How I gave up my Purple Belt at a New Gym (And Why You Shouldn't)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 16. 01. 2017
  • Should you have to give up your rank when you join a new gym?
    If you're a Blue, Purple or Brown Belt should you have to restart over if your instructor thinks that you don't know enough about their system?
    What do you think?
    In this video I answer that question.
    The question comes from someone who has been training Brazilian Jiu-jitsu for a number of years and received his Blue Belt from a legitimate affiliation. I did not list any of the details of this person or his training to keep it private for him.
    Because of work he's had to move all over the place and hasn't been able to train consistently at one Brazilian Jiujitsu gym for a long time.
    Recently he started training BJJ at a new gym and really likes the instructor and the gym overall.
    The problem he's running into is that the instructor wants him to start over because he doesn't know his system as well.
    Our friend feels that this is a bit unfair and doesn't want to restart his BJJ journey all over again. He adds that the frustrating part about this is that he's doing very well during rolling against the instructors students and feels fine with the techniques he's showing.
    In this BJJ video I share a story about how I personally gave up my Purple Belt when I came to a new gym to train Brazilian Jiu-jitsu. It was a new instructor who didn't care for me or felt threatened by me.
    I've also had students who I didn't quite think were up to par with our Blue Belts. And I share whether or not I made them give up their rank. If you watch my BJJ videos you probably know what I did.
    Anyways, I hope you enjoy the video. And if you're in the process of changing BJJ gyms. I hope this video is helpful to you or gives you some insight into any problems you might have.
    Thanks!
    -Chewy
    -----------------
    Free Ebook: www.chewjitsu.net/focused-jiu-...
    Video Courses and Products: www.chewjitsu.net/products
    T shirts: www.chewjitsu.net/shop/
    / chewjitsu
    / chewjitsu
    / chewjitsu
    Intro/Outtro Music : www.thesoundproviders.com/#/
  • Sport

Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @povang
    @povang Před 5 lety +919

    Im primarily a boxer and its like saying "Ohhh your ammy boxing record is 20 wins and 2 losses. You haven't fought in 2 years so im gonna have to ask you to wipe those last 10 fights off your record."
    Your belt is a record of your accomplishments, nobody has the right to wipe your record.

    • @dedde1311
      @dedde1311 Před 4 lety +16

      20-2 nice not bad

    • @anonoumos
      @anonoumos Před 4 lety +19

      its more like having a degree in one country, and not being able to transfer it to another country (e.g doctors, nurses). they gotta take an exam to show theyre as qualified to standard. same shit

    • @shy8054
      @shy8054 Před 4 lety +31

      @@anonoumos i think medical things are more serious than personal martial arts. Like the only danger really of me not being up to standard is mainly myself. If a medical person is not up to standards its going to hurt other people.

    • @palehorse24681
      @palehorse24681 Před 4 lety

      A language translation of your skillset is not the same bro.

    • @duc696monster6
      @duc696monster6 Před 3 lety +4

      @@anonoumos so an olympic record holder only counts in the country he got it in then, according to you.. Then again, following your logic, that person would not be able to compete in the Olympics, since he/she did not practice his/her skill in the country that holds the Olympics.. Or, then competitions should all be banned, since, one might compete as blue belt, (blue belt in his gym) but it wont be recognised in another gym, so 2 blue belts of differents gyms, dont exist in your point of view.. 🤔🤔Interesting...

  • @andrewldoe
    @andrewldoe Před 7 lety +2013

    I took three stripes off my purple belt when I went to my current school. I hadn't rolled in 2 years, and I wasn't consistent prior to that. I figured I'd be happy to just have them let me wear the purple. When my instructor found out he told me, "you never lose rank. You earned those stripes and that belt. Maybe you're not back to where you were, but you still earned those."

    • @stillnessinmovement
      @stillnessinmovement Před 6 lety +66

      yeah. not really true. a belt is a representation of skill level and understanding of how that particular school does things. in a school. seminars and tournaments are different.. did you notice that late in life, Helio was not wearing his red belt? he was wearing a purple belt. if he can wear a purple belt, you can be ok with it.

    • @overkill_716
      @overkill_716 Před 6 lety +137

      Helio does not dictate appropriate etiquette amongst the BJJ practitioners of the world. If that's how he retains his integrity, fine, but it isn't entirely honest to me. 60+ years of BJJ, he can teach anyone anything, that's not a purple belt accolade. Purple belts are not masters.

    • @alanguages
      @alanguages Před 6 lety +46

      I know of one guy who travelled and stopped at a BJJ school in the Philippines. The school wanted him to take and pay for an introductory white belt BJJ classes for a couple of weeks. He asked to roll with the guys at the school to prove his skill level was at purple belt, but the school denied his request, and was adamant he had to take introductory BJJ classes first.
      That is a shitty school. Like what others have said, if a person has earned their belt and stripes, that cannot and should not be taken away. Blue belt has a high drop out rate, that does not mean if anyone comes back, that their accomplishment should be taken away. They just have to train real hard to catch up, upon returning.

    • @MinotaurvsCyclops
      @MinotaurvsCyclops Před 6 lety +20

      Heilo believed you had to wear a different colour belt from your instructor, when people started wearing red belts, he started wear a blue one.

    • @fishbygding4920
      @fishbygding4920 Před 6 lety +40

      Not really an expert, but at some point we all get worse. Belting seems to me to be a symbol on skill, but also a mark of accomplishment alltogether. Downranking is nonsense. They dont take away your gold medal if you lose the next fight either. And Helio could wear whatever he wants cuz he's boss.

  • @wilson36532
    @wilson36532 Před 7 lety +1140

    I say put on the white belt and then ask him why a white belt keeps choking out his blue belts! LOL

  • @DarkKnight2037
    @DarkKnight2037 Před 7 lety +718

    Plot twist, his real name is "Bob"

  • @pullbothbarrels
    @pullbothbarrels Před 7 lety +464

    never never never give up a belt you earned legitimately

    • @iggy082
      @iggy082 Před 4 lety +30

      Give up that belt. Beat your new classmates. Pretend it's beginner's luck.

    • @pullbothbarrels
      @pullbothbarrels Před 3 lety

      @LION TAMER wow ok kool . I didn't know
      Here in Miami you wouldn't do that
      But that's kool I'm all about respect

    • @pullbothbarrels
      @pullbothbarrels Před 3 lety

      @LION TAMER actually here in Miami if you showed up with a white belt and you were ,let's say a purple belt and didn't say anything , they wouldn't like that .
      Again I'm about respect . whatever is expected as protocal is ok with me

    • @pullbothbarrels
      @pullbothbarrels Před 3 lety +2

      @LION TAMER I guess if I went to another school I would just ask the instructor what was the proper thing to do in his school..

    • @SssamB
      @SssamB Před 3 lety

      TEKNOMOGUL no

  • @tobyn123
    @tobyn123 Před 4 lety +75

    My coach told us all to wear our belts with pride in new gyms. Fight to prove we earned them and fight to keep them if someone wants to de-rank you.. so that's what I will do.

