I’m got my fourth strip on my white belt a few months ago. At 55 an a former Fortune 500 executive, I’ve never been more proud of those stripes in a career of big vacations and huge bonuses. After two years training four to five days a week I will have my blue belt and I know I would have earned it. There were two young men who started within a month of me. We have pushed and supported each other. We have seen many white belts come and go the last two years and we will be promoted in January together. Jiu Jitsu is life.
@@stevenslawson8926dude good on you. Came back after a 14 year layoff due to back surgery. I am 56 at a 1 stripe purple belt… some days my body says stop, it sucks at times and I have to throttle back.
I am 67 yrs old started training Jiu-Jitsu last week of December 2022; been training for almost 7 months and just got my first stripe last week; injury is unavailable but I think am beginning to love it even at my old age;
I'm a 49 year old black belt. I've been training since 1997. I fully agree with everything in the video, but I believe this advice applies to people of any age. If I would have understood these things earlier, my jiu jitsu career would have been easier and more successful.
I am a 47 year old blue belt and I have been training about five years, and I have gotten to where I love your content Rick. I think that age is a major hurdle in your training, and many people don't understand that. Trying to match the younger peoples intensity and explosiveness is dangerous. It's also not conducive, as an older practitioner, to compare you performance level to equal rank but younger training partners. For the last couple years, I have been discouraged with my training because I see these younger blue belts and purple belts in the gym, and I feel like if I am not performing like they are, I am failing, or stagnating. Each persons journey is different, and you need to realize that you're not your training partners, and your journey is going to differ from other people in the gym. Keep up the great content.
Absolutely! It's spot-on! That is a definite challenge that requires a certain perspective. At 55, with my purple belt, I've encountered various scenarios. Among them, my favorite is witnessing the progress of someone with a white belt, possessing excellent athletic abilities, who's been training for less than six months but is already grasping foundational skills quickly. It's inspiring to see everyone providing opportunities to refine technical skills. However, I've found one of the toughest challenges is maintaining composure amidst focused chaos to identify openings for executing multiple sequences. It's definitely easier said than done, but it's an enjoyable journey!
Thank you so much for this. I am a 51 year old male who started BJJ 6 months ago at a wonderful school. My fellow athletes are respectful, supportive and nobody takes advantage of me, the old guy.*s* Learning BJJ has been a very humbling experience. When I started, I was around 45 lbs overweight, depressed and lacking a lot of confidence. BJJ has helped improve all of these things. I still find some aspects difficult. I have never been a natural athlete so I feel like my improvement has been very slow. All the holds are very confusing Also, I seem to get hurt every week. Nothing too serious but enough to be in some discomfort for a few days. All in all, I am happy I started this journey and look forward to see where it will take me
49 here. I totally feel you. I'm about 25# over and I completely agree. It was funny when I got a 285# 6'2" knee right on my rib cage instead of knee on belly. It is true that white belts hurt white belts. The funny part was when I was letting the professor know why I was going to miss a few weeks was my adding in day 1: found strange bruises in strange places. Day 2: found interesting friction burns on top of my toes. Day 3: I couldn't lift my left arm above my head. Day 4: broken 7th and 8th ribs. I wonder what day 5 would bring!? I finally just got back after 5 weeks off and completed day 5, where they absolutely took it easy on me and I was obviously subconsciously guarding my left side. I still love it, but being selective of who you roll with is paramount!
I was getting hurt (very sore) every week, until I started to stretch every area that was specifically prone to injury. Over 40, you not only need to stretch, you need to stretch ALLOT. Since I started stretching more than anyone else in the class, I have had significantly less soreness and no injuries.
Stretching, like other have said here, is paramount. Hydration is super helpful, my biggest help has come from peptides like BPC-157, CJC-1295, etc. those peptides took it all to another level. I was resistors them as I thought they were performance enhancement drugs, they’re not. They simply simply sped up healing & recovery like you had when were when you where 20 years old.
I’m 55. Right there with you in getting hurt. I’m two years in and getting my blue belt in January. Pace yourself and learn to take an extra day or even a week off to save your body. I had to accept early on that I don’t heal like the young guys in the gym. I’m now the white belt they pair up with cocky newbies to humble them. Grey hair and beard. Underneath the GI is 200 pounds of old man strength. I lost 45 pounds on my journey and after two years ago BJJ and eating carnivore, I can see my abs for the first time since I left the Marines at 31. Stick with it. The confidence will come. Get in the gym 2/3 days a week to lift weights. It will harden your tendons and ligaments. Don’t eat sugar. Enjoy the journey. .
I agree 100% sleep is when our bodies recover. Bad sleep negatively affects our ability to perform. I started taking naps 1x or 2x a week and it vastly improved my sessions.
Model 1979 purple belt here. Great videos! 💪Let me share my thinking: One of the best decisions for me was when I participated a class which is designed for people +40. The number one rule there was avoiding injuries. During the years I have got bones crushed, black eyes and joint problems, mostly by not obeying the ninth commandment or/and having sparred with younger and heavier ones, who try to go as hard as possible.
Love this topic! I'm a 45 year old blue belt, and BJJ is definitely something that I want to continue practicing for a long time to come. These commandments are all great, and will serve well anyone who implements them. Learning to control the breath has been a big one for me (that I'm still working on). I have struggled with a few injuries in the few years I've been training, including what I believe is a recently torn shoulder labrum, and would love to hear more about how you dealt with your injuries, when you decided to keep training, when you would take time off and how you would return from a break, etc. Thanks for the content, as always!
