It IS more difficult as an adult to make friends, but the way to do is to go join groups. Cooking class, chess club, church, pottery class, valley dancing, rock climbing, soccer club. Whatever floats your boat. Meet new people. You will make friends.
tl:dw 1. Go to class 2. No junk training 3. Tap early, Tap often 4. Find training partners you can crush (to help them get better) 5. Find training partners on your level (to test yourself) 6. Find training partners that can crush you (to get better) 7. Find your niche 8. Become an athlete 9. Do your homework (train at home) 10. Tell everyone about martial arts (popularize martial arts) 11. Ask questions
tl/dr version! 1) Skip class - you can only trane UFC by watching it anyway 2) Wearing TapOut shirts and flexing while screaming JUST BLEED is also trainning 3) Tap late and only do so by bloodcurdling screams! Submission rope-a-dope is a viable strategy. 4) Only train with people you can crush 5) Don't train with people your level 6) Get crushed by your partners 7) Train a bazzilion different things 8) Nothing matters except your rash guard: Affliction or TapOut? 9) Dog ate your homework. Also if you lift, Ramsey will feel you up... 10) Rule No. 1 of Fightclub. Don't tell anyone you trane ufc. 11) Just google it. OK! That seems about right!
#9 is the one that bothers me the most. I come from a boxing background and in boxing we were expected to do our own road work and I still do. Gym time is reserved for skills work. But when I have tried to join an MMA dojo half the time is spent on conditioning. My time is limited. Any moron can work someone out. Its easy to tire people. But I'm paying money to train, which is different from working out.
This is all too true. Coupled with the fact that classes could be as short as 1-1.5hrs in length for $100-300/mo (CAD) and I'm wasting time and money. This is why I almost prefer just solo and partner training mostly.
RealSteelJyn, Yes I have never been to an MMA dojo where there wasn't too much of a focus on conditioning. I come from a boxing background were there are serious national and world level boxers who came through my main gyms over the years. As far as the boxing trainers I have worked with over the years are concerned conditioning is the responsibility of the fighter. If you want to go far you are expected to do your own road work on your own time not the trainers time. The trainers time is reserved for skill devolpment. If a boxing trainer is criticizing your for your conditioning there are many bad things you can say in response but he absolute worst thing you can say is 'that's because you haven't been working me hard enough.' That aint his job.
consider tiring a guy out a necessity before training session so he wont "instakill" a partner by accident hitting with 90-100% output, tiring warmup is a must to lower that to around 30% and make trainees sluggish
Funny, tip 4 reminds me of advice I've heard from top level competitive fighting game players (Street Fighter, Mortal Kombat, that sort of thing). They attributed a lot of their consistency and growth to going to local tournaments every week to crush all the worse players as bad as possible. This allows you to hone your basic movements, combos, matchups, and gameplans against a large pool of different players who really want to win. I think the equivalent in martial arts would be a BJJ black belt constantly rolling with lower belts over the years perfecting their submissions, sweeps, pressure, etc against a group of different resisting partners. Loved your videos for a long time, keep at it!
Just recovering from a dislocated shoulder, and my excitement for training has gone missing. After watching this I'm feeling my hunger again. Thanks Ramsey.
As a former martial artist/martial arts instructor and a current fitness coach, I LOVE the essential truths here. In both fields of endeavor, too much value is placed on novel or esoteric “secrets” and too little on proven fundamental habits and strategies.
One thing I would add to this is: don't let "bad" training sessions put you off. I've had a fair few sessions where I've not done well in sparring, or where I've just not had the energy; but then I've had quite a lot of really good ones where I've learned a lot or it's given me a moment where I realise I've made progress.
I love this video I started boxing again it put a fire under my ass like no other to train I'm 40 I dont have many friends so it's hard to motivate myself to get back in there thanks for the boost ramsey love your channel man
Ramsay, I want to be like you. You are my favorite person on the internet and have taught me so much, not just about martial arts but about the way a man should conduct himself. I’ve started boxing and I’m going to start wrestling soon because of you. Thankyou for your wisdom and willingness to express yourself, you’ve truly inspired me
It's very strange how in many martial arts and especially in my background one (judo) there's this sort of almost hatred for strength, for being an athlete. Especially in a amateur set up. Ive had Senseis actively go against the idea that you should use strength in a combat. Saying it's all about the technique. Strength is almost a bad word. They love to lie to themselves, they would like it to be some kind of witchcraft almost, a way for david to beat goliath. I dont understand how they can look at fighters like Teddy Riner and tell us "there's no strength involved there'" the dude's basically a colossus. There's technique but technique only works if it has a suitable amount of strength to back it up. To quote you, Ramsey, I think, technique is only the proper way to apply strength.