    • @abaddon4823
      @abaddon4823 Před rokem

      That’s easy when your in shape

    • @T94869
      @T94869 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@abaddon4823get in shape

  • @rturo22
    @rturo22 Před 7 lety +275

    If you earn your rank from a legit professor you should keep it. It would be disrespectful to ask someone to demote themselves. I would say just let them know what the knew requirements are to get promoted

    • @chrisfrank8413
      @chrisfrank8413 Před 5 lety +6

      I like what your saying, Really, it would take the instructor who gave you the rank to take it away. I don't think you can demote yourself anymore that you can promote yourself.

    • @leovuitton9117
      @leovuitton9117 Před 5 lety

      Just say they have to catch up on his little things he doesn't know and he can't move up until he catches up on certain things

    • @clantonaw
      @clantonaw Před 4 lety +1

      and if they are below standard, they'll potentially be wearing that belt for a long time

    • @ricardojorgefilho4172
      @ricardojorgefilho4172 Před 4 lety

      Agreed, he should just have to learn the details needed in the new curriculum got get next stripe.

  • @martinkaleta5287
    @martinkaleta5287 Před 6 lety +116

    Never give up what you allready achieved, if you have earned your rank - this is disrespectfull to the former teacher.

  • @MF-kb2nv
    @MF-kb2nv Před 5 lety +13

    I have started to take up Judo again after a 25 year absence. I was brown belt prior to leaving. I've decided to start my 3 children at a club and start beginning class with them. The sensei doesn't know I was ever in Judo. In the class I'm considered a white belt and like my kids haven't even started to wear a gi. I admit I'm very rusty and have forgot many names of throws plus my body just doesn't move like it use to. One day I will tell my sensei but right now I'm just enjoying watching my kids play.

  • @justanotherwarr
    @justanotherwarr Před 7 lety +555

    Wow, I didn't know Dan Blizerian did Ju jitsu.

  • @jeffcordero7899
    @jeffcordero7899 Před 7 lety +147

    I wouldn't want to start over, I've been training for over 7 years (3rd degree purple belt) I've earned some IBJJF medals at large tournaments (Pans, master worlds) and I'm 52 years old. It's not like I have all the time in the world to spend on the mats trying to be the next Buchecha, I do this for fun not to "win." While my focus is not on belt colors I do plan on earning my black belt someday. I don't want to train for 20 years as a purple belt.

    • @jamesmol3634
      @jamesmol3634 Před 4 lety +2

      What belt are you now?

    • @GR-uc1gq
      @GR-uc1gq Před 4 lety +41

      Update he went to a new gym and is a white belt choking out the instructor

    • @LionWolfTactical
      @LionWolfTactical Před 4 lety

      Jeff Cordero What belt are you now Jeff? Still Purple? At 10 years in, I would think of you wanted, you could have your black by now. Just curious

    • @2277ize
      @2277ize Před 4 lety

      Jeff!???? Update sir

    • @balder6337
      @balder6337 Před 3 lety

      We need an update Jeff!?!!?!! :P

  • @Pfsif
    @Pfsif Před 7 lety +122

    You encountered a Narcissist (Brazilian guy).

    • @amplifiedbible07
      @amplifiedbible07 Před 4 lety +6

      Yes, narcissism is one of the dark triad traits. Watch out for those types of individuals.

    • @2277ize
      @2277ize Před 4 lety

      Most of them are

    • @vcash1112
      @vcash1112 Před 4 lety

      This guy sounds cocky, probably got what he deserved...Pay your dues before stepping in front of a black belt...lol

    • @vcash1112
      @vcash1112 Před 4 lety

      @@2277ize Why? Because it took 8 years to get your belt?

    • @2277ize
      @2277ize Před 4 lety +3

      vcash nah brotha , that’s on me , won’t blame anyone else , but I’ve rolled under some Brazilians and their vibe can throw you off sometimes

  • @sampokemppainen3041
    @sampokemppainen3041 Před 3 lety +8

    New bjj gym asks you to lose your belt, tell them to get a premission from the person who gave you that belt.

  • @arturofernandez725
    @arturofernandez725 Před 7 lety +20

    Hi Chewjitsu,
    Thanks for sharing your story. I started BJJ last November and am new - I don't dispute that at all. Your story spoke to me because I have had this experience outside the martial arts world. And before I get into that I want to express my sympathy for you and Bob experience poor leadership.
    I served in the U.S. Army and deployed for a full year and a half before electing to try out for the 75th Ranger Regiment. I crushed the fitness and technical standards in selection and graduated at the top of my class. I was assigned to a Battalion on the East coast and was sent to a leadership school. Again I graduated at the top of my class. The day came when I met my platoon sergeant and the first words he said to me were, "Your kind usually doesn't make it here." By 'your kind' he meant Rangers who are 'imported' from having prior service in other units. There is a big attitude of 'if you didn't do it here, it doesn't count.'
    So after having proven myself in a combat battalion for 15 months, in country, in an active war zone, I had this guy with a superiority complex tell me I was no better than the green kids who just got out of basic training. I tolerated it for as long as I could but I never got out from underneath that leader. He made sure I was the last to get any relevant training opportunities after that and he made sure that I got the weakest privates assigned to me.
    We live and we learn. Because of the experience and feeling completely hopeless under my leadership I gave up on my aspirations of becoming an operator at a higher tier. I got out of the Army and got on with my life. It's by far one of the worst experiences and feelings of betrayal I have had to this day.
    Empathetically,
    A

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety +8

      That really sucks.
      I recently read a book about Robin Olds, a fighter pilot. And in it, he talked about a conversation he had with a 4 star. The general told him to watch our for people in the service who were out for themselves or to cut down on others.
      I was always surprised to hear that. Seems like everyone would be trying to work together in a situation like the military. Not cut each other down. But I guess as you've seen. People suck.

    • @themaker2475
      @themaker2475 Před rokem

      Dang I’m not reading all that.
      Congratulations though
      or
      Damn, that sucks

    • @mattmyers1655
      @mattmyers1655 Před rokem +3

      @@themaker2475crazy how Chewy took the time out his busy schedule to make a genuine replay because the guys experience is a teachable moment. Way to go bud, not being able to read quickly is not the flex you think it is.

  • @GOmegaPHD
    @GOmegaPHD Před 5 lety +20

    Going from a blue belt in no-gi to a white belt in gi was a 100% necessity. I had no idea how the Gi worked, it changes the entire game, you can't brute force anything technical, and people can catch you slipping really fast!

    • @09michaels
      @09michaels Před rokem +4

      I don’t think there is such a thing out side of 10th planet Jiu Jitsu. To give color belt rank to students that don’t train in the Gi is kind of bogus in itself. If you’re training no gi only then you’re either beginner, intermediate, or advanced; no belt rank for no gi only practitioners.

