Zen & The Art of Jiu-jitsu

 

 

by James Eke

“Calm your mind. Control your body. Master your emotions. Breathe”

These are words that I heard a great deal when I first started studying Zen over 30 years ago. I was lucky because a few of the great teachers that I had a chance to study with not only were students of Zen but were also martial artists.

As happens though, my own learning of these lessons took a lot longer than simply hearing the words. In many ways I first needed to learn to sit still, discipline myself, control the mind and breath.  With time though, I started to see that Zen — or meditation — was actually in everything if I had the sight to see it and the ability to integrate it.

As a lay-ordained Zen Buddhist this has been my own personal training for much of the past 20 or so years; the integration of my Zen training into my martial arts and everyday life. The simple thought being, what good is meditation or mindfulness or any other aspect of practice if you cannot use it in everything you do. In that way, when I can, I will make a walk in the woods, or the beach, or from Fernwood to downtown all Zen-walks. When I am driving I’ll make it into Zen-driving. In my martial arts too I’ll make it into Zen-training.

When I started Brazilian Jiu-jitsu at 42 years old I was thrilled to see that the words that my first Zen teachers first said to me were now being repeated by BJJ black belts when we trained. And the more I trained, the more I saw the deep connection with Zen and Jiu-jitsu.

Of course, you can just as easily train in BJJ or anything martial art and be oblivious to the Zen aspect, just as you can walk along the beach and have no real deeper training going on. The important part is the intent and what you are injecting into the training.

In Jiu-jitsu you are in a state of intimate understanding of combat and the simple reality that if you make a mistake, if you lose focus, if you lose structure, if you get gassed out, if you don’t have the stamina, this other person is going to pin you down, squish you flat and make you tap out seeming to have more limbs than possible and be everywhere at once, quicker than you can say ‘Avalokiteshvara’.

Our growth in Jiu-jitsu really starts to take shape when we learn to control our minds, to relax them, to see things as they really are, to notice the subtle differences in body position, the breath of our opponent, their intent. From there we start to learn how to control our bodies — we see how our weaknesses will be used against us, we see how simple understanding of where we are in relation to the other person can start a chain-reaction that makes a huge difference in how things happen.

For a lot of people this is as far as they get.

To get further means letting go of the ego. To master your own emotions and your inner dramas. You learn that your training is not about tapping the other person out — it is about something more. This ‘something’ depends on an impartial participant who is striving for a higher level of Jiu-jitsu than feeling the ‘other guy’ tap.

Key to all of this is to learn to breathe.

You likely think you already know how to breathe. You think that you are breathing. But next time you are rolling force yourself to listen to your opponent; are they breathing harder than you? What is your breath doing to your emotional output when you roll? What are you not seeing or feeling because of the fight to get air into your body? Why are you in a panic to get another breath when you’ve been smashed and you are dealing with their weight on your chest even though you know that this too won’t last and another breath will come if you relax and let it?

In a lot of ways Jiu-jitsu becomes a physical manifestation of Zen when we learn how to train a certain way and when we do amazing things happen — we find that the act of training itself is teaching us about far more things than simply how to defend ourselves.

The things you will learn in your Jiu-jitsu training are far deeper than you will understand when you first walk out on the mats. Yes, you’ll learn to defend yourself. You’ll learn discipline. You’ll become more fit. You’ll make friends. You’ll get a deeper appreciation for your own life. You’ll look back and wonder what would have happened if you had never started training.

We don’t have to become Zen Masters. We don’t have to become BJJ World Champions. What we do need is to become more in touch with ourselves and our potential. When we train ourselves to see more in our lives we care more about the people and things that surround us.

Jiu-jitsu, if trained properly, can give us all of this and far more.

As the teachers have been saying for thousands of years, as we train ourselves we will find the world, and our own hearts, will open to us.

There is so much that you will learn from Jiu-jitsu. It will make a world of difference to you. Just take that first step, trust in the system and what you will discover.

You’ll get there. Have faith.

