Develop the right BJJ mindset: tap often, embrace failure, track progress and stay motivated for the long journey.
Most people who quit BJJ quit in the first 6 months. The techniques are confusing, you'll get submitted by people smaller and weaker, and progress is invisible at first. The mindset shift: you're not failing β you're collecting data. Every tap tells you something your game is missing.
The ego wants to 'win' sparring. The learning mindset wants to 'use the technique.' These conflict constantly for beginners. One way to resolve it: don't count submissions in sparring. Count how many times you successfully attempted a new technique, regardless of whether it worked.
| What to Track | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Techniques you've drilled Γ10+ | Measures real learning, not just attendance |
| Positions you can hold for 30s | Shows defensive improvement |
| Sweep/submission attempts in sparring | Offensive development indicator |
| Time before getting submitted | Defensive resilience benchmark |
Frustration peaks at blue belt (the 'blue belt blues') β when you know enough to see how much you don't know. Strategies: train with beginners to feel your progress; review old footage; set technical goals rather than outcome goals. BJJ is one of the few sports where the process IS the reward.
Weekly techniques, tips and updates
Attempting to finish before proper mechanics are in place results in failed attempts and positional loss. Prioritize position before submission.
Muscling through setups creates bad habits and fails against stronger or more skilled opponents. Focus on leverage and angles.
Techniques only become available in live rolling after extensive drilling. Regular repetition builds the muscle memory needed for execution under pressure.
Every technique has common counters. Learn the most frequent defensive reactions and have follow-up attacks ready.
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Get Free Access βIt's completely normal to feel overwhelmed at first. Focus on understanding one concept or technique at a time, and trust that consistent practice will lead to retention. Celebrate small victories and acknowledge your progress, no matter how minor it seems.
Motivation ebbs and flows; rely on discipline and habit instead. Remember why you started BJJ and focus on the journey, not just the destination. Connect with your training partners and instructors for support and to remind yourself of the shared experience.
View every mistake as a learning opportunity, not a failure. After a roll or drilling session, reflect on what went wrong and why. Discuss these moments with your instructors or more experienced training partners to gain insights and adjust your approach.