    • @DrakeWilson-sn1ds
      @DrakeWilson-sn1ds Před 10 měsíci

      Yea no belt class in no gi all we care about is technique but I agree training in gi is a boon.

  • @jasonjohansen771
    @jasonjohansen771 Před 7 lety +95

    I wouldn't give it up. When we have student's from other schools come through, they remain the rank they are at until they are caught up, unless it's obvious they bought the belt on-line and are a complete novice...

    • @cogen651
      @cogen651 Před 6 lety

      Jason Johansen Yup,that's the best way to handle it.

    • @Pric3less1
      @Pric3less1 Před 4 lety

      Jason Johansen this.

  • @Presence_o_Mind
    @Presence_o_Mind Před 7 lety +3

    Great advice. Very well put.

  • @wozzupp8647
    @wozzupp8647 Před 7 lety +32

    "Next time break fall?" A proper instructor would have gave warning and give you a pull up, any judoka would.

    • @buttercatz99
      @buttercatz99 Před 4 lety +1

      Agreed. I would have gone hog wild on him and embarrassed him in the dojo and then never showed up again.

  • @jimmywantwingy
    @jimmywantwingy Před 5 lety

    this is awesome. great to see someone really into the art and enjoys what they are doing. the excitement about the mats were cool.

  • @steve7econmba
    @steve7econmba Před 7 lety +1

    This is the first video I've watched of yours, but damn. Your and humble and motivating and I guarantee it helps people grow. That's probably why so many people come to you for help because they know you will lift them up.

  • @Combatinho
    @Combatinho Před 7 lety +80

    As an instructor I would honor the belt level unless he does not hang in there with other belts that are the same size, age, and physical abilities as him. I would let him know the next belt requirements and award him when he is capable. I personally woud not give up my belt and would request to hold me in rank until I "caught up" to my peers.

    • @Lootroq
      @Lootroq Před 7 lety +11

      @Capone, do you not find any irony in your comment? There's quite a disconnect between the big picture of what you're trying to convey and they way you're conveying it. Try not to teach humility with arrogance.

    • @CAVEMANsean
      @CAVEMANsean Před 6 lety

      e. david yes, just ignorant people who choose to be offended and let their anger get the best of them. then they say that you don't know the spirit of martial arts, it's quite hilarious

    • @CAVEMANsean
      @CAVEMANsean Před 6 lety

      Lootroq you seem like a very wise dude. keep up the positivity bro

    • @spartanmerc1
      @spartanmerc1 Před 6 lety +2

      I took an extended break from training a long while ago when I was a blue belt. When I came back I did not feel like I was still blue belt skill level, I asked my instructor (a friend from high school) if I should wear my old white belt. He told me "Only if you want to, you earned the blue belt." I kept training and earned my purple belt, I got hurt and had to take a few months off, when I came back, I didn't even ask about belts. It's my purple belt, I earned it, I keep it on unless my instructor that awarded it to me tells me I should take it off. The belt really doesn't make much of a difference other than maybe intimidation factor, and that really only effects lower belts. Once you learn to gauge someone's skill based on their rolling they can wear whatever belt they want, the rest of the guys in the gym know what his skill level is.

  • @JD2jr.
    @JD2jr. Před 7 lety +213

    Yikes. I think not giving up a belt is even more important as a blue belt than any other. To me, the first earned belt (blue for BJJ, yellow for judo, whatever) just means "I know what I am doing and know how not to hurt myself or my partner". I am a blackbelt in judo and a blue belt in BJJ but I would rather demote myself all the way to yellow in judo than white in BJJ. I don't need a blackbelt to help someone improve a technique I can do well, but no one really knows how much mat time you have put in and to me, a colored belt shows just a little bit of that.
    Where I did BJJ for a while, I came in as a judo brown belt but no "actual" BJJ experience, but that white belt bothered me. I didn't really think I "deserved" a blue belt, but I wasn't allowed to roll because I wasn't high enough ranked (they wanted you to have 2 or 3 stripes to roll) and that really bugged me. It also bugged me how they awarded belts- if you came consistently enough ( I think 2 classes per week), you got a promotion after a certain amount of time. No skill requirements, no rolling/mat time requirements, just "show up for x months".
    I don't think I'm even close to being on topic anymore, so tl;dr: Unless it keeps you from training all together, keep the belt.

    • @deathByStupid
      @deathByStupid Před 7 lety +51

      Sounds like a lame gym, I rolled in my first class, it really sounds bizarre to require 2/3 stripes in order to roll.

    • @JD2jr.
      @JD2jr. Před 7 lety +7

      deathByStupid
      Yeah, but it was the only one less than about an hour away. The people there were great and the Gym was pretty nice (exclusively BJJ/Judo too). But little things always just didn't feel right. Sucks not having an awesome gym right around the corner anymore. =/

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety +29

      Who needs to be on topic anyways? Rambling is welcome here James. ;)
      I agree with the comment about he blue belt. It at least visually shows the people around you,"I'm not a brand new beginner."
      Bummer about the not rolling part at the BJJ gym. I can maybe understand it for a brand new person. But from someone with a Judo background already it seems a bit odd.

    • @craiglaidlaw4758
      @craiglaidlaw4758 Před 7 lety +4

      I have trained on and off since 2007. A couple of deployments, a couple of instructors who left my gyms, and just inconsistency has prevented me from receiving my blue belt. I roll with blues and I'm fine. Higher level blues going into purple is obviously difficult for me but I've never cared about belts. If someone told me to demote - sure. If you enjoy training enough who cares?

    • @JD2jr.
      @JD2jr. Před 7 lety +4

      Craig Laidlaw
      It doesn't really matter (like I said, don't refuse if it keeps you from training), but in the same regard, because it doesn't matter, no one should force you to be demoted.

  • @TheJubdestroy
    @TheJubdestroy Před 7 lety

    Man, I really dig your bump music. Sound providers is so chill.

  • @lordgrizzle
    @lordgrizzle Před 7 lety +2

    Chewy you are the man! my Professor and I were having this conversation a few days ago because he saw a guy get stripped of his rank and that made him furious, he said exactly what you said that it is his job as an instructor to build the guy's game up and make him a solid purple belt. I was of the same opinion being that I have taken many beaks in training and was demoted a few times, three to be exact, although it was few stripes each time and not a full real rank but I know what it feels like. Great vid, awesome info and insight... I need that shirt btw, lol!

  • @corkyakins1519
    @corkyakins1519 Před 4 lety +22

    This has been a very long time ago, but I can relate to this issue. I tried for several years with an instructor that I really respected and he was tough and would not advance me to another belt until I absolutely deserved it. Anyway, long story short, I was a brown belt in Tae Kwon Do when he had to relocate. It took me a month or so to find a new gym and when I joined the instructor said I would have to drop back one belt and when I asked why he said because he does not believe that new students that join his dojo are as good as his students. I dropped the belt and stayed. A month later he told me he was wrong, I was very good and I should take the Black Belt as soon as we could get it scheduled.

