
Originally Posted by
Isaac Atley
ID also suggest stopping all this thinking. you wont flow if you think every step through. trust your body to do what is right, if you get it wrong then all you do is tap and keep on trying.
good luck mate
Isaac, i appreciate the reply. A lot of good observations.
One thing I wanted to touch on was the last comment. I would say that in the first couple years of rolling, especially with lower level opponents I used to not "think" too much. You get away with a lot when you aren't dealing with killers every day, which I personally wasn't in the beginning. In the last year or two, since I have been REALLY paying attention to flow charts, paths, and really dealing with higher level opponents, my game has increased 10 fold. I feel like you have to do everything with purpose to start seeing massive improvements in your game. I used to just go roll, not think too much. Now, every class I drive and decide what 2-3 things I really want to work on and improve, and also what submission chains I want to use that day to get to my favorite finishes.
(IMO). With beginners and lower level comp you can throw a leg up and threaten a triangle, armbar, see what happens. Sure your mind can go to other places. The second you just throw up a leg without thinking on a high level grappler, you get passed, and sometimes smashed in the process. I do agree that the ULTIMATE GOAL is to flow through every single transition without HAVING to think about the moves and where what goes. But still I am then just thinking in different ways. In that case, you REALLY fully dive in and focus on the mental aspect of jiu jitsu and start setting traps and thinking 5, 10 moves ahead of your opponent. If you aren't thinking in this particular sport (again in my own opinion) you are going to constantly walk into traps yourself.