I’m a 52 year old seasoned blue belt and I learned the hard way. Use to get hurt all the time. Because I’m in decent shape I thought I could hang with the super athletic younger guys. The next day I’d be in the hurt locker and they’re training just as hard, the very next day. It wasn’t until I started being smart that my Jiu Jitsu started to grow. And now I can get in a couple hard rolls with the same guys and be fine the next day. So long as I do my epson salt bath and taking my magnesium. Thanks for the extra tips. 👊🏼😎 24:52
I'm a newcomer to BJJ at 49 but was a professional kickboxer in my 20s and coahced almost 30 years in stand up arts. I've been fortunate that I've maintained a high level of flexibility and strength, and in my only 6 months of BJJ learned fast to slow it down even though mobility wise I can hang with the younger guys and my flexibility also gives me some options I found early on the more patient you are the more you learn and avoid injury
54 year old 4 stripe white belt and training for 21 months. In the last couple of months, I have been focusing on these points and have enjoyed jiu jitsu much much more. I kinda love it when a young buck hesitates to roll with me because I make them work for everything and even get the upper hand. I currently train 3 days a week due to working two jobs but I am consistent. I would love to pick up a 4th day and i think that will come soon. Thanks again.
Time stamp 7:26 commandment number four when you said, "the quality of your jiu-jitsu is directly proportional to the quality of your movement" really got me thinking and hit home for me Rick. Thank you for sharing! 53 year old male three stripe white belt.
45 year old blue belt, been training for 2 years. Thank you for this great video with such important reminders for us older athletes. All the points you mentioned are critical to any athlete but more so for those us that are older than our training partners. Here's my experience with each of these: Most challenging ones that I'm working on with my coach, to keep me safe and continuously progressing as I'm one of the few older guys in the gym: Manage Expectations (train and roll at my pace, not the younger, faster, heavier, stronger guys'). Stay Within Your Limits (learn to listen to my body and not go 100% with all of my rolls, learn to sit out some rolls). What I need to work on improving: Training with intention: go within with a specific goal/area of improvement for that day of training. While I do this some days, I don't do all the time. Recovery: I'm good in terms of active recovery (yoga every morning, moving throughout the day) but not so good in terms of training volume. I was training 4 times a week, 2 classes + sparring on every training day for almost 2 years straight. A recent groin & hip injury due to overtaining forced me to reconsider my training volume. I'm coming back slowly now 3 times a week, 1 class only. Once I'm back in shape, I'll go back to sparring once a week. Being selective with training partners: I'm only 115 lbs, most people in class are around 150 - 180 lbs which I'm fine with. There are some much heavier guys 220+ lbs which I can survive rolling with but at a much higher cost to my recovery. I've started excusing myself from those rolls as the risk of injury to me is too high. Game changers for me that I've already being doing: Mobility: most of my exercise outside of the Jiu-jitsu Academy is focused on this to avoid issues with my pre-existing back condition and shoulder issues. Hydration (also use LMNT): this was a game changer when I started drinking this during training sessions a few months after I started training. My energy levels increased and I don't feel as drained after training since I started drinking electrolyte drinks. Warmup (helps with my back, hips, shoulders) which I do before the class warmup begins and I also go through a cool down routine after the class which I find just as important if not more so than warming up. Breathing: learned this one early as a smaller white belt to be able to survive getting crushed by heavier guys. Tapping early: some people get annoyed when I do this (because they want to earn the tap) but I explain to them that my joints and range of motion is much more limited than theirs and I do this only when they've locked down the submission but before reaching the painful end range for me.
Fantastic Advice - I’m turning 58 in March and recently got my brown belt - I actually did a private with Roy and the most useful advice I recall was to avoid redlining too long - like a car or motorcycle, you can only redline for short periods of time of your engine will burn out - also, I take hot Epsom salt baths after every session - I like the liquid salt but you can dissolve them as well - tea tree oil body wash helps avoid bacteria and fungi along with H&S shampoo which does the same.
I'm 41 and have struggled with mental health issues for years. Im a white belt so not been training long, but jiu jitsu has literally saved my life. I can't explain it but when I'm on the mats its like everything is ok.
BJJ is very powerful that way. Sometimes people that are close to me will ask why I continue to beat myself up. It's because there is nothing quite like the "reset" you get after having trained.
I “ deliberately “ chose Bjj for mental health for myself and especially for my beautiful wife, it’s helped her immensely and I am happy to go on this journey with her. Bjj for me is a means of peace and added healthy lifestyle, the mental health help is a plus.
I’m a 56 year old blue belt, been in a real funk about BJJ for the last 6 months…been skipping more classes than I go to…really trying to figure out if I want to keep training…
37F...returning to jiu-jitsu after being away for 8 years (and after gaining A LOT of weight). This helps a lot, even just the realization that I'm not the only one feeling not quite the spring chicken I was ❤ Thank you.
This channel is gold! I started last year at 44 & now at 45, I earned my blue belt a couple of months ago. Your content has helped me to pace myself, check my ego, & learn with intention. I will replay these commandments as they're a good reminder to stay healthy, safe & positive about the journey. OSS!
Really enjoying your content, I turn 41 on Wednesday and really want to start BJJ. I started Karate at 39 and Im loving it. Im reaching out to BJJ gyms and Im hoping to start within the next few weeks. Keep em coming.
