I don't care what your circumstances are, whether you are young, old, tall, short, skinny, stocky, male, female, injured or well... when you understand how to apply the concepts of Hidden Jiu-Jitsu... you can adapt to any situation to become unstoppable!
Introducing "Flow With the Go in Thailand"
145 videos take you to the next level of skill, where you go beyond technique and learn to adapt your Jiu-Jitsu to any situation.
+1 BONUS that will completely change your game!
BONUS!!! Matt Jones Footlock Masterclass!
I've been doing Jiu-Jitsu for over 25 years now, and I've seen many ways of doing the footlock, taught by all of the most respected experts.
NOBODY teaches the foot lock as well as Matt Jones.
PERIOD.
I begged Matt to teach this in depth at this camp, and he agreed!
In fact, my entire goal for 2021 for my own Jiu-Jitsu is to master the Matt Jones footlock.
By the way, Matt's students have snapped their opponents shins by refusing to tap in competition!
This wicked footlock can be hit from SO many different positions, and generates that much power and leverage, and goes from zero to finish LIGHTNING fast!!!!
You will get every last detail you will ever need as part of this camp footage.
Read on to read what else you'll get when you add Thailand 2020 to your Hidden Jiu-Jitsu dashboard NOW!
Before I show you what the rest of the camp is about, this Matt Jones Footlock Masterclass is so important, I have to tell you about it personally!
Reason #1 The Thailand 2021 Footage Will Be The Best Hidden Jiu-Jitsu purchase you've ever made:
Laugh at your "limitations" and learn to be 100% effective under any conditions, in any situation!
Recently had knee surgery?
Battling arthritis?
No problem.
On the very first video of the camp, I will personally demonstrate how to deal with limitations like these even from the most difficult situations.
Like being stuck on my knees in the closed guard while I'm recovering from knee surgery, and it has nothing to do with "sucking it up" or "pushing through the pain".
You can see on the video I'm completely relaxed, just doing what feels right and easy, and I'll teach you to do this too.
Because on each of these 145 videos, I walk you through the deep concepts of Hidden Jiu-Jitsu, and how to apply them to literally any situation... over and over and over again.
It's one thing to memorize a technique.
But it's a completely different thing to understand a concept deeply so that you can apply the concept to any situation, and you don't have to memorize anything.
It's the difference between memorizing a fact like 2+2=4, and understanding the principles of addition so you can add any series of numbers.
That is what I deliver for you in these seminar videos.
The ability to undestand and apply the Hidden Jiu-Jitsu concepts no matter what is being thrown at you, or what your perceived limitations are.
I will not only teach you the Hidden Jiu-Jitsu concepts like weight distribution, connection, changing angles, how strength works in single planes of motion and how to exploits this, and so on...
But I will also walk you through enough examples and take on so many novel, specific challenges the students are throwing at me that your subconscious mind will have absolutely no choice but to finally have those "aha!" moments that allow you to THINK in Jiu-Jitsu and solve any problem on the spot, using those same Hidden Jiu-jitsu concepts that not 1 in 1000 black belts even knows how to see.
And when I say "any situation" I mean literally any situation!
Recently had knee surgery or battling arthritis in your legs, but find yourself having to stand in the closed guard?
No problem!
I will show you the simplest adjustment you can make to be just as effective as if you had no challenges to overcome... and as always, it will feel effortless for you and yet impossible for your opponent.
Unreal?
Not really, it's actually pretty simple if you understand the concepts.
And that's what this Hidden Jiu-Jitsu camp in Thailand 2020 was all about.
Reason #2: An absolute tsunami of Q & A videos allow you to download a massive amount of troubleshooting knowledge and wisdom in record time.
My online coaching club, the Mind Blown Club, has really proven to me the value of Question and Answer videos when it comes to learning from seminar footage at home.
There is something about seeing other students ask questions and to see how they're answered that almost guarantees a lightbulb turning on for the viewers at home.
And the same applies here.
There are 145 videos in this series, and nearly half of them are Q & A.
Meaning not only am I going into record-breaking detail on the instruction (I have made a huge effort this last year to really perfect how I teach on camera for viewers at home) but also...
You will be able to get the benefit of seeing how each person's questions are answered as they come up.
And that's what this seminar was really all about, was not just teaching techniques, but teaching the students to think in the Jiu-Jitsu concepts so they can apply them to any challenge in real time.
And really, when I say "think" that's only in the beginning.
What I really want for you to master Jiu-Jitsu is to internalize these principles so well that you just "feel" the right answer instead of thinking it.
Because thinking is so slow.
But feeling is lightning fast, almost instantaneous, and allows you to react at nearly the same moment you perceive what's happening.