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November 2016 BJJ Syllabus

You get smashed, you are flat on your back, they are feeling like they weigh about twice of what they actually are on the scale.

Oh, hip escape! Right?!

Now what?

This month we will be working on a number of concepts to get your Brazilian Jiu-jitsu moving exactly where you want it to be.

First off, we will be working on a submission flow drill starting from the guard with a variety of chokes and submissions that link together — all using their position in your guard as their downfall. This drill has a large number of submissions that link together so please make sure you get to class so you don’t miss an important part of the complete flow drill.

Next, expanding from October’s hip escape focus, we will look at how to get our bodies from where they may be to where they should be. Next will come recognition of where would be an even better place to go to and possibilities for dominate positions as well as possible submissions.

We are going to not only be working on the hip escape but also fundamentals of side control, getting out of side control as well as looking at the butterfly guard.

Jiu-jitsu is all about movement. We need to read the opponent and intimately feel where we are at the moment and what we can do. We have to realize that unlike how we feel when we first start training, we are never really ‘stuck’ — sometimes it just takes appreciation of where you are, slowly adjusting and getting to another place where things are better.

flowchart-001

The key focus will be on recognizing and expanding on our knowledge base of position with the understanding that no submission is ever going to work the way it should if we don’t first have a grasp of our position and where we would be better off.

Jiu-jitsu is about learning how to first control ourselves, then to see where we are in relation to our opponent and where we need to be compared to where we are now. From there we have to intuitively understand how to use structure and sensitivity to use our opponent’s strengths and weaknesses against them.

Hope to see you in class for further exploration of these concepts!

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Brazilian Jiu-jitsu is for everyone

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by James Eke

After 35-plus years in the martial arts I’ll be the first to admit that some martial arts are good for some people while others are good for ‘others’. While there may be people out there who would say that this isn’t the case, they are probably either very young, very inexperienced or simply more interested in making a buck off of someone than concern for the well-being of others.

Brazilian Jiu-jitsu however, if practiced as it was meant to be, really is something that should be and can be for everyone. Not only that, but it is at its best when you have people of all different sizes, shapes and ages. Jiu-jitsu is about learning about yourself in relation to all of these different types of people. It is about learning about life.

While I may have started my training in the martial arts when I was about 12, my BJJ training didn’t really start until I was about 42 years old. Now you can believe what you want, but the body you have when you are in your 20s is not the same body you’ll have when you are in your 40s and it will be a whole different ball-of-wax when you are approaching your 50s. That said, this should never stop you from training and in fact, when it comes to BJJ, I have started to believe that a mature viewpoint not only makes the Jiu-jitsu journey more important but aspects of it will actually come easier to you as when you are past the ‘flashy’ ego-driven time of your youth. My own long-time martial arts instructor, Guro Dan Inosanto didn’t start Brazilian Jiu-jitsu until he was in his 60s — and now at 80 he is still training in it.

At its core, Jiu-jitsu as I have come to learn, is more about learning to deal with whatever it is that life or your opponent throws at you and responding in a calm, accepting and relaxed manner. Sure, on the outside it might look like something aggressive or dynamic but the seed inside of that dynamic sphere of movement and combat needs to be a non-aggressive, non-ego-driven understanding of the moment that you are currently in and possible outcomes.

Once you learn and get the fundamentals of Jiu-jitsu working for you, it doesn’t matter much what is thrown your way, you will be able to deal with it. What you find as a result is that this calm detachment — this ‘Jiu-jitsu Chill’ — is going to carry itself into your every day life.

As we say like a mantra on the mats at Eke Academy of Martial Arts when we are training, “if you are working harder than your opponent, you are already losing.” This way of thinking when the chips are down, unravelling the knot that has been presented to you is a very empowering thing and one of the amazing aspects of BJJ.

There are lots of different kinds of schools out there. All offer something. There may be schools that you’ll visit that are made of people who simply want to knock-heads like the goats in Beacon Hill’s Children’s Zoo but this is not what Jiu-jitsu is all about. As I say to my students, our goal is to have an inclusive school where you’ll see people of every age and body type training and having fun; where laughter and learning always is above the idea of tapping someone out, where longevity in training is paramount and respect happens both inside the Academy and out in the regular world.

