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Old 10-04-2007, 02:57 PM   #1 (permalink)

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Confidence in Grappling (Article)

Confidence in Grappling
Author: Jason Scully
www.GrapplersGuide.com

"Kill the snake of doubt in your soul, crush the worms of fear in your heart, and mountains will move out of your way" ~ Kate Seredy

Yesterday I was rolling with one of my students in class who has about 3 years experience and when we were rolling I noticed something, and I realized that this is actually an issue with many grapplers out there. As we were rolling I was paying attention to his movements and his facial expressions and it was clear that he was missing something very important. What was he missing? He was missing his confidence. That's right, it was his confidence that he was missing.

There's so many times when I train with someone and they don't seem confident at all in what they're doing. Even if they know a ton of techniques they hold themselves back because they don't trust themselves that they'll execute those techniques properly.

When you're in practice you should never have to worry about if something is going to work, or if your opponent is going to counter your attack. You should just go for it with 100% confidence that you are going to make something happen. That no matter what, even if your opponent counters your movements you should have 100% confidence in yourself that you can counter right back.

You see many times it's not the moves you know that makes the difference it's the trust in yourself that makes a difference. There is so many people who can execute moves perfectly when drilling, but when it comes down to performing them in a live situation they either freeze up, don't remember them, or they don't have confidence in what they know.

Have you ever rolled with someone more experienced then you and you were weary of coming forward and you had a technique or plan that you wanted to execute but you weren't sure if it was going to work? You ended up taking a second to think about what might happen and by the time you're done thinking your partner or opponent has already made his move, because they were more confident then you were. That's what can make the difference of being steps ahead of your opponent or not.

The person who is 2, 3, and even 4 steps ahead of their opponent is the same person who is completely confident in their abilities and their techniques. They don't care if they know what's going to happen or not, because regardless their going to MAKE THINGS HAPPEN. There is no waiting, pausing, or thinking about what might happen they just go and take that chance knowing that no matter what they trust in themselves that they will be the ones to come out on top every time.

Even if what you tried didn't work you still believed in yourself and you now know what would have happened because you went for it instead of just sitting back and not taking any chances at all and not even knowing.

This is also a very common when you roll with someone who is much more experienced then you or a much higher rank then you. Let's say a blue belt in BJJ pairs up with a brown belt. Many times that blue belt is already thinking of ways that the brown belt can beat him before they even started rolling. They beat themselves before the match even started. They never gave themselves a chance and counted themselves out right from the beginning instead of starting with their head high and their confidence in full affect.

When you are confident in yourself regardless of your technical ability you will:
  • Think clearer.
  • React faster.
  • Feel better about yourself.
  • Breath better.
  • Be less conscious.
  • Make things happen.
  • Be steps ahead of those who aren't as confident.
  • Attack better.
  • Defend better.
  • Trust that you can deal with any situation in the moment.
As your techniques and strategies get better and better and you mix that in with being confident in yourself you will be much more successful in your rolling sessions.

Before we finish up, I just want to clarify what being confident is not. Being confident IS NOT:
  • Being cocky or over confident - just because your confident doesn't mean you should be cocky. Confidence will help you improve your overall game, but it's not the only thing that will make you the best.
  • Being lazy - being confident doesn't mean you are lazy and you shouldn't work hard.
  • Being arrogant - A person can be confident in themselves without being arrogant and boastful. Show your confidence with respect and work to help others be confident in their grappling as well. Don't under mind your partners and look down on those less experienced or even less confident then you may be.
  • Comparing yourself to others - Don't compare your confidence to others, and your abilities to others. Just be confident in what you know and your potential and you'll be well on your way to a successful and most importantly FUN grappling experience.
  • Having an Ego - One can be confident and not have an ego. Always trust in what you do and regardless of what happens whether it is a positive or negative, be humble in your experience and see every opportunity as a learning experience.
To sum things up: The point is to trust yourself and what you know. Trust that even if you don't know how to do something that you will one day. If you don't have confidence in yourself, then you don't trust yourself. If you don't trust yourself, then who can you trust?