Yeah for sure! But at a beginners level one does too often only use strength and little technique. Which works if you are stronger than the other person , and they don't either have technique. So I guess the trainers you've encountered just wanted to teach you that without proper technique it will be tough winning against a stronger opponent. I would say, learn the technique without use of strength first and then apply strength afterwards to match what you want to achieve with that technique.
The experience I also have. My friend - 1,90 meters tall, 140 kilogram (slightly above 6'2, 310 pound) who hits the gym regularly (basically - a lot of muscles and very little body fat) and is not very big on martial arts, but still watches and is entertained by them - so have at least basic understanding - likes to test overpowering techniques with strength. Nearly all the times comes on top, especially when performed by some 60-70 kilo opponent. Boxing - well he outreach them and his beginners punches still have more weight to them than a well trained athlete with lower personal weight, yes he cannot easily bypass guard - but taking those hits even with guard hurts a lot. And his low kicks (his form is terrible and he will be the first person to admit that) makes your foot lift up from the ground. Wrestling - good luck with that if you are below 100 kilo to make him move, when his heavy lifting routine includes making pull ups and push ups with 20 kilos additional weight. A lot of people obsessed with 'strength' doesn't matter will say 'such case is at the extreme end'. Well if the extreme end prove a point, then there is still a spectrum, being stronger helps - by how much depends on the difference.
"strength doesnt matter" is coach talk. they want you in giving them that extra 20-50 quid a week. rather than spending that money on a gym membership. and if you believe them, you can spend a year getting squashed, make little to no progress and theyve made a fat chunk of change. theres money in training weak people than athletes. and most coaches arent THAT Machiavellian but that is definitely a factor. im the "training ruined my self esteem" guy from a few months ago and thats sort of what happened to me. like there were tons of other factors involved but that was definitely a part of it.
Mr. Orangeaide well, personally I find technique based training more interesting and entertaining, plus it (knowledge, even muscle memory and reflexes) will last and work a lot longer versus strength and mass based training which requires constant maintenance and a lot more supporting regimes (diet, sleep, compounding workouts, ...) so yes, strength, size and mass make a lot of difference but strength and muscle mass are more difficult to maintain (unless you're an exceptionally genetically blessed freak), not feasible for everyone and will wane with age, whereas technique will not. there's a codependency between these factors of course, but for smaller and less powerful people technique is the way to even or surpass the odds. coaches or other people who state that strength, size or mass don't matter anything are either lying or simply very ignorant. it's technique and experience that gives an alternative advantage to being super big and/or strong. that being said, being super big or strong without any technique is likely to always get defeated by proper technique.
@@mr.orangeaide5260 yeah Well. I am with you that strength obviously matter. But in what situation are you thinking of? if you're just strong and face a guy who's as strong as you and knows the techniques, you don't stand a chance. So therefore a smaller guy who knows technique has a lot bigger chance of success against the bigger who has none technique.
Thank you coach Since finding your channel a couple of months ago i have felt incredible movivation and i am getting out there and training Your words brush away self doubt and make me believe i can achieve anything i want but lifes a learning curve i wont get there straight but with time i can learn and become who i want to be
This is by far the best video ice seen for any beginner and I wished I'd seen it earlier. Its relieving to know I'm on the right path because I'm doing all of these things. Thank you
This was actually very helpful, as expected of your channel. Reminded me that I need to put the time in even after the grueling hours of training every day and that I really should talk more about what I do, the people I talk with rarely are prone to sports but they almost always show interest in martial arts, it's just that it never crosses mind to bother them with such things, I tend to keep to myself. Thank you coach Dewey, I've been following you for long and you still teach me new things.
Love your videos. You give lots of good advice and have inspired me to improve my physical conditioning. I was in a deep slump of depression and you have motivated me to think more positively about myself and situations I find myself in. Thank you for the work that you do and the ambition you have for helping people improve their lives whether they are involved in combat sports or not.
