An older grappler (OG) joins a local Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) class that happens to be full of young punk grapplers that think his dream of becoming a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Black Belt are a joke and waste no time showing him how he’s doesn’t belong on the team. So, after getting his azz kicked and run off the mat by the young punks, the OG realizes that he needs help and finds help by finding “The 7 Survival Secrets for Older and Non-Traditional/Non-Competitive Grapplers. After learning about the benefits of developing the three training areas known as the “Training Triangle”, the OG returns back to class to let those young punks know that he’s nobody’s grappling dummy!
The other day, I was having a conversation with one of my students and he wanted to know what gave me the idea of using a folding chair to demonstrate and teach the proper posture for the “Bullfighter” Guard Pass (as he saw in on the OG Clinic DVD) since he had never seen anyone use furniture to teach a grappling concept before. I told him the reason I was able to use the chair to successfully teach the concept of proper body placement and weight distribution was based solely on the fact that no one ever told me that I couldn’t use a folding chair to teach my students. And since no one told me I couldn’t use a chair (or anything else that comes to mind), my teaching was bound ONLY by my creativity.
The motivation for using the chair was to teach my students the proper hand positioning and to show them where the weight should be distributed to neutralize their opponent while doing the pass. The reason I used the folding chair was the fact that they’re light and mobile, which allows me to put several on the mat at one time to create a unique drill for the students that immediately catches their attention and presents them with a simple training tool that most of them have in their homes and workspaces. Once they put their hands on the chair in the proper position, the feeling they feel in their hands lets them know exactly where the weight is being distributed and if their feet and hips are properly positioned for successfully neutralize their opponent for a successful guard pass.
The whole idea of using a folding chair seems so foreign to many grapplers (of all experience levels and ranks), but that’s one of the reasons that so many grapplers can’t improve outside the traditional setting or without black belt level instruction. They lack the imagination and creativity required to help them learn, understand, and to teach grappling techniques and concepts outside of the traditional setting that you see in lots of training academies, grappling books, and instructional DVDs.
Would I consider myself an innovative genius for using chairs (among other things) as training props? Well…yes and no! I am innovative because I haven’t seen anyone else doing it and no one’s accused me of stealing it from someone else…yet! At the same time, I know that I don’t own the patent on training creativity and quite certain that there are TONS of non-traditional training methods being used in gyms around the world that teach grappling concepts that are unknown to the masses.
THAT’S what I consider “thinking outside the box” in grappling. So, if you’ve got some “crazy” idea that helps you or your students understand a grappling principle, keep up the good work and continue to think outside the box. And if you think using a folding chair as a guard passing training tool was cool, wait until you see how I use a stationary bike seat and an umbrella in my OG Shadow Grappling DVD, which will be available within the month!
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Paul M. Greenhill, “The Wise Grappler”, is the creator of The Wise Grappler System and author of The Wise Grappler Ezine, a weekly ezine that provides grappling and mental mindset training tips for the older (over 35) and non-traditional/non-competitive martial artists. To learn more about “The Wise Grappler” and to sign up for more FREE tips like these, visit his site at www.thewisegrappler.com or contact The Wise Grappler.
April 5, 2008 at 9:15 pm |
“Tap old man.”
“Knee on face.” “Let’s go!”
Hilarious.
I can identify. Even though I am only 34, I can feel the change in recovery time, flexibility, etc…
June 8, 2008 at 2:58 pm |
I can relate, though I am being trained by guys who seem to care about my well being. I am 42 and in good shape, but yes, its hard on me!! Physical discomfort is easier for me to deal with when I have a goal in mind–to learn Jiu Jitsu!
December 6, 2008 at 4:44 pm |
wow,i was thinking about joing the lloyd irvin or leo dalla school,but i’m 44 and after hearing all this talk about getting dissed by the youngsters,i think i’ll pass..i come from a “traditional” martial arts background and my old sensei would’ve kicked anyone out that acted like that towars a new student.are ALL the BJJ dojos like this?
December 11, 2008 at 2:11 pm |
hey dyland,
the video was created to show a problem that exists in a lot of bjj and grappling schools around the world, but isn’t an indictment against all of them because there are good instructors that don’t allow this stupidity. i used our school and students as an example just to make the video entertaining, but it would’ve been very foolish on my part to point that out the existence of that flaw in our schools if it really existed.
so, go check out the lloyd irvin or leo dalla schools as planned because i’m certain they won’t put up with OGs being terrorized by mat punks.
paul greenhill (aka the wise grappler)