    • @davefletch3063
      @davefletch3063 Před rokem +3

      He should have evaluated you prior to your start before requesting you demote

  • @kingash71
    @kingash71 Před 5 lety +4

    I think that you handled those situations perfectly. When you were asked to surrender rank, you did so even though the instructor in question was just making a power play. And when it was in your hands to make the same call, you built your new student up. Giving him the chance to live into the rank. Train to gain skill, not rank. Rank can be given or taken away, skill can’t.
    I would also advise you to go back and learn those Judo throws. Not because you need them necessarily, but because you’ll learn things that will make your technique better in other areas. I learned that the hard way about skills that I ignored in my first 20 years of training. You don’t have to forget how to wrestle to learn something new. Just advice, and like nostalgia, it often means more to the person giving it than the person receiving it.

  • @jhoserovi29
    @jhoserovi29 Před 2 lety +1

    You touched a great point, the environment the coach creates does impact your drive in class, my coach is moody at times and temperamental with his delivery, I found that focusing on me and not relying on him to be part of my motivation has helped a lot and I stay at my gym because the other people in class are awesome so take the good with the bad, pushing extra hard to move to blue belt and change coaches.

  • @silentc1015
    @silentc1015 Před 7 lety +1

    Chewy, your videos are the best. Thanks, man.

  • @ShiddyShad808
    @ShiddyShad808 Před 7 lety +17

    I took the stripes off my blue belt when I attended a new school, but the teacher promoted me to purple belt just a few months later so I guess it didn't really matter.

  • @Silverbackpumphrey
    @Silverbackpumphrey Před 7 lety +40

    Rank DOES mean something...... if it didn't we would even have rank. Rank is like rank in military it represents knowledge and skill level. It also gives a structured order of things. I agree with Chew, don't give up the belt you have earned and be respectful of those ranked above you. While at the same time it is only respectful to direct questions as to" how to this or that" to the instructors unless they trust the lower belt enough to answer those questions.When it comes to fighting, I agree with Helio because nothing matters in a fight there's only one victor..

    • @2inchfromtheground
      @2inchfromtheground Před 5 lety

      crazyhorse True Martial arts belts are only white and black. You are a student or a teacher. Colored belts came about for western culture, which needs more physical signs of their achievement rather than knowing their skill

    • @Manny-ok7fv
      @Manny-ok7fv Před 5 lety

      You’d be surprised the kind of people that hold rank in the military. The two are apples & oranges

    • @2inchfromtheground
      @2inchfromtheground Před 3 lety +1

      @Sergio Díaz Nila thanks for going into detail on how I am correct. BTW jujutsu and jiu jitsu are both correct spellings for different martial arts. Many Japanese martial artists were taking their systems west, which is why they were translating their languages to Latin.
      Just want to make sure... were you there when Jigoro Kano invented colored belts? Or are the black belts that filled you in on this bit of history named Google and Wikipedia?

  • @logruszed
    @logruszed Před 7 lety

    This is just great advice for any social scene, Chew. Don't let people who haven't given you something just take it from you.

  • @3ARKH
    @3ARKH Před 5 lety

    Thank you Chewi for being the voice for us all in this sport.

  • @shaun0621
    @shaun0621 Před 7 lety +469

    I would just tell my coach, "cash me ousside how bout dat". Problem solved....

  • @LiveItUpDaily
    @LiveItUpDaily Před 7 lety +6

    Thanks for the advice Bilzerian

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety +3

      . . . really funny. . . ;)

    • @LiveItUpDaily
      @LiveItUpDaily Před 7 lety +1

      haha all in good fun! really enjoyed watching your video :)

  • @HollyDollyTakahani
    @HollyDollyTakahani Před 7 lety

    Good guy. Nice to know there are people out there like you. Excellent story.

  • @DudeHugh
    @DudeHugh Před 7 lety +1

    Subscribed man. Really entertaining, positive guy. Some good advice too. Totally respect your approach of allowing the student to keep their belt as they no doubt rolled well against your own blue belts, but focusing on strengthening key areas you think should be strong for anyone with a blue belt in your gym. Best of both worlds.

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety

      Thanks for subscribing. Glad you enjoyed the video.

  • @AGC828
    @AGC828 Před 7 lety +7

    Too many guys out there focus too much on ranking. The belt. You should be in any school or gym to learn. So what belt one has around their waist shouldn't matter at all.
    Philip Rhee's "coach"..."Sensei"....when he started learning a new style put on a white belt. Yet I think he was already a "master" I think in TKD/Hapkido.
    Belts. Some schools hand them out like coupons. Giving kids black belts at age 10. :) Other schools you have to be at least 18 to even go for testing. Standards vary too much in the US.

  • @bennybooboo6789
    @bennybooboo6789 Před 7 lety +29

    Nailed it. There isnt a single instructor who could demote me. If I dont hold up against their standard, so be it, still not taking my belt. Hold me there until I meet the standards.

  • @Jayreed4Jesus
    @Jayreed4Jesus Před 7 lety

    Man that was some awesome advice. Thanks for sharing it with us.

  • @shootits48
    @shootits48 Před 4 lety

    Chewy I enjoy your talks, thanks for your stories and advice.

  • @Sawbucks23
    @Sawbucks23 Před 7 lety +48

    I'm a purple belt myself and think that too many school or BBJ practitioners focus too much on the belt. The belt only represents the time you put on the mat. Too many people get caught up on how good your are supposed to be just because you have a certain color dye on your belt. BBJ is mainly for self defense, health, and fun.

    • @zacharycaldwell7821
      @zacharycaldwell7821 Před 7 lety +2

      Sawbucks23 how long did it take u to get a purple belt?

    • @sigmaprojects
      @sigmaprojects Před 6 lety +4

      Agreed. It wasn't till Judo put belt rankings into the mix that martial arts started adding belts really. It's like just focus on getting better.

    • @wesdowty79
      @wesdowty79 Před 6 lety +1

      Exactly!

    • @wayne47able
      @wayne47able Před 6 lety +10

      You got a purple belt in BBJ?

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band Před 5 lety +1

      "I think too many people focus on the belt"
      **literally the first thing he mentions is his belt**

  • @justinhills2740
    @justinhills2740 Před 7 lety +3

    I feel this talk is so awesome. I train in a gym where I totally understand the judo talk. I have one goal to grow and learn. So now I am coming to the end of my 3 months of this place where Im doing too well. So I need to change because of your story thank you man.