Excellent advice! People can accomplish anything if they genuinely try and try again. Another awesome video!!!! Your students are great, they are a credit to you. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise Ramsey 🙂
This should apply to things, not just martial arts, but in everyday life. Also thank you Ramsey I'm a first year wrestler in highschool and tuning in to your channel really gives me confidence and insight on more than just combat. Thank you
@@ivanovmario_5398 I'm 16 and I just started wrestling this school year, I knew it'd be hard but I never imagined it to be as difficult as it is. It's especially difficult if you start in highschool, but it's totally worth it. It makes you tougher mentally and physically. Everytime I lose a match which is often, some of my teammates like to talk down to me, it gets to me sometimes but thats just what happens when you wrestle highschool. I really suggest if you do wrestling don't take crap from any of the guys just because they're better wrestlers, wrestling has also proved to be very useful in defending myself
My son is in his 3rd yr of wrestling. He has been wrestling 3 kids above his level for most of the yr. Getting crushed. Everyone has said, find the hard guys, throw him in. I don't know combat sports. I really appreciate your perspective. He has improved a lot, but at times it looks as if i threw him in a pool and he can't swim yet. He loves the sport. So I'll try to mix his partners more so he can have some more rewarding days. Thanks !
All of these tips are really important Ramsey👍 I can really see that you have invested a lot of time and effort in martial arts and fighting. You are awesome💪
I once had a coach who believed a lot in full contact sparring and essentially said "You don't need belts to improve. You'll know you're getting better once you stop getting your ass kicked." While I don't believe anyone will improve simply by getting their asses kicked, it's s good way to learn quickly sometimes. You learn where to improve yourself a lot.
This is by far 1 of the best "beginner" instructional videos I have come across on here... I am sure the is a reason to separate 5,6,&7 however I do think you could have thrown them into 1 category... still some great GREAT advice... I will send some of my students to this link
Great video Ramsey! You Sir are absolute right about every point in this video! It's snowing in Germany but I think I will work on my heavy bag outside right now :)
This was nice. I’ve been competing in judo and wrestling for years, you are correct, extra time in the weight room can really turn the tide! Shoot they do it in the judo Olympics.
what an amazing video and message. Too often we get stuck in the rut of doing syllabus stuff and just grinding through the motions for the belts - aliveness training is the key. Oss sir
Absolutely brilliant truely enjoy these videos, lve been a student and teacher for decades and the I sights shared are gold so.... NOW GET OUT THERE AND TRAIN
Great clip Ramsey...and you seem to have awesome students too...cool.! Miss to train with you guys..really! Keep rocking the ring buddy...Best regards Brian
Excellent content! I used to train in Tango as well and the instructor shared a story about him witnessing something awesome when he was training Tango in Argentina. The highly trained dancers will always train their fundamentals every morning. They work on their stretches, postures and pivots. My Tai Ji instructor said something similar: "even if I don't have time to train the forms, I can always work on the fundamentals.".
It feels good when you're doing most of these already. It gives me more peace of mind that even tho I'm getting tapped frequently, (I'm doing BJJ right now) I'm at least going in the right direction.
Amen. I have said the same to people countless times. To be tough, IS tough. There is no quick pay off. Anyone who tells you there is, is selling something.
Ramsey, I think you missed your calling as an Audible book voice actor.
they should look for martial arts related books that havn't been voice acted yet, and hire him to read them!
Champuonship Boxing read by Ramsey Dewey.
@@Quisiio0303456 as someone who owns the book. Absolutely! I imagine a deep voice when reading it.
Haha I felt that vibe
Granted, his golden voice is world class.
"if you don't have any friends, go make some"
Gee thanks, why didn't I think of that?
Yapoz a last name time stamp
Vonzarooz 6:40
Yapoz a last name cause you don’t have friends
It IS more difficult as an adult to make friends, but the way to do is to go join groups. Cooking class, chess club, church, pottery class, valley dancing, rock climbing, soccer club. Whatever floats your boat. Meet new people. You will make friends.
Yapoz a last name he’s right though
tl:dw
1. Go to class
2. No junk training
3. Tap early, Tap often
4. Find training partners you can crush (to help them get better)
5. Find training partners on your level (to test yourself)
6. Find training partners that can crush you (to get better)
7. Find your niche
8. Become an athlete
9. Do your homework (train at home)
10. Tell everyone about martial arts (popularize martial arts)
11. Ask questions
tl/dr version!