I'm in the masters 4 bracket. Apart from my coach, I'm the oldest guy in my gym. I received my blue belt tonight and I'm dreading how my training will manifest from now on. Your advice really helps. Thank you.
One of the greatest video i have watched on bjj. I am today 46 years old purple belt, i am convince this vid will help me to go further. Thanks for your excellent work 🙏
Im' 41, I find your videos super valuable thank you! I have always stayed fit with consideration of trying to keep up with the overeating lol, I love to eat. I have been in bjj for 1 year just received my green belt. I'm at a awesome school with a great professor and awesome teamates. I really apprecaite your content!
Im 62 and holding my chin up on my new Jiu Jitsu journey down the local gym week 4.......No surrender, No going back,All or nothing .....! if ya dont give it a go yall never never know.....👍👍👍
Really great advice here. Especially the knowing your limits bit. If your gym culture doesn’t reinforce respect for the old guys who are still able to train at 40+, it should change. The hardest part is admitting to yourself that you aren’t a spring chicken anymore and being wise enough to avoid being baited into rolls you will likely regret later. Sort of the “you calling me chicken?” as seen in the fine 80’s classic Back to the Future. Also love the point about declining rolls - many of us will not do this. I don’t unless it’s severe. I won’t sit out rounds, but I will find the guys who appear to be gassed and convince them to just roll light with me - and my line “it’s always better to be moving than sitting out” seems to resonate! Ossss.
I’m 46 and only recently realized how much harder I had been rolling than was necessary. A bulged disk in my neck finally taught me the wisdom of rolling lighter and with less competitive energy. I’ve become selective about who I roll with and avoid the muscled up white belts. Girls, other old guys, injured people, newbies that don’t have natural aggression… I pride myself on being the guy that gives those people fun, safe and informative rolls. I’ve learned way more technique and I can turn my head without wincing pain. It’s been way more fun and I can train way more often now that I roll light.
As a 21 year old blue belt it's great to hear what to expect later on. It makes me able to get into the right mindset now, so I can do this art a lot longer!
@artofskill 5th Commandment: Hydrate Properly What you discribe is "heat exhaustion" And drinking too much water leads to Hyponatremia. Technically a serum sodium (Na+, the Na in NaCl, which is table salt) level below 135 mEQ/L. I've seen levels at 120 with little effect due to the level being achieved over time, and I've seen seizures bad enough to bite a tongue off at 123 from a lady that over hydrated before a spin class.
I'm 39yo and i've always been sedentary up to 2 months ago when I started training Relson Gracie JJ... I looks like your vídeos were made to me! What a great work you're doing!
At 33 yr old ex football player (Offensive Lineman) here, I'm already hurting more than I should after 10 round Tuesday. I realized quite fast there's only so many gym battles you can get in on some particularly brutal mats at my gym. I'm prioritizing drilling and being deliberate about how many of those Tuesday death matches I engage in. Or just break more between tough rounds like that.
glad I found this video. #8 is big for me. I'm only about 160lbs, 5'9. 39yo but physically probably of someone in their mid 20s but lack the physicality! Rolled with a guy that was 6'5 and whatever the weight of that height, but was ungraded. Instant regret within 5seconds. Asked twice to lower their strength. I did get frustrated but it was a humbling moment to my ego to keep within my means! Thanks for this vid!
Thank you thank you Rick excellent video I have 53 years old soon I will be 54 and I recommend before Roll take creatine help tremendously. This video and all the videos that you do helping me so much brother .
I solved my hydration problem with sugar-free Gatorade G-Zero. I was POUNDING 1-2L of water a session--one of those big Stanley containers--with more even before and after. I simply could not stay quenched. I discovered that just keeping myself hydrated before class and drinking maybe 10-16oz of Gatorade before class helped me not feel like I was dying of thirst. It was probably 3 months on the mat before I figured out the importance of electrolytes.
Lol I’m only 30, but I feel like I’m already at the point where I need this! I think this is basically the advice of how to be an elite BJJ athlete, but if you are old you need to train like an elite athlete just to keep up!
Excellent video. I kind of was already doing most of this, but the hydrate properly and breathing one stuck out most. We have a dojo with no Air Conditioner so it gets extremely hot with the Gi on but we get frequent water breaks and are continually told and instructed on how to breathe. It makes all the difference.
I so appreciate this video. 52 and new blue belt. I was happy to see that I already practice 9 of the 10 commandments here. But the commandment about hydration has always been a weakness of mine… I’ve even made two trips to the ER with chest pains only to discover I was dehydrated. I will definitely make a better effort and get some electrolytes.
I'm 47, started 5 months ago, 2 stripes now, love it to death. I've been in really good shape for the past 3,5 years (yes, I used the lock down to start) but without some of the ideas from this video, that I was fortunate enough to figure out on my own, I would probably have already given up by now, even in my above average physical state. The guys I train with can be kids of mine, age wise. I always have a plan, I always pace myself, and everybody says that eventually it gets fun... I've been having fun since first week!! Spectacular video, 100% on point!
@@mfundimkhize3137 I became really diligent outside the mat, I'm always researching, but with a completely white belt mindset, focus on basics, improving few things at a time, don't care to win, always prioritize defense and position retention, always have a list of 3 or 4 thing to practice during rolls, because if you choose just one, the situation may not rise to it. And most important, I really try to be the best training partner I can be, lighthearted, helpful, attentive and never abuse strength or speed with smaller opponents. I can be tapped, surpassed, get tired, but I really have fun with it all, good and "bad".
