Play-Based Warm Up

Play-based goodness.

Often times our training is too medicinal, too sterile, not fun enough. Not engaging enough. We take people through dry preplanned warm-ups and movement prep and hope they engage.

We forget that they are human. We are training humans that are searching for meaning and expression. We are working with humans that are looking for community and communication.

Partner work/play is the ideal situation to create and encourage adaptations and dexterity.

The sample below is super simple to implement. All you need is a yoga block and two willing players.

And although some coaches try to coach their student/athletes to perform bear crawls “correctly”. I would encourage you to allow your student/athletes solve this little movement riddle themselves using a task-based approach as opposed to a shape-based approach.

Enjoy.

If you’d like to experience this approach in person please check out our Play Craft | Physical Creative Live Workshops.

How to Free Your Creative Spirit

kentposter_wall.jpg

A friend of mine created a beautiful poster size print of Corita Kent’s 10 Rules for Artists. Although these rules were originally written for her art students, you could easily apply and embrace these rules for your own movement or martial art practice and life in general. You can check out her work here:

Three Daughters Studio

Below is the link to check our Corita Kent’s books on Amazon. If you choose to purchse via that link I may earn 11 cents. Gracias and merci.

Learning by Heart- Teachings to Free your Creative Spirit.

Greasing the Groove

Are you looking to improve a general strength training exercise? Maybe pull-ups or push-ups? Maybe something a bit more technical?

I’ve got the perfect solution for you.

Just a quick personal example.

This sweet little method helped me go from 6-8 pull-ups to 21 clean reps in 3 months. It helped my oldest son achieve a personal pull-up record of 23. And I’ve been using this method successfully for over 20 years with students and athletes to get them stronger, add some lean muscle mass and build confidence in their physical skills.

This method goes by three different names:

  • Post-synaptic facilitation or just synaptic facilitation. (Geek)

  • Grease the Groove or GTG for short. (Pavelite.)

  • Practice (most folks.)

In order for this method to work best you need these three elements to be present:

Turkish Get-Up (1).png

Basically, you pick a skill/exercise that you’d like to improve and you perform low rep sets of that exercise very frequently though-out your day.

A few tips that will help you progress smoothly:

  • Set a target number. I needed 20 pull-ups in the Marines to score a 100% on my PFT (Physical Fitness Test.)

  • Don’t train to fatigue. If your form breaks down at repetition 5, stop around your third rep.

  • Perform this practice in a convenient location. In the example of my oldest son, we placed pull-ups bars on the kitchen door frame. Every time he went into the kitchen, which seemed like a 876 times per day, he had to perform a set of pull-ups. In my example, the pull-up bars were outside the bathroom. No pull-ups? No bathroom.

  • General strength training exercises work best. Think push-up, pull-up or pistol squat, but honestly, you can use this method to improve any skill, mental or physical, fine or gross motor. I’ve even used this technique to help with speaking another language.

    Why do I love this method and you will too?

  • Using GTG helps you improve quickly without leaving you exhausted. For example, although I practice GTG all day I’m still fresh to train hard at my Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) later in the day.

  • It’s very simple to implement. There’s way too much complexity in the field of physical conditioning and preparation. It doesn’t need to be complex and you’ll experience this directly when your practice GTG.

  • It helps keep us mentally and physically sharp. You will think better and feel better by sprinkling some movement throughout your day.

Thanks for reading and watching. Let me know if you have any questions in the comments. Going back to old school.

3 Things You Need to Get Better at Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu

How do you get better at Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu?

You practice of course.

But practice is a very deep and rich conversation. Things can complicated quite quickly.

And although I love the science of motor learning, I like to keep things super simple in concept and design. 

This is why I fell in love with this simple concept I read about from MMA fight Frank Shamrock. 

Embracing the Seasons of Jiu-Jitsu

If you want to grow your mind, your body, your movement practice or your Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu skills you have to plant seeds.

The seeds of tomorrow's brilliance, your shiny new skills, your beautiful new body and Jiu-Jitsu are planted in the soil of today's activities.

That begins right now.

It begins with what you're putting in your mind and your body. How you're cultivating the soil and how you're tending the seedlings. 

So many of us live in a perpetual harvest mode.

We just want to reap a harvest all the time. But we're not willing to plant the seeds, to tend the seeds and to take care of it.

There is a natural progression to everything in life: you plant, then cultivate and then finally you harvest.

When we were farmers everyone knew this intuitively. And the results were self-evident: it's just the way things are. 

Plant. Cultivate. Harvest.

But that's all changed today.

In today's culture everyone wants to go from plant to harvest.