1) Skip class - you can only trane UFC by watching it anyway
2) Wearing TapOut shirts and flexing while screaming JUST BLEED is also trainning
3) Tap late and only do so by bloodcurdling screams! Submission rope-a-dope is a viable strategy.
4) Only train with people you can crush
5) Don't train with people your level
6) Get crushed by your partners
7) Train a bazzilion different things
8) Nothing matters except your rash guard: Affliction or TapOut?
9) Dog ate your homework. Also if you lift, Ramsey will feel you up...
10) Rule No. 1 of Fightclub. Don't tell anyone you trane ufc.
11) Just google it.
OK! That seems about right!
Mwahahahahaha! Great list!
Lmao
HEHE
H
how bout drinking outside of class a lot. Does that come with benefits?
“Tapping out in the gym is a sign of learning, not losing.” Epic quote
"Welcome the new kid, then shake his hand, then put him into a pretzel."
#9 is the one that bothers me the most. I come from a boxing background and in boxing we were expected to do our own road work and I still do. Gym time is reserved for skills work. But when I have tried to join an MMA dojo half the time is spent on conditioning. My time is limited. Any moron can work someone out. Its easy to tire people. But I'm paying money to train, which is different from working out.
This is all too true. Coupled with the fact that classes could be as short as 1-1.5hrs in length for $100-300/mo (CAD) and I'm wasting time and money.
This is why I almost prefer just solo and partner training mostly.
Never been to a gym where they didnt condition you. I wouldnt trust the average person to be responsible to condition themselves properly.
RealSteelJyn yea because it's big part of the sport. But if your not very motivated or it's just your hobby then it's not that important
RealSteelJyn,
Yes I have never been to an MMA dojo where there wasn't too much of a focus on conditioning. I come from a boxing background were there are serious national and world level boxers who came through my main gyms over the years. As far as the boxing trainers I have worked with over the years are concerned conditioning is the responsibility of the fighter. If you want to go far you are expected to do your own road work on your own time not the trainers time. The trainers time is reserved for skill devolpment.
If a boxing trainer is criticizing your for your conditioning there are many bad things you can say in response but he absolute worst thing you can say is 'that's because you haven't been working me hard enough.' That aint his job.
consider tiring a guy out a necessity before training session so he wont "instakill" a partner by accident hitting with 90-100% output, tiring warmup is a must to lower that to around 30% and make trainees sluggish
I'm a simple Russian. I hear someone praising Russians and Ukrainians for whatever reason, I give that person a like and a sub.
Семён Курашов Russians and Ukrainians have the best accents dude i gotta admit
Hey my professor of Russian. :)
That's a speech you rehearse in the mirror.
Funny, tip 4 reminds me of advice I've heard from top level competitive fighting game players (Street Fighter, Mortal Kombat, that sort of thing). They attributed a lot of their consistency and growth to going to local tournaments every week to crush all the worse players as bad as possible. This allows you to hone your basic movements, combos, matchups, and gameplans against a large pool of different players who really want to win. I think the equivalent in martial arts would be a BJJ black belt constantly rolling with lower belts over the years perfecting their submissions, sweeps, pressure, etc against a group of different resisting partners. Loved your videos for a long time, keep at it!
That’s also a big part of why the coach at a BJJ gym is usually the best guy on the mat- he has the most experience rolling with people he can squash.
C'mon ppl who else thinks Ramsey sounds like an old wise kung fu panda champion gimme a thumb up. :)
no sarcasm!
Just recovering from a dislocated shoulder, and my excitement for training has gone missing. After watching this I'm feeling my hunger again. Thanks Ramsey.
I love you Ramsey. No homo
I love chocolade, but i don't *** it :p
Love Ramsey 100% homo
Seph Mato u gay
I don't love him I just like him. Lovers love... very gay.
As a former martial artist/martial arts instructor and a current fitness coach, I LOVE the essential truths here. In both fields of endeavor, too much value is placed on novel or esoteric “secrets” and too little on proven fundamental habits and strategies.
One thing I would add to this is: don't let "bad" training sessions put you off.
I've had a fair few sessions where I've not done well in sparring, or where I've just not had the energy; but then I've had quite a lot of really good ones where I've learned a lot or it's given me a moment where I realise I've made progress.
