Every time I hear Greg on a podcast I understand more and more. I recently opened a new gym and we have only used Ecological Dynamics. It has been amazing watching my students grow so quickly.
Ive gotten really deep into this and I am with Greg. Technique is like a road map, but BJJ is a world with now roads. We do not remember technique in a fluid state, and so we do not execute technique in a fluid state. To pass the guard in a fluid state you have to abandon technique. So we would call this "chaining passes" but the reality is all we are doing when passing guard is developing better pummeling with the legs.
Coach for 9 years here. Just adapted this style a week ago, and it’s been eye opening. I’ve always had a feeling like “something is missing here” while noting many flaws of the traditional class structure. I looked into understanding short term memory and working memory, and it only supported the ecological dynamics approach. There’s also way less wasted time as people aren’t standing around waiting to attempt replicating what the instructor is (usually) taking up to ten minutes (or more) of the class available training time. We start class now and get right to it. Using almost the entire hour constantly goal oriented and live training. It’s worth reflecting and taking a deeper look into at the very least hybridizing the eco approach. I also find it more demanding of the coach. You really must understand the game you’re playing, and you will make more discoveries as you go. My school has 4 coaches including myself, and I will be switching to 95 percent eco approach, which in turn will benefit the other coaches as I am helping to create good grapplers which will supplement their prescriptive approach (until they jump on board and employ this approach) Anyways, this is growth, and martial arts is all about adaptation to solve problems.
I just started using this approach last week and the positive feedback I’ve gotten has been overwhelming. What’s funny is I can simplify this entire podcast in almost one sentence. Why is it that nearly all traditional jj instructors tell there students if you want to get better quickly then go compete. I’ve literally heard one say: one competition is like training for 6 months in the gym. Well why is that? It’s because a competition is a live training environment with full resistance. Well no duhhh you’re going to get better in that environment when it’s realistic. Greg you should have Noah roll with nick like you did one of my old professors vellore caballero that was at your southbay seminar of which he told me the results and let them figure out why Noah is destroying them.
@@justinskaggs3622 coming back to this comment I dropped 7 months ago… Eco/CLA has changed my life and I’m doing really well with it coaching at 2 schools 6 classes a week. Adults mostly and one group private of kids. So incredible and humanizing. Yet I still have to deal with dissent and misinformed claims about the approach. My retention is super high and the rooms are improving since I teach multiple different schools at this point I get to start over with a new population and mat culture. The new group really loves it and a few weeks in the mat is packed, as well as providing challenge points for all levels.
hey! Its one year later with the approach. employed at 2 dojos, running the CLA / eco approach. Its been a great year. About 160 classes of experience with this approach now. Its been a journey. how you doin!
Great episode Chewy! I have seen a lot of podcasts and discussions with Greg and you were incredibly thoughtful in your responses and challenges to his claims or beliefs. We all get tribal about our methods and ideas but you did a great job of challenging for the purposes of learning rather than proving yourself correct. I have been primarily using ecological training for the last few months and many of the idea are hard to fully grasps unless you jump into it. That being said, get ready for a shitstorm in the comments between guys who aren’t willing to look into the methods or science behind ecological training and Greg’s aggressive cult following.
@@ryanthompson3446are you the same guy that Grappling With just called out in a recent podcast? I was literally just listening to that. Apparently a Ryan Thompson commented on a video of theirs saying drilling is garbage. Too cool if that was you. Wild coincidence.
@@KodiakCombat lol if they did i dunno about it but cool it is garbage its a huge time investment better spent watching live film doing live positional constraint practice or just straight up rolling.
Fascinating - once he spoke of the imbalance in skill and constraint it it clicked - cause if you constrain one person of the same skill level you limit skill acquisition maybe - fascinating However with beginners such as myself do you show at least how a mount could be controlled
Unfortunately they are diametrically opposed views. It’s oil and water. Ecology is a world view that is emerging based on evidence. We can debate methodology for implementing perhaps, however the scientific community is clearly reaching a consensus on that as well. The debate is about how to best apply the science to the real world. You can train however you want, but there is a clear advantage to the speed at which someone can acquire skill using CLA and differential learning.