Jiu-jitsu provides those who start down its path an incredible journey. Most people will never become World Champions — and there is nothing wrong with that — Jiu-jitsu is not about the sport aspect. It is about YOU. It is about DISCOVERY. It is about LOVE of an art and the people who are around you.

One thing is certain, if you give it the time, Jiu-jitsu will change your life. It will enhance your life. If you cross-train in other systems you’ll have a far greater appreciation and understanding of them. But perhaps most importantly, you’ll feel better about yourself, your life and all the amazing things and people that make it up.

Jiu-jitsu is a journey but it starts with a step. That step is something that will change you forever. Don’t you deserve that?

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Essence of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu

 

by James Eke

Someone asked me the other day what Jiu-jitsu was and I answered with a clinical text book answer. Then they asked me something that made me think, they asked, ‘what is its essence?’

Now giving a short answer on a question like that is a tough one. Especially if you know me and understand that I’ve been involved with martial arts for over 35 years. The essence of the martial arts is something I have been digging into and rooting down through for a while now. It is the kind of deep thinking that I love.

The simple answer would be respect for each other, respect for the art, respect for your teacher. But while this is truth and I really believe that we need to, as one of my instructors used to say to us in his broken English, “Always respect! Begin. End. Respect. Don’t forget! Breathe respect. Bow respect.” Too many schools and systems these days seem to forget that. I’ve even read something once that said that we shouldn’t bow because it is some ancient Shinto thing…huh?…what? This is also the kind of place you’d probably hear swearing and fighting in the school. If you don’t understand respect you sure aren’t going to practice it.

The essence of Jiu-jitsu. You could say that it is about efficiency and effectiveness. About learning how to use the opponent’s strengths and weaknesses against them. This would all be correct as well. Jiu-jitsu, if you learn it properly has little to do with aggression. In fact, aggression only breeds more aggression and mix that into a confrontation and you’ll gas out quicker than you’d realize. Jiu-jitsu requires you to leave your ego outside the Academy and to enter with the view not to tap anyone out but to work with your partners so that you both will become awesome.

Maybe the essence of Jiu-jitsu has something to do with getting into great shape and learning things about your body, mind and soul that you wouldn’t have otherwise figured out. Few martial arts will show you the mirror of what you are, your fears, your abilities, your weaknesses with the no-BS-lense quite like BJJ does. You might think you are in great shape and realize that this older dude who doesn’t look like he has been to the gym in a decade or two kicks your butt. You might think you are awesome until someone takes your back and chokes you out. You might think your Jiu-jitsu is superior until someone gets you with a knee-on-belly that feels like you’ve been stapled to the ground. Jiu-jitsu is a levelling ground that keeps you humble and yet constantly improving each and every day.

Jiu-jitsu is all of these things. It is also a whole lot more.

When I looked back at this person who’d asked the question I thought about all of this, I thought about the kindness I’ve personally found through legendary BJJ black belts, I thought about the friendships I’ve made from the mats, I thought about how excited those of us who truly love the art feel every time we tie our beat up belts around our uniforms, I thought about the times I’ve wanted to train but couldn’t because of an injury or sickness, I thought about how much I miss my teachers in Los Angeles, I thought about how much this new spin on an ancient art has come to mean to me in only five years, and the last thing I thought about was something that my teacher and BJJ black belt Guro Dan Inosanto said to me once and I smiled and nodded before answering.

“The essence of BJJ is love.”

A raised eyebrow told me that this person who’d asked didn’t either understand or didn’t buy it.