  • @stephenschneider3521
    @stephenschneider3521 Před 5 lety +1

    I love your 'make him a real blue belt' approach. Working with him and building him up gives a guy confidence. Telling him he sucks and taking his belt away cuts him down. Nothing is worse in a fight than doubting yourself and thinking that you suck. If I went to class, and was told, you suck you need to start over. I would doubt everything I know until something else happened. Think about being jumped in the street after that, or having your boss give you the business after that. I'd probably cave in or give up after a self-esteem blow like that. You're totally right. Let people keep their accomplishments but quality control is just as important. Thanks for the video

  • @mannyyhormiga3386
    @mannyyhormiga3386 Před rokem +2

    Uff thanks God you brought up this issue. I went through the same thing but after beating every blue belt for over 4 months and not being tap by any of them I was recognized as a purple belt who just came out of training 7 years of judo in Japan 🥋🙏

  • @taekwondomartialart1
    @taekwondomartialart1 Před 5 lety +17

    I have also been on both sides.
    As a student, I transferred as a 2nd Dan black belt in taekwondo, I just kept at my rank until I learned the new curriculum and tested for my 3rd.
    As an instructor, I have had color and black belts transfer in. I follow a simple rule, I recognize prior ranks, but they will need to meet my requirements to test.
    Bottom line, I agree with him, NEVER GIVE UP AN EARNED RANK! Be respectful about it, but be firm.

  • @SindreEide93
    @SindreEide93 Před 7 lety +21

    I earned my bluebelt from my master that I respect and got a really god relationship with. He is a brown belt. I would say a really high lvl brown belt. I moved to a different city to go to university and I now got a really good black belt couch. But, if a new couch told me to take of my belt and go back to white i would never done it. I earned that belt and would look on it as disrespectful against my old couch that gave me the belt to give it up.

    • @ubaidshah1910
      @ubaidshah1910 Před 7 lety +23

      Sindre Eide That *couch* sounds pretty interactive for an inanimate object!

    • @Sirmustardpack
      @Sirmustardpack Před 6 lety +6

      Sindre Eide hope you took remedial English classes at your university 😂

    • @kobebryant2288
      @kobebryant2288 Před 6 lety +11

      This nigga really learned BJJ from a couch.

    • @ChrisParayno
      @ChrisParayno Před 4 lety

      Sounds like an ego thing🤣

  • @keenedgedesigns
    @keenedgedesigns Před 4 lety

    You always give good advice. Well done.

  • @hoodoooperator.5197
    @hoodoooperator.5197 Před 4 lety +1

    Chewy, you're such a legend. Just wanted to say that. Cheers.

  • @sigmundurjohansen7166
    @sigmundurjohansen7166 Před 7 lety +9

    No one should ever demote themselves or others. Here's why!
    If you get a black belt, take a vacation for 5 years, and feel like you don't remember anything and it's been too long since you fought and decide to demote yourself to yellow belt(or any other belt for that matter) and enter a tournament, you'll fucking wreck everyone because even if your mind doesn't remember it, your body still remembers how to fight.
    I've seen this happen, and when you see a yellow belt beat every brown belt at the "under black belt division" at a national tournament you know something is wrong, and everyone that was there looked at this guy holding the trophy at the top of the podium and thought either that he was fucked up in the head for getting any satisfaction from this, or they thought it was amazing that a yellow belt could win, because they didn't know any better, which just made it more disgusting.
    Now for the reason that someone else cant demote you is simple, there isn't any organization that determines who's worthy of what rank, the coaches are given this power for good or worse but that's how it is, there are guidelines for what you need for each belt, but in the end there is more than one curriculum and if you pass in one, the other's cant demote you even if they want to because they don't have the authority to do so, if the coach feels all his students that have certain rank need certain skills that's his problem not yours, so if you are lacking in his eyes he should just make sure to teach you what he believes you need for the next rank and every rank up to it.
    Where I'm from when we go up in rank we need to show that we also can do(remember) all of the things required in the ranks below the one we're aspiring to.

  • @Siper2
    @Siper2 Před 7 lety +5

    For the record, that is one epic T-shirt.
    :-D

  • @Doberman144
    @Doberman144 Před 7 lety +1

    Great topic and video .. I have also noticed a thing in the BJJ community that some are concerned with everyone else's rank or the belt they are wearing .. It appears to be a type of jealous thing .. I also notice it is also among the millennial crowd .. You do not know if the guy you are judging may have a physical disability or it may be just age itself .. It is not your place to decide on whether the guy is up to the belt he is wearing, it is your place to focus on your game and mind your own .. Just focus on being better than you were yesterday both in the gym and out ..

  • @RajSinghKhalsa
    @RajSinghKhalsa Před 6 lety

    Good advice, thank you Chewy

  • @captainseyepatch3879
    @captainseyepatch3879 Před 7 lety +8

    Hmm.. I have a very mixed feeling on this.
    -
    See.. When I was fourteen I started to take Taekwondo (It was the only thing in my area) did if for a year and moved. (Military family)
    Took Jujitsu for three years and then moved. (College)
    In college I took Judo (Judo Team) Wrestling (College) Kendo (Jude Team) Fencing (Umm your seeing a pattern)
    In military I took combative. I took some Shotokan. Took some Aikido. Arnis.
    Took martail arts in Japan. And in China While working over seas.
    -
    And...
    I never once carried over a belt.
    -
    But I never really knew a reason to.
    I have seen yellow belts that can run brown belts off the mat.
    I have a brother who is a phenomenal fighter with no REAL training.
    And I'm not really comparing or saying that some things are not worth it.
    I'm just saying that belts are more or less a measure of "Progress" not really much else.
    Its kind of like you can find two Lawyers who are very different in skill. But they both passed the bar.
    I know a great deal of Black Belts. That are all very talented. but there are some pretty marked gaps in skill/ability.
    _
    I don't know that I would ever say "I wont go to this gym / judo" because I don't get to keep my belt... but..
    There are gyms that 100% are not worth that.
    -
    Note on author: After twenty years of martial arts. In what ever I had around me in the area I was. I have a brown belt. A few blue belts. a BUNCH Of yellow belts. A wall full of training equipment. And no black belt. I might at some point. (Most likely not, but only because I have leaned away from forms that give belts. Mostly because of health problems)
    And.. I don't really mind. I know a pretty good about most anything you can run across. (Not great at anything)
    But some people can be better in 5 years then other in 20. Some people never learn to fight. (There really is such a thing as a killer/fighting instinct.)
    -
    AND Now I"m rambling.
    But what is a one eyed internet pirate to do I suppose.
    Great Response to the question Chewjitsu.
    And if you don't mind me saying so. That... Is a Damn fine beard...

  • @tavitatoti6222
    @tavitatoti6222 Před 7 lety +73

    BELT = Competition. Don't get demote and bully the competitions... Belts lives matter !

    • @ryvrdrgn15
      @ryvrdrgn15 Před 7 lety +4

      All I really wanted out of belts is to know the person I'm throwing down won't die because he knows how to fall and he won't go use unrefined techniques that could cause injury to training partners.

