Why is Blue Belt so hard? Is it the hardest rank in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu?

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  • Опубліковано 20 лют 2023
  • Surveys have said that blue belt is the hardest belt rank in Jiu Jitsu. How do grapplers feel about their BJJ blue belts? Why isn't it easier than white belt? What are they facing when grappling on the mats and what advice to they have for Brazilian Jiu Jitsu white belts and blue belts?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 373

  • @bidong
    @bidong Рік тому +658

    As a blue belt, my only advice is, every time you feel like you can skip training. Ask yourself. Have you ever gone to training and said, "I shouldn't have gone..." afterwards.

    • @surferjoe8586
      @surferjoe8586 Рік тому +13

      Such an underrated comment,and yet so true .👍

    • @danielkeene3852
      @danielkeene3852 Рік тому +8

      That's how I keep myself working out and going to training: no one ever regrets working out after the fact. (There is one exception, which is getting injured, but caution does mitigate that)

    • @Diegomarvid
      @Diegomarvid Рік тому +13

      Lol I've regreted multiple times. If you never had a serious problem then you were just quitting, but believe me I went with some tought stuff to a lot of sports not only bjj and believe me it was not worth it. Some simple thing is overtraining, maybe you are doing 5 different sports per week and you are feeling tired and the best thing is just to skip training. If not you will overtrain and diminish your performance not only on bjj but on other 4 activities.

    • @philosopher2king
      @philosopher2king Рік тому +2

      Exactly! Leave the gym bag ready by the door.

    • @christinarosario9896
      @christinarosario9896 Рік тому

      YESSS

  • @ProfessorJones7
    @ProfessorJones7 Рік тому +297

    I always keep that quote in mind :
    "It’s not who’s good, it’s who’s left" - Chris Haueter

    • @bravotoomuch4218
      @bravotoomuch4218 Рік тому +4

      That's the one I use to keep me positive and that's the quote I tell new people.

    • @bobsmith8124
      @bobsmith8124 Рік тому +4

      Because they are the ones paying for my car and vacations 😅😂

    • @sudstahgaming
      @sudstahgaming Рік тому +3

      I won't forget this quote because it basically applies to everything, you will always improve regardless of how your performance as long as you keep mixing up and not repeating mistakes

  • @jiujitsujackson9831
    @jiujitsujackson9831 Рік тому +340

    After 9 years of training, I’ve experienced and witnessed blue belts go through an ego maturing process. The more you train, the better you become at dealing with the ego. Once the ego is less involved with your development, you will eliminate most reasons for quitting. Once that mental process is mastered, your Jiu Jitsu will be unlimited growth with no fear. All blue belts out there, enjoy the process

    • @timothyotoole8224
      @timothyotoole8224 Рік тому +6

      that was some great words of wisdom. I kinda needed to hear that.

    • @FR-ty5vn
      @FR-ty5vn Рік тому +1

      Osss - leave your ego at the door 🚪

    • @goodfortune5480
      @goodfortune5480 Рік тому +1

      I don't know about that & only because some of my favorite brutal MMA grapplers have the absolute worst egos I've ever seen & they're blackbelts. Like one guy he's a sizest, he thinks people can only be great at grappling if they're 6'4" and 300lbs. I've never seen it happen but he would probably go home & cry & have his libido lowered if he lost to say 115lbs female.

    • @jiujitsujackson9831
      @jiujitsujackson9831 Рік тому +3

      @@goodfortune5480 are these favorite MMA Grapplers your students or famous people? There are exceptions like young talented athletes who hardly had their ego challenged throughout their journey but everyone is confronted by their ego even at the elite level. How they react in a learning environment such as a gym with other lower belts watching is vital. We sound like we profoundly agree by the example you give. No one should mistake learning to losing to one of their “teammates”No matter how physically superior they are to their “teammates.”What encouraging advice would you give to a person whom you can envision experiencing an ego crisis that lead him into episodes of melancholy which could have an adverse effect on his training in your posted example of the 6’ 4 300Ibs guy?

    • @irsh2786
      @irsh2786 Рік тому +1

      Great!

  • @78logistics
    @78logistics Рік тому +142

    Been a white belt for 22 months now. I was coming off losing more than 100 lbs and at 150 lbs learning a new skill just shy of 62 years old.. Still at it..I turn 64 in July and am quite realistic when it comes to my skill level and potential. I have an 86 % cumulative disability from the VA here, about half that PTSD, and this journey is an important part of my maintenance and recovery. So if blue comes some day great, something new to work on. In the meantime showing up four days plus a week especially on days when I am not on top of my game is difficult. I get smashed a lot by people both a lot younger and heavier.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +17

      That is inspiring! Stay the course and enjoy the journey. Be safe and keep showing and growing my man. Thank you for sharing.

    • @yoruthetruth5854
      @yoruthetruth5854 Рік тому +7

      Hell yes brother. Loved reading this 💯💯💯🙌

    • @badgoat666
      @badgoat666 Рік тому +5

      Like a boss! Well done, not a lot of people have your determination 😊

    • @Triptoons
      @Triptoons Рік тому +4

      Dude! I know I don’t know you but I’m proud of and inspired by you
      God bless

    • @78logistics
      @78logistics 10 місяців тому +2

      ​@Krufessor_Rad still at it 3000 km from home dealing with two family illnesses back east. Being able to train most days as a visitor to a local gym is a blessing. Content to hang out as a white four stripe for a while yet.

  • @markb3451
    @markb3451 Рік тому +84

    I’ve been a brown belt for about a year and I would say white belt was by far the hardest belt. Knowing that you’re going to get destroyed every time you’re on the mats is brutal.