I didn't know Daredevil trained at your gym. [0:27]
Red Hook MMA Ramsey does on occasion have some very interesting training techniques.
(dressing up is one of them ;) )
Scrolling down looking for this comment
a true martial artist speaking just how it is, no bs, love your channel
Ramsey's body is legally a weapon
Holy Diver Ramsey’s soul is a weapon.
A weapon of mass destruction
I love this video I started boxing again it put a fire under my ass like no other to train I'm 40 I dont have many friends so it's hard to motivate myself to get back in there thanks for the boost ramsey love your channel man
Ramsay, I want to be like you. You are my favorite person on the internet and have taught me so much, not just about martial arts but about the way a man should conduct himself. I’ve started boxing and I’m going to start wrestling soon because of you. Thankyou for your wisdom and willingness to express yourself, you’ve truly inspired me
Ramsey so glad I’ve followed you over the years
Back when you were making videos in a flat in Utah ☺️
Always full of the knowledge and life experience
That means a lot to me, my friend!
Ramsey Dewey your welcome ☺️ loving the constant video work
It’s hard to keep up now which is good☺️
It's very strange how in many martial arts and especially in my background one (judo) there's this sort of almost hatred for strength, for being an athlete. Especially in a amateur set up. Ive had Senseis actively go against the idea that you should use strength in a combat. Saying it's all about the technique. Strength is almost a bad word. They love to lie to themselves, they would like it to be some kind of witchcraft almost, a way for david to beat goliath. I dont understand how they can look at fighters like Teddy Riner and tell us "there's no strength involved there'" the dude's basically a colossus. There's technique but technique only works if it has a suitable amount of strength to back it up. To quote you, Ramsey, I think, technique is only the proper way to apply strength.
Yeah for sure! But at a beginners level one does too often only use strength and little technique. Which works if you are stronger than the other person , and they don't either have technique. So I guess the trainers you've encountered just wanted to teach you that without proper technique it will be tough winning against a stronger opponent.
I would say, learn the technique without use of strength first and then apply strength afterwards to match what you want to achieve with that technique.
The experience I also have. My friend - 1,90 meters tall, 140 kilogram (slightly above 6'2, 310 pound) who hits the gym regularly (basically - a lot of muscles and very little body fat) and is not very big on martial arts, but still watches and is entertained by them - so have at least basic understanding - likes to test overpowering techniques with strength. Nearly all the times comes on top, especially when performed by some 60-70 kilo opponent.
Boxing - well he outreach them and his beginners punches still have more weight to them than a well trained athlete with lower personal weight, yes he cannot easily bypass guard - but taking those hits even with guard hurts a lot. And his low kicks (his form is terrible and he will be the first person to admit that) makes your foot lift up from the ground.
Wrestling - good luck with that if you are below 100 kilo to make him move, when his heavy lifting routine includes making pull ups and push ups with 20 kilos additional weight.
A lot of people obsessed with 'strength' doesn't matter will say 'such case is at the extreme end'.
Well if the extreme end prove a point, then there is still a spectrum, being stronger helps - by how much depends on the difference.
"strength doesnt matter" is coach talk. they want you in giving them that extra 20-50 quid a week. rather than spending that money on a gym membership. and if you believe them, you can spend a year getting squashed, make little to no progress and theyve made a fat chunk of change. theres money in training weak people than athletes. and most coaches arent THAT Machiavellian but that is definitely a factor. im the "training ruined my self esteem" guy from a few months ago and thats sort of what happened to me. like there were tons of other factors involved but that was definitely a part of it.
Mr. Orangeaide well, personally I find technique based training more interesting and entertaining, plus it (knowledge, even muscle memory and reflexes) will last and work a lot longer versus strength and mass based training which requires constant maintenance and a lot more supporting regimes (diet, sleep, compounding workouts, ...)
so yes, strength, size and mass make a lot of difference but strength and muscle mass are more difficult to maintain (unless you're an exceptionally genetically blessed freak), not feasible for everyone and will wane with age, whereas technique will not. there's a codependency between these factors of course, but for smaller and less powerful people technique is the way to even or surpass the odds.
coaches or other people who state that strength, size or mass don't matter anything are either lying or simply very ignorant. it's technique and experience that gives an alternative advantage to being super big and/or strong.
that being said, being super big or strong without any technique is likely to always get defeated by proper technique.
