Jitsu Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Jitsu. Here they are! All 100 of them:

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They forget that the CIA is all about collecting information. Information for other people to act on. If you join the CIA expecting a life of laser guns, ju-jitsu and exotic STDs, bear in mind that your only contact with them may come through the pages of The Lancet and Popular Mechanics.
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Jay Spencer Green (Breakfast at Cannibal Joe's)
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Please keep in mind that no matter how strong, fast or coordinated you are, there is always someone stronger, faster and more coordinated.
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Helio Gracie (Gracie Jiu-Jitsu: The Master Text)
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Anyway, this could be something useful like Parkour or Jui-jitsu, or you could get f*cked and receive some useless crap like Stamp Collecting or Kombucha Brewing.
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Matt Dinniman (Carl's Doomsday Scenario (Dungeon Crawler Carl, #2))
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Anyone can be tough for a season. It takes a special kind of human to rise to life's challenges for a lifetime.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Wearing a black belt does not make you a super hero, and wearing a white belt does not mean you have little to offer as a person. It is what we do in the belts we wear, and not the belts themselves that matter.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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My time in the woods is time spent with a tutor on how to live.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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The greatest effects we have on the world are the ones we can never see.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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If you want to be a lion, you must train with lions.
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Carlos Gracie, Sr.
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The highest aim was never to master Jiu Jitsu; it was to master myself.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu Jitsu is a baptism by combat, and serves a purpose in the inner life of the individual that has always existed, but our modern culture fails to acknowledge.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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There is no losing in jiu jitsu. You either win or you learn.
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Carlos Gracie, Sr.
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This is what Jiu Jitsu gives us, and is what so often remains ineffable. Jiu Jitsu frees us and allows us to be what we have always been, but simply never had the medium to express. Jiu Jitsu is the vehicle. Not the Road.
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Chris Matakas
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We must not learn to try harder. The key is to learn how not to try in the first place.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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The point of meditating is not to learn to sit quietly in a room. The point is to live that way in the world.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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In the modern world we are surrounded by so much abundance that we cannot see it.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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If we do not master ourselves, we will be a slave to ourselves.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Anyone who has ever achieved anything has been a steward of his potential.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Things can be added, but that doesn't mean that anything is missing.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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When you realize you are no longer made of glass, you lose the desire to demonstrate that fragility in others.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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When you react, you don't give your mind the time to get filled with emotions. You are devoid of anger, fear, and frustration; you are simply moving.
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Saulo Ribeiro (Jiu-Jitsu University)
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There is no higher calling than service to your fellow man, and to do so through your own personal mastery of a craft is a gift enjoyed by few. Cultivate this gift, and give it away.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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These Taoists' ideas have greatly influenced all our theories of action, even to those of fencing and wrestling. Jiu-jitsu, the Japanese art of self-defence, owes its name to a passage in the Tao-teking. In jiu-jitsu one seeks to draw out and exhaust the enemy's strength by non-resistance, vacuum, while conserving one's own strength for victory in the final struggle. In art the importance of the same principle is illustrated by the value of suggestion. In leaving something unsaid the beholder is given a chance to complete the idea and thus a great masterpiece irresistibly rivets your attention until you seem to become actually a part of it. A vacuum is there for you to enter and fill up the full measure of your aesthetic emotion.
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Kakuzō Okakura (The Book of Tea)
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Make no mistake, you earn a white belt. The belt is a physical representation of a commitment to the beginner's mind. It is a vulnerability and a willingness to learn that shines through.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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True mastery, it turns out, is not found in accumulating each and every tool under the sun. True mastery is learning that there are really only a handful of tools, and it is the proper application with correct timing and setting that makes them so useful.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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On the other side of self-doubt comes a confidence from faith in the process. Even though our destination may be a long way off, each day we rise with a subtle smile as if we have already achieved it, because, when we are truly committed to a task, we already have.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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His system is a combination of ferocious blows, holds and throws, adapted from Japanese bayonet tactics, ju-jitsu, Chinese boxing, Sikh wrestling, French wrestling and Cornish collar-and-elbow wrestling, plus expert knowledge of hip-shooting, knife fighting and use of the Tommy gun and hand grenade.