I like Greg's approach to teaching. Examples are great and helps me understand his approach. More Examples of implementing "Concepts" like he gave for Guard Pass would be great.
As a newer and older student (74), 2 years, I think it would have helped to be taught the basic concepts that apply throughout all of the techniques we learn. Concepts were mentioned, but I think they are essential and have to be emphasized more. Now, I always look for the concepts that apply to each technique I see because it gives me a connection and helps me learn faster.
I'm sure there is a better place to ask a question like this. However, around the 50 minute mark, Chewy talked about having a drill from the mount where the bottom person only defends and doesn't try to escape and Greg said that was not representative. However, I have seen Greg on Instagram show a drill where a top mount player tries to trap wrists to the mat while the bottom player tries to put their hands on the hips. So, in Greg's game would the bottom player still be allowed to bridge and roll or recover guard? I'm not trying to criticize Chewy or Greg, I'm just trying to better understand how we measure representation. The biggest issue I have with using the constraints led approach is keeping the games representative while keeping the variables low.
No that is a parameter of the bigger picture its isolating the full game of mount escape, so there the skill is just getting hands back to hips and handfighting, the ultimate goal would still be to get out but not in that game. Do you see the point within that context it is representative.
Rickson Gracie once said that constant open free rolling is toxic. Jiujiteiros must have a surgery approach where you isolate one section of any free rolling, and rep from there, reset, rinse/repeat.
I think what Souders is trying to explain is basically what skateboarders or freestyle BMX or other X games athletes do. There are no coaches for these sports. They "play" together and continually experiment with new things and pushing and pushing these things until they become more intricate. Take freestyle motocross... first they were whipping the motorcycle around off the jumps. Then they started doing a back flip, then a double back flip, and now they are doing front flips...on a motorcycle!!! No one taught this...they had to explore and experiment and continually fail until they succeeded.
Im a 50yo purple belt who used to skate back in the late 89s early 90s. Started 6yrs ago and fell in love because it reminded me of learning skate tricks. I think your bang on!
I appreciate the patience of you guys dealing with the subject matter, and Greg. But something I thought worth asking him was what his sporting background was in other sports, collegiate etc. I know he doesn't have much of one, otherwise he wouldn't talk about collegiate sports in a way that ignores what actually happens in them (not practicing the full sport for example, or needing to perform in practice). Not trying to pull anyone's card, but I think that context is very important in this discussion. Because most of what Greg is saying, to be blunt, is not how collegiate practices (in Football or Wrestling in my experience) are carried out. That's fine, but Greg should probably learn there's other ways to do things than his way he just learned and started applying to a new sport that are massively successful and can't be handwaved as "well if they joined the darkside they would be better". For example, focus on how much Greg focuses on making drilling synonymous with being dead and not live...meanwhile acknowledges wrestling practice doesn't work that way...but mate, they still drill lol. Which basically invalidates this whole idea, unless you want to admit "constraints based learning" involves drilling and not just "games". Why even make that a point of contention? Feels scapegoat-like. Don't believe me though, ask someone else with collegiate sports experience and they won't ever give you a super one-note perspective like Greg is doing here.
Greg did jiu jitsu the way most do it all the way past black belt and it led him here so what do you mean he should learn…. Is it possible you are wrong?
Constraints and games are harmonious not synonymous. No admission required. Researchers have dedicated entire papers to clarify the difference between constraints and games. Games just happen to be the most natural implementation of constraints manipulation.
Greg is polarizing. It won’t matter if he has several adds medalists. People will still argue against him for decades because he represents change and is challenging the status quo.
