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Jiu Jitsu for Anyone

20 members • Free

11 contributions to Jiu Jitsu for Anyone
🥋 Question of the Day – The “Dirty” Details Edition 😏
What’s your favorite “dirty” move in jiu-jitsu? (Not illegal… just annoyingly effective.) You know the one: - The grip that ruins someone’s posture - The pressure that makes people rethink their life choices - The transition that feels unfair but somehow always works 😅 Now break it down 👇 - Where does it usually show up? (scrambles, guard, top, stand-up) - Why does it work so well for YOU? (timing, body type, patience, pressure, speed) - What’s the one detail that makes it hit—or makes it fall apart? Bonus round 👀 If you don’t have one yet: 👉 What “dirty” move has someone hit on you that made you immediately say, “I need to steal that.” This isn’t about being flashy. It’s about efficiency, awareness, and building a game that fits your style. Drop it below 👇 Let’s trade secrets and level up together 🔥🥋
1 like • 19h
Wristlock when there are only 10 seconds left in the clock
Attempting to Float
Something I’ve really been working on lately is floating and surfing from the top instead of forcing pressure. Rather than trying to glue myself to one position, I’m staying light, mobile, and reactive—letting movement create openings instead of muscling them. What I’m noticing: • Fewer scrambles I don’t want • Less energy wasted • Better timing on transitions • More control without feeling heavy I’m still far from perfect. There are moments I mistime it, lose balance, or get caught trying to be too loose. But that’s the process. Jiu-jitsu has layers, and this one has been huge for me—learning when to float, when to surf, and when to drop pressure. Curious—do you prefer heavy pressure on top, or a lighter, more mobile style? 🥋👇
Attempting to Float
1 like • 19h
Bernardo Faria just posted a video about relaxing in BJJ that is in the lines of your comment. I like mobile to pass, light to get to the position and then heavy pressure to secured the position. In reality, I like to adjust between all of them to be more fluid depending on the situation.
Question I saw on Reddit (Ego or Lack of Knowledge)
Hey team — I came across a post on Reddit recently that sparked a really good conversation, and I wanted to bring it here to get your perspective. I already shared how I would personally handle it, but I’m genuinely curious how everyone in this group would approach the situation. Scenario: A training partner outweighs you by around 40 pounds and has previously injured you during rolls. You’re trying to train consistently, stay healthy, and keep improving — but you’re unsure how to decline rolling with this person without it becoming awkward, disrespectful, or escalating egos. How would you handle this? • What would you say (if anything)? • Do you set boundaries directly or keep it simple and move on? • Where’s the line between being a good training partner and protecting your body? There’s no right or wrong answer here — just interested in hearing different perspectives and learning from each other. Let’s talk 👇
Question I saw on Reddit (Ego or Lack of Knowledge)
1 like • 19h
I have never denied a roll if I'm healthy so don't know but I'll be direct with the person saying why I don't want to roll. When I'm injured I just say I'll tap early and in strange situations because I'm trying to recover X. I have learned in competitions that you get hurt and then you need to figure out how to keep competing without using one arm or one leg so if you don't do it in training you don't know how in competition.
🔥 Question of the Day – Let’s Be Honest 🥋
What’s the most OVERRATED technique everyone teaches… that you almost NEVER hit in live rolling? Not saying it doesn’t work. Not saying it’s useless. Just being real — in your game, under real pressure, against fully resisting humans… it just doesn’t show up. Now here’s the important part 👇 👉 What do you do instead? What’s the adjustment you actually rely on when things get messy? What technique has been way more reliable for your body type, pace, and style? This isn’t about trashing techniques. It’s about honesty, problem-solving, and building games that actually work outside of instructionals. Drop your answer below ⬇️ Beginner or black belt — your experience helps someone else skip years of frustration
2 likes • 19h
Standing straight ankle. It works if you are super fast and/or the other person doesn't know how to react and the reason is that you need to have some sort of hip/leg control. I don't really try it live, but if I have to, I step from inside to the outside of the hips to block it and then it is an easier finish.
Jiujitsu practice while on the road/in a hotel?
Hey everyone! With the holidays coming up, I was wondering if any of y'all have some cool jiujitsu practice/exercises that you do when you have limited or no access to the mats. Any exercises or workouts you've found yourself doing when on vacation?
2 likes • 19h
Try https://www.bjjglobetrotters.com/ to find places to train if there are not Alliance gyms near you. Without any option to roll I typically focus on cardio.
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Gerardo Andrade
2
6points to level up
@gerardo-andrade-3473
Alliance brown belt

Active 2h ago
Joined Dec 20, 2025