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Giles Milton (Churchill's Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare: The Mavericks Who Plotted Hitler's Defeat)
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I can think of no more worthwhile aim than pursuing mastery in this craft while transcending one's own limitations.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Properly directed thoughts result in properly directed actions. The only way to appropriately guide our thoughts is to know their foundation, our values.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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An intelligent consistency is the foundation of genius.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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The major events in our lives receive the entire spotlight, but ultimately your life will be defined by the same handful of choices you make each day.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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Mastery does not exist.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu Jitsu is the vehicle. Not the road.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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In Jiu Jitsu, we often fall into the trap of simply trying a technique "harder," rather than recognizing that it is a poorly chosen tool for the task at hand.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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For the sincere student, it mustn't be enough to simply understand Jiu Jitsu. We must seek to understand ourselves.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu Jitsu is a vehicle for self-discovery and growth. It reminds me of my ego, of my insecurities, and of my shortcomings.
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Chris Matakas
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If you can wrestle but not play Jiu Jitsu, or you can play Jiu Jitsu but not wrestle, you are not a complete grappler and lack the sufficient skills to safely subdue an opponent.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu Jitsu gave me the opportunity to be a real human being. It opened my heart and my mind. I am kinder, more gentle and more loving due to my efforts in this art.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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I have never been as alive or awake as I have been through Jiu Jitsu.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu Jitsu uses us to express itself, and the best thing we can do to is to become a vehicle capable of expressing Jiu Jitsu with all of its perfection minus our imperfections.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu-Jitsu is just an excuse Brazilians came up with to hug people for a few hours a day.
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Rayron Gracie
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After I received my blue belt, I soon recognized that the belts were simply an external representation of an inner experience, and that they mattered little compared to the person I was becoming.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu Jitsu removes the societal walls that we have been forced to unknowingly hold up with our adopted beliefs. It removes the limits of common thought, and allows for expression of our highest ideals.
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Chris Matakas
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We seek to understand Jiu Jitsu as a vehicle to understand ourselves. We have different explicit goals, from getting in shape, learning self-defense or competition, but tacitly we all seek mastery of ourselves.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu Jitsu forges friendships in a way I’ve never known. Being involved in an art as intimate as this, where bodily connection is a must, the common cultural boundaries of personal space are broken. You will never see more hugs, high fives, and physical expressions of love than on the mats. Ultimately, this proves to be one of the most fulfilling aspects of our pursuit of mastery. Along the way, we learn to love others as we love ourselves.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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For young kids, Jiu Jitsu should be nothing more than a fun form of recreation that introduces them to the movements through games and structured play. As they get older, you can introduce more Jiu Jitsu, but it should be playful.
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Rickson Gracie (Breathe: A Life in Flow)
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Jiu Jitsu gives each of us something that no other sport can. We have the opportunity to become truly great regardless of what circumstance fate has handed us. We have complete freedom and responsibility to achieve whatever level of mastery we wish.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Relativity is a beautiful, irrifutable truth. We must acknowledge that wearing a black belt in jiu jitsu does not make you a black belt in life. In the home, there are black belts who are white belt fathers, and there are white belts who are black belt fathers. This holds true for all areas of life. A black belt does not mean you are successful in life. It does mean that you have mastered this art to an enormous degree, and that the skills you have acquired can be transmuted to a plethora of other activities. It does not mean, however, that you have done this.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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Today's world is flooded with participation trophies. In an attempt to promote equality we have robbed our youth of the most growth-inducing aspect of competition, failing. If you want to be resurrected, you have to first be crucified. Everybody wants to be reborn, but no one is willing to die. Losing, in the context of whatever arena it may be, is a microcosmic death. When we learn from our failures and grow because of them, we are reborn.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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I am fortunate to be content with having very little, and so I never wanted the new car, fancy clothes, the big TV and the video games. All I ever wanted to do was read, walk through the woods and do Jiu Jitsu. When this is the foundation upon which your life is built, you need very little in the way of material security.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Imagine a true master of the art, someone with complete skill in every aspect of Jiu Jitsu. This master would not force anything. He would simply allow the roll to take whatever form it does, and in every position would act in the most efficient way based off what the circumstance dictates, and not what he himself prefers.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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If Jiu Jitsu does not make you a better father, son, mother, daughter, wife or husband, you are missing the point. If Jiu Jitsu does not leave you viewing strangers in a kinder light, you are missing the point. If you are not better equipped to deal with the vicissitudes of life due to your training, then you are not really training.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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The best yardstick for our progress is not other people, but ourselves. Am I better than I was yesterday? This is the only question worth asking. As long as you go to bed at night a better practitioner than the one who woke up that morning, you have succeeded. Your worth should have nothing to do with how your progress stacks up relative to another.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Any advanced student will tell you the best way to recover guard is simply not to get your guard passed in the first place.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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It is in community where we find our very selves.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Life is so unlikely, so rare and beautiful an opportunity it is to live, we must be on constant guard to ensure that our actions are worthy of the life it takes to perform them.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Being part of the whole, as I grow so does that which contains me.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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We are free to live the life we have imagined, not the life imagined for us.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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We must know where we want to go in order to get there. Our modern lives are growing increasingly chaotic, and it is only a clear, definitive purpose that will keep us on track.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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When we honestly take stock of our ability, we are then granted the opportunity to improve our circumstance. Accessing where you stand is the only way to stand somewhere else.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Do not seek victory, for victory in itself will not serve you. Seek to understand what made the victory possible.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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You are never as good as you think you are, and you are never as bad as you believe yourself to be.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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You have become more and therefore expect more, but never become too purpose-driven to step back and realize just how far you have progressed.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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Somehow my gold medals didn't make me a better person.