We get frustrated when we join a BJJ school and aren't brown belts in 6 months. We get upset when we start a diet and don't lose 10 pounds in 2 days.

Cultivation. This is the step we've lost touch with. But it's exactly where the power lies.

And it's this step that you have the most control over.

And it takes place totally with your movement and Jiu-Jitsu practice. 

In fact, I would go as far as stating that Cultivate & Practice (as a verb) are quite synonymous. 

So don't worry about your training year or your 8-week cycle. Master your day. Cultivate daily rituals that will lead to the beautiful type of fruit your looking to enjoy. 

Master your day and all else will follow. 

The Way of The Physical Creative

The Physical Creative is more than just another brand. It is a lifestyle, a choice, a calling to choose the most simple, strongest and most sustainable path. It’s a path dedicated to Strength & Art.

It is an attempt to live a more simple life, to be less stressed, to take it easy and be gentle on yourself and those around you in your day-to-day life and training.

The Physical Creative is about the "being" and not the "bling." It's about the process and the practice (as a noun & verb) and not being overly attached to the external outcome. It is the combination of discipline and surrender.

The Physical Creative is taking our strength and arts out of the dojo and gym and into the world. 

Here's what I believe.

  • Brazilian Jiu~Jitsu is about much more than positions and foot-locks... to me anyways. Those are great, but it’s also about freedom, fun, challenging myself and finding flow, working on something interesting, living a life I’m crazy about, making a difference and creating a legacy for my sons.

  • That you are the author and creator of your own unique Brazilian Jiu~Jitsu experience from the very first day you enter the Dojo or academy. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is the vehicle but the journey is completely up to you.

  • That you can create meaning from your BJJ training that extends far beyond the walls of your academy into your life and career.

The Dojo is always open!

Logan Says follow The Way of The Physical Creative or Get a Knuckle Punch

Logan Says follow The Way of The Physical Creative or Get a Knuckle Punch

Two Recent Interviews...

I must apologize. I've been MIA for the past few months. I've been traveling a lot with speaking gigs and kettlebell workshops at various locations, which is always fun because I get to meet so many cool people but tough because other things get put on hold.

Like creating some awesome content for you.

But I'm back now, so let's get caught up.

I recently had the awesome pleasure of being on 2 wonderful podcasts where we talk about the Gentle Art of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu,  and Physical Preparation for BJJ and life.

You can check them out here:

Show the Art Podcast 

Fight Camp Conditioning Podcast.

The Body is a Musical Instrument

As part of my daily ritual, I read at least 10 pages, often much more if I can get some alone time. Sometimes it's a book that I'm revisiting for the 100th time, as in this case, and sometimes it's a new book I recently picked up. As I read, I'd like to share with you the parts that really jump out at me. 

The following few paragraphs were written by my mentor Frank Forencich, creator of Exuberant Animal

It's taken from an essay called "Learning from the Inside Out." It's part of a collection of essays from his book called "Change Your Body Change the World."

I think you'll like it. I added some notes within the text also. I think you'll clearly see how this all relates to learning Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu very easily. Enjoy.

 "Musicians everywhere are united on this score. Theoretical abstractions don't carry much weight in music education; it's time-on-task that makes the difference.

Learn to play by playing.

Learn to move by moving.

Keep at it.Immerse yourself in the process and participate fully.

Practice. Practice. Practice.

Abstract knowledge is nice if you can get it, but it's action that makes the musician.

In this sense, music and physical education are simply different expressions of the same physical education process. Africans have known this for a long time, ( *I would also argue Brazilians and indigenous cultures.) but in the West we have yet to realize the common ground between music and movement. We segregate  athletics and music into different departments, often located at opposite ends of the campus. We use different curriculums and require that athletic and music teachers undertake entirely different courses of study and earn separate credentials.

But this isolation and segregation reveals a deep misunderstanding of physical learning.In fact, the musician and the athlete are engaged in a learning process that is far more similar than different. Ultimately, the biggest difference between the musician and the athlete is that the athlete works with big muscles of the butt, thighs and core, while the musician works with smaller muscles of the fingers, arms or mouth. But both artists are ultimately after the same objective: quality movement that's smooth, powerful and lively. Both are working the nervous system, sensation and motor feedback loops to produce highly coordinated, orchestrated movement.

In fact, as a thought experiment, let's try putting music teachers in charge of physical education and physical educators in charge of music. Yes, there would be a transition period with plenty of noise and wasted effort in the process, but ultimately everything would work out very nicely indeed. Musicians and coaches are both physical performance teachers after all.

