I'm back here again in Thailand training for my bodybuilding (figure) competition at the end of April and I decided to shake things up a little with some training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) and No-Gi. I originally did this for some core training but there is a whole other element of training like this which is surprisingly pleasing. It is another sport where I can express authenticity and I think to shrink our identities sometimes is a dangerously limiting road to go down. It was also a welcome positive distraction from mounting feelings of overwhelm about stepping on stage in a bejewelled bikini smaller than my thumb nail.
Unsurprisingly, my "all or nothing" personality took to this challenge like a bull to a red flag and within one week of training I've entered a Tournament in Bangkok for the following week.
I'm not a beginner to martial arts, but to BJJ absolutely yes. I have strength but no skill - which isn't a combination which works against anyone with any competence. Training in a fighters gym, there are not many with no competence. So, although this may sound absolutely crazy on all fronts being so close to my bodybuilding competition, there is in fact logic to the madness because I wanted to try and address the following questions?
- I train in a very intuitive mind-body way which is about making "hard things fun" through mindset changes, because it creates motivation and focus. Can I apply this to a very challenging situation; one that puts me far far out of my comfort zone. Can I manage the stress, so this is a truly fun, positive and enjoyable experience? Can I overcome my own fear of uncertainty?
- What effect does two weeks of pre competition BJJ training have on my physique and physiology?
- Is there value to integrating competition really early on in learning a sport, so you learn how to compete - and by this I mean how to win and lose with grace and humility so it is an experience that ultimately builds character and is motivating. I can't help thinking delaying competition builds up expectations, pressure and takes away the ease and fun of a sport. Is there value in doing the two side by side? Thai kids will take fights very early on in their careers and I wonder if there is some learning in that. Learning to win and lose is a vital skill living in a society where fear of failure is rife. You can't shelter oneself from failure, it's a prerequisite of success and living a full life, so isn't the best way to deal with it, to learn and grow from it?
I have been training for 10 days and trying to integrate this with a full-on schedule of pre-competition bodybuilding training and dieting in 35C heat, so it's not a masterpiece of efficiency and something that I will have to review.
With a week to the tournament, twice daily 90min sessions of BJJ in this heat will be enough training for me. Being a beginner of any new sport is not an efficient use of ones energy anyway and it's really important to be mindful of that. It's taxing on all systems; physical, mental and emotional. Because I rely on strength so much as my only survival skill, I get a very good strength session both dynamic and isometric. It does however kind of defeat the point of this project a little which is to learn to be comfortable in uncertainty and to embrace learning of new skills; to cultivate a beginners mind, which requires leaving the ego at the door. This gives me a renewed compassion of new comers to weight training and I'm glad of this reminder, because we were all beginners at some point and sometimes the encouragement of a coach or friend was the thing that helped us gain enough momentum to stay the course. I'm very grateful to those that have been so patient with me.
Abandoning my ego is a lot harder than I thought. I want to use strength, because that's pretty much the only thing I have. I think I can just about execute one move on a partner if they promise to just lie there like a dummy and don't move. The excitement of doing something new which feels very authentic and natural to me is also teamed with immense amounts of frustration, fatigue, expectation, confusion and every other emotion under the sun.
I've spent a year building up confidence and competence in weight training gyms of all sorts and now the slow dismantling of ego begins; so this is a very interesting project for practicing what I believe in - how to "make hard things fun" and applying this "inside-out" approach. This experience could be immensely positive or it could be immensely corrosive depending on what route I choose. It is the perfect opportunity for practicing being gentle on yourself to be really strong. I have to admit I failed miserably at this yesterday; the session culminating in me flailing and swimming around in my own sweat like a beached whale for about 2 hours, being face planted and arm locked by men twice my size. I did however manage to make something quite easy look immensely difficult and that I think is a skill in itself. However, like all things that go terribly wrong - refuelling and a good night sleep do wonders for resetting the button on mindset and so I'm writing this just before my first morning session but with a slight change to strategy and this is as follows:
- Getting huge amounts of rest, staying calm, practicing mindfulness and meditation so I am in a good position to absorb and retain information. There is no room for frustration.
- Having appropriate expectation for how much I can learn in a very short amount of time.
- Laughing.....a lot, perhaps not in class but certainly afterwards.
I continue to learn huge lessons everyday I do this; maybe I will stop after the tournament and maybe I won't - that is part of the journey. I have been helped and encouraged immensely by sparring partners who have been patient beyond what is reasonable. This extreme of kindness and clinical destruction are an example of the many attributes martial arts trains and this is part of the many things I love about it. The lessons it teaches us about the spirit of competition, ourselves, others and life are hugely powerful, something I really hope I can help give back to those on their own fitness and life journeys.