"Experience tells you what do to do, confidence allows you to do it" ~ Stan Smith

Thanks for reading!
Jason
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Last edited by jaysculls; 10-05-2007 at 12:10 PM.
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Old 10-04-2007, 03:08 PM   #2 (permalink)
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That is a good point that you have brought up. When performing moves in grappling, one has to believe in the moves in order for them to work effectively. I have heard on numerous occasions that the mental aspect of martial arts are just as important as the physical, sometimes more so. I have personally heard on dozens of occations, and in plenty of interviews, fighters saying that the fight game is 80% mental, or even 90%. Not that it is an excuse to abandon all physical training and practice the art of "Mental Martial Arts", because that is just obsurd, but those who couple their mind and body together, and function as one complete unit, those are the guys that are seperated from all of the other competitors, and are the champions.
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Old 10-04-2007, 03:41 PM   #3 (permalink)

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Good reply Boulderface
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Old 10-04-2007, 03:50 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Great article Jay. It really resonates with me. At my gym most of the ppl there are blue or higher while I am a white and an inexperienced one at that. So as you can imagine I get used and abused left right and center. Everyone is cool and I have made huge progress in the last 9 months because of all of their help and all of the asskickings I get.

Last night I decided to just stop worrying about how much better than me they are and to just try to roll with some confidence. It totally made a difference. I still got "beat" but I felt much better about how I moved and how I reacted to each of my partners. I hit some sweeps and passed some guards and I was totally stoked on how I was rolling.
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Old 10-04-2007, 04:17 PM   #5 (permalink)

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Great to hear RadBoy!
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Old 10-04-2007, 08:16 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Excellent article, I agree completely.
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Old 10-04-2007, 08:41 PM   #7 (permalink)

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Like RadBoy, this resonates with me as well. I am a 7 month white belt and anytime I roll with people more experienced and/or bigger and stronger than me, I tell myself I'm going to lose and I just try to survive for as long as I can.

I have my first tournament coming up in a couple weeks and have been thinking about this lately, my mental game. The last couple training sessions, I've tried hard to not think like that at all but just focus on exactly what I needed to do in the moment and do it, ie get the takedown, pass the guard, etc. I've been feelin' good about how things have been working out.

Like so many of your other posts, awesome read. Thanks alot man
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Old 10-04-2007, 09:04 PM   #8 (permalink)
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Interesting, but not sure I understand. Yes, confidence is helpful. But isn't the suggestion here that one can manufacture confidence even without experience and success?
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Old 10-04-2007, 09:43 PM   #9 (permalink)

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yojimbo. View Post
Like RadBoy, this resonates with me as well. I am a 7 month white belt and anytime I roll with people more experienced and/or bigger and stronger than me, I tell myself I'm going to lose and I just try to survive for as long as I can.

I have my first tournament coming up in a couple weeks and have been thinking about this lately, my mental game. The last couple training sessions, I've tried hard to not think like that at all but just focus on exactly what I needed to do in the moment and do it, ie get the takedown, pass the guard, etc. I've been feelin' good about how things have been working out.

Like so many of your other posts, awesome read. Thanks alot man
That goes both ways.

I've been training three years, and sometimes I'm overconfident against a new grappler and the match doesn't go well. From there, I lose confidence instead of turning the tide in the match.

I agree. Confidence is important.
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Old 10-05-2007, 12:15 AM   #10 (permalink)

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Quote:
Last night I decided to just stop worrying about how much better than me they are and to just try to roll with some confidence. It totally made a difference. I still got "beat" but I felt much better about how I moved and how I reacted to each of my partners. I hit some sweeps and passed some guards and I was totally stoked on how I was rolling.
That is Great! and really gets to my point!

Quote:
Interesting, but not sure I understand. Yes, confidence is helpful. But isn't the suggestion here that one can manufacture confidence even without experience and success?
No that is not the suggestion...My statements aren't meant to teach you or tell you how to manufacture confidence. But what I am saying is that just because you're not experienced, and this also applies to many who are experienced, doesn't mean you can't be confident.

I do believe that the more experience you gain in grappling the more confident you "could" become, but it does not guarantee it also. Regardless of your experience the only person who is going to get you to be confident, trust yourself, and make you not be afraid to take risks, is you. Why not start as early as possible when you can. This doesn't just apply to grappling either. It applies to everything.

Also the quote at the end of the article relates:

"Experience tells you what do to do, confidence allows you to do it" ~ Stan Smith

**Thanks for the great conversation.
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