July 5, 2016: The First Stripe is the Hardest

At this point in my life (circa 2016), training jiu-jitsu came secondary and probably tertiary (if that) to other aspects of my life.  In May 2016, my priorities were something along the lines of wife and dog, a growing career trajectory, and gym fitness.  Secondary interests such as food festivals or wine clubs, travel or exploring new cities (especially ones we just moved to), and even exciting TV shoes like Game of Thrones all came before concentrating on martial arts such as jiu-jitsu.

Two days after joining Buckhead Jiu-Jitsu, my wife and I traveled to Europe for the remainder of the month.  It was a trip we’d planned for over a year, maybe even years.  I know we talked about it since forever, finally taking the leap to wander London, Berlin, Munich, Venice, and Rome (with an accidental stop in Iceland).  I worried about finding weights gyms, figuring out hotel room workouts, and generally keeping active as we ingested fish and chips, doughy pretzels, gallons of wine, some gelato, lots of cappuccinos with croissants, and various other European foods.  We biked.  We hiked.  We generally kept moving.  One thing definitely didn’t stress me out – taking time away from jiu-jitsu. It wasn’t even a back burner thought.

In fact, as I watched YouTube videos of basic self-defense jiu-jitsu, I started wondering if I made a mistake signing up for jiu-jitsu memberships.  Sitting in a mosquito-infested hotel in Florence, I wrote out an email or two – that I never sent – asking to drop my memberships.  What was I getting into?  Did I really care about jumping into another physical pastime (after my semi-obsessive recreational soccer run)?  

I hesitate to write “sport” in reference to jiu-jitsu, as I didn’t see it as a “sporting” venture.  I saw it as an option to keep me active outside the weights gym and a possible lifelong hobby.  I never planned to compete in jiu-jitsu.  I didn’t know there was a “sporting” element to it.  Still so new and after attending only a couple of classes prior to departing to Europe, rolling was still a foreign concept.  That’s how little I knew about jiu-jitsu.

I knew nothing. Less than nothing. I barely understood that jiu-jitsu didn’t involve striking in any manner. That first month, though, I epitomized “a stupid white belt” by exposing my neck, rolling away and showing my back when someone strolled around/through my guard, flailing around in fruitless attempts at pin escapes, and shoving against shoulders which turned into wrist locks (“Ruth-locks”).  The first month served as a brutal introduction to the large mountain I hoped to climb. The journey of a million taps starting with hundreds in the first month.

A couple of weeks in, I rolled with Sam.  He flowed and let me move.  I knew, even then, he was testing my growth.  He was looking to see what moves I’d retained.  If I could move around with some sense of awareness.  What sort of innate talent – whether a natural born killer or even simply a will to not be dominated by another human – lay inside this small, mid-30s guy?  Well…I can tell you…not much.

The first time I rolled with Sam, I froze.  I’d grown accustomed to defending attacks from all angles – covering my throat, attaching my elbows to my ribs, tucking my chin, shrimping to escape, clinging to closed guard with all hope, and otherwise becoming a turtle encased in plexi-glass.  I didn’t know how to attack, what to attack, why to attack.  I learned to be reactive, countering or attempting to counter my rolling partners’ movements.  That didn’t work when someone was looking for improvement.

With my inaction, I failed my first stripe test. I knew it as he didn’t call my name after class and instead handed out stripes to others. The same thing happened the next class and the following.  Others were promoted, while I stayed without a single stripe on my drooping white belt.  I wondered when or even if there would be a next chance.  I only knew I would keep showing up and force him to call my name, even if it took months.

Days passed. Sam continued calling others’ names. Others passed me, getting their first stripe or even their second before I even received my first.  One evening, Sam finally called my name.  This was it, my first step towards my black belt.  All the sweat and hard work was worth it.  Yet, when I stood up, Sam looked confused.  I had misheard.  Sam had called someone else’s name.  They strolled forward and wrapped another stripe I thought was mine around the end of their white belt.

Red-faced and hoping everyone thought I was stretching out a cramp, I sat down before making the moment more awkward.  Now, to be fair to me, their name vaguely sounds like my own.  To this day, I still don’t stand for any promotions until Sam or others say my name twice and look directly at me.  Then and only then, I’ll hesitantly stand up as I fake a bit of surprise like someone receiving an Oscar or Grammy when they didn’t prepare an acceptance speech.

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After a bit, I stopped expecting that first promotion.  I gave up in a way.  Yet in my stubborn and possibly stupid ways, I doubled my efforts just to spite a hopeless situation.  I kept coming to class and working, grinding, getting devoured by others, and maybe surviving much longer than expected. My routine of attending classes every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday became…well…a routine and I stopped caring about a piece of tape on my belt.  At least I stopped expecting to be called.