And reaching this level of feeling the right answer can happen so much faster than you think if you just make the effort... but it has to be the right effort!
Because it is completely possible to spend 20 years practicing Jiu-Jitsu and NEVER discover what you will learn on these videos.
Trust me, I hear that story every week I do a seminar!
There are black belts everywhere who write me regularly about how they've been practicing 10, 15 or 20 or more years and have NVER been exposed to this way of thinking about Jiu-Jitsu.
But you don't have to worry about that!
I'll reveal it all in this series, and what's more, once you get it, you'll be able to discover anything you need because you'll be able to solve your own problems as they arise.
Reason #3: We had a full house of students from so many different situations and backgrounds, that your mind will easily be able to abstract the principles that make this all work because there are SO many different types of people here!
Let's return to our math analogy.
If you were learning how to add numbers, but your teacher always used numbers less than 5... then you would have had zero practice with carrying or dealing with numbers greater than 10.
And when you hit a problem like say 6 +7, you might have to stop and think to figure out that you had to carry numbers because you've never practiced adding numbers that reach that high (if you figured it out at all).
Or worse, that lack of variety in your practice could have led you to have what's' call an "illusion of competence" where you think you're better than you actually are, a very dangerous situation for martial artists!
(But sadly, very common in the martial arts!)
This sort of overconfidence is actually like a plague in martial arts, because the ego loves to think it's the best.
So the ego pretends to be much more advanced than it is, and becomes overconfident, and then becomes sometimes brutally humbled when it hits an obstacle, and then the cycle of rationalization, denial, quitting conversations, and basically all of the silly questions like "how long does it take to get a black belt" find their way to the online forums because the student has lost touch with the love of the art and a passion for learning.
We do the opposite in this series!
Imagine that same situation above with math but this time, your teacher walks you through every type of variation possible in a way that makes it fun, simple and easy to understand.
In that situation, you will have had so many different types of questions, asked and answered from so many different angles, that you will have mastered the concept.
And that's when things start to get really fun, because one of the hallmarks of this sort of mastery is when the student begins to entertain themselves by coming up with new challenges on their own! (a.k.a. you will PLAY with your new skill and find new and interesting ways to apply it!)
Watch kids, and they will do this naturally.
When they really start to understand something, they will show off by seeking out more difficult problems just to make a display of how well they know it (and they'll make sure they have an audience too!)
That's where you want your subsconscious mind as you learn Jiu-Jitsu.
You want it to turn into that kid that is having so much fun and understand so completely that it's actually going out of it's way it make things more difficult, just to show off how awesome it is.
And you will be, once you begin to understand and apply these concepts.
Reason #4: My teaching on these videos is optimized for YOU at home, and my proof is in the scissor sweep!
Hidden Jiu-Jitsu has been online since September of 2015, and the footage from this Hidden Jiu-Jitsu camp was recorded for New Year's 2020.
That's 5 years of practice for me in recording online instructional material.
But for this camp especially, I put a renewed effort into making the instruction absolutely crystal clear so that nothing is left vague or a mystery for the viewers at home.
(This is a surprisingly challenging thing to do, to put into words that can't be mistaken what is so easy to just show someone when they can feel it)
And my proof is in the scissor sweep!
I don't know how many times I've taught this online or in person, but I know this is one of the most mind-blowing techniques for people at seminars.
However, online, I still get questions about what's actually happening and how to make it work, even though it's so simple and easy to demonstrate in person.
But I believe I've cracked the code this time!
I dare you to watch this video and not have a huge breakthrough in either how easy the scissor sweep is for you, or how easy it is to teach your students, or both.
And that extends to ALL of the techniques in this series.
I believe these are some of my best explanations I've ever recorded, and it will show in your results on the mats.
Reason #5: Take a ride in a time machine with me...
In just a moment, I'm going to share with you the ENTIRE list of techniques and videos covered in this series.
But first, I want you to imagine a time in the future, say six months to a year from now.
And from that point in time, I want you to imagine how easy all of the techniques listed below are for you.
Because not only do you understand these techniques, but you understand what actually makes them work so deeply and so clearly, that you find yourself coming up with new challenges all the time in class just for the fun of it.
Because this is all so clear to you that you entertain yourself by finding even more difficult and wildly different ways to apply these concepts that you have not learned from me.
In fact, you're happy to come up with them on your own because you know the concepts so well, it's fun to play with them to just see what you can get away with.
And now, from that point in time, I want you to remember the moment you decided you have to have these videos as being the start of it all.
And as you read each item on this list, remember how fun it is to be able to take ANY situation thrown at you and come up with a solution to it, no matter what your circumstances are.