The essence of BJJ is love because when you start training you are doing it 100 per cent for you. It is a selfish thing but something you know you need in your life. It like a special present for you wrapped up in an awesome bow with a cool suit. With time BJJ becomes about your school and your teacher and the people around you — they all become central to your life, you are proud of them all and feel a kinship with them like you haven’t really felt in your life before. Eventually BJJ becomes something that is alive and breathing and you can feel its heartbeat every time you walk onto the mats — it is like a baby that if you nurture it and help it grow you know that it will become something absolutely incredible. Then BJJ becomes this mystery that you have to unravel — you read everything you can find, watch everything you can find, listen to everything you can find because you know there are missing piece that have to fit together and you are going to unravel it. Eventually though, BJJ becomes something far greater — it becomes, in a way, a place where not only you can grow but where you can help foster the amazing journey you have felt in others. You want them to discover themselves. You want them to see what you feel. You want them to succeed. It becomes not about competing against others but helping them. All of these things and more are the reasons why the essence of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu is love.

Brazilian Jiu-jitsu is a journey which may well take you here and there. You might decide to compete, you might not. You might get to train with a lot of different teachers or just one. You will definitely see people come and unfortunately you’ll also see them go. But through all of this, Jiu-jitsu is a journey not through time and space and people; Jiu-jitsu is a personal journey through yourself which happens through the grace and love of others.

What you will find at the other end is a far greater gift than you could have anticipated when you began.

Jiu-jitsu is for everyone. You don’t have to be fit. You don’t have to be young. You don’t have to be anything. Jiu-jitsu is about YOU and US and at its heart it is about what life itself is all about. Love.

That’s not a bad thing, is it?

Why not give it a try?

You will love it.

 

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Brazilian Jiu-jitsu is a beautiful thing

 

by James Eke

People train in the martial arts for a myriad of reasons.

Some want to get in better shape. Some want to make friends. Some want to learn to defend themselves. Some just think it is cool.

In the end, the martial arts will give you exactly what you are looking for but if you stick with it long enough you will find out that it has given you a whole lot more than just that.

For me, my martial arts journey started when I was a child — you can read my book Warrior’s Way if you want to find out more about this — suffice it to say I have been doing the martial arts for pretty much my whole life, minus a few years where I more interested in playing on the floor with toys and learning how to walk.

At 47, I have been involved with more systems than I can sometimes remember. Some I have tried out and left behind, others I studied for years and moved to the next progression, and some I have sticked to for longer than some of my students have been alive.

The one constant has been just how blessed I have been with the level of instruction that I have somehow managed to get.

I’d read about Brazilian Jiu-jitsu for years and having started my serious study of martial arts as a child in Judo for close to a decade was very interested. Unfortunately, in Canada we lag behind the US in terms of quality BJJ given that it only really showed up in the US in a big way in the 1980s and didn’t really start to spread until the 90s. Here in Canada it wasn’t until the early years of the 2000s when we started to see people with brown or black belts.

As happens in life, an interest in looking into something new when you are already busy with what you already do plus being a Dad and having a job make it difficult when you’d have to often travel elsewhere to find something legit.

But like I said, I’ve been very blessed.

When I was 42, I had the crazy good fortune to try BJJ for the first time with one of the few people you could actually call a legend of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu, Prof Jean Jacques Machado. I was training at the Inosanto Academy in Los Angeles with my long-time teacher, Guro Dan Inosanto (who is a BJJ Black Belt under Prof Machado) and decided I was crazy if I didn’t take part in a camp being held there.

If you haven’t trained with someone at the level of Prof Machado or Guro Inosanto then you don’t really understand the difference between what is real and what is fake. There is a big difference between making a peanut butter sandwich yourself or getting a world-famous chef to make you a sandwich — one will fill the hole and the other will change the way you think about a sandwich. That is exactly what happened to me within the first few minutes of sharing the mats with Prof Machado. He changed the way I viewed…everything.

As I say to my students, the best way I can describe it is to say that training in real Brazilian Jiu-jitsu as taught by the likes of Prof Machado opened a door in my body and my mind so that I now understand not only BJJ but also have deeper core understanding of all the other martial arts that I practice and teach at the Eke Academy.

I still can’t believe I tried BJJ the first time with a legend. He was also the first person I ever rolled with in BJJ…and consequently the first BJJ Black Belt I got to roll with and to be honest, kind of left a ‘high water mark’ that is pretty tough to beat when it comes to what is BJJ.