  • @CW-uw2cb
    @CW-uw2cb Рік тому +71

    White belt is hard as shit to get. Most will never set foot on the mat but think they know something

    • @cooperdeek7910
      @cooperdeek7910 Рік тому +4

      And they will be shit on by a trained opponent

    • @CW-uw2cb
      @CW-uw2cb Рік тому +2

      @@cooperdeek7910 as a 3 stripe white belt I agree with this

    • @theflamingone8729
      @theflamingone8729 Рік тому +4

      Getting started is possibly more difficult than continuing and progressing. That fear of the unknown and whatever prejudices one might have.
      I have alot of respect for beginners, in anything.

    • @GregArmyStrong
      @GregArmyStrong Рік тому

      @@CW-uw2cbas a 4 stripe white belt I agree too

  • @vrviking8930
    @vrviking8930 Рік тому +29

    Just got my blue belt tonight after 10 years.

  • @Texasbroski512
    @Texasbroski512 Рік тому +11

    Love the guys answer on not using all your strength on smaller people going technique for technique dude is dialed in

  • @Jiu-JitsuJourney257
    @Jiu-JitsuJourney257 Рік тому +38

    Just got my purple belt a couple of weeks ago. Blue belt had its moments.. but you have to keep pushing forward. Come in with a humble mindset, be open to criticism, challenge yourself, and never give up.

  • @bspi624
    @bspi624 Рік тому +21

    I'm brand new at this art 50. I been a martial artist for 30 years. Never n been in judo/jujitsu. This is awesome, scary, intense, and motivating all at once. It is so hard, so grueling... and so easy to quit, that's why I'll never let my mind beat me in the long term war. It did win some battles to be honest. Especially when being smashed.

  • @NoJesusNoBeast13
    @NoJesusNoBeast13 Рік тому +60

    Been a blue belt for a few years now. Gotta say, I love it. I know most people have a hard time at this stage. It is so far the most exciting! To constantly improve the foundation you were building since you first arrived. To start asking the right questions. To see your own errors and know what to work on. It helps having higher belts to roll and train with. Then to test against other blue belts your size. Its easy to compare yourself against the best in your gym. You should focus on comparing yourself to you and where you were a year ago.
    You will have incredible days on the mats. Other days, you will be defeated and discouraged. Those are the days I look forward to. Learning and failing is a beautiful thing when you are looking to grow.
    This was a great video btw. I love the community of BJJ.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +1

      Great summation and advice. Thank you for the comment 🙏🏽

    • @jackn.2388
      @jackn.2388 Рік тому +2

      So true and very well said! I am at the end my third year of blue belt and at 49 years old I have my good days and my bad. In terms of my body not healing like I want it to, lots of bad. I think I speak for many of us on here, we keep learning and keep grinding.

    • @NoJesusNoBeast13
      @NoJesusNoBeast13 Рік тому

      @Jack N. I can only imagine. I'm turning 30 this year, and it definitely doesn't get easier. I feel better stretching before and after class. It doesn't save my body from the pain, but it sure does make a difference. Keep showing up. One day, all the pieces will come together. You got to remind yourself, most people your age aren't doing what you are capable of.

  • @TheGunnyBadger03xx
    @TheGunnyBadger03xx Рік тому +35

    The purple belt was my hardest. The skill disparity among blue belts is HUGE! However, at purple belt you tend to have a polished game from most common positions and have learned how to chain techniques in combinations. Over the last 12 years it seems most people get a blue belt and say, "That's good enough."

    • @theflamingone8729
      @theflamingone8729 Рік тому +8

      Most blue belts can at least defend themselves against most people off the street (off the street), so they probably think they have an adequate self defence skill set for on the street.

    • @thefilmpoets
      @thefilmpoets Рік тому +5

      Yea as a new blue belt it was tough to accept that a 3-4 stripe blue was an ocean of skill ahead of me.

  • @TrickyyRicky
    @TrickyyRicky Рік тому +22

    Idk if I’m the minority but I feel as soon as I got blue I was about 10x more motivated to learn cause I feel like I had to prove myself

  • @norcalmack
    @norcalmack Рік тому +6

    The young girl who’s already planning to open up her own place is awesome. Made my day.

  • @andrewsintel
    @andrewsintel Рік тому +8

    Thanks for coming by our school Brandon and asking a few of our blue belts to come to this. See you on the mats.

  • @charlespalmer5014
    @charlespalmer5014 Рік тому +36

    The most important belt promotion I ever received, and I did not realize it at the time, was my white belt. We didn't have regular schools when I first started training. Started training in 1996, received my blue belt at a seminar in 2006, from Alexander Paiva. In 2019, Alexander Paiva and his entire family, relocated from Rio de Janeiro Brazil to where I live. I was blessed after 16 years, to receive my purple belt by his hands. His son Victor, had him, award me my Purple Belt in December, 16 years after he awarded me my Blue Belt. It has been a wonderful journey. Victor shared with me recently "you will become a black belt someday" I said back to him if I don't die first. He said no you will, because you never quit. I love Jiu Jitsu! Over the past 27 years I've discovered something really important. Learning to fight, is the most difficult, complex activity I have ever been involved with. There is so much information to learn! The more I learn, the more I'm left scratching my head, about how much I have left to learn.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +1

      Great truths in here sir, and a good journey. Thank you for sharing.