Highly doubtful, change has largely been supported in the BJJ community. It's one of the youngest sports and combat sports after all, it's not like a pedagogy has even had time to exist yet properly...and if you want to base it off that, there are no ecological based champions. This wouldn't matter if Greg and his savants weren't 0 sum. @@aaronlynde9146
I’ve heard Danaher will start a class by saying something like, “you’ll never take a man’s back if you can’t see the top of his head”, and then sit down. He’s very ecological.
Some of these comments are hilarious. We’ve implemented the constraint led approach to coaching from the perspective of ecological dynamics and the results have been incredible. It takes more effort and forethought as a coach and I have to study and learn and adapt. However, there’s been a clear advantage to this approach in our room in just a matter of months. The uneducated comments here are comical 😂
I still rather drill something statically the first time I see it and then I can start doing situational sparring. Usually 10 minutes is enough to get the mechanics and then I can play the game around the position or goal I have.
What if you just added some resistance right from the start? Limit their options on how to resist so you don’t fail 100% of your attempts but could that perhaps be a better approach?
As a former tennis player who now does BJJ he’s right most tennis coaches do task based games. The issue is 99% of them have no damn idea why they are doing it or how to program progression. This is the downfall IMO of this type of learning.
Im sure Greg's teaching methods at Standard Jiu Jitsu is solid. He's an intelligent instructor. But in a couple years when every nogi-only school with a purple belt head instructor is teaching strictly ecologically it'll all devolve into an amateurish shit-show.
Belts mean nothing in regards to quality coaching. I'll put my expertise in coaching against 99% of black belt academy instructors. Coaching is a skill in itself. It is very seldom taught.
We don’t play a resistance game. Our game is about surrender, achieving non-resistance, getting a tap. We learn what that feels like first then control for the many points of pressure that come in to disrupt that. He’s not smart enough to know how narrow his view is. He has a hammer and everything is a nail.
This! How are people resistant to the fact that the game is about non-resistance through a process of controlling an opponent against their will?! KEEP HAMMERING
How is bjj not a game of resistance. Both players have the goal of breaking through resistance until one side concedes 🤷🏻♂️ also, what does that have to do with the methodology of constraint led approach?
I’ve spoken to Danaher on multiple occasions. He’s congratulated me on what I’m doing. I clearly understand why Danaher is successful, even though he uses different training methods. The fact the you considered my explanation of his success as “coping” says more about your capacity for comprehension than anything else. It’s your ignorance that makes you confident.
No it was coping, because you non-ironically said he would be proven wrong some day. So you have a lot of bark, but no bite when pushed on your ideals or things you say. Pretty disappointing for the leader of a so called movement.@@gregsouders9648
I’ve heard this guy explaining his system many times and it still doesn’t make sense. He speaks in a circle which doesn’t explain anything exactly. 😵💫headache listening to him
It sounds like he speaks in circles because the ecological approach assumes that things are grey rather than black and white. There are no buttoned up and clear answers because things are always changing in a dynamic environment. This conversation focused on a relatively small portion of the ecological approach so Greg wasn’t able to get into many of the other benefits that arise such as injury prevention and a natural increase in action capacity. If you are actually interested in this method but Greg doesn’t seem to make sense, try listening to Rob Gray’s channel or reading his book “How We Learn to Move”.
@@ryanthompson3446 He is the one making the claim that this is the better approach, it is up to him to articulately explain why and come with evidence
Imagine this guy's approach to teaching math 😂😂😂. No instruction, just "Do It" and learn on your own 😂😂😂. He forgot to mention he had ten years bjj experience before he coined this 'intuitive' method.
Greg didn’t invent this approach. He’s one of the first coaches to apply Ecological Dynamics (Ecological Psychology, Constraints-Led Approach, Dynamic Systems Theory, etc) to BJJ. It’s a legitimate field of research being applied to motor-learning, Rob Gray’s books and lectures are worth looking into.
Every time I hear Greg on a podcast I understand more and more. I recently opened a new gym and we have only used Ecological Dynamics. It has been amazing watching my students grow so quickly.
