Just a warning..this is long and I kinda ranted…it felt good to write if you don’t want to read it please don’t but I’d appreciate feedback because it’d be helpful:
Hey everyone. I am just wondering if I joined a McDojo awhile back at my previous school and if the things i mention specifically attribute it to being a mcdojo and if i wasted of my money and time. I started about 4 years ago but discontinued as of recently because my work schedule interfered, moved out of state and also decided to finish college. Anyways, there was conditioning and a whole world of things we would do in the class including some mma techniques. The style is kajukenbo (I just called it karate) and the class would sometimes have kata in the beginning that we'd learn before the training began. Often times each month the training would shift after a belt/tip test. You get 3 tips until the next rank. sometimes when taking a tip test all you'd have to do is a little sparring and memorize the kata which i hated. there are 8 belts- white, yellow, orange, blue, purple, green, brown, then student black…you’d wait 6 months and receive an honors black after you went to black belt school and took a black belt test. The rankings after that were degrees (2nd, 3rd, etc.) which generally takes 2 years to achieve at each time and you could earn a sifu ranking to train the class by teaching classes. There is a grandmaster as well that has a lineage to kajukenbo in the system. I stopped after getting to a brown belt and I was consistent in the beginning when I had the time to go a lot and got into excellent shape. When I had a fulltime job i was less dedicated and would go in spurts of time, sometimes a few weeks straight and often times not for weeks or months which is why I never got a blackbelt in the 4 year period. From what I understand the blackbelt tests were rigorous and kind of a society where you’d spend the night and basically train and you would get broken both mentally and physically. Anyways, the curriculum switched as I said and there would be boxing one month, then muay thai, ground fighting (submissions), competition sparring, etc. sometimes we’d mix it up, spar either point fighting or continuous point fighting and learn using weapons like nunchucks or sticks. We’d condition before/after class whether it was run around the mat, do abs, or some other crazy routine like hitting the punching bag continuously or do pushup etc.. Whatever, now my understanding is that mcdojos don’t spar but we did do that and hit/kick each other. some months we worked on competition point sparring where you’d hit the head gear and couldn’t hit the face…..but other times when that wasn’t the curriculum and we’d do boxing we were allowed to. Anyways some of these things seem like it isn’t a mcdojo because I would condition hard, do jiu jitsu (no gi) and stickfighting after classes each week as an extra class to those with higher membership which was fun, and sometimes muay thai. But, some things did make me think it was a mcdojo based on readings of warning signs to what a mcdojo is:
The price was outrageous and I had a decent job to pay for it, but it ranged from 150-200 a month based on the membership whether it was unlimited or not (i had unlimited). Also, when my debit card expired where it was being withdrawn from, a collection agency sent me a notice and called me which was slightly annoying. Plus, the membership options were at least 6-12 months because they want your dedication and if I couldn’t go one month because of work or whatever reasons, I was locked in and lost out on that month and paid for it. Also, if I go consistently and participated in certain events and tournaments, I could get extra tips (stripes to put on the belt progressing to the next belt rank) which means within 1 ½ - 2 years I could be a black belt. The grandmaster is under 50 and has a master under him that is under 25. Now, I know what people say about black belts and it not meaning anything anymore when stuff like this happens, but this is a topic for debate to what a blackbelt means in each style. It means the dedication, right? so if I stuck with it would I have earned the blackbelt justifiably even if it was in 2 years in that style? Or should a blackbelt mean having that dedication and being a badass dude in the style. I think of this blackbelt concept as being smart vs. intelligent. You can do things smartly and have discipline and succeed by doing the right things but you may not be intelligent. Intelligent people are naturally gifted and are badass dudes that can remember things easily and conquer things because…well they are intelligent..may not even need to study for a test but get an A. Or working hard at being athletic to do certain things vs. being naturally talented and using that talent to get on another level. Some people think “that dude/chick is a blackbelt but I could knock her out” because she’s small or too young or old even though she or he put in the time, but is that what we should think when we see a blackbelt or does it HAVE to be “that guy has SICK jits and could choke the fuck out of my life” like looking at a rickson gracie type dude who has all the physical qualities as well? Sorry I ranted and those examples probably suck, just a thought on that because mcdojos are attributed to people having blackbelts...back to the mcdojo part. So all things considered I did get into good shape when i went consistently and when I got into a street fight during the time I did well and won (I don’t go looking for street fights but i choked this guy out…i am not bragging and the situation sucked) and I attribute it to the training I did, but what about the fact of the belt system? collections agency, price, paying for belt tests and the blackbelt school, the short term blackbelt, kids classes, training TKD/karate type sparring and traditional kata etc.??? Also they have a childrens program where kids could be blackbelts but it wasn’t an honors blackbelt, that was saved for adults. they say kids that have blackbelts or a system called tiny tigers/dragons (which this one did) is a mcdojo. But, overall it is a positive friendly family environment. Thoughts? I appreciate anyone who reads this as I know it was long. I just spent a long time at this other place and felt I spent a lot of money and it’d be nice to hear an outside perspective based on all the things about this school and schools like it. I moved and am looking forward to training at a jiu jitsu school thats nearby where I am right now under the Ribeiro brothers, Saulo and Xande, and would love to train at 10th planet in the future when I finish school. Thanks.
