Why Joe Rogan Did Jiu Jitsu

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Joe rogan explains how he got into jiu jitsu.

#ufc #mma #joerogan #jre #shorts
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Mark of a true martial artist: always humble, always learning.

Beslan_Myths_And_Facts
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Most people doesn't realize how helpless they are against a trained grappler

davidcarrancozepeda
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Joe "helpless" Rogan

Edit: thanks for 1k likes

DenzelMawere
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Losing consistently builds the best character and strength 🤘

Noblesavage
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Several Blackbelts were @ our Dojo and this young fella Gracie Bjj blue belt, was invited to participate in one of our Shotokan Karate lessons. All the Karate bb's got destroyed by this very quiet, very humble dude. Great lessons in humility were learned that night, by all of us. Osu.

Freeman
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That's a productive mentality, if i suck at something fun ! Put effort!

Nobody-pi
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That's a true warrior is humbled knowing that there always going be someone better and realizes his or her strengths and weaknesses

Ghost_-gr
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I always like the convo before going live when you and the opponent are saying the nicest things to each other before that bell rings

MILO-zjcn
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This is the reason I love Joe. He is a real one

wesleystarkey
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The reverse is the same, as a brazilian who trained BJJ when younger I still remember how lose i was in my first boxing sparring

casadogaspar
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I think a lot of these things they say about grapling os true to striking as well. The diffdrence is if a low level striker goes woth a high level one and has ego he might not know how bad he is unless he gets knocked out. And a good sparing partner wont do that.
But when rolling you can be respectful and still choke someone out. Then he cant argue about it

darrengrotyohann
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Jiu-jitsu and striking are completely different things

kpastanoodles
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The thing about bjj is that you never train to perfom against punches and the mayority of the dojos dont train takedowns due to injuries. So in a real fight situation is not the holy grail. I prefer boxing or mma all day. Bjj TODAY has too many holes. Is not the agressive bjj from the 90s.

manuelvillaverde
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I've heard of similar stories of guys getting humbled by people half their size, age, etc. It's the ones who stick through with it, that become great. Most people will get embarrassed and never return for a second training session.

alpaverson
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Started doing judo. Dude who owned it was prior Olympian. Didn’t make it far but still was that level. Me little white belt(late 20s) got folded and thrown by his 16 year old purple belt who did competitions across the country.

GoBoT-owkn
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If you don't get absolutely crushed and humbled on your first day on a dojo then there's nothing worth learning in there.

dion
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If u don’t believe in please walk into a Jiu Jitsu gym and challenge them and find out, the smallest guy will break your leg

capofodedor
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Jim Misti is one the most humbling martial arts

Phycho-game-book-theorists
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i can so relate to this. long term martial artist but all striking arts such as Tang Soo Do, Shotokan, Taekwando, kickboxing and boxing but no real grappling experience. I had already been humbled by a wrestler in a street fight many years prior but i had some success in that fight too and was only 15. when i tried BJJ first time in my early 40s and i was completely lost and helpless. It’s a whole different world and i really haven’t found the time or patience to get very good at it but i would like to. It’s an amazing martial art

MP-vgjs
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I can relate to that 100% I started in taekwondo moved into kickboxing and then started judo and jujitsu
And I don’t think anybody will forget the first time they got their ass handed to them on the mat by some random younger smaller kid who can just literally spin around you with ease and submit you whenever he wants it is scary good times🤘🏻

eddielee