Bro exactly the same at my gym, got begginers doing berimbolos outta nowhere it's wild
Ditto
How do you structure your classes and what resources do you recommend?
@vystopian8492Where are you?
get some mats in your garage and start with a couple of friends@vystopian8492
This one with Greg was simple and very direct. Clear questions, clear comments, and simple reflexions. No time loss.
Agreed. I've listened to a few podcasts with Greg, and this one is the first that got right to it and allowed me to understand it better.
Lots of knee cuts though
Ive gotten really deep into this and I am with Greg. Technique is like a road map, but BJJ is a world with now roads. We do not remember technique in a fluid state, and so we do not execute technique in a fluid state. To pass the guard in a fluid state you have to abandon technique. So we would call this "chaining passes" but the reality is all we are doing when passing guard is developing better pummeling with the legs.
Coach for 9 years here. Just adapted this style a week ago, and it’s been eye opening. I’ve always had a feeling like “something is missing here” while noting many flaws of the traditional class structure.
I looked into understanding short term memory and working memory, and it only supported the ecological dynamics approach.
There’s also way less wasted time as people aren’t standing around waiting to attempt replicating what the instructor is (usually) taking up to ten minutes (or more) of the class available training time.
We start class now and get right to it. Using almost the entire hour constantly goal oriented and live training.
It’s worth reflecting and taking a deeper look into at the very least hybridizing the eco approach.
I also find it more demanding of the coach. You really must understand the game you’re playing, and you will make more discoveries as you go.
My school has 4 coaches including myself, and I will be switching to 95 percent eco approach, which in turn will benefit the other coaches as I am helping to create good grapplers which will supplement their prescriptive approach (until they jump on board and employ this approach)
Anyways, this is growth, and martial arts is all about adaptation to solve problems.
I just started using this approach last week and the positive feedback I’ve gotten has been overwhelming. What’s funny is I can simplify this entire podcast in almost one sentence. Why is it that nearly all traditional jj instructors tell there students if you want to get better quickly then go compete. I’ve literally heard one say: one competition is like training for 6 months in the gym. Well why is that? It’s because a competition is a live training environment with full resistance. Well no duhhh you’re going to get better in that environment when it’s realistic. Greg you should have Noah roll with nick like you did one of my old professors vellore caballero that was at your southbay seminar of which he told me the results and let them figure out why Noah is destroying them.
@@justinskaggs3622 coming back to this comment I dropped 7 months ago…
Eco/CLA has changed my life and I’m doing really well with it coaching at 2 schools 6 classes a week. Adults mostly and one group private of kids.
So incredible and humanizing.
Yet I still have to deal with dissent and misinformed claims about the approach.
My retention is super high and the rooms are improving since I teach multiple different schools at this point I get to start over with a new population and mat culture. The new group really loves it and a few weeks in the mat is packed, as well as providing challenge points for all levels.
If you want to see me in action I live stream all my classes now, and just dropped a full length class
hey! Its one year later with the approach. employed at 2 dojos, running the CLA / eco approach. Its been a great year. About 160 classes of experience with this approach now. Its been a journey. how you doin!
Greg is killing it recently!
Lets get a supercut with just Chewy's facial expressions hyperzoomed throughout
Great episode Chewy! I have seen a lot of podcasts and discussions with Greg and you were incredibly thoughtful in your responses and challenges to his claims or beliefs. We all get tribal about our methods and ideas but you did a great job of challenging for the purposes of learning rather than proving yourself correct. I have been primarily using ecological training for the last few months and many of the idea are hard to fully grasps unless you jump into it.
That being said, get ready for a shitstorm in the comments between guys who aren’t willing to look into the methods or science behind ecological training and Greg’s aggressive cult following.
My cult goes hard
As opposed the the drilling cult of mainstream jiu jitsu?
@@ryanthompson3446are you the same guy that Grappling With just called out in a recent podcast? I was literally just listening to that. Apparently a Ryan Thompson commented on a video of theirs saying drilling is garbage. Too cool if that was you. Wild coincidence.