    • @levicieuxdubois
      @levicieuxdubois Рік тому +1

      It's not about getting promotions, although it helps for motivational purposes, but just loving jiu jitsu

    • @jaymoney485
      @jaymoney485 Рік тому +1

      Great read. Brings back the point of what's the belt really for, other than holding up your pants 😉. That's true dedication. It's a life study

  • @dustinbarrett3926
    @dustinbarrett3926 Рік тому +6

    I loved the authenticity and diversity in all the answers - everyone's journey is totally unique, which I think is just so cool. It's clear you all have an amazing community there! I would love to come train some day.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +2

      Thank you so much. If you're ever in Colorado look up Rad Muay Thai & Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Thank you again for the comment.

  • @ronlevy7288
    @ronlevy7288 Рік тому +13

    Blue belt is a very deep belt I notice. There are thinner lighter blue belts that made it to blue last week and there are blue belts that weigh 220 who wrestled in high school and college and who have been blue belts for 2.5 years and are around the corner from purple. So its a "Deep" rank in my opinion and you will be up against oponents who might have been around for years.

  • @muru7514
    @muru7514 Рік тому

    love this, thank you for sharing. 6 months in and loving it

  • @brandonskelton25
    @brandonskelton25 Рік тому +27

    What a wonderful video. Love for BJJ runs deep.

  • @Alebal76
    @Alebal76 Рік тому +15

    The very day I got my blue belt I got smashed by everyone, even a couple of white belts 😅

    • @brandonskelton25
      @brandonskelton25 Рік тому +4

      This is the most honest comment I've ever read. 😂

    • @jackdewipper187
      @jackdewipper187 4 місяці тому

      Yeah but a very competitive whitebelt that competes often can be better than a hobbyist blue belt. Belt only indicates the average years of training . It does not say much about someones skills.

  • @danilecashin4126
    @danilecashin4126 Рік тому +15

    Im about to get my black belt after 15 years of training and I would say the brown to black has been the hardest because im expecting more from myself, the best of myself every-time im on the mat. Excellent video 😊

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +1

      That's awesome! Way to stay the course. It's a whole new journey once you get your black belt. Keep enjoying the journey and thank you for the feedback.

    • @danilecashin4126
      @danilecashin4126 Рік тому +1

      Rt on man thank you 🙏

  • @Thecelestial1
    @Thecelestial1 Рік тому +5

    I love being a blue. White belts go insane, purple belts don’t hold back. Amazing trial by fire on both ends.

  • @BM-of6dg
    @BM-of6dg Рік тому +3

    I can resonate with so much here. Amazing, jits family. The passion is real, it’s something that I can say I’m addicted to, great addiction to have. OSS

  • @timothyotoole8224
    @timothyotoole8224 Рік тому +2

    I like all the different stories, thanks

  • @TheStarwolf01
    @TheStarwolf01 Рік тому +7

    Just got the 3rd stripe on my white belt yesterday and at 48 years of age it's been one of the highlights of my year so far. 1 year and 4 months into the journey and I just remind myself weekly that some days will be better than others on the mats, but regardless it's a slow, steady progression forward. Great insights from this video. This most recent stripe took me by surprise and I even questioned myself a little...like...do I really deserve this one right now? Reflecting on it though, opened my eyes to the difference of my overall presence in the academy now to how it was when I started and it made me smile. For me the best indicator that I'm on the right path in Jits is that I'm now one of those guys that everyone's down to roll with. Not the biggest guy in the academy but bigger, stronger and faster than most at 205 lbs. and 6'3 with an athletic build and background. Smaller guys, the women in the academy and some of the higher belts wouldn't look my way when it was time to roll before. Never hurt anyone when we started but I was definitely using muscle and explosiveness a hell of a lot more than technique. Now everyone's like...come on man...let's get at it. I can shift gears better in rolls than I used to which makes sparring all the more fun for both myself and my training partners. We can never take the next day for granted but hoping to continue down this road as long as my body will take me. Excited to get on the Blue Belt Highway by sometime 2024. Oss everyone.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +1

      so awesome! Congratulations and thank you for sharing. Enjoy the journey and stay the course.

  • @OURWORLD4EVER
    @OURWORLD4EVER Рік тому +7

    Well I'm still a White belt after almost 4 years 😆 had a major injury which had me out 1.5 years and stupid covid lockdowns for over a year. Fingers crossed I get my blue this year. Oss everyone

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +1

      Keep working and you’ll gain skills and then your rank. I had a similar situation with a lengthy lay off due to injury when I was a PB. thank you for sharing.

  • @concernstudent4884
    @concernstudent4884 Рік тому +2

    Great vid! just earn my blue belt yesterday...very excited and anxious at the same time...but the recommendations here are on point. Thank you!

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +1

      That's awesome! Congratulations! Thank you very much for the feedback as well.

  • @sriraagsridhar2011
    @sriraagsridhar2011 Рік тому

    Great Video, Loved it, thanks for sharing you guys !!
    Wish you all loads of growth and success 💪🤙

  • @DragoonSoulShot
    @DragoonSoulShot Рік тому +7

    Very good video. One thing I would add, blue belt teaches you how much you don't know. Not only the fundamentals but the small details which you miss, pass over or forget. As a 3rd dan blue belt, I have learned this is a life long journey and the only way to make it to black is to just keep swimming and to learn to suck less.

  • @DanT288
    @DanT288 Рік тому

    Just got back into it after a 4 year lay off im a purple belt this video is so motivating thank you and i wish you all the best in your journeys

  • @JerelMcCollum
    @JerelMcCollum Рік тому +2

    Awesome video! I gained a lot from it as a white belt for almost 2 years.