Turning 49 next week and just got to blue. Been working on the physical parts of active recovery, hydrating, breathing, warm ups etc. Need to do a better job on the ego part of tapping early, picking partners and pacing myself. Been through some injuries as a result but want to extend this journey through my 50s and hopefully beyond. Great content I can relate to.
Very insightful video. My only addition is to the stay within your limits section. There are certain inverted positions and takedowns I just won’t do. I respectfully ask my coach if there is an alternative technique which he is always happy to demonstrate. OSS.. 🤙🤙
I am a 55 year old black belt training since 1997. My suggestion is to always challenge yourself but be mindful of your limitations. When you recognize your current limitations, figure out how to expand them. If you have a hard stop limitation (I can’t do shoulder weights due to tendinitis) figure out another strategy to get the most out of your limitation then find a strength to possibly offset it. You can always become the best version of yourself which is often more than you expect.
No I haven't. I had a micro-discectomy to remove the chunk that was pressing into my sciatic nerve. For me, surgery was mandatory because my calf went dead due to the nerve impingement. Recovery was pretty easy but it took me out of commission for a year. Been fine ever since, although as I get older I feel stiffness increasing in that spot. Good luck to you.
This is why I train in a sauna suit hoodie and sweats I even mow the lawn in that stuff takes me 45mins to push mow the lawn you not only have to train the body you have to train the mind and I’m 46
Thanks a Bunch, great content as usual. Have you considered a more in-depth video with breathing techniques and some mobility drills. I would find it very useful. As always, thanks and appreciate you sharing your knowledge!
Loads of good stuff here. Only thing is remember some older guys are naturally fit, strong, quick and tough. My 65 year old judo sensei (also a bjj bb) is an absolute super fit savage. Also a yoga, diet and lifting guy. Was a world class judo guy so a bit of a genetic exception.
I always take salted (fleur de sel) honey before & after my sessions! The medical condition is called Hyponatremia. Super nice that you have mentioned that! Super grateful for your content 🥰🙏🏼❤️🔥
@@witchdoc5075 I get magnesium in the LMNT. Little bit of calcium is just to add a bit of hydration. It’s helped. It’s 105 here, and training jujitsu in the heat (the AC at the Gymn can’t keep up), dehydrates the heck out of you.
00:28 | 1 TRAIN WITH INTENTION
02:55 | 2 MANAGE EXPECTATIONS
05:06 | 3 STAY WITHIN YOUR LIMITS
07:27 | 4 FOCUS ON MOBILITY
09:47 | 5 HYDRATE PROPERLY
12:50 | 6 WARM UP THOROUGHLY
14:57 | 7 LEARN TO BREATHE
18:16 | 8 BE SELECTIVE WHEN ROLLING
19:50 | 9 TAP EARLY
21:37 | 10 PRIORITIZE RECOVERY
Some heroes don't wear capes... Oss!
Thanks for doing this!
Thank you
I've listen to this twice while driving, thank you. These made it to my notebook!
Rule 0.9: You're old and you're NOT GETTING PAID... Quit, you fool!
71 and I so appreciate your channel. Just 3 months into my white belt. Love jiu-jitsu ❤️.
👏👏👏
Amazing!
Legend
Good for you 💪👏
That's awesome! Good luck to you.
I’m got my fourth strip on my white belt a few months ago. At 55 an a former Fortune 500 executive, I’ve never been more proud of those stripes in a career of big vacations and huge bonuses. After two years training four to five days a week I will have my blue belt and I know I would have earned it. There were two young men who started within a month of me. We have pushed and supported each other. We have seen many white belts come and go the last two years and we will be promoted in January together. Jiu Jitsu is life.
54 year old brown belt here going through a training rough patch. I needed this video - definitely going to help me recalibrate.
Right there with you brother... 54 Brown Belt and some days wondering how I got here.
A third 54 year old brown belt. Training is brutal sometimes (most of the time). Hang in there dudes. 19 years training and I still not a black belt.
@@stevenslawson8926dude good on you. Came back after a 14 year layoff due to back surgery. I am 56 at a 1 stripe purple belt… some days my body says stop, it sucks at times and I have to throttle back.
I am 67 yrs old started training Jiu-Jitsu last week of December 2022; been training for almost 7 months and just got my first stripe last week; injury is unavailable but I think am beginning to love it even at my old age;
Are you still training?
I started Jiu-Jitsu after stop smoking at 34. Now Iam 46, blackbelt an still love it. ❤🥋 oss
Good for you! Stopping smoking is a huge accomplishment. BJJ Black Belt is a big deal, too! OSS 👊
I'm a 49 year old black belt. I've been training since 1997. I fully agree with everything in the video, but I believe this advice applies to people of any age. If I would have understood these things earlier, my jiu jitsu career would have been easier and more successful.
I'm 37, been training since 29. I think this video is totally applicable to practicioners of all ages/ranks!
I am a 47 year old blue belt and I have been training about five years, and I have gotten to where I love your content Rick. I think that age is a major hurdle in your training, and many people don't understand that. Trying to match the younger peoples intensity and explosiveness is dangerous. It's also not conducive, as an older practitioner, to compare you performance level to equal rank but younger training partners. For the last couple years, I have been discouraged with my training because I see these younger blue belts and purple belts in the gym, and I feel like if I am not performing like they are, I am failing, or stagnating. Each persons journey is different, and you need to realize that you're not your training partners, and your journey is going to differ from other people in the gym. Keep up the great content.