@@KodiakCombat lol if they did i dunno about it but cool it is garbage its a huge time investment better spent watching live film doing live positional constraint practice or just straight up rolling.
Fascinating - once he spoke of the imbalance in skill and constraint it it clicked - cause if you constrain one person of the same skill level you limit skill acquisition maybe - fascinating
However with beginners such as myself do you show at least how a mount could be controlled
22:48 - good to see Chewy following and help translate and make the ideas more accessible!
Great episode!
great pod. I feel like a hybrid of both is the way
Maybe you can help us out then. How can information be both direct and indirect?
Unfortunately they are diametrically opposed views. It’s oil and water. Ecology is a world view that is emerging based on evidence. We can debate methodology for implementing perhaps, however the scientific community is clearly reaching a consensus on that as well. The debate is about how to best apply the science to the real world. You can train however you want, but there is a clear advantage to the speed at which someone can acquire skill using CLA and differential learning.
Feelings are great and all but facts don’t really care…
@@ryanthompson3446didn't realize Ben Shapiro did BJJ!
@@KodiakCombat lol good one. I don’t sell sheets and whine but close 😅
I like Greg's approach to teaching.
Examples are great and helps me understand his approach.
More Examples of implementing "Concepts" like he gave for Guard Pass would be great.
As a newer and older student (74), 2 years, I think it would have helped to be taught the basic concepts that apply throughout all of the techniques we learn. Concepts were mentioned, but I think they are essential and have to be emphasized more. Now, I always look for the concepts that apply to each technique I see because it gives me a connection and helps me learn faster.
This podcast reminds me of the time I tried to explain the internet to my grandparents.
I'm sure there is a better place to ask a question like this. However, around the 50 minute mark, Chewy talked about having a drill from the mount where the bottom person only defends and doesn't try to escape and Greg said that was not representative. However, I have seen Greg on Instagram show a drill where a top mount player tries to trap wrists to the mat while the bottom player tries to put their hands on the hips. So, in Greg's game would the bottom player still be allowed to bridge and roll or recover guard? I'm not trying to criticize Chewy or Greg, I'm just trying to better understand how we measure representation. The biggest issue I have with using the constraints led approach is keeping the games representative while keeping the variables low.
No that is a parameter of the bigger picture its isolating the full game of mount escape, so there the skill is just getting hands back to hips and handfighting, the ultimate goal would still be to get out but not in that game. Do you see the point within that context it is representative.
Is there an ecologically sound approach to getting my coach to notice me?
Lmao
Show up without clothes on
Be an early 20s female
Rickson Gracie once said that constant open free rolling is toxic. Jiujiteiros must have a surgery approach where you isolate one section of any free rolling, and rep from there, reset, rinse/repeat.
That is not what is being advocated either by Greg or in your example.
Rickson transcends the science with the sheer power of his chi
He also said he was 400-0
You need to read Robert Drysdales books
Kit Dale an Australian black belt has an instructional called task based games that sounds like this exactly.
Thank God for Greg Souders, and of course Kit Dale!
God gave you guys Kit. I was handed up by satan 😈🤓
@@gregsouders9648 🤣🤣🤣
@@gregsouders9648 hail Satan 🤘😈
And our lord and savior Kit Dale 🙏
I think what Souders is trying to explain is basically what skateboarders or freestyle BMX or other X games athletes do. There are no coaches for these sports. They "play" together and continually experiment with new things and pushing and pushing these things until they become more intricate. Take freestyle motocross... first they were whipping the motorcycle around off the jumps. Then they started doing a back flip, then a double back flip, and now they are doing front flips...on a motorcycle!!! No one taught this...they had to explore and experiment and continually fail until they succeeded.
Im a 50yo purple belt who used to skate back in the late 89s early 90s. Started 6yrs ago and fell in love because it reminded me of learning skate tricks. I think your bang on!
