
BLUE - PURPLE - BROWN - BLACK by John Will
Here is an overview of the differences between the basic ranks in BJJ. It's
a broad-strokes outline but used in conjunction with our landmark Blue Belt
program will serve as a guide to your progress in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu training.
White to Blue: This is FOUNDATION building time. This phase is NOT about
developing your sparring/grappling game. The focus needs to be much more broad
that that. If you go into competitive grappling to early, you tend to develop
your strengths and avoid your weaknesses - this is natural. You DO NOT want to
do this to early. Now is the time to develop a good ALL-ROUND understanding of
how the basics go together. A time to develop a good understanding of all the
basic positions, the relationship between these positions and the ways to affect
the basic attacks and escapes from these positions. This is the time to develop
an OVERALL foundation, upon which we begin to build all we will ever learn about BJJ in the future. This FOUNDATION better be good!
Blue to Purple: In a word, this phase is about COLLECTING. It 's about adding
significantly to the foundation we have created at Blue Belt level. This is the
time to collect our huge swag of techniques that can be applied from as many
different positions/situations as is possible. In fact, people cannot help but
do this; we naturally seek out new 'moves', new 'attacks', new 'defences'. This
information age that we live in, makes this an easy task. But I must emphasize,
the better foundation we have built at Blue Belt level, the easier this task of
collecting, we be. For we will not only be adding to our repetoire of techniques,
but we will be significantly increasing our depth of understanding of the
principles and mechanics that lay behind those techniques.
Purple to Brown: This phase is about ORGANIZING! By now, you have a lot of
knowledge. And that's just like having a house full of books. If you want to e
able to access this information quickly and at will, you need to have those
books organized in a structured fashion. Brown belts need to go beyond the
understanding of relationships between techniques - they need to build
relationships between PLANS. A plan is more than just a random collection of
techniques, it is a method by which those techniques are organized into
sequences that go somewhere, and produce desired outcomes. This is a very
personal phase of our grappling development; it's kind of selfish because it is
really very much about OUR own personal perspective.
Brown to Black: In our opinion, this is all about teaching. The Black Belt is a
kind of universal qualification for teaching; yet more often than not, the new
Black Belt has had little or no teaching training. As a teachers martial arts,
we need to be able to engage with other people and communicate meaningfully to
them about how to best undergo their personal journeys of learning. This means
so much more than just being able to demonstrate our personal ability. It means
we need to be able to communicate to a student in a way that allows and
facilitates their ability to move from their present state to a new and more
desirable state. To do this, to enable people, to empower them to teach them
understanding of the mechanics and principles that lie behind the techniques -
and to do so in a way that is powerful and meaningful to the student - that is
at the heart of what TEACHING is all about. Teaching training should have begun
at the white belt stage of our training and should have ripened to some sort of
maturity by the time we reach the level of Black Belt.