Hey everyone. I am just wondering if I joined a McDojo awhile back at my previous school and if the things i mention specifically attribute it to being a mcdojo and if i wasted of my money and time. I started about 4 years ago but discontinued as of recently because my work schedule interfered, moved out of state and also decided to finish college. Anyways, there was conditioning and a whole world of things we would do in the class including some mma techniques. The style is kajukenbo (I just called it karate) and the class would sometimes have kata in the beginning that we'd learn before the training began. Often times each month the training would shift after a belt/tip test. You get 3 tips until the next rank. sometimes when taking a tip test all you'd have to do is a little sparring and memorize the kata which i hated. there are 8 belts- white, yellow, orange, blue, purple, green, brown, then student black…you’d wait 6 months and receive an honors black after you went to black belt school and took a black belt test. The rankings after that were degrees (2nd, 3rd, etc.) which generally takes 2 years to achieve at each time and you could earn a sifu ranking to train the class by teaching classes. There is a grandmaster as well that has a lineage to kajukenbo in the system. I stopped after getting to a brown belt and I was consistent in the beginning when I had the time to go a lot and got into excellent shape. When I had a fulltime job i was less dedicated and would go in spurts of time, sometimes a few weeks straight and often times not for weeks or months which is why I never got a blackbelt in the 4 year period. From what I understand the blackbelt tests were rigorous and kind of a society where you’d spend the night and basically train and you would get broken both mentally and physically. Anyways, the curriculum switched as I said and there would be boxing one month, then muay thai, ground fighting (submissions), competition sparring, etc. sometimes we’d mix it up, spar either point fighting or continuous point fighting and learn using weapons like nunchucks or sticks. We’d condition before/after class whether it was run around the mat, do abs, or some other crazy routine like hitting the punching bag continuously or do pushup etc.. Whatever, now my understanding is that mcdojos don’t spar but we did do that and hit/kick each other. some months we worked on competition point sparring where you’d hit the head gear and couldn’t hit the face…..but other times when that wasn’t the curriculum and we’d do boxing we were allowed to. Anyways some of these things seem like it isn’t a mcdojo because I would condition hard, do jiu jitsu (no gi) and stickfighting after classes each week as an extra class to those with higher membership which was fun, and sometimes muay thai. But, some things did make me think it was a mcdojo based on readings of warning signs to what a mcdojo is:
The price was outrageous and I had a decent job to pay for it, but it ranged from 150-200 a month based on the membership whether it was unlimited or not (i had unlimited). Also, when my debit card expired where it was being withdrawn from, a collection agency sent me a notice and called me which was slightly annoying. Plus, the membership options were at least 6-12 months because they want your dedication and if I couldn’t go one month because of work or whatever reasons, I was locked in and lost out on that month and paid for it. Also, if I go consistently and participated in certain events and tournaments, I could get extra tips (stripes to put on the belt progressing to the next belt rank) which means within 1 ½ - 2 years I could be a black belt. The grandmaster is under 50 and has a master under him that is under 25. Now, I know what people say about black belts and it not meaning anything anymore when stuff like this happens, but this is a topic for debate to what a blackbelt means in each style. It means the dedication, right? so if I stuck with it would I have earned the blackbelt justifiably even if it was in 2 years in that style? Or should a blackbelt mean having that dedication and being a badass dude in the style. I think of this blackbelt concept as being smart vs. intelligent. You can do things smartly and have discipline and succeed by doing the right things but you may not be intelligent. Intelligent people are naturally gifted and are badass dudes that can remember things easily and conquer things because…well they are intelligent..may not even need to study for a test but get an A. Or working hard at being athletic to do certain things vs. being naturally talented and using that talent to get on another level. Some people think “that dude/chick is a blackbelt but I could knock her out” because she’s small or too young or old even though she or he put in the time, but is that what we should think when we see a blackbelt or does it HAVE to be “that guy has SICK jits and could choke the fuck out of my life” like looking at a rickson gracie type dude who has all the physical qualities as well? Sorry I ranted and those examples probably suck, just a thought on that because mcdojos are attributed to people having blackbelts...back to the mcdojo part. So all things considered I did get into good shape when i went consistently and when I got into a street fight during the time I did well and won (I don’t go looking for street fights but i choked this guy out…i am not bragging and the situation sucked) and I attribute it to the training I did, but what about the fact of the belt system? collections agency, price, paying for belt tests and the blackbelt school, the short term blackbelt, kids classes, training TKD/karate type sparring and traditional kata etc.??? Also they have a childrens program where kids could be blackbelts but it wasn’t an honors blackbelt, that was saved for adults. they say kids that have blackbelts or a system called tiny tigers/dragons (which this one did) is a mcdojo. But, overall it is a positive friendly family environment. Thoughts? I appreciate anyone who reads this as I know it was long. I just spent a long time at this other place and felt I spent a lot of money and it’d be nice to hear an outside perspective based on all the things about this school and schools like it. I moved and am looking forward to training at a jiu jitsu school thats nearby where I am right now under the Ribeiro brothers, Saulo and Xande, and would love to train at 10th planet in the future when I finish school. Thanks.