  • @batdorfvideo
    @batdorfvideo 8 місяців тому +3

    Everything gets tougher when you become a blue belt. You discover just how nice the upper belts were being to you all along, and you also have white belts absolutely frothing at the mouth to get you. Being a blue belt has taught me that my ego has been my greatest enemy all along, in Jiujitsu and in life. Sure I can choose to not show up, but showing up, losing, and showing up again is infinitely better than not showing up at all - in Jiujitsu and in life. I have great days, and I have awful days. On the awful days I learn the most. And I have learned to find victory in the simple fact that I keep showing up regardless.

  • @HalfGuardMedia
    @HalfGuardMedia Рік тому +5

    2 month old blue belt here and enjoying the journey even more. 🤙🏻

  • @cameronlevitt1895
    @cameronlevitt1895 Рік тому +5

    The following analogy sums up to difficulty in moving beyond blue belt.
    White belt: learn to stand and walk.
    Blue belt: learn to run and jump.
    Purple belt: learn to dance.
    The jump from white to blue is fairly simple and straightforward (although feels awkward at the time)
    The journey from blue to purple is far more difficult and requires an ingrained level of unconscious ability where the practice surpasses simple athletic movements, and starts to capture expression.

    • @tededo
      @tededo Рік тому

      Charming way to express the BJJ journey.

    • @tededo
      @tededo Рік тому

      According to Rickson Gracie the journey from white to blue is the hardest. From blue to black belt, just cummulate mat time. If students complain that the blue to black is the hardest, according to Rickson, something is wrong with their jiujitsu.

  • @philippedeclauzadedemazieu195
    @philippedeclauzadedemazieu195 4 місяці тому +1

    Got my blue belt in December. Had my christmas break and decided I would stop training. Out of nowhere, point blank, I decided I was sick of it. I am going back on the mats next monday and will never give up

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  4 місяці тому

      It can happen. Glad you’re getting back to it. Enjoy the journey!

  • @tristonharrison2264
    @tristonharrison2264 Рік тому +4

    Such an educational video

  • @danwong5432
    @danwong5432 Рік тому +6

    Bluebelt is the most confusing belt.. some things work, some things don’t.. u know just enough where higher belts don’t treat u like a white belt anymore..
    Lower belts feel like u left them & they come after u with a vengeance 😆
    Blackbelt is the hardest for me but also the most enjoyable..
    Most forget that the real journey begins at blackbelt.. at tournaments your competitors may have 30 years more experience than you..
    I’m over 60 with many injuries from stand up arts even before I began bjj..
    As the years pass , those purple belts that were pests 🤣, become more of a threat😂..
    The mental fortitude is tested so u must carry on .. this is the life I choose & I can’t imagine not doing it 💪💪

  • @aaliyahsweeney9571
    @aaliyahsweeney9571 Рік тому +2

    Winners never quit and winners never win and I choose to be a winner:

  • @davidjoaquim9915
    @davidjoaquim9915 6 місяців тому

    0:47 was a work of art replayed it like 10 times

  • @Owl-of-Minerva
    @Owl-of-Minerva Рік тому +4

    Time. Health. Money.
    You need these 3.
    If it were affirdable, the numbers would increase dramatically.

    • @DunceCapSyndrome
      @DunceCapSyndrome Рік тому +2

      1. One hour is all you need. Most people spend HOURS on Netflix and then complain that "They don't have the time"
      2. As long as you're physically capable, you can do BJJ. A literal blind man received his black belt some time ago.
      3. You don't need a giant lavish gym to do BJJ. You can look for small local Dojos from talented people just trying to get off the ground. Eat out less, spend less on fancy cloth, ETC.
      It's possible, most people just don't have the will.

    • @Owl-of-Minerva
      @Owl-of-Minerva Рік тому +2

      @DunceCapSyndrome thanks for the opinion. It doesn't change the reality that most of the people who are interested in jiujitsu can't afford it. Most of us live paycheck to paycheck, and we wish we could afford fancy clothes and have time for Netflix. I volunteer my time in my community and teach for free once a week, open to anyone.
      I've been around jiujitsu since 1996. I know what I am talking about. The main obstacles are:
      Time. Money. Health.
      Money is the biggest obstacle.
      Have a blessed day, and see you on the mats brotha.

    • @tededo
      @tededo Рік тому +1

      I have to disagree. YOu need an instructor who will take you under his wing and award you the belts. Cause there are ton of students who pay, have health and spend the bulk of their BJJ time, yet no steady instructor to deliver them their next belts.

  • @MotoBeemer
    @MotoBeemer Рік тому +3

    I put on brown belt a few weeks ago, 10 year journey. I've seen so many start and quit and white and blue, sometimes purple. Usually by purple folks stick around. Most white belts quit for a good reason, no time / family / job busy / injuries / I'll do it later / whatever. All start with great intentions, very few stick it out.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +2

      Congratulations on your brown belt! That's a great achievement. Keep on the path and enjoy the journey.

  • @tomastelensky-vlog8723
    @tomastelensky-vlog8723 Рік тому +5

    All the tough guys: "I struggled so much"
    Cute little girl: "I just have to wait till 16 to reach the minimum age"
    😅

  • @judosailor610
    @judosailor610 2 місяці тому

    I'm a relatively new blue belt. Very proud of it! And I recently ran into a black belt just out and about and we started talking BJJ. When I told him I was a "just" a blue belt, he stopped me and hit me with "blue belt is the hardest belt to achieve." It was really nice of him to say and I had a nice laugh looking at my wife (who was there at the time) with a "I told you it was a big deal" look! Haha. But all that said, it's not the hardest. Clearly black belt is the hardest to achieve. But it's still nice to have your hard work recognized! And that's what blue belt really is, to me.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  2 місяці тому +1

      That's awesome! Thank you for sharing and enjoy the journey. 🙏

  • @ricochete5875
    @ricochete5875 Рік тому

    Great content!