I appreciate the patience of you guys dealing with the subject matter, and Greg. But something I thought worth asking him was what his sporting background was in other sports, collegiate etc. I know he doesn't have much of one, otherwise he wouldn't talk about collegiate sports in a way that ignores what actually happens in them (not practicing the full sport for example, or needing to perform in practice). Not trying to pull anyone's card, but I think that context is very important in this discussion. Because most of what Greg is saying, to be blunt, is not how collegiate practices (in Football or Wrestling in my experience) are carried out. That's fine, but Greg should probably learn there's other ways to do things than his way he just learned and started applying to a new sport that are massively successful and can't be handwaved as "well if they joined the darkside they would be better". For example, focus on how much Greg focuses on making drilling synonymous with being dead and not live...meanwhile acknowledges wrestling practice doesn't work that way...but mate, they still drill lol. Which basically invalidates this whole idea, unless you want to admit "constraints based learning" involves drilling and not just "games". Why even make that a point of contention? Feels scapegoat-like.
Don't believe me though, ask someone else with collegiate sports experience and they won't ever give you a super one-note perspective like Greg is doing here.
Greg did jiu jitsu the way most do it all the way past black belt and it led him here so what do you mean he should learn…. Is it possible you are wrong?
Constraints and games are harmonious not synonymous. No admission required. Researchers have dedicated entire papers to clarify the difference between constraints and games. Games just happen to be the most natural implementation of constraints manipulation.
I just asked someone with collegiate sports experience and they gave a perspective like Greg
ruclips.net/video/03Nntz8d8r0/видео.htmlsi=myPcwwanH5DNeG99 Is this the authority you were appealing to?
This comment makes me think you might have completely missed the point 🤷🏻♂️😅
John could say word for word what greg says and the wholl bjj community would go crazy for it but being greg is saying it. It's argued against.
It’s going to be argued against until his team produces an adcc caliber medalist. Which will happen in time.
Greg is polarizing. It won’t matter if he has several adds medalists. People will still argue against him for decades because he represents change and is challenging the status quo.
Highly doubtful, change has largely been supported in the BJJ community. It's one of the youngest sports and combat sports after all, it's not like a pedagogy has even had time to exist yet properly...and if you want to base it off that, there are no ecological based champions. This wouldn't matter if Greg and his savants weren't 0 sum. @@aaronlynde9146
Another banger by g-man
Good stuff Greg! Keep it going man. Really enjoying these podcasts 🤙🏼
You can 100% measure your heart rate with a monitor during your rolls
I’ve heard Danaher will start a class by saying something like, “you’ll never take a man’s back if you can’t see the top of his head”, and then sit down. He’s very ecological.
Some of these comments are hilarious. We’ve implemented the constraint led approach to coaching from the perspective of ecological dynamics and the results have been incredible. It takes more effort and forethought as a coach and I have to study and learn and adapt. However, there’s been a clear advantage to this approach in our room in just a matter of months. The uneducated comments here are comical 😂
Chewy's audience is extremely regarded
@@dfjr6525 extremely regarded? 😂
@@aaronlynde9146never go full regard
Dude can't even make the insult he was trying to make, while insulting other people rofl@@dfjr6525
@@aaronlynde9146perhaps he means acoustic? What's your gym. Trying to create some relationships with people of a similar mind.
Yo Chewy is blown the fuck away. Dude look astonished and low key pissed that he has wasted all this time " because that's how they did it".
Yo. Chewies mind is on fire HYPER DRIVE.
I still rather drill something statically the first time I see it and then I can start doing situational sparring. Usually 10 minutes is enough to get the mechanics and then I can play the game around the position or goal I have.
What if you just added some resistance right from the start? Limit their options on how to resist so you don’t fail 100% of your attempts but could that perhaps be a better approach?
