This was my experience too when I'd first started learning combat sports as a teenager and was trying to absorb all of the information about fighting that I could get my hands on. Fortunately I found a good Jiujitsu gym from the beginning and the quality of instruction was good for the time but some of my most productive sessions for learning came in the form of informal training sessions with some of the more experienced guys from the gym who would teach me all of the little tricks of the game. Because this kind of teacher-student relationship was more personal many of the techniques which the more experienced guys taught me would stick better. I benefited greatly from those sessions. Then years later the situation was reversed. I would teach the younger guys some of my more unorthodox techniques and all of the little details and they would love them and keep coming back for more.WilliamSmith wrote: ↑August 5th, 2022, 1:00 pmPersonal opinions from my own MMA days earlier: The instructors obviously help teach the fundamentals and a lot more (depending on the coach), but just showing up to lessons wasn't enough, and much better leaps ahead in progress for me came from training freely with partners that you get along with outside of structured lessons. That was a hell of a lot more fun too. Also, if you can find some MMA guys or whatever martial art who would give you private lessons that might be cool too, because sometimes they have to be more PC in courses that are open to whoever signs up, but then the same guys who pay lip service to a bunch of PC sounding stuff are actually testo-poisoned brawlers who will show you all sorts of different stuff in private, LOL. That was how it was for me where I'd pay one of them to train me at the trailer park where he lived instead of the fancier downtown athletic center where the main lessons were, and he'd show me a lot of cool stuff and also tell funny stories about getting in drunken brawls and street fights.![]()
Once I reached an intermediate level a lot of my learning of technique came through watching online videos and then practicing those techniques with certain buddies at the gym but that's when I'd already acquired the fundamentals through hours of formal training. I'd pick out techniques for each of the positions which looked useful and try them out either before or after class. If ever I found that I was constantly getting stuck in a certain position during rolling and didn't know what to do I'd consult the internet and try to find an appropriate solution. I learned all kinds of little tricks this way like some sneaky escapes against mount and how to counter an opponent's defense against certain submissions. I also learned various unorthodox submissions which would catch many opponents off guard. All of these were things that you don't typically learn at formal Jiujitsu classes.
What I hate about most Jiujitsu schools is that they don't have a formal syllabus of key techniques for each belt like most other martial arts do. Everything is too informal. People just stroll into the gym in their sandals as though they were on vacation and then the instructor will teach a few random techniques and the students will go away and drill them at their own leisurely pace. No wonder it takes the average guy 10 years to get a black belt! I'd rather have structure and a syllabus of key techniques which must be learned for each belt or at least up until purple belt. I think that it would be conducive to faster progression as well as a higher quality of training. But most Jiujitsu schools don't offer that and after a certain point you're really on your own and have to do your own homework to progress. At that point YouTube becomes your best friend as long as you can find training partners willing to do some extra informal training sessions with you on a regular basis.
I actually taught no-gi grappling (because I hate the gi) for a few years at my local MMA gym at the behest of the head instructor. At first he wanted me to put on an extra class so that the students there could learn my unique techniques but then as the head instructor began to spend months at a time abroad for his own MMA training I was appointed as grappling coach for the main grappling classes too. During that time I created a kind of syllabus of my own for the students and we would drill certain key techniques for all of the main positions on rotation. My goal was to instruct MMA fighters who were not necessarily grapplers in the fundamentals of grappling as quickly as possible so that they would have enough knowledge of grappling to get by in MMA. Many enjoyed my classes because of my attention to detail as well as the solid structure of the classes. I was getting high numbers of students almost every session. I'm not the best athlete or competitor but I think that I have a good mind for coaching.
I once had the idea of getting my brown belt in Jiujitsu (even though I hate most Jiujitsu classes) and then leaving to open my own grappling school in some remote region of Latin America since I'm too much of a nutjob to put on a suit and do a regular job and teaching martial arts is something that I think I could do without any major problem provided that I learned a little bit about marketing, but I stopped training Jiujitsu due to injuries and health problems and so I gave up on that idea. But maybe I'll start up again and eventually teach in LatAm provided that we haven't yet been enslaved by the Great Reset.