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Training When You Travel

The true BJJ addicts will often pack a kimono in their luggage when they are on short business trips or vacationing in a different city.

BJJ has truly become a global art and there is a solid chance there will be an academy wherever you visit. A group of new friends who will very likely offer to show you around the city and take you someplace to eat after the class is great to have when you are a stranger in a new city.

I welcome many travelers at my BJJ academy in Saigon, Vietnam, and Jiu-Jitsu Times readers are always welcome to visit.

However, there are certain things you can do to make visiting another gym better.

Here are four of them.

Message Ahead

BJJ academies are not very formal places, but it is customary to message the academy ahead of time to introduce yourself and inquire about the training times. The instructor can help you find the gym and will be expecting you.

Have A Plain White Gi

Now, many of you will argue about this, but most experienced travelers have a plain white gi specifically for visiting other academies.

Some academies have a policy that students wear their kimonos, but a plain white kimono will offend few.

I have often thought in the back of my mind that a patch from another academy could be considered a bit of a target and motivate your rolling partners to go a little harder to show you that no outsider is going to come into their academy and show them what is up!

Have A Fun Attitude

No one wants to have a newcomer visit their academy, go hard, and get tapped in front of their instructor. You can call it ego or whatever you want, but there exists a certain territoriality in jiu-jitsu academies.

Be careful not to bring an aggressive attitude or roll intensely at the beginning. The instructor may observe this and introduce you to the academy pitbull to “slow your roll.”

Smile A Lot

In the sometimes intense atmosphere of a BJJ academy, other students can be apprehensive about getting tapped out by a stranger of lower rank and react to new faces a little cautiously.

Worse, some students are wary of the outsider who comes in and could injure them with heel hooks and neck cranks

An open attitude and friendly smile do more than anything to make friends and have the best spirited rolls wherever your BJJ travels take you.

Read also on Jiu-jitsu Times: Learn To Defend Illegal Techniques!

The post Training When You Travel appeared first on Jiu-Jitsu Times.

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