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This month, I have showed up five to six times a week, stopped fighting, and
felt clear-headed in my training. I have analyzed positions more and as a
result, mistakes have truly become lessons. Everyday, I look forward to sparring
where I have a chance to improve my technique.
One night, I was caught by Steve from the half-guard bottom with a kimura. I
revisited the position and successfully defended several similar attempts from
others in the following days. I had a lot of success with the paper cutter choke
but one day, Stephen escaped the last second and I realized I should have my
weight on him while attacking. To learn from my own failures had stayed a lip
service until now. After long suffering, it finally happened.
My friend Harsh is a 180+ lbs muscular dude in his late 20s. Every time I rolled
with him, I ended up being mounted. Once he finished me there. I reviewed
Henry's teachings and the next time we sparred (Wed Oct 19), I raised my hips and
kept them up which prevented his attacks as he had to base out with at least one
arm to avoid face-planting to the floor. I did the same with Mike, a 220+ lbs
freakishly strong dude, and he couldn't do anything to me either. This gave me
great confidence although I didn't try anything extra to advance that day. I
knew I could make the guy at the top uncomfortable and stay safe at that
position. It is a powerful feeling.
It just happened on the same Wed, Rickson released a one-minute excerpt (titled
"A plan B to defend against the mount that even black-belts don't practice
enough") of a recent video and the dots connected like never before. What Henry
said about the upa being the only escape one needs to get out of mount finally
makes sense.