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La Quinta Jiu Jitsu
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 8 ก.พ. 2017
How Jiu-Jitsu Supports Veterans in Civilian Life
Discover a place where challenges transform into growth-Six Blades Jiu-Jitsu isn't just about martial arts; it's about building resilience, strength, and confidence, together. Here, every class is more than just training; it's a step towards personal excellence. Join us to see how Jiu-Jitsu can be your cornerstone for mental and physical health, especially for veterans seeking a supportive community.
Ready to start your journey?
Join our family and experience the change. 🥋💪
Ready to start your journey?
Join our family and experience the change. 🥋💪
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Very nice straightforward video, nothing more to say.
Thank you!
martial artist these days are so toxic and narcissistic.. we need to bring back discipline character wise
Fully agree. Thanks for your comment!
This approach is disappearing in our art. Too many schools teach Jiu Jitsu as purely a physical endeavor. I'm very happy to hear this kind of talk in our community once again.
100 percent, do you also train somewhere?
@@chrishargett8958 I have my own place. I got my black belt in 2012 from Professor's Tim Cartmell and Mike Lindmeier.
Suuuucha great point! This should be lesson 1 for every white belt.
Glad you liked it!
Great and simple point. Thanks!
Of course, thank you
I’m at like 250 classes and a 3 stripe white 👀
Then your coach is different or your s*it
This is why people need to rein at other schools and schools need to visit each other to roll occasionally. If a white belt is competing with and sometimes tapping blue belts it’s time for them to be given a blue belt. If a blue belt consistently has trouble with or gets tapped by lower belts or fresh blue belts then talk them about staying there for a while or dropping rank. The only real way to see what belt someone should be is either you are a high level black belt whom can tell by watching someone - or you see them compete with a certain belt level well and others not so well.
Thing is though, in this example, if white belts are tapping blues, does that mean the whites are good and need to be promoted, or does it mean the blues are bad and need to be held back longer? There needs to be some objective measurable standard like mastery over a particular set of techniques, positions, combos etc
@@cadklsThat’s why I find belts and colors to be arbitrary. It’s not as if belts magically enhance one’s abilities.
@@letshuman8985 I wouldn't say they're entirely arbitrary, they represent mastery over part of a martial art, and can denote skill if done correctly, i.e not handing out belts like TKD does every 18 seconds but also not handing them out based on subjective performance against other belts.
@@cadkls you ask a very open ended questions. There are too many unknown variables to answer correctly. What I said remains true; if you’re high level you c na literally see if someone needs to be given a higher ranking or not. However I am of the mind no one needs anything especially a rank to tell them what they already know lol
I was a wrestler, learned submission wrestling, Catch wrestling, and had a blackbelt in Hakkoryu Japanese JiuJitsu. I was given my bluebelt after showing up for classes for about a month and being the wrestler/rolling dummy for most of the students. I either could not get tapped out or would dominate everyone up to most of the competitor purple belts and some browns defensively. I then competed in a few NAGA and Grapp Quest events as Intermediate and won a gold and two bronzes. I went to a few schools typically a few weeks more or less the truth is I hated the gi. Then I strictly trained MMA and fought in a few amateur MMA fights. I then began teaching MMA and submission and amateur wrestling. After about 7yrs I walked into a school trained there for a few months and was given a purple belt and taught no gi. I moved to another state and went to another school and after 6mos or so I was told I needed to work a few months of gi chokes and gi techniques and I was offered a blackbelt (skipping brown). He also discussed, for me to be an affiliate back in my home state. THAT is when I realized something important and lost interest in BJJ completely. It shouldn't matter if someone is good in competition or rolling they shouldn't be given a belt. I was given belts that way and honestly I felt like a fraud. I had maybe only 1 year of actual training in a gi. How could I teach people as a blackbelt? I have seen over the years this trend more and more. People being guven belts due to being a star grappler or fighter. But to me a blackbelt needs to be justvas much a book of knowledge and have the ability to teach a technique flawlessly. Belt chasing is wrong and so is belt gifting. I realize at 52yrs old I missed out on the entire BJJ journey. I've never had a single stripe put on, grew better with classmates, or had an instructor to build tge student/teacher relationship with. I walked away from training 20yrs ago and I never accepted anything higher than my old faded purple belt. Thats where I feel in my heart thats what I deserve to wear technically.
Mcdojo
Celebrating our students progress is our favorite thing, what do you like to celebrate?
Are there any situations in which this is a bad idea? I.e. when rolling into it will give your partner the submission/snap a bone.
It’s a generality and usually best performed early on with submissions that have a rotational component. Submissions that are finished in more of a linear nature (armbar, straight ankle lock) it can be hard to “go with it” as a defense. In training, when unsure, the safest bet is to tap and review the position to be certain you are applying the correct escape.
Thank you.
of course
Idk about that, the obvious combat application would be any weapon or kick/stomp would nullify this stance entirely. Promoting it because UFC and sporting events use it is ok but in a practical sense it's so incredibly vulnerable.
I was just distracted by that beautiful girl this whole time
Whichever samurai invented this was the younger sibling 100%
😂😂😂
💯 😂
Its the illegal move when siblings fight eachothet
😂😂😂👏 exactly
If u need to defence ur self then after u make them lose grip u can hold their nech and give a knee kick to the stomach . Good tricks 👍
That’s one way for sure. We definitely air on the side of de-escalation. Thanks for sharing.
@@laquintajiujitsuwow u actually replyed and thank you for taking my idea , I'm national 1st rank in karate in India
We do our best. That’s great to hear, keep up the great work!
@@laquintajiujitsu u guys got insta?
Bruce Lee mindset, JKD forever tho 💪💯
Love it!
Man more than man, no matter how big you are, how skill, how strong, there will always be someone bigger, stronger and even skiller, so don't be over confident.