    • @itscork
      @itscork Před 5 lety +2

      "Belt lives matter"
      Just spit up my orange juice! 🤣

    • @thelurkingpanda3605
      @thelurkingpanda3605 Před 5 lety

      but what if they are bad and end up hurting themselves

  • @whitetailpoet4243
    @whitetailpoet4243 Před 6 lety

    I was fortunate to have a great instructor who allowed me to keep my TKD red belt rank after eight years of blood, sweat, and tears at another school when I changed Dojangs and started to learn the nuances of his system. I have often said a great instructor is more important then a certain style. If a teacher is to insecure to recognise my prior efforts I would question their discretion. Interesting video. Thanks! Peace from Minnesota. DB.
    Ps; at the same time, I do not get hung up on rank, and asked my new instructor where he wanted me to start.... Its just fun to train with people that care about the process more then testing out!
    Hopefully I can train in BJJ some day... My rural area does not offer many options.

  • @FlashySenap
    @FlashySenap Před 7 lety

    Wow, that is the best way to go about a student who u feel is not at a level u feel comfortable for a belt. Great work man!

  • @Gallagur-xz6fr
    @Gallagur-xz6fr Před 7 lety +13

    I have had a similar experience in TKD. Not that TKD compares at all with BJJ (which I love and trained in for some time as well), but the situation itself was identical. YEARS ago, I had trained under a TKD organization and left when I was a green belt - simply due to the location of a nearer school. I trained and earned my black belt under an instructor who taught the exact same system, only he added more to the requirements. He passed away, and I then went back under the previous organization. The master instructor visited the class that I was training in, pulled me aside and told me that, in his organization, I was still a green belt. Back then, I was young, in shape, flexible, etc... I could do all the cool jump spinning kicks, flashy kicks, etc... and people noticed that AND also new that I had come from another school. And again, similar to this story, I think he felt threatened from a business stand point. That is, I feel he wanted to be able to say that I earned my black belt under his academy, so that he could take claim to what was accomplished in my training under my previous instructor. I'm not claiming to be a badass by any means. The techniques were just flashy. But I think this can be a huge factor in situations like that. I think for some instructors, it's about them wanting to repackage your abilities with their brand on them. If you think of it in those terms, it is a compliment.

    • @juddgranger7457
      @juddgranger7457 Před 2 lety

      A green belt isnt a rank. Its a small step in a long walk. Any legit martial art would tell you that.

  • @MMOInformers
    @MMOInformers Před 7 lety +10

    Some people are puny, they do that because they feel insecure that you soon would surpass him. Kid mentality.

  • @countsmyth
    @countsmyth Před 3 lety

    Solid advice as usual!

  • @EPantano
    @EPantano Před 7 lety

    Thanks for this advice!

  • @DragonSlayer-tg5mk
    @DragonSlayer-tg5mk Před 7 lety +3

    Chew, you are a good dude!

  • @bigjimmcbob9358
    @bigjimmcbob9358 Před 5 lety +3

    Demoting someone when they come to your gym is pretty disrespectful to their last coach, especially it seems like, for a blue belt. At my current school, rank, especially for white belts, is largely a product of coming everyday, working hard, and using technique when you roll. If you do the right things consistently for long enough, you get promoted. I'd see it as an insult to my last coach if someone said I was so inadequately prepared that I needed demoted, especially if rolling was going fine.

  • @mkolland123
    @mkolland123 Před 7 lety

    awesome video. i think my fav one yet. If I were in the area, I'd train with you. Mostly because of your mindset and humbleness. keep on it.

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety +1

      Glad you liked it Mike. Thanks for the comment brother.

  • @SentinelIXK
    @SentinelIXK Před 6 lety

    Good video/message, Chewy.

  • @hipqban169
    @hipqban169 Před 6 lety +8

    I’ve a question and would appreciate advice.
    Been a blue belt for 4 years. Missed my purple belt promotion due to an injury. Then had to move and started training at a new school about 3 months ago.
    Former professor invited me to test for my purple belt but idk if current coach will accept and honestly I’m embarrassed to ask. I feel my skill level is at purple level as I kill every blue at new school but I can’t promote myself. What’d you think?
    Any suggestions?
    Help appreciate it.

  • @HazardoustoyCOD
    @HazardoustoyCOD Před 7 lety +3

    You are a gentleman and a scholar

  • @alli4236
    @alli4236 Před 2 lety

    Great advice!

  • @jtstevenson81
    @jtstevenson81 Před 5 lety +1

    Just discovered your channel and am definitely loving it. Quick question, where do you receive questions through? I have some things I would like to send you. Thanks brother!

  • @davieh6
    @davieh6 Před 7 lety +8

    great video. even getting one stripe on your belt takes lots of your time, its all time driven as well as experience and skill driven, and you can't get the time that you've spent back, so I would never give my belt up. it's a stupid thing to ask someone to do and that instructor should have known better.

  • @marcohutch9754
    @marcohutch9754 Před 7 lety +4

    another MMA fighter who loves sound providers👍

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety +2

      Haha happy to meet you Marco!

    • @marcohutch9754
      @marcohutch9754 Před 7 lety +1

      Chewjitsu good to meet you too. I fight under Afro Samurai👍

  • @78Bigtank
    @78Bigtank Před 6 lety

    dude you are a bad ass keep up the great work

  • @_Mordion_
    @_Mordion_ Před 6 lety

    I had this same issue in karate but in BJJ since the belt progression takes SO damn long, I feel like it applies double. Lots of respect to you though for being humble enough to give up your purple belt under those circumstances.

  • @tim707max
    @tim707max Před 7 lety +51

    This sounds like an episode of Seinfeld lol

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety +6

      It would make a good episode wouldn't it?

    • @tim707max
      @tim707max Před 7 lety

      Chewjitsu Yea lol

    • @tim707max
      @tim707max Před 7 lety

      Chewjitsu​ Has anyone ever told you you look like Dan Bilzareian

    • @litgeeksquadofficial
      @litgeeksquadofficial Před 5 lety +3

      "what... Is the deal with belts?"

    • @KiNG-tx9je
      @KiNG-tx9je Před 5 lety

      NO BELT FOR YOU!!!

  • @sabrewolf479
    @sabrewolf479 Před 7 lety +14

    Belts keep your pants and Gi together, nothing else. Train and learn.

  • @MyChelsea1964
    @MyChelsea1964 Před 7 lety

    Great advice Sir

  • @Beastius24
    @Beastius24 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for sharing. I have been doing kempo for 4 years, kyokushin karate for 6 and hopefully will pass my brown belt grading soon (in kyokushin). I have just signed up to BJJ and will be happy to wear a white belt. The concept of belts awarded by a coach without any examination is a bit foreign to me, but I guess that's part of the reason why each gym might have a different interpretation of the meaning. I am looking forward to the next years or months until I would be awarded by a new belt ; unlike karate it's not like you might be ready, let's grade so you know exactly when that moment comes, making it all the more exciting

  • @marklaughlin1290
    @marklaughlin1290 Před 7 lety +4

    Great video and advice. In my Dojo, I will honor the belt someone has earned from a previous Dojo...however, in order to progress, they must learn all of the kata, weapons, self-defense, etc. leading up to their current belt, and rank test for each one under my curriculum.
    Osu!

