Just go to boot camp. They will teach you what you need to know for their training to survive.
Example:
I was watching UFC Ultimate Fighter show this week. Dana White had some special guest, some marines. They show them how the marines train and how everything is built on brotherhood. They gave them some fighting techniques. The UFC guys gained a greater appreciation of what the marines go through. They saw how different it was to train for survival than it is to train for the cage. They realized that they don't have the same worries. In the marines it is not a good idea to stay on your back and fight. Their object is that if they end up on their back get back to a vertical base as soon as you can. Their life depends on it. They are taught that they have to be undefeated. There are no second chances r rematches. If they lose they die! Many techniques are the same. But the focus of the training is different. Marines train to survive (life or death). BJJ train to win a sports contest (trophy, medal or foolish ego).
2 months of jiu jitsu isn't enough. I would go to boot camp asap. They will probably teach you different things in boot camp anyway than what you would learn at the jiu jitsu school. You probably won't get much of a chance to continue your training either. Even if you did get a chance to train more in the military that 2 monts of jiu jitsu training won't matter at all anyway. 2 months won't put you ahead of the game much at all. I would just go do various exerices, in get best shape possible instead. Probably a fitness gym is what you need more to help than jiu jitsu.
Just go to bootcamp. If you want to train anyway, it wouldn't hurt, but its not the end all be all that BJJ is made out to be. Aside from that there are many marines who train in some form of martial art, and they also have their own system MCMAP which you can enroll in. The marine training is more in firearms and teamwork than it is personal protection. This is because their effectiveness is reliant on their teamwork.
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Verified answer
Just go to boot camp. They will teach you what you need to know for their training to survive.
Example:
I was watching UFC Ultimate Fighter show this week. Dana White had some special guest, some marines. They show them how the marines train and how everything is built on brotherhood. They gave them some fighting techniques. The UFC guys gained a greater appreciation of what the marines go through. They saw how different it was to train for survival than it is to train for the cage. They realized that they don't have the same worries. In the marines it is not a good idea to stay on your back and fight. Their object is that if they end up on their back get back to a vertical base as soon as you can. Their life depends on it. They are taught that they have to be undefeated. There are no second chances r rematches. If they lose they die! Many techniques are the same. But the focus of the training is different. Marines train to survive (life or death). BJJ train to win a sports contest (trophy, medal or foolish ego).
2 months of jiu jitsu isn't enough. I would go to boot camp asap. They will probably teach you different things in boot camp anyway than what you would learn at the jiu jitsu school. You probably won't get much of a chance to continue your training either. Even if you did get a chance to train more in the military that 2 monts of jiu jitsu training won't matter at all anyway. 2 months won't put you ahead of the game much at all. I would just go do various exerices, in get best shape possible instead. Probably a fitness gym is what you need more to help than jiu jitsu.
Just go to bootcamp. If you want to train anyway, it wouldn't hurt, but its not the end all be all that BJJ is made out to be. Aside from that there are many marines who train in some form of martial art, and they also have their own system MCMAP which you can enroll in. The marine training is more in firearms and teamwork than it is personal protection. This is because their effectiveness is reliant on their teamwork.