So let's get back to the fundamentals.

Leave the abstractions for a another day. Get some movement going, then refine it as you go. 

Play the music, play the body, play the drum. Play Jiu-Jitsu!

It's all the same thing."

 

 

 

The 3 Levels of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu

There are 3 levels of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu...and I'd imagine any form of martial art and combat sport to be honest.

These 3 levels are:

  • Reflexive/Reactive

  • Responsible (Or Response-Able.)

  • Creative

The Reflexive/Reactive Level is marked by our instinctual movements....movements that are hardwired into our system to protect us from danger. Think about going into the fetal position when we hear a loud sound or something startles us. These can be good reactions in most situations but in a grappling context they can be quite dangerous.

Some common sights you'll see in the Reflexive Level is giving up the back or pushing with the arms when you get mounted which quickly gets you choked or arm-locked. 

Another example of the Reflexive Level is using up all your energy while trying to escape and panicking under the pressure, exhausting yourself to the point that you can no longer defend yourself and surrender position.

Picture the new white belt student in your head for a moment. They have the best intentions, but are usually quite spastic and reactive simply because they haven't learned how to respond well to the techniques that are being applied to them.

The Responsible Level is the next level in BJJ. I want you to think about that word for a second and break it down...Responsible...Response-Able. It's literally your ability to respond.

On this level, you're able to think clearly and respond to your partner's attack with clarity and focus.

You know what to do.

You can step between stimulus and response and choose the most appropriate counter.

Please try to pay attention the next time you feel yourself being triggered and see if you can sneak back into that lovely place between stimulus and response and actually stop the reflexive...knee-jerk reaction and choose your next move.

In many situations you know well ahead of time what your training partner is planning so your response is proactive and not re-active. In fact...you can start to develop your game entirely around well-timed responses that put you into better position and also use your responses as attacks. For example, I have very few guard passes, but one of my favorites is the old-school stack pass. Often times I will simply wait and bait my partner to go for an armlock or triangle and use this opportunity to secure his collar and go for the stack pass. Do I get caught sometimes? Of course. But it does work very well for me. Being well-developed within the Responsible Level can blend into the next and 3rd level of BJJ, the Creative Level. 

On the Creative Level, you are the attacker, you are the person that decides where the game will be played and just how quick the pace and flow will be. You know that term Martial Artist? I believe that's where the "Artist" comes from, the Creative Level. 

Cauliphlower BJJ Creative

 

But the strange thing is though...artist don't sit around talk about art. They talk about work....works of art. It's a creative process. One that requires great effort and patience. One that requires us to chisel away at the non-essentials on a daily basis so we can bring out the beauty that's not hindered and dampened by excessive effort and tension. 

Jiu-Jitsu is not something you take...Jiu-Jitsu is something you make!

So get to work Jiu-Jiteiro! Start creating!

When you get a second please check out these awesomely creative Jiu-jiteiros:

Cauliphlower. 

Show the Art.

How to Get Smashed and Keep Smiling

Maybe I'm just a selfish guy. Maybe I'm asking for too much? But to be blunt, I think the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu world is pretty closed-minded and incestuous.

Personally, I want more out of my jiu-jitsu journey than the move of the day and let's roll syndrome. I'm looking for a deeper connection with human movement, play and physical challenge. 

Sometimes we need to look outside of our own culture to discover some gems.  I think I've found one.

There's an entire world of movement available to us. Beautiful movement cultures and approaches that would blend and resonate very well with the gentle art, but we're so slow to adopt them and to explore what they may have to offer us as Jiu-Jitsu players. 

One dogma I hear quite frequently is "You don't need anything for your jiu-jitsu but your jiu-jitsu..." Although there is some truth to that statement, it's not the best way to train if longevity is a goal of yours. 

Take a moment and check out the video below. Please watch and listen through the eye's and ears of a jiu-jitsu player and see the truth, the beauty and wisdom in exploring other movement arts. See what this type of play can offer us.

Here are my favorite highlights:

  • When you are changing partners, you're meeting a new strategy. And you can test on yourself how adaptable you are.

  • You have to speculate how to put your partners out of their habits. Because only there do you cook & develop.

  • Everybody can have muscle...but what kind of muscle do you have?

  • Diversity brings immunity! (This may be my favorite.)

  • Try.Try.Try. Change partners. Try.

  • Out of repetition the quality will come.

  • Play.Play.Play.

  • If you don't have pressure you don't develop.

  • Stay healthy but be challenged. (This sounds very much like Judo's "Mutual Benefit Tenet.")

  • You get smashed but you still smile and go on to explore more.