  • @jlogan2228
    @jlogan2228 Před 6 lety +6

    I have a 3rd dan rank in japanese jujutsu where i am the head instructor under the shihan, and just recently took up bjj for new skills, meet people, and challenge myself.
    When i was signing up the guy offered to let me start at blue belt bc if my previous experience but i decided to start at white (obviously wasnt there for long) bc to me its a matter of respect.
    I may kniw exactly what im doing in my style but to come.to a new school i aim to learn and i cant let my ranks elsewhere cloud that mentality

  • @Speculativedude
    @Speculativedude Před 5 lety +1

    I can understand the frustration and confusion about a belt rank. As you said, a belt doesn't mean everything, but it does mean something to the person that earned it. I have been practicing Taekwondo for almost 25 year and am currently a 3rd Dan black belt. However, for the last 4 years I have lived overseas in China. For the first couple of years I did not realize how popular Taekwondo was in China and sadly did not practice like I should have. However I did manage to meet an instructor in Beijing when I was living there. He's a really nice guy and I consider him a friend. He let me train and practice for free in exchange for occasionally helping to teach some of the younger kids. However even though he never said anything, I could see that he was bothered when I wore my belt from my previous school. So When I would train I stopped wearing the belt and he was visibly more relaxed. However now I am living in Dongguan China not too far from Hong Kong and found another good Taekwondo school, and I had the opposite happen. I didn't want to bother anyone so when I went to my first class I put on my Gi but not my belt. At break time the coach asked me to put on my belt simply because I was higher rank than most of the students there and he thought I should stand out a bit more. (Not that being the only white guy in the group didn't make me stand out enough.) But it really all depends on the instructor.

  • @sfcxxv8319
    @sfcxxv8319 Před 6 lety

    Thank you for being my coach!

  • @mikeharvey1597
    @mikeharvey1597 Před 7 lety +24

    Weird story. I got some guys in my gym who don't really like me due to my being kind of playful ( cause that's who I am). I figure as a white belt, who cares? But I wish they'd get over it.

    • @noahweller6939
      @noahweller6939 Před 7 lety

      mike harvey thats normal. it'll work out over time. just proof that ur tough

    • @jockim123
      @jockim123 Před 7 lety +19

      define "playful"

    • @JustFollowJesus
      @JustFollowJesus Před 7 lety +39

      jockim lol he's grabbing guys' asses 😂

    • @DissFunkShunIll
      @DissFunkShunIll Před 7 lety +37

      He sniffs penises longways like a Cuban cigar and goes "no homo bro". Seriously though I like to be goofy too and I hate people who think they're so high, mighty, and important.

    • @mikeharvey1597
      @mikeharvey1597 Před 7 lety +8

      I just smile all the time, and yeah, my favorite move is choking the guy with his own belt. I probably shouldn't do that, but when i happens, I think it's hysterical, so I guess I'm an idiot. I'm in Japan, as well, maybe doesn't help. :)

  • @pmartialartsx
    @pmartialartsx Před 7 lety +16

    Reminds me of a Karate school I walked into many years ago. I was a black belt in both Taekwondo and Hapkido yet they demanded I wear a white belt which I did. One day during sparring class, a brown belt told me that he wouldn't kick because he didn't want to hurt me but I can do whatever. Well I'm sure you guys can guess how the rest of the story goes.

    • @oldmate9561
      @oldmate9561 Před 5 lety +7

      pmartialartsx
      🤔Being a black belt in hupkito or whatever and Taekwondo don't make you a black belt in karate they're different arts

    • @threethrushes
      @threethrushes Před 5 lety +1

      Call me pedantic, but I need it spelling out. What happened next?

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band Před 5 lety +2

      @@threethrushes The entire class started clapping. And the name of that brown belt? Albert Einstein.

    • @threethrushes
      @threethrushes Před 5 lety

      @@B3Band Good one.

    • @samuelfernandezbjj
      @samuelfernandezbjj Před 3 lety +1

      It's a different art. I'm a black belt in jiu-jitsu. If I show up to karate I am now a white belt and will wear one, no problem

  • @DanielleFerreira-uk9yt

    This sucks... I’m super sorry that you had to go through this.

  • @carterstaekwondo268
    @carterstaekwondo268 Před 5 lety

    After 5 years of HTF, simular to ITF style Taekwondo, I moved and started as instructor assistant at a school, started off as teaching as a brown belt at one school, started off as a white belt at another school and currently I run my own school. Yes I did hear you mention that the belt is not everything and yes I agree. Learning from scratch at a new school is not horrible since Mastery takes a lifetime. However, it would be difficult starting as a white belt at a new school, but if it's an another discipline or anything different, it would make sense to start off as a white belt again

  • @rolandvogt
    @rolandvogt Před 5 lety +10

    Funny that a BJJ practitioner thinks he could set the standards for throwing. I'd prefer wrestling throws over BJJ throws at any time. Sincerely a judo coach

  • @Anthony126517RKO
    @Anthony126517RKO Před 7 lety +6

    I think once you earned it, it's yours and a good coach will bring out the best of you even if you are not up to there level in terms of skills. There is a huge difference between BJJ schools all around.

  • @TheParkBadBoy
    @TheParkBadBoy Před 6 lety

    first time i've watched your channel and would like to say great vid!!!

  • @keepittrill6370
    @keepittrill6370 Před 7 lety

    totally agree with you on this subject brother....I've known some dudes that have encountered this very predicament and it definitely seems as though it is generally about domination and pride when it comes to new instructors striping their students of rank

  • @mustard..
    @mustard.. Před 7 lety +81

    belt belt belt. thats all anyone cares about anymore. i have my black belt, and i wear anything i can get my hands on when i train if i forget my black belt. it is what it is. if you're good, you're good.

    • @anthonyborrelli8805
      @anthonyborrelli8805 Před 6 lety +5

      BibleAsFireWood absolutley not you know nothing about bjj if your saying this. Why have belts in the first place if no one cares about them. Take your black belt off and put a white belt on if you dont care. A new belt is what people train for I shouldn't have to give my belt up just because I go to a new school

    • @anthonyborrelli8805
      @anthonyborrelli8805 Před 6 lety +4

      And you wear any belt you can find? If that's the case your a schmuk then

    • @padmad3k63
      @padmad3k63 Před 6 lety +13

      If you don't have the skillset of a black belt you shouldn't wear that. There are so many BJJ/JJ/MMA gyms who're complete McDojos. Back at my gym my Wing Chun teacher who was a purple belt BJJ did teach BJJ, but the combat version not the sport version. We didn't have any belts. Belts really don't represent the skillset.
      If you train for just belts you'll become a product of a McDojo. Most of those guys don't focus on great techniques just on the exams. Bible is right, screw belts they mean nothing.