  • @squillytimmons4179
    @squillytimmons4179 Рік тому +2

    Should've interviewed Tristen 😂...jk, sick video from the Kracken bois

  • @nicks1169
    @nicks1169 Рік тому +22

    Nice vid. 3 months into my journey while going 5 times a week. Still feel like as bad as day 1 but I’ve picked up some things according to my body type. First comp in 2 months

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +3

      That’s awesome! Good luck on your competition 🙏🏽

    • @nicks1169
      @nicks1169 Рік тому +1

      @@Krufessor_Rad thanks brother

    • @Hustle9292
      @Hustle9292 Рік тому

      How did you do at the comp?

    • @nicks1169
      @nicks1169 Рік тому +1

      @@Hustle9292 hey, Gold in Gi and Silver in no gi. Lost in overtime for the gold medal no gi match due to me knowing zero takedowns lol. Live and learn

  • @alfiesolomon3531
    @alfiesolomon3531 Рік тому +9

    Blue belt here, i gotta say there are many things that makes the path towards this belt hard, many aspects lead to a lot of confusion because :
    1- It's a complex art, you understand nothing as a newbie nor it is intuitive (by that i mean, the idea of what JJ is in your head is still blurry and will change over time the more you practice). You have to teach your body how to move effectively and you have to touch at many aspect of the sport at the same time, which is overwhelming : defense, attack, passing, guard, control, aspects of biomechanics, action/reaction as a first tool of tactical approach, etc....
    2- The curriculum puts often a lot more emphasis on offense than on defense, which is pointless in a way and leaves room to improvement in that area. It's conducive to more confusion (maybe for profit?) and hurts your self esteem on the mat. Overtime, for that reason only, you may fall into one of those 2 categories : the quitter or the perseverant. If you quit, you will never know what were the mistakes you made that would have improved your journey, kept you on the mat. It's not entirely your fault, this curriculum has been designed this way since the beginning and by tradition it's perpetuated. it "weeds out the weak" even it was designed for the weak!
    What's the point of learning an armbar and drilling it like a maniac if you spend most of the time getting wrecked by any one who has at least a stripe above you? And most of the time you don't drill it enough...
    You should work on your defense, it will teach you why an attack works, why a pass works, why a guard works. Indirectly you learn offense as well as all the other aspects of the game. And once you are good at that and successfully apply it, offense will be offered to you on a platter.
    But you have to stick to it long enough until that "aha" moment comes.
    Just like chess, i can show you all the openings and tactics in the world you will do nothing of it if you don't play enough. You will mindlessly apply this move and that tactic like a dummy. You will fail but overtime the brain makes magic and things start to makes sense. Everything synthetizes in your head for some reason and all of a sudden see the big picture. At least that's how it was for me.
    Unlike the frustration of losing a chess match, JJ will humiliate you mentally, physically...plus you will train with your share of bullies at your gym. One mantra that kept me going was "no one cares, work harder" and as cold as that may sound, it clearly improved my journey. I'm on the path to purple, and trust me it's waaaaaaay more fun now! GO TRAIN!

  • @stevebetancourt7485
    @stevebetancourt7485 Рік тому

    Great video

  • @MyFinanceFriends
    @MyFinanceFriends 4 місяці тому

    That kid at 3:40 has it spot on. I as a BJJ blackbelt still learn things from white belts, we don't know it all and I certainly don't shy away from learning from other people regardless of their rank. You can learn from anybody!

  • @marcusweaver9728
    @marcusweaver9728 Рік тому +4

    12 years of training, 1st degree black. Hardest belt was purple

  • @bogadenu
    @bogadenu Рік тому +11

    4 striped white belt, i was a top 5 state wrestler in high school, went to college for a year to wrestle then dropped out.. i got all 4 stripes in a year.. i never asked how or why.. but.. yeah, i feel blue belt for me is coming here shortly.

    • @deenofmean8784
      @deenofmean8784 Рік тому +5

      Slow down buddy... Ur gonna miss the point.

    • @camonly849
      @camonly849 Рік тому +1

      Your wrestling is what got you to 4 stripe so quick. It's very common. Once you hit blue it will take a lot longer.

    • @bogadenu
      @bogadenu Рік тому

      @@deenofmean8784 i was saying i wish i didn’t get promoted quickly😂

    • @bogadenu
      @bogadenu Рік тому

      @@camonly849 i didn’t want it that way😂😂

    • @camonly849
      @camonly849 Рік тому

      @@bogadenu haha well now it will take longer lol

  • @ropongi1008
    @ropongi1008 Рік тому

    Great content

  • @theapeman1230
    @theapeman1230 Рік тому +1

    Nice video ❤❤❤

  • @ScaredycatG
    @ScaredycatG Рік тому +6

    Thanks for this motivating video I really enjoyed it. My BJJ journey has been short and very hard...I tore my lateral collateral ligament in my left knee after three months of training BJJ (still a white belt) and have had six months off, including from K1 kickboxing, which sucks. But, I’m writing this on a Tuesday evening and on Friday, I plan on going back to BJJ for my first class after injury...it’s going to feel like starting all over again. Cant wait 🤙

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +1

      so sorry that happened, but I'm so happy you will continue with your training. Keep going my friend. Thank you for the feedback.

    • @ScaredycatG
      @ScaredycatG Рік тому

      @@Krufessor_Rad Thanks! I actually went back yesterday - got dumped on my head after about 30 minutes in. Welcome back 😆 Loved it!

    • @xijinchan
      @xijinchan 7 місяців тому +1

      @@ScaredycatGdamn, sorry to hear & hope it’s healed up by now (How is it after another 7 months now?) & any tips for a fellow white belt on avoiding these bad injuries?