@@mr.orangeaide5260 yeah Well. I am with you that strength obviously matter. But in what situation are you thinking of? if you're just strong and face a guy who's as strong as you and knows the techniques, you don't stand a chance. So therefore a smaller guy who knows technique has a lot bigger chance of success against the bigger who has none technique.
Perseverance pays off. Thank you for your time.
Godspeed.
Thank you coach
Since finding your channel a couple of months ago i have felt incredible movivation and i am getting out there and training
Your words brush away self doubt and make me believe i can achieve anything i want but lifes a learning curve i wont get there straight but with time i can learn and become who i want to be
Best video you’ve made. The point about practising at home or in your spare time is so important
This is by far the best video ice seen for any beginner and I wished I'd seen it earlier. Its relieving to know I'm on the right path because I'm doing all of these things. Thank you
I just added barbell training on my off days, already added 45lb to my deadlift and 25lb to my squat.
This was actually very helpful, as expected of your channel.
Reminded me that I need to put the time in even after the grueling hours of training every day and that I really should talk more about what I do, the people I talk with rarely are prone to sports but they almost always show interest in martial arts, it's just that it never crosses mind to bother them with such things, I tend to keep to myself.
Thank you coach Dewey, I've been following you for long and you still teach me new things.
Thank you for this Ramsey. Love the content and honesty. Keep it up.
Your best video yet Ramsey! Keep it up. Very inspirational to us for you to give this kind of sage advice.
Thank you so much for sharing your time, and experience Ramsey. You are a great teacher!
Love your videos. You give lots of good advice and have inspired me to improve my physical conditioning. I was in a deep slump of depression and you have motivated me to think more positively about myself and situations I find myself in. Thank you for the work that you do and the ambition you have for helping people improve their lives whether they are involved in combat sports or not.
It does hold true for any sphere of life, and not just martial arts. Honoured to be a subscriber of your channel sir. Just priceless content
"Tapping out is the sound of learning, not losing". Wow, that is a great line.
Excellent advice! People can accomplish anything if they genuinely try and try again. Another awesome video!!!! Your students are great, they are a credit to you. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise Ramsey 🙂
Yet another great video Mr. Dewey... Your insights are priceless.
Nice and simple, straight to the point. Thanks ramsey, hope this year goes well for you.
This was a great video Ramsey...really honest, inspiring, and motivating...
This should apply to things, not just martial arts, but in everyday life. Also thank you Ramsey I'm a first year wrestler in highschool and tuning in to your channel really gives me confidence and insight on more than just combat. Thank you
Is there a way to start training ar 17.. cuz ive never trained wrestling but i would really like to start training. I will start from zero tho.
@@ivanovmario_5398 I'm 16 and I just started wrestling this school year, I knew it'd be hard but I never imagined it to be as difficult as it is. It's especially difficult if you start in highschool, but it's totally worth it. It makes you tougher mentally and physically. Everytime I lose a match which is often, some of my teammates like to talk down to me, it gets to me sometimes but thats just what happens when you wrestle highschool. I really suggest if you do wrestling don't take crap from any of the guys just because they're better wrestlers, wrestling has also proved to be very useful in defending myself
This was such a bomb of wisdom from you! I feel many of these things can also be applied to almost any goal in life.
Really appreciate these lessons. Thx Ramsey.
My son is in his 3rd yr of wrestling. He has been wrestling 3 kids above his level for most of the yr. Getting crushed. Everyone has said, find the hard guys, throw him in. I don't know combat sports. I really appreciate your perspective. He has improved a lot, but at times it looks as if i threw him in a pool and he can't swim yet. He loves the sport. So I'll try to mix his partners more so he can have some more rewarding days. Thanks !
Not one of your videos is garbage. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. I always learn something out of it.
All of these tips are really important Ramsey👍 I can really see that you have invested a lot of time and effort in martial arts and fighting. You are awesome💪
Refreshingly wise..always enjoy your comedy, but this was a concise example of truth in a straightforward manner. Appreciated.
I once had a coach who believed a lot in full contact sparring and essentially said "You don't need belts to improve. You'll know you're getting better once you stop getting your ass kicked." While I don't believe anyone will improve simply by getting their asses kicked, it's s good way to learn quickly sometimes. You learn where to improve yourself a lot.