Indeed, you're only in competition with your old self.
you should switch style before injured
Absolutely! It's spot-on! That is a definite challenge that requires a certain perspective. At 55, with my purple belt, I've encountered various scenarios. Among them, my favorite is witnessing the progress of someone with a white belt, possessing excellent athletic abilities, who's been training for less than six months but is already grasping foundational skills quickly. It's inspiring to see everyone providing opportunities to refine technical skills. However, I've found one of the toughest challenges is maintaining composure amidst focused chaos to identify openings for executing multiple sequences. It's definitely easier said than done, but it's an enjoyable journey!
Outstanding advice, I’ve been on my BJJ journey for 5 months, I’m 53 years old, and the advice here is on point
Thank you so much for this. I am a 51 year old male who started BJJ 6 months ago at a wonderful school. My fellow athletes are respectful, supportive and nobody takes advantage of me, the old guy.*s* Learning BJJ has been a very humbling experience. When I started, I was around 45 lbs overweight, depressed and lacking a lot of confidence. BJJ has helped improve all of these things. I still find some aspects difficult. I have never been a natural athlete so I feel like my improvement has been very slow. All the holds are very confusing Also, I seem to get hurt every week. Nothing too serious but enough to be in some discomfort for a few days. All in all, I am happy I started this journey and look forward to see where it will take me
49 here. I totally feel you. I'm about 25# over and I completely agree. It was funny when I got a 285# 6'2" knee right on my rib cage instead of knee on belly. It is true that white belts hurt white belts. The funny part was when I was letting the professor know why I was going to miss a few weeks was my adding in day 1: found strange bruises in strange places. Day 2: found interesting friction burns on top of my toes. Day 3: I couldn't lift my left arm above my head. Day 4: broken 7th and 8th ribs. I wonder what day 5 would bring!? I finally just got back after 5 weeks off and completed day 5, where they absolutely took it easy on me and I was obviously subconsciously guarding my left side. I still love it, but being selective of who you roll with is paramount!
I was getting hurt (very sore) every week, until I started to stretch every area that was specifically prone to injury. Over 40, you not only need to stretch, you need to stretch ALLOT. Since I started stretching more than anyone else in the class, I have had significantly less soreness and no injuries.
Stretching, like other have said here, is paramount. Hydration is super helpful, my biggest help has come from peptides like BPC-157, CJC-1295, etc. those peptides took it all to another level. I was resistors them as I thought they were performance enhancement drugs, they’re not. They simply simply sped up healing & recovery like you had when were when you where 20 years old.
I am 54 . I don't see myself as "the old guy". Keep the good work
I’m 55. Right there with you in getting hurt. I’m two years in and getting my blue belt in January. Pace yourself and learn to take an extra day or even a week off to save your body. I had to accept early on that I don’t heal like the young guys in the gym. I’m now the white belt they pair up with cocky newbies to humble them. Grey hair and beard. Underneath the GI is 200 pounds of old man strength. I lost 45 pounds on my journey and after two years ago BJJ and eating carnivore, I can see my abs for the first time since I left the Marines at 31. Stick with it. The confidence will come. Get in the gym 2/3 days a week to lift weights. It will harden your tendons and ligaments. Don’t eat sugar. Enjoy the journey. .
I really think number 1 should be sleep. It’s the most difficult to focus on at any age. Also difficult to do
Naps too
I agree 100% sleep is when our bodies recover. Bad sleep negatively affects our ability to perform. I started taking naps 1x or 2x a week and it vastly improved my sessions.
Model 1979 purple belt here. Great videos! 💪Let me share my thinking: One of the best decisions for me was when I participated a class which is designed for people +40. The number one rule there was avoiding injuries. During the years I have got bones crushed, black eyes and joint problems, mostly by not obeying the ninth commandment or/and having sparred with younger and heavier ones, who try to go as hard as possible.
Such good advice!
Used to train in my 20s and 30s. Now in my early 40s and just had a hip replacement - 2024 is the year I come back!
Love this topic! I'm a 45 year old blue belt, and BJJ is definitely something that I want to continue practicing for a long time to come. These commandments are all great, and will serve well anyone who implements them. Learning to control the breath has been a big one for me (that I'm still working on). I have struggled with a few injuries in the few years I've been training, including what I believe is a recently torn shoulder labrum, and would love to hear more about how you dealt with your injuries, when you decided to keep training, when you would take time off and how you would return from a break, etc. Thanks for the content, as always!
I've gotten that request from a few people, so I'll definitely cover it in a future video.
I’m a 52 year old seasoned blue belt and I learned the hard way. Use to get hurt all the time. Because I’m in decent shape I thought I could hang with the super athletic younger guys. The next day I’d be in the hurt locker and they’re training just as hard, the very next day. It wasn’t until I started being smart that my Jiu Jitsu started to grow. And now I can get in a couple hard rolls with the same guys and be fine the next day. So long as I do my epson salt bath and taking my magnesium. Thanks for the extra tips. 👊🏼😎 24:52
I'm a newcomer to BJJ at 49 but was a professional kickboxer in my 20s and coahced almost 30 years in stand up arts. I've been fortunate that I've maintained a high level of flexibility and strength, and in my only 6 months of BJJ learned fast to slow it down even though mobility wise I can hang with the younger guys and my flexibility also gives me some options I found early on the more patient you are the more you learn and avoid injury
54 year old 4 stripe white belt and training for 21 months. In the last couple of months, I have been focusing on these points and have enjoyed jiu jitsu much much more. I kinda love it when a young buck hesitates to roll with me because I make them work for everything and even get the upper hand. I currently train 3 days a week due to working two jobs but I am consistent. I would love to pick up a 4th day and i think that will come soon. Thanks again.