    • @ScaredycatG
      @ScaredycatG 7 місяців тому +1

      @@xijinchan Don’t do jujitsu…best advice for remaining injury free, haha! The knee is fully healed but I’ve been concentrating on my Kickboxing as I have competition in November. Then I’ll go back to BJJ! Good luck with your training 👍

  • @Papadarce
    @Papadarce Рік тому +4

    If they asked me what I would say to white belts would be “break grips and get passed the legs” 😂😂

  • @JordanSheppard-fi4po
    @JordanSheppard-fi4po 8 місяців тому

    The one chick said it perfectly, it’s like a new language.

  • @flopiet4783
    @flopiet4783 8 місяців тому

    nice motivation video

  • @seamac7564
    @seamac7564 Рік тому +1

    I'm 54, started in 2017. I'm a 4 stripe blue belt, but the past year and a half, shoulder injury and surgery have kept me from class. Going back in June, hoping the professor would recognize my tenacity and belt up...I will let you know.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому

      the injuries can really take chunks out of your mat time, but stay the course. Keep it doing and thank you for the comment.

  • @billthebard805
    @billthebard805 Рік тому +5

    Getting my blue belt really wasn’t difficult looking back at it, but actually being a blue belt is a like having a constant bullseye on your back.

  • @TheEasygone
    @TheEasygone 8 місяців тому +1

    it was nice see fellow slovak guy in the video

  • @xamil
    @xamil Рік тому +1

    When i was a blue belt i would kill to NOT quit bjj. When i got tapped by other blue or purple belts with good technique, i asked them to show me how they did it.

  • @goyneser1
    @goyneser1 3 місяці тому

    Inspiring

  • @devriestown
    @devriestown Рік тому +2

    Definitely need to train take downs to be a good blue belt.
    I guess blue belt i started to have my own game top and bottom but i all ways train to be a complete grappler.
    I do personals just to learn the heel hook game but there is so much to work on .

  • @marthzalsahvideos6673
    @marthzalsahvideos6673 Рік тому +2

    I've been a white belt for two years. Had my first tournament Last week. Won my class and the open class. However, I didn't feel like a winner. So many misstakes and so many flaws. Therefor I'm fine beeing a white belt for a few more years. Getting blue belt is more out of my reach, then my brown traditional jujutsu belt.

  • @projectstoicism
    @projectstoicism Рік тому +4

    I got my blue belt two months ago and I really feel in a rut rn. Feel like it's a mental thing, but also there's more responsibility on my shoulders. The answer is to just keep coming regularly.

    • @simlittle89
      @simlittle89 Рік тому +1

      From the 4 stripe brownbelt and someone who really struggled with this when i started No there isn’t….. the only added responsibility on your shoulders is what you place there. Get tapped out by white belts, who cares, we learn by working on what we are bad at, sometimes this means we “lose” but the ones who really lose are the ones who spend every practice fighting and never work on their weaknesses and allow their ego to guide their training. Let go of that mentality… and enjoy the marathon oss

    • @projectstoicism
      @projectstoicism Рік тому

      @@simlittle89 osssu

    • @johnhaworth7034
      @johnhaworth7034 Рік тому +1

      It's not for nothing that blue belts suffer from 'blue belt blues' where you simply feel like you aren't progressing. You are! You just can't see the forest for the trees as they say.

    • @projectstoicism
      @projectstoicism Рік тому

      @@johnhaworth7034 Bro I just broke out of them today after a month of feeling like shit.. Now I feel unstoppable again, I had a great roll this morning. Unstoppable as in I took the pressure off. I rolled with some dudes and wasn't mad at myself that the white belts weren't all tapping to me. Just was sweeping and getting swept and enjoyed it

  • @sombojoe
    @sombojoe 7 місяців тому +1

    I was a judo brown belt when I started BJJ in Philly in the mid 90s. After about a month of BJJ a tournament was held at the club, and the instructor threw a blue belt to me the day before. I’m like “Oh gee … thanks.” Haha

  • @totalnike03
    @totalnike03 Рік тому +1

    Cant wait to start my BJJ journey. Was doing no gi for a couple weeks then injury hit. Torn my meniscus. Hopefully soon will be back to start gi training

  • @mexicanpanda510
    @mexicanpanda510 Рік тому

    As white belt 3 months in after some frustrating sessions and some good sessions the only thing I tell myself the only option is too keep going

  • @noobjitsu
    @noobjitsu Рік тому +1

    As a total noob, fully determined to not be part of that 90%. Really helpful video by the way. Keep up the great work.

  • @XxXXxxXXxx78
    @XxXXxxXXxx78 9 місяців тому +1

    I got to blue but my school closed during kovid and the next nearest is 70 miles away. Tough to do as a single dad. Total bummer

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  9 місяців тому

      Oh man, I’m sorry. That really sucks. I hope a new school opens in your area soon.

  • @DoggosAndJiuJitsu
    @DoggosAndJiuJitsu Рік тому +2

    I mean, blue belt is how you go from white (no game) to purple (refining a game you didn't have).

  • @emanl84
    @emanl84 Рік тому +2

    for 99% of the world, surviving the white belt is already a huge accomplishment. And then you start with Jiu-Jitsu

  • @retrovcr777
    @retrovcr777 Рік тому +1

    If you have the mindset to make it black belt from the beginning when you first sign up for training in your bjj career, you will easily make it to blue belt, and from there just keep showing up, ready to learn. You will make it to black even if it may take longer than usual if you don’t give up.

