Long-tail articles for the problems that actually push people to look for help: hips, back, shoulders, knees, neck, guard retention, recovery, and training after 40.
Hip pain in BJJ usually comes from too much compression, not too little effort. Here is how to open the right angles, calm the irritated tissue, and keep training.
Read article →Your lower back is often doing work your hips, ribs, and core should be sharing. Fix that split and your rounds stop costing so much.
Read article →Your shoulders take a beating from frames, posts, kimuras, underhooks, and bad scrambles. The answer is not babying them. It is giving them better movement and better support.
Read article →Knees complain when the hips and ankles stop sharing the job. Fix the chain and the knee usually stops being the first thing you think about in training.
Read article →Your neck gets taxed by guillotines, crossfaces, stacking, and office posture. The fix is better movement, better support, and less panic in bad positions.
Read article →Good guard retention is a movement problem before it is a technique problem. If the hips cannot access the positions, the guard always feels late.
Read article →Post-roll work should make tomorrow easier, not become another workout. Keep it short, useful, and aimed at the areas BJJ beats up most.
Read article →Training after 40 is not about slowing down into irrelevance. It is about building a body and routine that can keep showing up year after year.
Read article →If you are new to yoga and already training jiu-jitsu, you do not need a spiritual makeover. You need a simple way to move better, recover faster, and stop feeling beat up.
Read article →Grapplers do not need a hundred poses. They need a handful that open the ranges jiu-jitsu demands and calm the areas that get smoked every week.
Read article →If the front of your hips always feels cooked after guard work, passing, or sitting all day, the answer is usually better positioning and smarter mobility, not just harder stretching.
Read article →The best mobility routine for grapplers is not the longest one. It is the one that fits around hard training and fixes the ranges that jiu-jitsu keeps stealing.
Read article →A lot of BJJ cardio problems are really breathing problems. Fix how you breathe under tension and your gas tank suddenly looks much better.
Read article →If your wrists ache after gi grips, posting, or endless phone time, you need more than just shaking the hands out between rounds.
Read article →Recovery-day yoga should make tomorrow's training easier. If it feels like a second hard practice, you are probably missing the point.
Read article →If your ankles are stiff, your guard, base, deep squat, and even your knees often pay for it. This is how to make the ankles useful again.
Read article →Start with the free-class funnel, then unlock the full library for $9.99/mo when you want the entire Yoga for BJJ system.
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