This is by far 1 of the best "beginner" instructional videos I have come across on here... I am sure the is a reason to separate 5,6,&7 however I do think you could have thrown them into 1 category... still some great GREAT advice... I will send some of my students to this link
I love this video, it's beautiful it makes me wanna drop the weights and hit the proper fighting gym. Thank you. 🙏🏽
Excellent tips. Ty!
Great video Ramsey! You Sir are absolute right about every point in this video! It's snowing in Germany but I think I will work on my heavy bag outside right now :)
You racka disaprine
There’s a huge dearth of disaprine in my training- that’s for sure!
Kyle fee shitty wok can I take your order?
Prease
Kyle fee 😂
LMAO
Amazing video! You broke down the basics excellently, and there’s beauty in the basics.
This was nice. I’ve been competing in judo and wrestling for years, you are correct, extra time in the weight room can really turn the tide! Shoot they do it in the judo Olympics.
Excellent tips Ramsey! Keep up the good work.
Exellente video, and very true and every level, thank you for sharing this.
Thank you man. I started training about a year ago and these tips are going to help. Great vid
Watched a lot of your videos, but this one is the one that got me to sub you!
Thanks for everything!
BS. He didnt say steroids.
lol
People really think all champs are on roids?
@@DedicatedSpartan kamaru usman is
@@Unknown-lj2kw what evidence leads you to that conclusion.
Dedicated Spartan his eyes lmao
Great video! I get so much motivation from it! Now time for my daily training:)
Awesome breakdown!
what an amazing video and message. Too often we get stuck in the rut of doing syllabus stuff and just grinding through the motions for the belts - aliveness training is the key. Oss sir
Thankful for your videos
Great message!
Superb advice. Thank you
I really enjoyed this video. Very inspiring and insiteful.
I enjoyed the part about spreading the word, marketing, and how having a bunch of people to train with is very important so you can improve.
Loved this video! Thank you!
Gold advice. Thank you.
Absolutely brilliant truely enjoy these videos, lve been a student and teacher for decades and the I sights shared are gold so....
NOW GET OUT THERE AND TRAIN
Loved this video!! Thank you
Words of wisdom...and of a lot of experience!
Thanks coach; this is the advice I was looking for👍💪💯
BY GOING OUT THERE AND TRAINING
First comment to comment on the first comment
@@anti1training first comment to comment on the first comments first comment
Amazing. Thanks Ramsey!
Quality advise as always
Valuable video. The tap early thing and joint care....one of many things...I will try remember I am only learning not in a competition
Great clip Ramsey...and you seem to have awesome students too...cool.! Miss to train with you guys..really! Keep rocking the ring buddy...Best regards Brian
Excellent content!
I used to train in Tango as well and the instructor shared a story about him witnessing something awesome when he was training Tango in Argentina. The highly trained dancers will always train their fundamentals every morning. They work on their stretches, postures and pivots. My Tai Ji instructor said something similar: "even if I don't have time to train the forms, I can always work on the fundamentals.".
Thanks Ramsey I'll take these advise to heart.
Man.... Love this. This is the kick in the ass I NEED!
This guy is great and Criminallyyyyy underrated 💯🔥
I dont usually Click the like button on youtube videos, but this one is really great. Keep the good work, Oss
Cool video! Thanks for the tips!
I got to completely agree with you for all of this.
So true. Thanks
Thank you🙏
Thanks alot Master chifu for the advise you are very kind personne
Iam a boxing practitioner and because of you you taught be to be better you give me some knowledge to use when iam practicing my art . Thank u so much
Thank you.
Thank you
Brilliant video
Beautiful sentiments!
Watched this right before going to train
Thanks for the video, I'm relocating soon and looking forward to joining my local kickboxing gym
It feels good when you're doing most of these already. It gives me more peace of mind that even tho I'm getting tapped frequently, (I'm doing BJJ right now) I'm at least going in the right direction.
ty for the motivation!
I've watched a few of your videos but only just subscribed
absolutely spot on
Thanks man this realy helps
Great video, good info. Tyvm
Amen. I have said the same to people countless times. To be tough, IS tough. There is no quick pay off. Anyone who tells you there is, is selling something.
Ramsey, I am going to shoot you a email. Have a question about training with herniated discs. Thanks in advance.