  • @Jiu-Jitsu-Robot
    @Jiu-Jitsu-Robot 8 місяців тому +1

    Find the most mellow
    Easy going purple belt who will work with you as his project and help to make you better and also to protect you in a manner of speaking.

  • @qix1t
    @qix1t Рік тому +2

    Ugh I’ve been at white belt for 18 months, and a new baby obviously saw me training less. Got back into it, now have sciatica! Sometimes life just gets in the way - outside the gym, it’s more of a luck thing compared to others who don’t have to deal with extra life stuff!

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +3

      keep going my man. I had to take a year away when I went blind. Just recently I dislocated a rib while rolling and now I can't roll for 4 weeks. This is the life, but we must always find our way back to the mats.

    • @gerardmichael8523
      @gerardmichael8523 Рік тому

      I just started 3 months ago. I'm 46. I was just getting into it and bruised my ribs bad. No training for a month

  • @EastSideNYC
    @EastSideNYC Рік тому +1

    Me training at a strictly comp school. it took me 3 and a half years to get my blue belt.
    even with 2 a day training, competing etc. My coach wanted us to be the literal best we can before promoting

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому

      That's good my man. I can respect that for sure.

  • @viksaba5890
    @viksaba5890 Рік тому

    Cool video

  • @JiuJitsuM4
    @JiuJitsuM4 5 місяців тому +1

    Purple belt is the hardest in competition. At least it was for me.

  • @wolv.8923
    @wolv.8923 Рік тому

    Is her Panda Gi the Inverted Gear Bamboo Panda - Grey?
    It looks closer to green, but I'm unsure where to find that colour

  • @808BJJ_Black_Belt
    @808BJJ_Black_Belt Рік тому +1

    Blue is tough because you have expectations, target 🎯 on your back, and tapping to white belts are difficult. Although it’s a beginner level blue is added pressure some people can’t handle when they take long breaks from training losing when they return is devastating for some so they quit. Blue belt is hard but if you focus on being consistent and don’t rush to the next level enjoy your journey because purple is even more difficult x 10!

  • @philosopher2king
    @philosopher2king 9 місяців тому

    3:14 exactly that! Good days and bad days, keep showing up. One of my coaches compares it to the blocks in super Mario brothers that’d give you coins every time you hit them. He says that’s what happens every time you show up for class. It ain’t easy, and it is not meant to be. but don’t you love it?! OSS!

  • @BORE-d
    @BORE-d Рік тому +3

    Blue belt is where your ego goes to die.

  • @coach_DMITRII2022
    @coach_DMITRII2022 Рік тому +1

    Enjoy the process and your belts will not go anywhere. The main thing is to learn to understand how jiu-jitsu changes life. And if your life does not change in the course of classes, you need to change the approach to studying jiu-jitsu. The meaning of the path is in the path, not in the final goal.🤙😉

  • @Asoka-eb8ru
    @Asoka-eb8ru 3 місяці тому +1

    I just joined BJJ two weeks ago at age of 54, I don't ever expect to get to black belt since it takes 10 yrs.+ to get it which means I will be 64 but I am fine with that, because to me belts don't mean anything anyways. Belts are basically there to hold your pants up. LOL.

  • @sharptechnique7883
    @sharptechnique7883 11 місяців тому +1

    More than it being hard it’s expensive and I’ve experienced having to take a step back from jujitsu because of the price. I’m not complaining it’s the best martial art in the world and I understand the pricing.

  • @alexkehoepwj
    @alexkehoepwj 10 місяців тому +1

    I've been training for around 4 years, and I very regularly submit my gyms blue belts. Im also a lot smaller than the blue belts, so its frustrating to be at white belt for so long. I know the belts shouldn't matter, but it's just a bummer

  • @stop....hammertime
    @stop....hammertime Рік тому +2

    Over 90 percent don't make it to blue? That's so wild to me. I've done Muay Thai off and on since 04 ( just a hobbyist ), and I'm doing kickboxing now, but this makes me want to join the rolling crew at the gym I'm at. What a challenge. I seriously am going to think about it for the rest of the weekend. Glad I noticed and watched this vid. Thank you☺️

    • @bluelightmoon777
      @bluelightmoon777 Рік тому +1

      Ive done muay thai aswell and now do wrestling + jiu jitsu. I dont regret it its a lot of fun

    • @stop....hammertime
      @stop....hammertime Рік тому +1

      @@bluelightmoon777 I started rolling, brother. My left ear is already changing 😂

    • @bluelightmoon777
      @bluelightmoon777 Рік тому +1

      @@stop....hammertime i dont know why but my ears are not getting damaged 😂 🤷‍♂️

    • @stop....hammertime
      @stop....hammertime Рік тому +1

      @@bluelightmoon777 🤣 I'm one of the lucky I guess, huh? I've been told that it happens to some, and some others it never happens to

  • @shingitai5882
    @shingitai5882 Рік тому +4

    I don’t practice Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, but it sounds to me that they put to much emphasis on grades and that it discourages people from training because they don’t feel they are progressing as quickly as they hoped. I wouldn’t be surprised that in the future that the grading system will actually affect the number of practitioners practicing and a lot of dojo’s will eventually close or diminish dramatically in size as the fad of popularity fades.

    • @neonbelly9491
      @neonbelly9491 Рік тому +1

      So you don't practice bjj but you think you know how it works business wise? lol.

