Carlos Gracie Jr speaks about: Jiu-Jitsu For Everyone / Jiu-Jitsu Para Todos (by gb72videos)
The True Beauty of the Art, it is for the world and everyone in it
Here is my client Jayson I have him using two tools I enjoy using in training the P-Bars and the Power Wheel combining the two can take a beginner from a tuck to a inverted bridge with assistance and build the muscles it takes to do this movement solo on the P-Bars.
One hand gi throw (by johnmachado1)
Great Throw by a Great teacher.
Alex Munro Student of mine here in the clean position with a barbell ready to overhead press. The Photo isn’t the greatest feet of strength but the story of this Young man is.
Alex showed up to the gym a quite reserved kid who didn’t speak to anyone he would show up train smile and leave. He is quite honestly Awkward, that’s just his style and that something that he needed to hear. Everyone is there own person and just cause you don’t fit the social norms doesn’t mean your in the “wrong” everyone has there place and it truly seems he is finding his place here on the Mats of the Gym. Through Primate Conditioning & BJJ and Chok Sabai Gym we have seen Alex Grow and open up. He walks into the Gym smiling talking to everyone and Very much a Happy and Excited Young Man. Through the Efforts and the Knowledge he’s received his Confidence has sky rocketed.
He came into Muay Thai and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu just looking for a way to workout, but he found himself, his confidence and his future. Im proud to be able to teach and help him on his journey in Life and in the Gym, and I cannot wait to see where this path takes him in the future.
Heart!
“Life is tough, thats a given when you stand up your going to get shoved back down, when your down your going to get stepped on. My advice to you does not come with a lot of bells and whistles, its no secret you’ll fall down you’ll stumble you’ll get pushed you’ll land square on your face but every time that happens you get back on your feet. You get back up just as fast as you can, no matter how many times you need to do it. Remember this, Success has been and continues to be defined as getting up ONE MORE TIME then you’ve been knocked down.”

HEART! LET IT COME OUT IN EVERYTHING YOU DO!
I dont get to do this too often but its always a pleasure when i do i must give so much thanks to Martin Rooney this weekend at the Training For Warriors Level 1 Certification has reignited something that has been dying inside me. About a year ago i started to dislike a lot of what i have been seeing in the field i love so much the fitness/health field had lost some luster had become a lot of what i dislike and thats people doing something for nothing. This weekend Martin opened and reopened doors for me and reminded me of why i love what i do and about where this industry and this business can be if the right people are at the wheel. Im proud to be a great Coach and proud to now be a member of the Training For Warriors Family, Cant wait for the LEVEL 2 Certification next year.
Set goals reach them and surpass them. Jayson here wanted to be able to deadlift his bodyweight 175lbs here in this photo he’s deadlifting 230lbs. Set goals achieve them and surpass them its a way of life.
Mobility Training May Be the Most Important Factor in Musculoskeletal Health
By Steve Maxwell
Mobility, or joint mobility, is the ability to move a limb through the full range of motion—with control. Mobility is based on voluntary movement while flexibility involves static holds and is often dependent upon gravity or passive forces. Mobility demands strength to produce full-range movement, whereas flexibility is passive, thus not strength-dependent. Some authorities refer to mobility as ‘active flexibility’. It is possible to have good mobility without being especially flexible, just as one can be flexible with poor mobility, i.e., control. Of the two, mobility is more important. It is better to be inflexible with good mobility than flexible with poor mobility. The percent difference between your mobility and flexibility is the same percent chance of creating a musculo-skeletal injury during physical activities.
Sports, recreational activities and other daily physical practices can result in reduced range of movement in any participating joint. When the joint is unable to move through its full range, we call it compromised. When compromised movement is present in a joint, surrounding joints take up the slack, creating extra stress all around. A typical example are immobile ankles and feet underlying stress and injury to the knees, hips, and lumbar spine. It’s a cascade effect, albeit in reverse: the body tissues are held together with sheets of connective tissue called fascia, so stress extends upwards from the feet. Poor mobility in one area can cause pain and stress in seemingly unrelated areas, but once fascial anatomy is understood, the idea that immobile feet could cause neck or shoulder stiffness is no longer a conundrum.
Mobility work reduces the potential body imbalances inherent in our athletic and recreational pursuits. For example, it’s widely accepted that running for distance shortens the hamstrings, calf muscles and hip flexors, resulting in decreased free movement in simple full-range exercises, such as bodyweight squats. Well-documented is the compromised range produced by heavy weight-lifting and body building strength sports—yet, properly conducted, weight training can improve range of motion! All too often, in practice, weight lifters endow themselves with tight, restrictive movement by over emphasizing short-range movements and excessive hypertrophy. Worse, especially in the U.S., is that ubiquitous non-activity: sitting. Sitting in a chair, at a desk, while hunching over a computer is a recipe for a compromised structure full of imbalance and continual pain.
The solution? A joint mobility program. Joint mobility exercise stimulates and circulates the synovial fluid in the bursa, which ‘washes’ the joint. The joints have no direct blood supply and are nourished by this synovial fluid, which simultaneously removes waste products. Joint salts, or calcium deposits, are dissolved and dispersed with the same gentle, high-repetition movement patterns. Properly learned, joint mobility can restore complete freedom of motion to the ankles, knees, hips, spine, shoulders, neck, elbows, wrists and fingers. It’s especially important to keep the spine supple and free and if there were such a thing as a fountain of youth, joint mobility exercises come very close.
Use mobility exercises as a warm up, an active recovery during other activities, or as a stand-alone workout. You can rejuvenate yourself and reclaim the movement of a child with a good joint mobility program. Joint mobility makes a wonderful, energizing morning recharge and sets the day up on the right foot.