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Gene Dunn
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I train because it makes every area of my life better, and it makes me better at every area of my life.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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Where my tendons have been torn, my psyche has been mended. This was a worthy trade.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Plateaus are a manifestation of the law of diminishing returns, and when we reach one it simply means that it is time to adjust our methods.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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To achieve anything we must grind, but to enjoy anything we must flow.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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We are never truly ourselves as we are mid-roll.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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We see that the vast majority of our suffering is needless, and simply arises from the misidentification with our thinking mind.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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If you are forcing it, you are doing it wrong
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T.D. Abe
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The medal from an old grappling tournament will not serve me today, but the courage I developed in its acquisition will. By investing in yourself, by using all endeavors as a vehicle to shape who we are, we exist in the present moment with a lifetime of growth behind us. I have loved many vehicles throughout the years, Jiu Jitsu more than any other, but the vehicle has, and always will, be a distant second to the driver.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Jiu Jitsu is meant to serve us, not the other way around. It is meant to make you more of whatever it is you already are. It is meant to separate the wheat from the chaff. It is meant to bring to conscious attention all that once went unseen. It is meant to make you more loving. It is meant to make you more wise, but less certain. It is meant to make us humble, yet supremely confident. It is meant to remind us of our frailty while simultaneously making us feel invincible.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Nothing feels dirtier than living a life that is not your own. No amount of money is worth my soul. I would rather be homeless and go out in a blaze of glory than subject myself to a slow and steady death of apathy and government by my environment.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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My four things I care about are truth, meaning, fitness and grace. [...] Sam [Harris] would like to make an argument that the better and more rational our thinking is, the more it can do everything that religion once did. [...] I think about my personal physics hero, Dirac – who was the guy who came up with the equation for the electron, less well-known than the Einstein equations but arguably even more beautiful...in order to predict that, he needed a positively-charged and a negatively-charged particle, and the only two known at the time were the electron and the proton to make up, let's say, a hydrogen atom. Well, the proton is quite a bit heavier than the electron and so he told the story that wasn't really true, where the proton was the anti-particle of the electron, and Heisenberg pointed out that that couldn't be because the masses are too far off and they have to be equal. Well, a short time later, the anti-electron -- the positron, that is -- was found, I guess by Anderson at Caltech in the early 30s and then an anti-proton was created some time later. So it turned out that the story had more meaning than the exact version of the story...so the story was sort of more true than the version of the story that was originally told. And I could tell you a similar story with Einstein, I could tell it to you with Darwin, who, you know, didn't fully understand the implications of his theory, as is evidenced by his screwing up a particular kind of orchid in his later work...not understanding that his theory completely explained that orchid! So there's all sorts of ways in which we get the...the truth wrong the first several times we try it, but the meaning of the story that we tell somehow remains intact. And I think that that's a very difficult lesson for people who just want to say, 'Look, I want to'...you know, Feynman would say, "If an experiment disagrees with you, then you're wrong' and it's a very appealing story to tell to people – but it's also worth noting that Feynman never got a physical law of nature and it may be that he was too wedded to this kind of rude judgment of the unforgiving. Imagine you were innovating in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. The first few times might not actually work. But if you told yourself the story, 'No, no, no – this is actually genius and it's working; no, you just lost three consecutive bouts' -- well, that may give you the ability to eventually perfect the move, perfect the technique, even though you were lying to yourself during the period in which it was being set up. It's a little bit like the difference between scaffolding and a building. And too often, people who are crazy about truth reject scaffolding, which is an intermediate stage in getting to the final truth.