With all that in mind, here's the list:
Day 1:
1. Option to help you keep posture and break the closed guard if you cannot sit back
2. How to counter the knee behind the butt guard break.
3. How to clear the leg and engage your body when you stand to pass.
4. Advice - developing a game for a shorter and stocky person.
5. Dealing with grips and using your legs to prevent your opponent from standing up in your closed guard.
6. Using your legs to prevent your opponent from standing up in your closed guard QA.
7. Stopping the opponent from using his forearm frame to open the closed guard - Collapsing frames.
8. Hip switch sweep from the closed guard and how to win the battle to get on top after a sweep without grips.
9. How to deal with people grabbing the biceps from inside the closed guard and learning to attack the opponent.
10. Intro to The Scissor Sweep.
11. Strategy of how to open the closed guard.
12. Knowing when to open the closed guard and how to break posture when someone stands to open.
13. Breaking the posture of a standing opponent.
14. How to deal with someone who's smothering you from the closed guard.
15. The scissor sweep.
16. More details to the scissor sweep.
17. Foot Lock
18. Doing the scissor sweep when the opponent puts one leg up.
19. Doing the scissor sweep when the opponent puts one leg up QA.
20. Switching sides with the scissor sweep.
21. Switching sides with the scissor sweep QA
22. Recovering from the guard pass and switching sides to scissor sweep.
23. Recovering from the guard pass and switching sides to scissor sweep QA.
24. Scissor sweep training drill.
25. Scissor sweep training drill QA
Day 2:
1. How to get on top after you do the double ankle grab sweep
2. Getting on top with the double ankle grab sweep even if they grab the leg
3. Engaging to pass the guard against a sitting opponent using the sumo squat
4. How to use the arms to deal with the legs when passing open guard deflecting the legs
5. Options to deal with Spider guard
6. Getting on top after the push pull sweep
7. Fast armlock when the person grips your knees to pass guard
8. Fast armlock when the person grips your knees to pass guard QA
9. Strategy - getting off your back instead of playing guard to help with your sweeps
10. Demonstration and explanation of using weight and angles to collapse frames and pass guard
11. Engaging and committing your weight against a sitting opponent
12. More guard passing strategy and philosophy
13. Variations on passing butterfly guard
14. Using the reverse hook sweep to sweep or attack the knee bar and countering when your legs get collapsed to the
15. Going more in depth with the reverse hook sweep and switching to the hook sweep
16. Options to recover when the opponent uses a toreando pass to the back
17. Preliminary defense when the opponent transitions for the scarf hold
18. Preliminary defense from scarf hold and importance of bumping
19. Countering the double under hook escape from Crosside
20. Killing the hook sweep by turning your hips
Day 3:
1. Countering the Hip Press hydraulic mount escape
2. Attacking and countering when the opponent throws the legs over to escape high mount
3. Clearing the defense when going for the cross collar choke and rear naked choke
4. Switching directions to clear the defending arm for the rear naked choke
5. Trapping the arm for the umpa escape
6. Making the transition from the elbow escape and side mount escape seamless
7. Adjustment to maintain mount when the opponent starts with his legs flat
8. Difference between the hip escape and elbow escape
9. Learning when to transition between mount escapes
10. Using the bump to get your hand through the middle for the elbow escape and to get the underhook from cross side
11. Combining the elbow escape and the bridge when to use the bridge
12. Countering the mount escape when the opponent gets his arms under the leg and throws you off
13. Applying different strategies to training your jiu-jitsu for different circumstances when you go and when to be
14. Securing the head and arm from the mount and preventing their defense and escape
15. Using the hammer fist choke when the opponent defends the head and arm set up and understanding the concept of c
16. Conscious progression in Jiu-Jitsu
17. Combining attacks from the mount getting the opponent to open up
18. Going more in-depth with the head and arm from the mount
19. Going more in-depth with the head and arm from the mount QA
20. Going in-depth with the hammer fist choke
Day 4:
1. Freeing the arm to pass when the opponent on the bottom grabs with two hands
2. Freeing the arm to pass when the opponent on the bottom grabs with two hands Q & A
3. Half Guard - Freeing the knee first before you start to pass
4. Half Guard - Pummeling in with the elbow to establish the under hook from on top
5. Half Guard - Pummeling in with the elbow to establish the under hook from on top Q & A
6. Half Guard - How to flatten your opponent out even if he gets the under hook and turns towards his belly
7. Half Guard - How to flatten your opponent out even if he gets the under hook and turns towards his belly Q & A
8. Half Guard - How to flatten your opponent out when he tries to come up with the under hook
9. Half Guard - How to flatten your opponent out when he tries to come up with the under hook Q & A
10. Half Guard - Cross side with the leg stuck
11. Half Guard - Sliding up towards the head for cross side position to help free the leg
12. Half Guard - Freeing the leg when the opponent on the bottom tries for a hook sweep
13. Half Guard - Freeing the leg when the opponent on the bottom tries for a hook sweep Q & A
