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By My Blog
Your First Jiu Jitsu Moves Won't Look Cool That's fine. They're not supposed to. The flashy stuff you see on YouTube — flying armbars, slick transitions...
That's fine. They're not supposed to.
The flashy stuff you see on YouTube — flying armbars, slick transitions, people rolling like they're choreographed — none of that matters your first month on the mat. What matters is a handful of fundamental positions and movements that will serve you for years, whether you train twice a week or five times a week.
If you're an adult in San Antonio thinking about starting jiu jitsu this spring, knowing what these foundational moves actually look like (and why they matter) takes a lot of the mystery out of your first few classes.
It doesn't have a flashy name. Some people call it "shrimping," which sounds even less impressive. But the hip escape is the single most important movement in jiu jitsu, and you'll drill it hundreds of times before you stop thinking about it.
Here's what it is: you're lying on your back, someone is on top of you, and you need to create space. Instead of pushing with your arms (which burns energy fast and doesn't work well against a heavier person), you turn onto your side, drive off one foot, and scoot your hips away. That small gap you create is enough to reposition, recover guard, or escape entirely.
Why adults need this: most real-world self-defense situations where you'd use grappling involve someone pinning you down. The hip escape is your answer to that problem. It also builds the kind of body awareness that makes every other technique easier to learn.
You'll practice this in warm-ups at almost every class. It feels awkward the first week. By week three, your body starts figuring it out.
In most fights or self-defense situations, ending up on your back feels like losing. Jiu jitsu flips that assumption. Closed guard — where you're on your back with your legs wrapped around someone's torso — is actually an offensive position.
From closed guard, you can control distance, break someone's posture (pull them down toward you so they can't generate power), and set up sweeps or submissions. For a beginner, the most important skill here isn't attacking. It's learning to keep someone close enough that they can't hit you effectively, and controlling their posture so you dictate the pace.
The first time you realize you can neutralize someone bigger than you just by using your legs and grips, something clicks. That moment is a big part of why adults stick with jiu jitsu past the first month.
A sweep is any technique that reverses position — you go from bottom to top. Two sweeps that beginners learn early are the scissor sweep and the hip bump sweep, and they teach you something critical about jiu jitsu: you don't need to be stronger, you need better timing and angles.
Scissor sweep: From closed guard, you open your legs, get on your side, place one shin across your partner's midsection and the other leg on the mat. When they push into you (and they will — it's instinct), you use that forward momentum against them by pulling with your arms and cutting with your legs in opposite directions. They go over. You end up on top.
Hip bump sweep: Your partner is sitting up in your guard, posturing tall. You sit up explosively into them, posting on one hand behind you and driving your hip into theirs. Their base breaks, and over they go.
Both sweeps work because they exploit what the other person is already doing. That principle — using someone's own energy and reaction against them — is what makes jiu jitsu effective for people who aren't the biggest or strongest person in the room.
Most beginners want to learn what to do when they're winning. Smart training prioritizes what to do when you're losing.
Mount is one of the worst positions to be stuck in — someone sitting on your chest with their knees pinching your ribs. Your first instinct will be to push them off with your arms. That won't work, and it'll gas you out in about fifteen seconds.
The trap-and-roll escape is usually the first mount escape you'll learn. You trap one of their arms against your chest, hook their foot on the same side with your leg, and bridge explosively to roll them over. You end up in their guard — a much better spot.
Learning this escape first does something important for your confidence: it removes the panic. Once you know there's a reliable way out of a bad position, you stop freezing when you get there.
Our beginner-friendly jiu jitsu classes are designed around exactly these kinds of movements. Nobody expects you to walk in knowing anything. The curriculum builds from these fundamentals, and the training partners you'll work with remember being brand new themselves.
San Antonio's got no shortage of ways to stay active — morning runs along the Mission Reach, weekend hikes at Government Canyon — but jiu jitsu gives you something those activities can't: a skill set that builds on itself week after week, and a room full of people invested in your progress.
Your first moves won't make the highlight reel. They'll do something better — they'll make everything that comes after them possible.