Time stamp 7:26 commandment number four when you said, "the quality of your jiu-jitsu is directly proportional to the quality of your movement" really got me thinking and hit home for me Rick. Thank you for sharing! 53 year old male three stripe white belt.
45 year old blue belt, been training for 2 years. Thank you for this great video with such important reminders for us older athletes. All the points you mentioned are critical to any athlete but more so for those us that are older than our training partners. Here's my experience with each of these:
Most challenging ones that I'm working on with my coach, to keep me safe and continuously progressing as I'm one of the few older guys in the gym:
Manage Expectations (train and roll at my pace, not the younger, faster, heavier, stronger guys').
Stay Within Your Limits (learn to listen to my body and not go 100% with all of my rolls, learn to sit out some rolls).
What I need to work on improving:
Training with intention: go within with a specific goal/area of improvement for that day of training. While I do this some days, I don't do all the time.
Recovery: I'm good in terms of active recovery (yoga every morning, moving throughout the day) but not so good in terms of training volume. I was training 4 times a week, 2 classes + sparring on every training day for almost 2 years straight. A recent groin & hip injury due to overtaining forced me to reconsider my training volume. I'm coming back slowly now 3 times a week, 1 class only. Once I'm back in shape, I'll go back to sparring once a week.
Being selective with training partners: I'm only 115 lbs, most people in class are around 150 - 180 lbs which I'm fine with. There are some much heavier guys 220+ lbs which I can survive rolling with but at a much higher cost to my recovery. I've started excusing myself from those rolls as the risk of injury to me is too high.
Game changers for me that I've already being doing:
Mobility: most of my exercise outside of the Jiu-jitsu Academy is focused on this to avoid issues with my pre-existing back condition and shoulder issues.
Hydration (also use LMNT): this was a game changer when I started drinking this during training sessions a few months after I started training. My energy levels increased and I don't feel as drained after training since I started drinking electrolyte drinks.
Warmup (helps with my back, hips, shoulders) which I do before the class warmup begins and I also go through a cool down routine after the class which I find just as important if not more so than warming up.
Breathing: learned this one early as a smaller white belt to be able to survive getting crushed by heavier guys.
Tapping early: some people get annoyed when I do this (because they want to earn the tap) but I explain to them that my joints and range of motion is much more limited than theirs and I do this only when they've locked down the submission but before reaching the painful end range for me.
Fantastic Advice - I’m turning 58 in March and recently got my brown belt - I actually did a private with Roy and the most useful advice I recall was to avoid redlining too long - like a car or motorcycle, you can only redline for short periods of time of your engine will burn out - also, I take hot Epsom salt baths after every session - I like the liquid salt but you can dissolve them as well - tea tree oil body wash helps avoid bacteria and fungi along with H&S shampoo which does the same.
I'm 41 and have struggled with mental health issues for years. Im a white belt so not been training long, but jiu jitsu has literally saved my life. I can't explain it but when I'm on the mats its like everything is ok.
BJJ is very powerful that way. Sometimes people that are close to me will ask why I continue to beat myself up. It's because there is nothing quite like the "reset" you get after having trained.
Congrats brother, enjoy the journey…
I “ deliberately “ chose Bjj for mental health for myself and especially for my beautiful wife, it’s helped her immensely and I am happy to go on this journey with her. Bjj for me is a means of peace and added healthy lifestyle, the mental health help is a plus.
I’m a 56 year old blue belt, been in a real funk about BJJ for the last 6 months…been skipping more classes than I go to…really trying to figure out if I want to keep training…
As a 46 year old beginner I really appreciate this video, Thank you.
Great tips, Coach! As a 49-year-old white belt about 1 year into training, this advice is invaluable. Keep up the work on this awesome channel.
I’m a 39 yo 3 stripe purple belt who has a cervical spine fusion. I felt each and every one of these points. Great vid
37F...returning to jiu-jitsu after being away for 8 years (and after gaining A LOT of weight). This helps a lot, even just the realization that I'm not the only one feeling not quite the spring chicken I was ❤ Thank you.
This channel is gold! I started last year at 44 & now at 45, I earned my blue belt a couple of months ago. Your content has helped me to pace myself, check my ego, & learn with intention. I will replay these commandments as they're a good reminder to stay healthy, safe & positive about the journey. OSS!
Thank you! I appreciate it.
Really enjoying your content, I turn 41 on Wednesday and really want to start BJJ. I started Karate at 39 and Im loving it. Im reaching out to BJJ gyms and Im hoping to start within the next few weeks. Keep em coming.
I'm in the masters 4 bracket. Apart from my coach, I'm the oldest guy in my gym. I received my blue belt tonight and I'm dreading how my training will manifest from now on.
Your advice really helps. Thank you.
Helpful vid, thanks!
One of the greatest video i have watched on bjj. I am today 46 years old purple belt, i am convince this vid will help me to go further. Thanks for your excellent work 🙏
Im' 41, I find your videos super valuable thank you! I have always stayed fit with consideration of trying to keep up with the overeating lol, I love to eat. I have been in bjj for 1 year just received my green belt. I'm at a awesome school with a great professor and awesome teamates. I really apprecaite your content!
Thank you for this. Very well reasoned points. I'm watching this while I'm out injured and have made many of the mistakes you mention.
a great teacher and a great person as well...