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Eric R. Weinstein
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Thoreau and Huxley calmly state what I have spent years trying to articulate, and never found the words for doing so. To read the words of these great men is to read the highest expression of my very self which is inexpressible due to the shortcomings of my particular nature.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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There is an opportunity cost for everything we do. This is why we must have the awareness to ensure that what we are pursuing is really what we value, because the pursuit leaves countless lost opportunities in its wake. We choose one experience at the sacrifice of all other experiences.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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Many of us begin this art with little to no understanding of what we are getting ourselves into. Then, maybe a year or a black belt later, we realize this odyssey we have embarked upon and rest happily in knowing we have chosen a noble struggle. I think we owe most of our successes to our initial ignorance. When we begin, we cannot see the obstacles ahead, and so we march on optimistically. In hindsight, when we look back and connect the dots, we see just how green we were at the start, and it was only our ignorance that upheld us from the crushing despair of the task at hand.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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When we know our values, we can easily measure whether or not our actions are in accordance with them. Values are the measuring sticks with which we determine the worthiness of our actions. To be better associated with one's own values is to remove a lot of the needless activities of daily life.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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A truly humble man has no concept of his humility, for he cannot fathom that he would be so special to have the need to be humble. He is too busy getting lost in appreciation of a craft or his fellow man to think of himself. β€œTrue humility is not thinking less of yourself; it is thinking of yourself less.” -C.S. Lewis
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Chris Matakas (On Jiu Jitsu (The "Jiu Jitsu Essentials” Series Book 2))
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To base your self worth relative to others is to play a losing game. If you are at the bottom, you will be filled with self-loathing. If you are at the top, you will be filled with self-aggrandizement and ego. This will most certainly be one of your greatest obstacles to achieving whatever degree of mastery you are capable.
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Chris Matakas
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I believe the real reason we pursue anything in life is not for the thing itself, but for who we become on the way to its accomplishment. We strive to accomplish things in the attempt to mold ourselves. The greatest benefits Jiu Jitsu will have in your life will have nothing to do with Jiu Jitsu. It is this simple understanding that allows me to persist in my study. Even on the rare days when I may not have a burning desire to practice Jiu Jitsu, I am reminded that my practicing Jiu Jitsu is more accurately my practicing to become a better human being. The lessons I learn on the mat will serve me in every area of life-- personal development, relationships, business, and the like.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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Quotes tell a story. A stringing together of a few words can leave you with an idea that changes the course of your life, and can direct you toward reaching your highest potential as a human. The story they tell is derived from the experience which inspired them, and it is our sharing that experience that allows for the quote to resonate so deeply within our being.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Continued Education Through Jiu Jitsu)
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If you are fortunate enough to have a particular activity with which you find greatest joy and technical success, it is your responsibility as a growing human being to continue that study. Whatever your endeavor, if you can expand upon the knowledge in your strongest subject, that new found understanding of all things will trickle down to every other area of your life.
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Chris Matakas (My Mastery: Learning to Live through Jiu Jitsu)
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As far as our relation to the physical world, I doubt there will be much more improvement. Our basic survival needs have been met, and much of our current progress is superfluous or downright troublesome. Most advancement is performed out of comfort rather than necessity. What we are lacking, what the world so desperately needs now, is adjustments of the mind. We need to see the world again with fresh eyes, and come to an understanding of who we are as individuals, and what drives us.
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Chris Matakas (The Tao of Jiu Jitsu)
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The principles of Jiu Jitsu can be applied to every endeavor in life. You have stay calm when you are in bad situations. You need to cover and conceal your intent with other maneuvers. You need to utilize the simplest and most efficient methods. You need to prioritize your focus of effort. You need to train until you trust yourself to move intuitively, without having to think. You need to move at the right time. You have to defend critical areas. You should not attack your enemy’s strongpoints. You must utilize leverage. You cannot let your emotions drive your decisions. You have to establish a good base foundation to build upon. You cannot be overly aggressive, but you can’t just allow things to happen. When you make a move, you have to believe in what you are doing. You have to be mentally strong. You have to keep an open mind. You have to continuously learn new techniques while always reinforcing the fundamentals. You have to adapt your plan if circumstances change.