Sounds like you are a true martial artist, thanks for sharing!
“Strength in numbers” …tell that to 6 million Jews
Jui jitsu is for men that like to hug each other all the time.
Sound like you might need a hug?
@laquintajiujitsu are you offering all you have to do is say the word and I'll catch the bus to your house. We'll I'm waiting.
Judo it is only the beginning such true words
yes! the journey is the best part
Now do what it doesn't teach you.
Can you cite any other educational organizations that teach “what they don’t teach you” for reference please, thank you.
@@laquintajiujitsu I just mean that for the last 25 years everything I've heard about Jiu-Jitsu sounds like an advertisement. I've a lot of respect for Jiu-Jitsu, but it isn't complete, as things go.
Wow, it sounds like you’ve been following it for some time…. Why do you think it’s not complete? Are you referring to situations outside of 1v1 or when weapons are involved?
@@laquintajiujitsu I didn't mean to mess up the comments section of what was essentially a promotional video, I was just killing time and leaving random comments for fun. But since you asked: BJJ doesn't emphasize striking, obviously, and the standing grappling element is weak compared to several other systems. There's no real footwork like you would get in boxing, kickboxing or fencing, and as far as a complete grappling system appropriate for the cage goes I consider catch wrestling to be superior, always have, and this is because of the strategy BJJ takes towards fighting more than anything else. It's entirely missing the stuff that internal martial arts teach, such as the forms, the philosophy and the internal practices such as Qigong, and the mindset of BJJ practitioners generally creates a block to learning such things. (I realize that stuff isn't accepted as useful by everyone, but some people know better.). As a system of pure self defense I think it is missing many, many aspects, too many to briefly summarize, and as you mentioned, nothing about weapons. There are many ways to participate in martial arts, but for most of human history a "real fight" meant using weapons and I think to be a well rounded martial artist you need to competently handle weapons, which always, always involves training in footwork. No system is fully complete and I recommend martial artists learn multiple styles to balance out skills as well as perspectives. Even if you were to stick exclusively to South American styles, additionally studying Capoeira and machete fighting will certainly be more complete than BJJ alone. My issue is that BJJ guys often represent their system as more comprehensive than it is. Partially I think that this is because of the extraordinary success of MMA, which I love, but have always found to be somehow lacking, and all you would have to do is change the rule system to make BJJ nearly irrelevant, meaning much of BJJ s success is due to tournaments being the way they are and marketing. All that being said, I agree with much of what you said are advantages of Jiu-Jitsu in the video, though much of that applies to every competitive sport.
Not at all. We’re happy to provide a platform for discussion about something we are all passionate about. You raise some great points that are in line with Bruce Lee’s philosophy in regard to footwork for example or that no martial art is truly complete. Every art has strengths and weaknesses and you can go down the rabbit hole of why something wouldn’t work, which is very context dependent. I also agree that the sport of BJJ has little to do with self defense, however, what Kano intended (although it also led to the creation of a sport) encompasses the philosophical whole of how martial arts or bushido should benefit a society. There are also some practicality obstacles to overcome in terms of how much of people’s lives they will dedicate towards learning things like knife fighting etc. In terms of getting people active and giving them a baseline , in a relatively gentle way, of where their ability to defend themselves is, so they can continue on the path of self development, BJJ fares well in this regard. Thanks for your thought provoking comments.
90% of those 90% of fights that end on the ground ended on the ground coz someone got knocked tf out good luck tryna cuddle someone to death when you’re knocked out because you never bothered to train a useful martial art
Interesting statistic, would you be so kind as to provide some examples of “useful martial arts” so our audience can be more informed? Also, maybe you’ve already seen this but I recommend watching UFC 1. Cheers.
Can be a good self defense for take downs, but not to be down. Most people feel overconfident because of the entourage around them. At that point you definitely are at a disadvantage on the ground
Are you saying that against multiple opponents it is a disadvantage to be on the ground? Because that is definitely true, regardless of your martial arts training, engaging with multiple opponents is a very risky proposition altogether when you factor in size, skill and strength differences. A good martial artist will understand how to minimize risk and damage to self altogether. There is no unstoppable form, and with each person added to the conflict, more unpredictability. What Jiu Jitsu can offer, is a level of fitness in a grappling context that most people don’t have which will give them the upper hand in a clinch/ground setting in a 1v1 setting.
In a street fight 90% end up on the ground because one guy got laid out. You aren’t going to be choking anyone out at that point.
Jack it sounds like you have a lot of experience. So you probably know the amount of “clean shots” landed in an actual street fight are very few and result in both people (assuming it’s 1v1) tumbling to the ground where one person (usually the more trained person) has the opportunity to get on top and control the other. I do agree though, it is IMPOSSIBLE to choke someone out when you are unconscious, this is true.
I would love to do jiu-jitsu private lessons since im quite introverted, but i live in the middle of nowhere and the only places that teach it, i dont trust them
That can be a great start, what city are you located in?
In our jujitsu white belts suck
Sorry, what was that?
gotta be the second most fun sport in the universe
whats the first?
Klaus Schwab, hearing this guy imply that eating bugs isn't a good thing: "You vill own nothing, but YOU will not ve happy."
How did you get that from "eating bugs isn't a good thing" ?
@@laquintajiujitsu Implying that eating bugs isn't a good thing -> "Eat ze bugs" -> "...you own nothing, and you've never been happier" -> You dared challenge the prediction of the WEF -> Subversion of prediction -> "You vill own nothing, but YOU will not ve happy."
Integrity
absolutely!
You can talk about it or you can demo it and instill it. A good practice would make the kids stand in horse stance or some other kind of stance for a significant amount of time
not sure if thats a good way to instill it
Your a groomer
'promosm' 😅