I’m an older bjj guy and love these videos. Appreciate you sharing your experience and knowledge. 🤙🏼
Im 62 and holding my chin up on my new Jiu Jitsu journey down the local gym week 4.......No surrender, No going back,All or nothing .....! if ya dont give it a go yall never never know.....👍👍👍
Still going?
@@DBowTX ....yerp!
You’ve described more than a hobby, a passion. Not wrong but depends on your intended commitment.
Really great advice here. Especially the knowing your limits bit. If your gym culture doesn’t reinforce respect for the old guys who are still able to train at 40+, it should change. The hardest part is admitting to yourself that you aren’t a spring chicken anymore and being wise enough to avoid being baited into rolls you will likely regret later. Sort of the “you calling me chicken?” as seen in the fine 80’s classic Back to the Future.
Also love the point about declining rolls - many of us will not do this. I don’t unless it’s severe. I won’t sit out rounds, but I will find the guys who appear to be gassed and convince them to just roll light with me - and my line “it’s always better to be moving than sitting out” seems to resonate! Ossss.
These are gold! I’d add get good sleep for recovery. I try and get as much as I can and sneak in a nap once in a while.
That's very important too. My body always needs extra sleep on nights that I've trained.
I’m 46 and only recently realized how much harder I had been rolling than was necessary. A bulged disk in my neck finally taught me the wisdom of rolling lighter and with less competitive energy. I’ve become selective about who I roll with and avoid the muscled up white belts. Girls, other old guys, injured people, newbies that don’t have natural aggression… I pride myself on being the guy that gives those people fun, safe and informative rolls. I’ve learned way more technique and I can turn my head without wincing pain. It’s been way more fun and I can train way more often now that I roll light.
As a 42 year old blue belt who took a day off to get some shoulder/neck recovery in, I appreciate this video tremendously. Thank you!
awesome content brother! Thanks for addressing us old guys. I truly appreciate you and your wisdom.
Is sauna good for recovery?
As a 21 year old blue belt it's great to hear what to expect later on. It makes me able to get into the right mindset now, so I can do this art a lot longer!
That's smart.
Yes, very smart. I think "old man" JJ is about training as efficiently as possible, and anyone can benefit from that.
@artofskill
5th Commandment:
Hydrate Properly
What you discribe is "heat exhaustion"
And drinking too much water leads to Hyponatremia. Technically a serum sodium (Na+, the Na in NaCl, which is table salt) level below 135 mEQ/L.
I've seen levels at 120 with little effect due to the level being achieved over time, and I've seen seizures bad enough to bite a tongue off at 123 from a lady that over hydrated before a spin class.
Man these are great for all types of training. Fantastic work 🙏🙏🙏🙏
I'm 39yo and i've always been sedentary up to 2 months ago when I started training Relson Gracie JJ... I looks like your vídeos were made to me! What a great work you're doing!
Thank you, I appreciate it!
At 33 yr old ex football player (Offensive Lineman) here, I'm already hurting more than I should after 10 round Tuesday. I realized quite fast there's only so many gym battles you can get in on some particularly brutal mats at my gym. I'm prioritizing drilling and being deliberate about how many of those Tuesday death matches I engage in. Or just break more between tough rounds like that.
glad I found this video. #8 is big for me.
I'm only about 160lbs, 5'9. 39yo but physically probably of someone in their mid 20s but lack the physicality! Rolled with a guy that was 6'5 and whatever the weight of that height, but was ungraded. Instant regret within 5seconds. Asked twice to lower their strength. I did get frustrated but it was a humbling moment to my ego to keep within my means! Thanks for this vid!
This is a great video, healthy grounded. And it shows why to me, as "older" practitioner, this is one of the best channels out there. Kudos from Italy
Thank you very much!
Love it! Moving to Cheyenne soon. Looking forward to training at Black Label.
Thank you thank you Rick excellent video I have 53 years old soon I will be 54 and I recommend before Roll take creatine help tremendously. This video and all the videos that you do helping me so much brother .
I solved my hydration problem with sugar-free Gatorade G-Zero. I was POUNDING 1-2L of water a session--one of those big Stanley containers--with more even before and after. I simply could not stay quenched. I discovered that just keeping myself hydrated before class and drinking maybe 10-16oz of Gatorade before class helped me not feel like I was dying of thirst. It was probably 3 months on the mat before I figured out the importance of electrolytes.
Just found this channel and I love it and the comments!.. lovely people ❤
I'm 34 but let's learn early :)
I'm 54 so let's learn too late! haa
@@shabblabbat better late than never! ;)
Haha, you beat me to this.
🧠
Lol I’m only 30, but I feel like I’m already at the point where I need this! I think this is basically the advice of how to be an elite BJJ athlete, but if you are old you need to train like an elite athlete just to keep up!
I’m 53 years old. Great tips 👍✅
Excellent video. I kind of was already doing most of this, but the hydrate properly and breathing one stuck out most. We have a dojo with no Air Conditioner so it gets extremely hot with the Gi on but we get frequent water breaks and are continually told and instructed on how to breathe. It makes all the difference.
At 52, this is just the best advice. Thanks a million for your humble guidance 👻
41 here practitioner(white belt),anyone who does jitsu MAD RESPECT . If you train WATCH THIS VIDEO! 100% you'll relate to it all. Thank you 🙏
I am over 40 and train. I enjoy your videos sir.