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Rickson Gracie (Breathe: A Life in Flow)
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I do trust you though. I think if someone tried to take me, you’d at least fight them for me a little…” I watched his face for a moment before narrowing my eyes. β€œWouldn’t you?” That had his other eye popping open, his cheeks still slightly pink, but everything else about him completely alert. β€œYou know I would.” Why that pleased me so much, I wasn’t going to overanalyze. β€œIf someone tried to take you, I know aikido, some jiu-jitsu, and kickboxing,” I offered him up. β€œBut my dentist says I have really strong teeth, so I’d be better off trying to bite someone’s finger or ear off instead.” Aaron’s eyebrows climbed up his forehead almost comically. β€œLike a little Chihuahua,” he suggested, the spoon going into his mouth with a sly grin. I winked at him, immediately regretting it. I didn’t want it to come across like I was flirting. β€œI was thinking more of a piranha. I’ve only had one filling in my entire life,” I told him, wishing each word coming out of my mouth wasn’t coming out of it. If he thought I was being awkward or a flirt, he didn’t make it known. β€œOr a raptor.” β€œA lion.” β€œA tiger.” β€œDid you know a jaguar has twice the strength in its bite than a tiger does?” Aaron frowned as he took another bite of his oatmeal. β€œNo shit?” β€œNo. Two thousand pounds per square inch. They’re the only big cat that kills their prey by biting its head, through bone and everything. A tiger bites the neck of whatever animal they’re eating to cut their air and blood flow off. Crazy, huh?” He looked impressed. β€œI had no idea.” I nodded. β€œNot a lot of people do.” β€œIs there anything that bites harder than they do?” β€œCrocodiles. The really big ones. I’m pretty sure they have about 4000 or 5000 psi bites.” For the fifty-second time, I shrugged. β€œI like watching the Animal Channel and Discovery,” I said, making it sound like an apology. Aaron gave me that soft smile that made me feel like my insides were on fire. Then he winked. β€œI don’t know much about crocodiles, but I know all about alligators,” he offered. β€œDid you know there are only two species left in the world?” β€œThere are?” β€œAmerican alligator and the Asian alligator. More than a fifth of all of them live in Florida.” β€œWe have some gators in Texas. There’s a state park by Houston where you can go and you can usually see a bunch. I went camping there one time.” One corner of his mouth tilted up as he chewed. β€œLook at you, Rebel Without a Cause.” With anyone else, I’d probably think they were picking on me, but I could see the affection on Aaron’s face. I could feel the kindness that just came off him in waves, so I winked back at him. β€œI live life on the edge. I should start teaching a class on how to be bad.” β€œRight? Quitting your job, coming to Florida even though you were worried….” He trailed off with a grin and a look out of the corner of his eye. β€œI pretty much have my masters and license to practice. I’ll teach people everything I know.
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Mariana Zapata (Dear Aaron)
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When you want to sweep an opponent to your left, move him to your right first to compromise his balance and see what happens. A lot of people call the principle of action and reaction β€˜bait & trap’. The idea is to lure your opponent into reacting the way you want, not the other way around.