    • @shingitai5882
      @shingitai5882 Рік тому +2

      @@neonbelly9491 I don’t run a shop either but it doesn’t take a genius to work out that if people stop coming into a shop they are selling the wrong product. If you make something seem impossible to achieve people will give up it’s human nature.
      The myth of the invincibility of a black belt in the west has been a problem ever since Sensei Kano (founder of Judo) started the grading system and BJJ teachers seem to love this myth. It seems that BJJ teachers are exploiting practitioners by holding them back by dangling the carrot, the “black belt” hoping they will stay longer, as they know that when people achieve shodan there is a large dropout rate.
      I personally think it’s a shame that so many Dojo’s have taken the American commercial ideals on, it means the motive has more to do with money and nothing about doing it for the passion.

  • @Asoka-eb8ru
    @Asoka-eb8ru 3 місяці тому

    I train BJJ 4x a week and work out at the gym weightlifting 3x a week. I doubt I will ever compete, I have done my share of Muay thai and MMA fights already I just want to keep fit and continue to learn new techniques.

  • @jet872
    @jet872 6 місяців тому +1

    Bro evil
    Lol. Holding an interview between rolls 😂

  • @drewnielson6472
    @drewnielson6472 Рік тому +1

    I left bjj after haveing finance issues and some health problems now am 28 I started at about 22 so I need to really give a true go now .

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому

      I'm excited for you to get back into it. Enjoy the journey.

  • @cassius969
    @cassius969 2 місяці тому

    Probably because a lot of people decide they don't or can not keep doing this 3 to 5 times a week

  • @camonly849
    @camonly849 Рік тому +6

    As a white belt.....its very difficult to consistently go and never submit anyone, day after day after day. Feeling like you're making no progress.
    What you have to realize, and what I've realized is that every single day you go through the suckyness, is one day closer to being the one submitting everyone. If you consistently go you are building your cardio, you are committed to your health, you are building those nural pathways in your brain to recognize what's going on.
    Even after a year of getting smashed, roll with anyone on the street and 98% of the time you'll smash them. It's easy to lose perspective on how good you are actually getting. Don't quit and you'll be better for it.

  • @FR-ty5vn
    @FR-ty5vn Рік тому +3

    Nice 👍🏼 video - I was at blue for almost 5 years - very important time of development - lots of ups, downs, and plateaus - whether you see it or not, if you’re going consistently and trying you are improving…!!!

  • @levicieuxdubois
    @levicieuxdubois Рік тому

    Great motivational videos for us white belt, i've started 6 months ago and already hooked. I blame myself for knowing the art way before but not gotten the interest.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому

      Thank you for the feedback and I’m glad you started. 🙏🏽

  • @GregArmyStrong
    @GregArmyStrong Рік тому +1

    It’s pretty crazy but true been a white belt for 3.6 years and counting

  • @annahanson9733
    @annahanson9733 Рік тому +4

    I started only two months ago and I'm really loving the practice of this sport. However I'm massively struggling with the class environment emotionally. I'm 37 years old and feel stupid and constantly humiliated. Most of the class are much younger people with higher belts who just seem irritated that I'm there . I can't tell if I'm learning or improving because I'm not getting much feedback. Should I just leave and try somewhere else, or just suck it up?

    • @atlasbeetle8717
      @atlasbeetle8717 Рік тому

      if the class environment is bad then leave theres no point in going, find a gym with a good community.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +2

      We must be careful how we shape things around us. Is a lack of social interaction being construed as dislike and so on. Is a newbie mindset, being viewed as irritation from higher ranks, or could you open your mind more to the complexity of it all and focus on learning at the speed you are able to learn it. I tell my students all the time be careful how to frame things. ensure you are looking at everything openly and it you're still not sure then communication is key. Ask you professor for his feedback. if he's a good instructor he will provide some sort guidance to you. If he doesn't. You have your answer. Time to move on.
      Now, if you're right on all fronts and this environment is truly this toxic and clicky then it may be time to search for an academy and professor that better suites your needs. Nothing wrong with that at all. We need to be sure we set ourselves up for success in whatever ways we can.
      I hope all that makes sense and thank you for the question.

    • @BenWeeks-ca
      @BenWeeks-ca 8 місяців тому

      When you start going there's a huge gap as you don't know how to defend in most positions, or how to attack. For me, my cardio is so bad I gas out really quickly well before sparring time is done. But I think keeping at it and trying to pace yourself to gradually build cardio / gastank. As well as to learn more about each position all helps. Even muscle memory on a few things takes awhile to build. If you have a big class instructors may not be able to check in and comment. So finding a smaller class time then could help that. I'm lucky to go during the day and find the smaller class sizes are helpful. Early on I got some private lessons which helped a lot too as it's totally at your pace and any confusion is resolved right away. Often talking with people after rolling I'd realize that when I felt pressured and thought my defence was doing nothing, my partner's view was that they were pressured by me and perceived a strong defence. So the idea of ego and shame, it's healthy to realize one's actual low ability level so it can be improved. If one is over inflated in their sense of capability it can create more risks in a bad situation. Good luck.

  • @woleadu2571
    @woleadu2571 Рік тому +1

    Yeah, I have 99 problems but ego ain't one lol. When I step on the mat, I have zero ego, I could care less who slams me or submits me. I am just there to learn and pick something from every single person I roll with while also giving them enough of a challenge so they gain something from rolling with me and want to roll with me again in the future. Only person I compete against is myself from a week ago, a month ago etc...Got my 2nd white belt stripe yesterday...man my body is sore all over.

    • @Krufessor_Rad
      @Krufessor_Rad  Рік тому +2

      I love where your head is at. Enjoy the journey.

    • @woleadu2571
      @woleadu2571 Рік тому +1

      @@Krufessor_Rad Thanks!

  • @dougreviewstheuniverse9082
    @dougreviewstheuniverse9082 Рік тому

    "Take your focus off of the belts and put your focus on enjoying the process " DBC