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Hate your workout? Try something else...

Ever tried to stick with a workout you couldn't stand? For years my workouts consisted of half-hearted efforts to run or  lift weights, originally to put mass on my pitifully thin body, then later to remove years of Miller Lite detritus from my expanding mid-section. The problem was that I hated every second of every workout. Each step of a 2 mile run was painful, every rep with embarassingly light weight was pure misery.

Go figure - these workouts produced almost no results. I remained rail-thin until I turned 30, then immediatley packed on 40 pounds, until I weighed in at nearly 200 pounds on my wedding day 02/02/02.

Then, at 33, I discovered... Fight Club.

3 years later, I'm in the best shape of my life.

I submit to you the following video, which will appear graphic and rather shocking, but I assure you that it represents one of the safest and most effective ways to get in shape - and learn to realistically defend yourself in an actual fight.

EDITED: a bunch of people told me the link below no longer works. Here's a new one:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VN6PvPCrStI

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8137340106961077524&q=gracie&pl=true
(the video is Royce Gracie, a Brazilian, who, at 17 years old, is shown defeating a Kung Fu blackbelt nearly twice his age and 30 pounds heavier, in a controlled, no-holds-barred fighting match)

The martial art is Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, and to this day I am baffled why anyone in the world would not study it. On a scale of 1 to 10, the physical exertion in a single training session is a 10; on any given day, you will lose quarts of sweat, your every muscle will hurt, and you will barely be able to drag yourself to your car.

I could go on for days about how great this grappling sport really is, but I will simply state the following, and get back to my point:

Man, woman, big, small, old, young; take BJJ lessons for 3 months, and you will never lose a fight again.

It will appear from the video that only knuckle-dragging brutes would be interested in such a thing, but let me say that schools in your area cater to all kinds of people - professional fighters, women who want effective self-defense, guys who want to get in shape, and people looking for a unique and competitive sport. Most schools will accomodate any skill level, and any specific training goal, and we do not spend our time swinging wild punches at each other (despite what we want people to think).

I train 3 times a week, religiously, and I love every second of it. I am convinced that it is the love, not the training, that make Jiu Jitsu so effective for my health.

But, as hard for it is for me to imagine, perhaps grappling is not for everyone. Rolling around on the mats with a bunch of sweaty dudes might not sound like all that much fun. The point of this diatribe is to suggest that if you are having difficulty finding time, energy, or motivation to work out, the problem may be your choice of excercise, and not a lack of any of the three. It took me a quarter century to figure that out.

So forget the treadmill, drop the weights, put away the leg warmers - go back out and find something you really love, and it won't seem like work at all. And stop by my Brazilian Jiu Jitsu school anytime - we love to beat up on the new guys!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_Jiu_Jitsu
http://www.grappling.com/
http://www.grapplearts.com/search.php


Comments

 

rsood said:

Ok, I'm pumped! I don't hate my current workout but would love to try BJJ at least once. I'm going to check if they have classes closer to my home.

Watch out Rudi :-)
May 5, 2006 11:29 AM
 

mshannon said:

What happens in a typical session? Are the classes separated into mens' sessions and womens' sessions? What's the cost range? I have to say, your commentary had me hooked...until I watched the video. Ugh--what animals! Nontheless, it was intriguing to me for it's self-defense aspects since I like to run by myself and I'm not very big. You never know what you might run across, but if I had this training, I wouldn't care as much.

Mary Angela--a lumen
June 25, 2006 7:57 PM
 

rudi said:

30 minutes of warm-up, stretching, and drills. 30 minutes of instruction in new moves for attack or defense, 30 minutes of live sparring. Then ususally "open mat" for the hard-core, as long as you can go.

I pay $115 a month for access to five different schools in the area.

Jiu jitsu is *perfect* for self-defense, especially for smaller people, since the entire concept is to use as little possible force to defend or inflict maximum damage.

If you attack someone's arm with both your arms and legs, it doesn't matter how much bigger he is than you - all of your combined limbs will be stronger than his one. And a well-applied choke hold will work against any size attacker.
November 28, 2006 9:50 PM
 

sandy01 said:

I would love to learn self-defense and get fit at the same time.  Sounds great....I'll check it out!
December 4, 2006 7:02 PM
 

Irish1 said:

Sounds like something worth trying out.  Thanks for the info.
December 15, 2006 2:46 PM
 

dvliao said:

Try joining a Team in Training running club, this way you will have others who count on you showing up for training and you will be benefitting a charitable organization as well!
December 24, 2006 4:13 PM
 

sandy01 said:

I joined team in training about 6 years ago and really enjoyed it!!!  In the end you also get to run a marathon!  It's amazing how committed to it you get!
January 7, 2007 10:08 PM

About rudi

I am a director in the Lumenos IT Department, in charge of the web sites, Provider and Member databases, and other related operations systems. I've been with Lumenos since June 2001, when I was hired as the Web project manager.

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