I so appreciate this video. 52 and new blue belt. I was happy to see that I already practice 9 of the 10 commandments here. But the commandment about hydration has always been a weakness of mine… I’ve even made two trips to the ER with chest pains only to discover I was dehydrated. I will definitely make a better effort and get some electrolytes.
Always great to see your videos Rick
I'm 47, started 5 months ago, 2 stripes now, love it to death. I've been in really good shape for the past 3,5 years (yes, I used the lock down to start) but without some of the ideas from this video, that I was fortunate enough to figure out on my own, I would probably have already given up by now, even in my above average physical state. The guys I train with can be kids of mine, age wise. I always have a plan, I always pace myself, and everybody says that eventually it gets fun... I've been having fun since first week!! Spectacular video, 100% on point!
2 stripes in 5 months, how come so quick? 😮
@@mfundimkhize3137 I became really diligent outside the mat, I'm always researching, but with a completely white belt mindset, focus on basics, improving few things at a time, don't care to win, always prioritize defense and position retention, always have a list of 3 or 4 thing to practice during rolls, because if you choose just one, the situation may not rise to it. And most important, I really try to be the best training partner I can be, lighthearted, helpful, attentive and never abuse strength or speed with smaller opponents. I can be tapped, surpassed, get tired, but I really have fun with it all, good and "bad".
@@nelsonsimoes896 This. 100%. Started about a year ago at 48. Slowly learning the moves and how to stay safe / not injured so I can keep training.
Appreciate this. 36 now, but 40 is right around the corner!
This is a great list, very well produced
u are a beautiful soul friend. thank you
That's very kind of you. Thank you!
Thank you from this side of the grave! I will try to put this into practice.
Excellent video!!
Great advice!
Thank you for these great info. I’m way over 40 so this info is valuable.
Turning 49 next week and just got to blue. Been working on the physical parts of active recovery, hydrating, breathing, warm ups etc. Need to do a better job on the ego part of tapping early, picking partners and pacing myself. Been through some injuries as a result but want to extend this journey through my 50s and hopefully beyond. Great content I can relate to.
Very insightful video. My only addition is to the stay within your limits section. There are certain inverted positions and takedowns I just won’t do. I respectfully ask my coach if there is an alternative technique which he is always happy to demonstrate. OSS.. 🤙🤙
I am a 55 year old black belt training since 1997. My suggestion is to always challenge yourself but be mindful of your limitations. When you recognize your current limitations, figure out how to expand them. If you have a hard stop limitation (I can’t do shoulder weights due to tendinitis) figure out another strategy to get the most out of your limitation then find a strength to possibly offset it. You can always become the best version of yourself which is often more than you expect.
I felt that beginning frustration. I can relate. Lol
Honestly this is just good advice for any age. Just needs to be more emphasis on these as you get older.
I just recorded a video and did the same thing yesterday, except it was through my webcam. LOL SOOO I have to redo it today haha. OSSS
Great video!
thank you
thanks, wrote each one out .
Thank you!
Ive learned most of these by experience. Wish I would have run across this advice a couple years ago. 😅
Outstanding. Thank you
have you done a video that gives more details on that bulging disc injury? i am fighting that now and its keeping me off the mats
No I haven't. I had a micro-discectomy to remove the chunk that was pressing into my sciatic nerve. For me, surgery was mandatory because my calf went dead due to the nerve impingement. Recovery was pretty easy but it took me out of commission for a year. Been fine ever since, although as I get older I feel stiffness increasing in that spot. Good luck to you.
Great Excellent video
Solid Ten Commandments!
This is why I train in a sauna suit hoodie and sweats I even mow the lawn in that stuff takes me 45mins to push mow the lawn you not only have to train the body you have to train the mind and I’m 46
Awesome thanks😇🙏
Great content. Thank you.
This is amazing!!!!
I love your stuff. This one has been the most informative for me. 48 yr old white belt 😂
52 year old purple, could not agree more. Listening to the body has served me well
Great advice for this 40 year old much appreciated
I’m 61 haven’t done Mat work for over twenty years just started again
Thanks a Bunch, great content as usual. Have you considered a more in-depth video with breathing techniques and some mobility drills. I would find it very useful. As always, thanks and appreciate you sharing your knowledge!
You're welcome. I plan to create a mobility course once the course I'm currently working on gets released.
Loads of good stuff here. Only thing is remember some older guys are naturally fit, strong, quick and tough. My 65 year old judo sensei (also a bjj bb) is an absolute super fit savage. Also a yoga, diet and lifting guy. Was a world class judo guy so a bit of a genetic exception.
Thank you Sir, OSS 🇧🇷
Great video! In your forties, you are young enough to go really hard, but old enough to get really hurt.
Agreed. All of my serious injuries were in my 40s.
@@TheArtofSkill Sorry Brother. It's a labor of love, isn't it?
I always take salted (fleur de sel) honey before & after my sessions!
The medical condition is called Hyponatremia. Super nice that you have mentioned that! Super grateful for your content 🥰🙏🏼❤️🔥
Yes, hyponatremia! Thanks for the reminder.
Brilliant
I use LMNT too, it’s been a game changer. I am considering adding some calcium to my mix, also.
Ensure that calcium supplement (if you choose to do so) has some magnesium in it. Dehydration and excessive oral calcium will cause constipation.
@@witchdoc5075 I get magnesium in the LMNT. Little bit of calcium is just to add a bit of hydration. It’s helped. It’s 105 here, and training jujitsu in the heat (the AC at the Gymn can’t keep up), dehydrates the heck out of you.
Good stuff.