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Paulo Guillobel (Mastering The 21 Immutable Principles Of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu: The Ultimate Handbook for Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Students)
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I didn’t know enough about jiu-jitsu history to ask detailed questions. I simply picked up whatever anyone said, and tried to casually follow up on it. My interest was not academic. I was not there to debunk myths, if that’s what they were. I was moderately skeptical about the Gracie myth (having been raised on a diet of Bertrand Russell books), but I was not skeptical about the effectiveness of their grappling system.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Sometime during the second decade of the twentieth century, a β€œtouring Japanese master” taught the rudiments of a secret, ancient, and scientific system of fighting called β€œjiu-jitsu” to a sickly Brazilian adolescent named Carlos Gracie, who taught it to his younger brothers, with the possible exception of the youngest, Helio, who taught himself. Meanwhile, Japanese immigrants in Brazil were practicing and teaching a fake form of jiu-jitsu, called β€œjiu-do” [judo] in order to keep their scientific combat art hidden from foreigners, except for the Gracies, who had already learned real jiu-jitsu from the touring Japanese master and wanted to share their knowledge with other Brazilians. That is the story, at least. Some of it might be true. Some of it probably isn’t.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Gracie jiu-jitsu remained a Brazilian secret until the early 90s, not by design, but because no one outside of Brazil cared.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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The Brazilians didn't do what people in the North had come to expect martial artists to do. They didn’t shriek, growl, howl, sneer, or grimace. They didn't fly through the air to smash roofing tiles with their feet, or slice the tops off whiskey bottles with the sides of their hands. They didn't break bricks or blocks of ice with their heads. They didn't chop the horns off of bulls, extinguish candles with ki power, walk across floors covered with rice paper without tearing it, snatch pebbles from the fingers of blind monks, or meditate under mountainside waterfalls in winter. What the Brazilians did do was to easily subdue the martial artists who performed all these impressive but ultimately meaningless feats.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Rorion did for a generation of Brazilians what 30 years previously Brian Epstein did for a generation of English pop musicians, stimulating seemingly limitless demand for a product where none had existed before (Gould, 2007). But Rorion did it to an even greater degree, conceding that his system was basically judo. Helio felt the same way. In one of his last interviews, with Ana Missa on Sensei SporTV in 2009 (February 14), he explained that because he wasn’t physically suited for judo, he β€œmodified jiu-jitsu so that a weak citizen like himself could fight” [pelo meu porte fΓ­sico eu nΓ£o podia ser judoka, entΓ£o eu adaptei o jiu-jitsu para que atΓ© um cidadΓ£o fraco como eu pudesse lutar]. So there we have it. Gracie Jiu-Jitsu is pre-Olympic judo, taught by Helio’s method, whatever that is, and modified so that weak citizens can fight (apparently Helio felt that judo required too much strength, which is odd, because many of his promotional pictures and demonstrations involved judo throws). That doesn’t mean Gracie products and services aren’t worth what they cost. If judo people were teaching this material, people wouldn’t be paying Brazilians to do it. Rorion didn’t invent anything. What he did was to make it valuable.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Everyone says it’s ok to tap, but at the same time, everyone does almost everything they can possibly do to avoid it. That is precisely the point and that is why tapping is a valuable training tool.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Twenty million Brazilians have crawled up out from poverty since Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva became president in 2003. Rorion did not save 20 million Brazilians, but his achievement should not be underestimated. There are a lot of Brazilians making a living from jiu-jitsu who would still be doing construction work (if any work at all), if it hadn’t been for Rorion. And this book wouldn’t have been written.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Jiu-Jitsu teachers differ in their assessment of how many lessons are required to acquire basic self-defense skills. Helio Gracie estimated that about 40 would suffice. Malibu thought 10 would be enough. After that, he said, training is designed to deal with other jiu-jitsu fighters.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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If you are called to roll with a jiu-jitsu instructor, rolling means rolling. He may toy with you. He may decline to tap you. But he expects you to do your best to defend yourself and to attack him. When an instructor’s body can no longer do what his mind tells it to, then he does not roll with students in this way, but provides wisdom and leadership appropriate to his rank and age. Students also adjust their intensity level appropriately to the training context. It is not inconceivable that a strong young blue belt could tap Helio Gracie out in 1999. He would pay a high and painful price for the glory of doing it however. There is a reason for age, weight, belt, and gender categories in competitions.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Better people don’t beat you with more β€œadvanced” techniques. They just execute the basic techniques better.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Unlike Kodokan judo, jiu-jitsu does not have a β€œphilosophy.” Jiu-jitsu can be whatever anyone wants it to be, which is the good news, and also the bad news.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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Brazilian jiu-jitsu was originally self-defense [defesa pessoal, or auto-defesa], to which was added professional β€œwrestling” (grappling in a quimono, with rules, for money), which eventually morphed into vale tudo (add striking, subtract quimono). Finally, between 1967 and 1973 the type of sports jiu-jitsu that is now popular was created. Few practitioners engage in vale tudo fights, and most are apathetic about defesa pessoal, but everyone trains sports jiu-jitsu, because that is what almost every training session consist almost exclusively of.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))
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When a martial art exists in two forms, the original self-defense form and a sport/competition form with rules for determining β€œwinners,” the boundaries tend to blur, and effectiveness in self-defense can be sacrificed to effectiveness in scoring points in a rule governed contest.
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Roberto Pedreira (Jiu-Jitsu in the South Zone, 1997-2008 (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Brazil))