
Originally Posted by
Aiseop
Jiu-jitsu does not need MMA; nor does it need the street to be valuable. It is valuable on its own, a beautiful sport that we fall in love and addiction with, and in which the grand, very grand majority of us, will never be able to translate it onto the pavement or the MMA canvas.
Your entire post was wonderful and insightful, but in the interest of space I'm only quoting this, the beautiful distilled essence. We should discuss jiujitsu for jiujitsu's sake, and the effectiveness of jiujitsu technique qua jiujitsu.
What are we gaining from jiujitsu? From a purely physical perspective we're gaining strength, balance, an understanding of mechanics as applied to the human body. We're also learning about discipline, self-confidence, competitiveness, mutual respect... the philosophical and personal gifts of jiujitsu are manifold. You reap these rewards in or out of the gi.
Speaking purely mechanically and purely from personal experience, when I roll against gi players of similar size and experience to myself, they have crushing grip strength and air-tight defense. I have a much harder time submitting a gi brown belt than a no-gi brown belt, on average. On the other hand, I'm able to pass guard, sweep, take mount, and generally control position much more quickly and fluidly than they. This has always seemed paradoxical to me, as we (myself and the 10th Planet community) often deride the traditional position-obsessed view of BJJ in the gi, while praising the pursuit of submission above all other goals. Against a gi player, it would make more sense if I lost position more often but landed more submissions.
In conclusion, I automatically respect anyone who trains, whether in corny skull-and-axe embossed tights or in poofy floppy Asian pajamas.