Then a couple more weeks passed and Sam rolled with me again.  This time, though, I had a plan.  It was the same plan as any other roll which is to do things vaguely resembling jiu-jitsu. I didn’t freeze with Sam just because I knew he could easily cast aside my lame attempts at attacks.  Which he did, but I kept attacking. I kept surviving. I kept trying.

On July 5th, 2016, Sam called my name. As par, I didn’t stand up right away. He called my name twice and looked right at me.  I tried to pretend that first promotion didn’t matter.  It did.  Sweaty, beat up, and drained, I sauntered across the mat to receive my first promotion.  As Sam twisted the strip of tape around the end of my white belt, he whispered words of encouragement about continuing to try new techniques and working hard.  He gave me a hug and made his usual speech after class about being patient and putting in the work.  I zoned off because I couldn’t stop staring at my single stripe.

That night I hung my belt over the end of our couch  Rachelle saw it the next morning and could tell it meant a lot to me.  The first stripe is the hardest.  It means the most because it means the journey of improvement officially starts.

Why I Joined Buckhead Jiu-Jitsu: May through June 2016

I did join Buckhead Jiu-Jitsu.  I also joined two other gyms at the same time, imagining this progressive schedule of Muay Thai, Jeet Kune Do, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, and maybe Kali in a hybrid of self-weaponization.  What was I preparing for?  I guess after moving to Atlanta, I was preparing for an inevitable apocalypse in which only our bodies and sticks would be available for self-defense.  Either that or I’m bad with money and saying “no” to things (guess which is the more likely scenario).  To add to the legitimacy of my decision making skills, I also decided to travel to Europe for almost a full month after signing these contracts and letting them auto-charge for the month I was eating calzones and schnitzel. You know, instead of “thinking it over” and signing contracts once I came back to the U.S.

I remember a distinct moment in Florence, Italy.  Early in the morning, with soft rays of sunshine seeping through ancient shutters and a fresh layer of mosquito bites covering me and Rachelle, I decided to drop at least one academy.  I talked through the pros/cons with my wife while she feigned interest between snooze alarms.  I picked the one offering less Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu classes.  With a quick email on spotty Italian Wi-Fi, I asked to be released from my contract.  They were amendable and refunded me a few dollars, but overall released me from my contract as a whole.  Now I stood on two academy memberships.

After returning to Atlanta, I attended both places for a time.  Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays I attended Buckhead Jiu-Jitsu.  On Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, I went to a different academy for Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.  This lasted about a month.  At Buckhead Jiu-Jitsu, I grew intimidated by the thought of rolling against anybody, so I focused on attending the introductory classes for that first month.  I hoped to acquire a bevy of techniques in my arsenal before jumping into the more advanced class, just in time to show off my newly honed grappling prowess.

At the other place, rolling was part of the introductory class.  With large men hurling their bodies at me, I found myself using the techniques I learned at Buckhead.  They worked.  I passed guards, whipped on triangles, and otherwise surprised myself and my partners.

Yet, I also didn’t feel I learned much at this second place. White belts were shown a single, very situational technique and then told to drill in the corner with very little oversight or instruction to hone details and deter bad habits.  When we did roll, even against blue belts and upper white belts (3 or 4 stripes), I did fine or even better than fine as I shocked them with submissions and movement.  Maybe I was a natural.  Maybe this would be easier than I thought.  Maybe BJJ wasn’t as hard as advertised.  In retrospect, I was probably more athletic and aggressive.

Full of confidence, I returned to Buckhead Jiu-Jitsu and leaped into the regular class like a flying triangle.  Surely the difference between one academy and another wouldn’t be that striking.  Surely I was some sort of savant and would prove I could dominate wherever I landed.  Matched with an upper blue belt my size – with a bit less muscle, but more hair (let’s call him “Greg”) – I pulled him to my closed guard and started throwing my legs towards his neck.  He blocked them and tossed my legs to the mat.  In a blink he landed on my side and with a bony knee in my stomach and a forearm shoved against my cheek.  In another blink he spun around me for an arm bar.  I tapped.  We reset and I pulled closed guard again.  I held him there, but really didn’t do much except not open my legs as if squeezing him would suck away his will to live.  My ankles popped opened as I tried to bump sweep him because that was the move of the day and I felt it was better than clinging to closed guard with all my will.  The moment my legs opened, Greg danced over my legs and to my side again.  I wouldn’t fall for the spinning arm bar again. I had him solved.  So I rolled away, but he appeared on my back.  His fingers looped around my collar and I was choking.  I tapped.  Okay, maybe he was some savant as well.  I mean his blue belt had a million faded stripes and I was still new to all of this.  Time for the next match-up.

So it went as the journey of a million taps started.  With a blue belt lady.  With a three stripe white belt.  With a two stripe white belt.  With a different blue belt.  It didn’t matter.  I was at the bottom of the heap and squinting way up the mountain.  That night, I emailed the other place and quit.  I didn’t care that they’d charge my card for another two months of classes.  I was done.  I knew the path to take and it wasn’t the easy path.