For the past five years since then I have trained with Prof Machado as often as I can, as well as with his students Prof Jay Zeballos (who is the mentor and guiding light of our BJJ program at EAMA) and Prof Gary Padilla who runs the BJJ program at the Inosanto Academy. The Brazilian Jiu-jitsu that I have grown to love amplifies everything else I do and has become an integral part of who I am today.

Not many people at 47 after a lifetime of perfecting other martial arts would say that they are starting a long road to dedicating to another system but for me it is the obvious next step. In a lot of ways, after starting in Judo, now, as a mature adult it is like coming home to be back on the ground, rolling around and having a blast doing it.

Brazilian Jiu-jitsu is a huge world these days. There is a self-defence aspect to it, a competitive sport aspect and then there is something more — a core system that is about learning about you in a chilled out, tactile way that simply makes sense.

If you have the proper instruction, it is more like learning some integrated Zen-yoga-functional-mobility-martial-art that is not only fun but leaves you wanting more.

While there are lots of young people out there who want to explore the more aggressive and competitive aspects to it, BJJ also has more than enough room for those who want a martial art that allows them to train hard, learn to let go, learn skills, and in the end amplify their lives in a way that makes you see what a martial ‘art’ really is compared to a ‘sport’.

Brazilian Jiu-jitsu as I’ve been learning from a truly humbling lineage is something that will not only change your life but will be an art that you can practice for the rest of your life.

Five years in Brazilian Jiu-jitsu flies by. I imagine 10 years will be the same. It is amazing the depth that you will learn and the things that you will gain in training in it. Without a doubt, BJJ is one of the most beautiful martial arts that I have had the great fortune to have trained in and I know without a doubt that I will be involved with learning more of this amazing system for the rest of my life.

If you have been thinking about trying BJJ out. Do it. You won’t get beat up. You won’t leave wishing you hadn’t done it. You won’t be disappointed. What you will do is fall in love with this incredible martial art that we here in Victoria, BC are so lucky to have thanks to the likes of Prof Jay Zeballos and of course Prof Jean Jacques Machado.

I can’t wait to see what the future holds for Brazilian Jiu-jitsu and I feel blessed to be along for the ride. Wouldn’t you like to come?

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Brazilian Jiu-jitsu in Victoria, BC at Eke Academy

 

 

Email us at eke.academy@gmail.com for more information.

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Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu at Eke Academy

 

See these smiling faces?

This is what Brazilian Jiu-jitsu was meant to be — people coming together and training hard and having a great time doing it in a safe and friendly environment.

At Eke Academy of Martial Arts you get just that and more. We bring Victoria, BC the amazing art of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu under the mentorship and guidance of the incredible lineage of BJJ World Champion Prof Jay Zeballos, 3rd degree Black Belt under the legend, Prof Jean Jacques Machado.

Our BJJ classes are five days a week. Mon-Thurs at 8pm and Saturdays at 10am. All for the affordable price of just $80 a month (or $60 a month if you commit to a year).

For the month of October — our birthday — we are offering half-off our BJJ classes for all new students.

What could be better than that?

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October 2016 BJJ Syllabus

You have them in your guard, you think you are doing well and then you realize you are stuck, flat on your back with nothing.

Sound familiar?

We all find ourselves in this spot either by miscalculation or as a result of ‘the other guy’ trying to smash us regardless of them being in our guard or not.

As we learn from proper training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, there is always a way out, always something you can do. What we need are the pieces to figure out how to get to where we want to be.

For this month we will be looking at movement from the guard position. Most of this means learning the hip escape and then simple positional changes or submissions that will come from that movement/escape.

What we will be talking and training about looks kind of like this:

guardhip-escape-002

Basically put, you don’t want to stay stuck on your back. You are likely going to need to utilize the hip escape to make some space which will allow you to get to or to help set up your next position or a submission.