    • @betsyknox9469
      @betsyknox9469 Před 5 lety +2

      I hear you! If people just want a belt, they can buy plenty at Sears.

    • @sikfaka1
      @sikfaka1 Před 5 lety +8

      obviously YOU have no idea what you're talking about. any true judo or jj practitioner is there for the sport. Belt colors are only there to vaguely represent your skill level and for people to be able to visualize their progress. I do the same thing, I have done judo and bjj for 20+ years (since 6 years old) and to this day, ill wear a white belt if thats all i can find. You never actually play against 'blue belt' or 'purple belt', you are rolling with the individual in front of you. enjoy the sport for what it is and spare us the pissing contest

  • @slackerengi2401
    @slackerengi2401 Před 5 lety +3

    Belt just means time invested in the gym
    Skills really mean everything
    In a fight, no dudes gonna ask your belt rank

    • @ChrisParayno
      @ChrisParayno Před 4 lety

      Bingo, a gym! Different place, different rules, get over it peeps.

  • @badoocee1967
    @badoocee1967 Před 7 lety

    Interesting story Sir. Thanks for the insight. OSS!

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety

      You're welcome! Thanks for the comment.

  • @RedWolfSMA
    @RedWolfSMA Před 7 lety

    It was awesome meeting you and training with you @ Team Shawn Hammonds Training in Nashville! Big fan from Auburn MMA and JJ

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety

      Awesome. I'll be down in Auburn in April!

    • @RedWolfSMA
      @RedWolfSMA Před 7 lety

      oh hellz yeah! that side control reversal is sooooooo money for me!

  • @rogerdelcampo6146
    @rogerdelcampo6146 Před 7 lety +16

    I was a purple belt when I moved to a new city and gym. I went in as a white belt an told the coach that it is his gym and his rules, if he sees fit to promote me to his standard so be it. I trained as a white belt an just kept showing up it didn't matter to me. That was 6 years ago and I am now a brown belt an still there. I guess what I'm trying to say is it's their house their rules.

    • @michaeljung4398
      @michaeljung4398 Před 6 lety +3

      Roger del Campo
      I agree with you. If someone doesn't want to respect the school rules, they don't belong to that school. Experienced students from other schools are seldom happy with a new school. New school has new style, new people, new rules.... Not quiet happy with the new school. One of the martial arts spirit should be humbleness... By the way, BJJ is not a martial art. By definition, it is a Brazilian system of soft techniques.

    • @juttingforrest6184
      @juttingforrest6184 Před 6 lety +3

      Stfu! Did you grow up with two dads? Who the fuck does this!

    • @spiralinglight
      @spiralinglight Před 6 lety +8

      Must have been fun smoking all those other white belts

    • @Nikkenai
      @Nikkenai Před 6 lety +4

      Isnt that a bit unfair towards the other white and blue belts?

    • @2dimples_dad255
      @2dimples_dad255 Před 5 lety

      Exactly, empty your cup. Great story.

  • @holmganghamburg
    @holmganghamburg Před 7 lety +92

    no belts, no ranks, no problems with egos.

    • @holmganghamburg
      @holmganghamburg Před 7 lety +4

      you are right. although ranks and status is a wide spread society problem. one exception: the fake black belt series on youtube, because these guys are funny.

    • @FCF4L
      @FCF4L Před 7 lety +2

      I'll take a look at it

    • @kylekraft9202
      @kylekraft9202 Před 7 lety +9

      thats what wrestling is lol

    • @jlogan2228
      @jlogan2228 Před 6 lety +2

      To be fair they do serve some.purpose. helps break thibgs into segments to work towards, gives a rough immediate estimation of ones skill, and as an instructor helps you keep pace of where everyones at if you have students who are in and out.
      We used to only have 3 belt colors that were pre black but it gets tricky when you have someone take tine off and come back and trying to remember where they left off when a green belt for example covered 3 different ranks

    • @jammin1881
      @jammin1881 Před 6 lety +1

      holmganghamburg
      This is why the jiu jitsu gods created no gi jiu jitsu.

  • @daveram4693
    @daveram4693 Před 7 lety

    thanks chewy! good advice man

  • @ozthesoundguy
    @ozthesoundguy Před 3 lety

    Great Advice!!

  • @maxpaspirgilis3967
    @maxpaspirgilis3967 Před 7 lety +3

    I just injured my right Shoulder joint capsle, what shoud i do to recover as fast as possible? I have an Important judo comp comming up in 2 weeks...

    • @eljonnymac
      @eljonnymac Před 7 lety +12

      Max Paspirgilis I would give up your belt

    • @Chewjitsu
      @Chewjitsu  Před 7 lety +1

      Depends on severity. You may need rest. Stretching and corrective exercises could help as well.

    • @raymondlugo9960
      @raymondlugo9960 Před 5 lety +1

      How is the competition more important than healing your injury? If you re-injure the same place you may be out for even longer, right?

  • @ndshreddermn
    @ndshreddermn Před 7 lety +6

    I had a black belt in a different martial art, went to a new gym and they started me out as a white belt at first. About a month later they let me wear my black belt.

    • @noway2451
      @noway2451 Před 6 lety +1

      ndshreddermn you didn't have a bjj black belt before and they just gave you one after a month? That must be some kind of record

    • @damonmartin8021
      @damonmartin8021 Před 6 lety +3

      Really black belt in 1 month that’s a world record I think the fastest officially is 3yrs ish

    • @abonynge
      @abonynge Před 6 lety +1

      Allowing him to wear the belt he earned in another martial art is not the same as earning a black belt in BJJ. It is a respect towards his prior accomplishments, Tae Kwon Do grandmasters often allow this if they respect the prior instructor. The rest of the school is still made aware of his current ranking in the new martial art. In the TKD gyms I have been to browns often sparred with blacks, they cared more about personal matchups, strengths and weaknesses, than the color of your belt. Your belt shows your mastery of technique, not your ability to win a fight. In any martial art, the art is the key element, BJJ often focuses on the fight. As a result I can see where that concept can easily be lost in the community.

  • @JamesMoreau
    @JamesMoreau Před 7 lety +1

    This exact thing happened to me when I came to South Korea. When I decided to join a different gym and got to know the local scene, turns out the guy who wanted me to give my blue belt up apparently got tapped by a blue belt who joined once and he "lost face" in front of his other students and said he wouldn't let anyone join the gym who was higher than a white belt, or if they did, they had to go back down to white and he actually wouldn't roll with them. I was quite happy I made my choice as 2 years later I'm a couple grades closer to purple belt and much better after all the ass kickins I've taken at my current gym. My ego isn't huge and frankly the belt isn't the biggest deal like you said, but when I think back on the 2 years it took me to get it and what it meant to me and all the hardship it represented, I felt it was disrespect to my first professor and all the people I trained with.

  • @NuEnque
    @NuEnque Před 7 lety +1

    It would be awesome if we had guys like this in Muay Thai. This dude is cool and his stories are stories you really want to hear.