You just invented the SBG training process@@aaronlynde9146
This is so exhausting
As a former tennis player who now does BJJ he’s right most tennis coaches do task based games. The issue is 99% of them have no damn idea why they are doing it or how to program progression. This is the downfall IMO of this type of learning.
I see Greg, I click..
Always 👍
I feel... I think... I like... worked for me.
“The Life-Changing Science of Detecting Bullshlt” by John V. Petrocelli. Please read.
Props to Luke! He lost lots of weight.
Im sure Greg's teaching methods at Standard Jiu Jitsu is solid. He's an intelligent instructor. But in a couple years when every nogi-only school with a purple belt head instructor is teaching strictly ecologically it'll all devolve into an amateurish shit-show.
The entire community is already taught by an army of purple belts; they just hide it by wearing black belts.
PS our community is already an amateur shit show
Belts mean nothing in regards to quality coaching. I'll put my expertise in coaching against 99% of black belt academy instructors. Coaching is a skill in itself. It is very seldom taught.
Needs to explain better what he does . How he explains i think turn people off
btw i love Greg
We don’t play a resistance game. Our game is about surrender, achieving non-resistance, getting a tap. We learn what that feels like first then control for the many points of pressure that come in to disrupt that. He’s not smart enough to know how narrow his view is. He has a hammer and everything is a nail.
This! How are people resistant to the fact that the game is about non-resistance through a process of controlling an opponent against their will?! KEEP HAMMERING
How is bjj not a game of resistance. Both players have the goal of breaking through resistance until one side concedes 🤷🏻♂️ also, what does that have to do with the methodology of constraint led approach?
@@aaronlynde9146nothing. Everyone just ignores people like them. They’re here for the attention.
@@gregsouders9648 big facts 💯
@@gregsouders9648whoosh fellas same team
Mumbo jumbo word salads
When John Danaher came up haha. Cope.
The cope is not realizing sometimes people are successful in spite of what they are doing rather than because of it.
I’ve spoken to Danaher on multiple occasions. He’s congratulated me on what I’m doing. I clearly understand why Danaher is successful, even though he uses different training methods. The fact the you considered my explanation of his success as “coping” says more about your capacity for comprehension than anything else. It’s your ignorance that makes you confident.
No it was coping, because you non-ironically said he would be proven wrong some day. So you have a lot of bark, but no bite when pushed on your ideals or things you say. Pretty disappointing for the leader of a so called movement.@@gregsouders9648
The eco cult
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂A democrat and a republican 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I’ve heard this guy explaining his system many times and it still doesn’t make sense. He speaks in a circle which doesn’t explain anything exactly. 😵💫headache listening to him
It makes perfect sense there is a whole scientific field around ecological science, maybe you’re just not understanding, is that possible?
It sounds like he speaks in circles because the ecological approach assumes that things are grey rather than black and white. There are no buttoned up and clear answers because things are always changing in a dynamic environment. This conversation focused on a relatively small portion of the ecological approach so Greg wasn’t able to get into many of the other benefits that arise such as injury prevention and a natural increase in action capacity. If you are actually interested in this method but Greg doesn’t seem to make sense, try listening to Rob Gray’s channel or reading his book “How We Learn to Move”.
@@ryanthompson3446 He is the one making the claim that this is the better approach, it is up to him to articulately explain why and come with evidence
Situational sparring> drilling. I feel like this is the simplest way of explaining what he’s saying
Reading is a good thing…
Imagine this guy's approach to teaching math 😂😂😂. No instruction, just "Do It" and learn on your own 😂😂😂.
He forgot to mention he had ten years bjj experience before he coined this 'intuitive' method.
Greg didn’t invent this approach. He’s one of the first coaches to apply Ecological Dynamics (Ecological Psychology, Constraints-Led Approach, Dynamic Systems Theory, etc) to BJJ. It’s a legitimate field of research being applied to motor-learning, Rob Gray’s books and lectures are worth looking into.
@@SpiralBJJ it’s like lil bro listened for 30 seconds, formed his opinion, left a comment and closed the video.