Make sure you work this key movement both in isolation and with a partner and as you progress have your partner give you a harder time until you can create space and movement via the hip escape with ease.

Of course a flow chart is nice on paper and understanding the syllabus is important but putting it into practice is the key. Make sure you make the most of your October 2016 BJJ training at Eke Academy of Martial Arts and make it out to both our Monday, Wednesday and Saturday Gi classes as well as the Tuesday and Thursday no-Gi classes. You will find there are subtle differences and key fundamentals with both which you won’t want to miss.

This month we would like to see you have a few takeaways to work on when you train:

Key submissions:

  • Kimura
  • Omoplata
  • Armbar from guard
  • Armlock

Key positions:

  • Full Guard
  • Open Guard

Key movements:

  • Hip escape

For more information there are a couple of very good articles on the hip escape you should read:

http://www.bjjweekly.com/blog/post/the-importance-of-hips-in-brazilian-jiu-jitsu

https://breakingmuscle.com/brazilian-jiu-jitsu/how-to-hip-escape-a-fundamental-bjj-movement-and-a-low-cost-mode-of-transportati

 

 

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Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in Victoria, BC!

 

At Eke Academy of Martial Arts we are please to provide Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in a safe, mature and open manner, making BJJ not just about competition or gaining belts, but about changing your life, getting fit, making friends and learning life-long skills that you can use in your day-to-day life.

Our BJJ program is run under the guidance and mentorship of Prof Jay Zeballos, 3rd Degree Black Belt with legendary BJJ Champion and Master Instructor, Prof Jean Jacques Machado. You’ll be hard-pressed to find a better lineage than that.

“Jiu-jitsu isn’t about competing. It is about learning how to be a better you. It is about learning to control yourself. It is about realizing the power a person actually has. It is about learning to let go. About seeing that there is always another way. When you put all of these attributes and aspects together you find that in an actual confrontation that there is always a way out. You will learn that a smaller person can defeat a larger one. But more importantly you will learn something about yourself,” James Eke, chief instructor and owner of the Eke Academy said.

“At Eke Academy we want our students to be World Champions in how they live their lives and impact the community around them. Competition is great — you can learn a lot from it but what is more important is building something that you can foster and continue with for the rest of your life. That is what Jiu-jitsu is to me and the martial arts as a whole — learning how to be a champ in your own life.”

At 47, Eke has been training in the martial arts for over 35 years, starting BJJ in 2011 with Prof Machado. “The first time I trained with Prof Machado at my long-time instructor, Guro Dan Inosanto’s academy in Los Angeles I was literally blown away. Jiu-jitsu is a martial art that if you learn it right and from solid people who understand the art, you will be amazed by what you can learn. What I found immediately was how it fit in so perfectly with the other martial arts I have been doing for decades. It is very unique. Jiu-jitsu is not wrestling — wrestling is kind of like the same coin as BJJ but the other side of it. Real BJJ is not aggressive, it uses the other person’s strength, weight, balance and position all against them. It is not only fun but a really empowering art. If you try it and learn it like it is meant to be you will be hooked.”

The BJJ Program at Eke Academy of Martial Arts in Victoria, BC is affordable at only $80 a month or $60 a month if you commit to a year — with five classes a week offered at the 209-734 Aldebury St location.

For the month of October, as part of our anniversary celebration we are offering our BJJ classes at 50% off for all new students. Look for the offer on our Facebook page.

For more information email us at eke.academy@gmail.com or call 250-216-2801.

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Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu at Eke Academy

Eke Academy of Martial Arts is pleased to announce that we have Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu classes five days a week open to the public five days a week in Victoria, BC.

Our BJJ program, under the guidance of Prof Jay Zeballos, 3rd Degree Black Belt under Prof Jean Jacques Machado, is a safe and friendly Jiu-Jitsu program devoted to helping the student be the best that they can be.

We foster an environment that is committed to student growth and a love for Jiu-Jitsu and the martial arts.

Classes in BJJ at Eke Academy are affordable at only $80/month if you are paying month-to-month ($60/month if you commit to a year).

 

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