14. Preventing the opponent on the bottom from recovering guard
15. Half Guard - positioning from Half Guard on top
16. Half Guard - Dealing with the person on top getting a high half guard position underneath the armpits
17. Half Guard - Dealing with the opponent getting a high position underneath the armpits from bottom cross side
18. Half Guard - Using the butterfly or hook sweep from half guard
19. Half Guard - Dealing with the lockdown from half guard
20. Half Guard - Countering the hook sweep from half guard
21. Half Guard - Using the under hook from bottom half guard
22. Half Guard - Using the under hook from bottom half guard
23. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - Intro into the leg positioning
24. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - Intro into the leg positioning
25. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - details on the sweep from standing
26. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - Details on the leg positioning and counter-attacks
27. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - Details on the leg positioning and counter-attacks Q & A
28. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - How to squeeze the ankle
29. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - How to squeeze the ankle Q & A
30. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - More details on the straight ankle lock
31. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - More details on the straight ankle lock QA
32. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - Understanding how to drop the shoulder to add pressure to the squeeze
33. Matt Jones straight ankle lock session - Understanding how to drop the shoulder to add pressure to the squeeze Q & A
Day 5:
1. How to use flow rolling and positional training to get better and reduce the risk of injury
2. Hand positioning from the bottom of cross side
3. Not stopping flat on your back when the circles and tries to flatten you out from cross side
4. How to pummel back in for the under hook from on top when the person on the bottom of cross side starts with the
5. Cross side escape when the opponent on top neutralizes the under hook by laying over the hips and wrist
6. Recognizing the opponents hand positioning for control to identify what cross side escape to use
7. Recognizing the opponents hand positioning for control to identify what cross side escape to use Q & A
8. Overexposing the back by turning too much from bottom cross side
9. Freeing the arm if the opponent on bottom of cross side pinches between the legs
10. Putting the hand on the side of my face when I underhook and turn towards the face
11. How to hold to shut down the opponents option to do guard recovery and turn to the knees
12. How to free your arm to be able to get to your side when they are plucking your elbow
13. How to free your arm to be able to get to your side when they are plucking your elbow Q & A
14. Using bumps to disrupt and making them quick and explosive
15. Step around arm lock from cross side and countering the hitchhiker escape
16. Step around arm lock from cross side and countering the hitchhiker escape Q & A
17. Intro to using the under hook to be able to stay on your side from the bottom cross side
18. Intro to using the under hook to be able to stay on your side from the bottom cross side Q & A
19. Countering the opponent from being able to pummel in for the under hook
20. Countering the opponent from being able to pummel in for the under hook Q & A
21. Counters when the opponent overhooks or tries to dive the hand behind the head
22. Counters when the opponent overhooks or tries to dive the hand behind the head QA
23. How to deal with the cross face from bottom cross side
24. How to deal with the cross face from bottom cross side Q & A
25. How to stay on your side when they try to pluck your elbow
26. How to stay on your side when they try to pluck your elbow Q & A
27. Getting back to your knees from bottom cross side
28. Shrimping out to get to your knees
29. Shrimping out to get to your knees Q & A
30. Getting back to your knees from bottom of the cross side when they cross face
31. Getting back to your knees from bottom of the cross side when they cross face Q & A
32. Outro
Day 6:
1. How to use the cross collar choke from the closed guard and open guard
2. Guard passing from the sumo squat position and killing the hook sweep
3. Keeping posture from the closed guard
4. Keeping posture from the closed guard if they pull with the legs and pull your arm
5. How to use weight distribution and apply pressure from the cross side position
6. Getting back to the knees when the opponent tries to cross face
7. What to do if the opponent grabs your arm and stuffs it to stand from closed guard
8. Escaping the back when you fall to the opponents strong side
9. Details for the elbow escape when mounted
10. Countering when the opponent tries to push you underneath the armpit from cross side
11. Guard passing vs seated guard
12. Details to guard passing changing angles to kill frames and body positioning
13. Countering the bullfighter pass
14. Armbar from the closed guard
15. Keeping base when you go for the cross collar choke from mount
16. The way I was taught guard passing vs how I teach it now
17. Passing the guard when your opponent is already laying on his back
18. Breaking the legs from closed guard and using the same principles from other positions
19. Opening the legs from the closed guard and how to start passing
20. Countering the hip bump sweep and taking the back