I started training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu around 1996. At that time I was teaching Martial Arts at a fitness center in Wilmington Delaware. (I was affiliated with the Tai-Kai school in Syracuse – except we weren’t calling it Tai-Kai just yet). I decided (along with Ken Kronenberg and Scott Schultz to compete in an MMA Style event called the “Fearless Fighting Challenge” in Virginia). At the time I was teaching mainly Japanese Jujutsu – very little grappling and more self-defense oriented. I didn’t really know much about submission grappling at the time – and definitely sucked by today’s standards. But it was 1996 and hardly anyone was doing BJJ. Think about it…the first UFC was in 1993! Anyways, I took this fight and lost a decision after a thirty minute battle. The next day we were all invited to Mario Yamasaki’s(the now very popular UFC referee) BJJ school to train. I immediately fell in love with BJJ! I loved the training so much that I would continue to drive to Yamasaki’s school (an almost 3 hour drive each way) whenever I could to train in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. I would go on to completely embrace Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and train almost exclusively in BJJ (In fact we would go on to name the Syracuse and Delaware schools “Tai-Kai Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu”). I would own and run the Delaware Tai-Kai school until 2003 when I would go on to sell the school and relocate to Colorado with my now wife Sheena.
When I got to Colorado I ended up working for a large karate school chain. Career wise it definitely served me well as I had the opportunity to learn sales and marketing from one of the best in the world.
BUT BJJ-wise it wasn’t so great! I had a very limited opportunity to only train with beginners and hardly ever roll with anyone with skills. Unfortunately this really hurt my progress in BJJ. Just to put it all in perspective…I received my brown belt in 2001 along with ken Kronenberg and Scott Schultz! So that means I have now been a brown belt for almost eleven years (ouch). I always half jokingly say I am trying to set a record for the longest BJJ brown belt in history. Truthfully it really bothers me that my training has been so inconsistent. I turn 43 years old in May…again ouch! People always tell me why do you care about turning 43? You look so young… But it does bother me… regardless. I have watched five of my former students go on to earn the coveted BJJ Black Belt! (and three other close friends who started with me on the BJJ path all go on to earn their own BJJ black belts) Of course I am VERY happy for them…but there is a part of me that gets secretly bummed out when I see others get their BJJ Black Belt. Last May I relocated my entire life / family back to Central New York so we could be closer to family and so Sheena and I could train. For various reasons (and none of them all that strong) I haven’t been able to train the way I really want too. In fact I have gotten so discouraged that I have now “officially quit BJJ” twice in the past six months. The last time was just a week ago when I became VERY frustrated with my lack of training schedule so I told my wife Sheena “I was hanging up my brown belt once and for all!” One thing anyone who trains seriously in BJJ knows for sure is that it’s REALLY hard to progress in BJJ unless you roll (grapple) consistently. Otherwise you are just reminded how out of shape you are and how much you really suck! I have always said, Jiu-jitsu…good or bad is the "ultimate lesson in honesty!" The mats don’t lie…every time you train, you know exactly where you are skill wise!
So when I decided to have this most recent “pity party” I thought this is it…I’m done! But of course the mats have a way of always pulling you back. It’s been a series of things that have all happened in the past week that have really "woken me up". Physically I have gained some unwanted extra weight. In addition, my blood pressure has been a little higher than I would like to admit. So I definitely need to get in better shape. But that’s not the only reason (if I wanted to just get in shape I would get a gym membership). I’ve really noticed that when I don’t train I am moody…grumpy and not myself. Honestly…I don’t like that version of me. I like how I feel when I am in shape and training BJJ. There’s nothing more empowering that being in the "BJJ Zone". People who train BJJ get this… I desire it and need it more now than ever. I also feel like I owe is to my own children…the kids I teach everyday…and ultimately myself to earn my Black Belt. So here it is. I’m actually a fairly private person (believe it or not). But there is something really empowering about saying it out loud so the world can hear you…about being really brutally honest with yourself… I am making a commitment to getting my BJJ Black Belt…to get on the mats as much as possible…to train like I’ve never trained before and I will say it again…GET MY BJJ BLACK BELT! I turn 43 years old in two and a half months – I’m jumping on my own bandwagon to enter my forty third year in the best shape of my life AND ON THE ROAD TO FINALLY GETTING MY BJJ BLACK BELT. It starts right now and I’m not looking back.
It’s "TIME TO SHIT" – cause honestly I can’t stand being “off the pot”. Right now I don’t feel like I deserve to be a Black belt! I have work to do…and that’s okay by me. I will do the work.
So there you have it…as honest as I can be. I am making a commitment to myself to stay the course and I will blog my training online for no other reason than to keep me honest. I also plan to get back on the competition mats REALLY SOON and see what happens…
I look forward to seeing you on the mats…
I expect nothing less than to be pushed harder than ever and I will begrudgingly and humbly tap when I need too…
Not sure anyone will read this...doesn't really matter since I really wrote it for me.
"If you raise your children to feel that they can accomplish any goal or task they decide upon, you will have succeeded as a parent and you will have given your children the greatest of all blessings." -Brian Tracy
You did it Brother!
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