Tag Archives: Machado BJJ

Interview with Jess ‘Swear Jar’ Fraser


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Jess Fraser – Brown Belt Dominance MMA

I met Jess in 2013 (which I am sure she would have no recollection of, she meets a lot of people), I was in Melbourne to compete at the Nationals. I entered the female change rooms to get changed into my gi and there she was also getting changed. I was this dopey brand new blue belt, all tongue tied because I was sharing the change room with Jess Fraser!! I awkwardly introduced myself while Jess was half naked :-), I can’t remember what we talked about but I do remember thinking she was super nice. Jess is an inspiration to a lot of us ladies, she leads the way to help promote women’s BJJ here in Australia and she is a real rock star when it comes to organizing Australia Girls in Gi camps, which I was really happy to attend my first last weekend (Jan 2015). Not only is she very smart, hilarious (awesome sense of humor), beautiful, articulate, and talented – she is going to be an awesome coach. She provides so much support to us ladies, she is a true ambassador for this sport. Please let me introduce, the awesome Jess Fraser.

jess me

How many years have you been doing BJJ – how old were you when you started BJJ and why did you start?

I started in April 2010. I was 30 years old the first time I put on a gi.

I started BJJ without knowing what it was or researching it in any way. Weirdly I just knew that’s what I wanted to do. I wanted to be a badass. This sport, the athletes, they are certainly that. So here we are.

What other sporting background do you have?

I skateboarded for years very badly. And snowboarded for many more very well. Before starting BJJ I was an instructor in both yoga and Krav Maga. I was doing a lot back then. Now I’m more focused.

You recently got your brown belt, besides being thrilled how did you feel when you received it? What were your thoughts?

brownbelt

As I understand it my journey is the fastest female to brown in Australia’s history. On top of that there’s only about 5 a Aussie female Browns. This is not only the rarest belt in Oz, it’s the rarest in the World. Female brown belts, we’re very, very rare. So. What does that tell me? It tells me I have a great deal of support and love and investment being shared my way. There’s no way I’m exceptional yet I’m in an exceptional situation. That means exceptional people have gotten me here. And my hard work and dedication has made that possible. It’s a shared effort. I believe my belt is shared with all of those around me and see it my responsibility to then share as much as I can of myself with others.

As far as how I felt on the day, I’m FKN proud to wear a Dominance Brown. Like I can’t explain. Belts come slow and hard at my gym and my coach only grades those that are truly ready. The purple belts here are ridiculously good. It blows me away that I have worked to get the technical ability worthy of his Acknowledgement in this way. I’m proud. And stunned. As with receiving my purple. Now all I can think is, I don’t wanna just be a brown. I want to be an incredible brown. So now we start again.

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What does your training schedule look like? Does this include strength training and are you particular with your nutrition?

I’m off season now so weight training and weight checking is almost out of my routine.

My week is currently: Monday 6pm wrestling, 7:30pm gi Tuesday 6pm advance BJJ, 730pm gi Wednesday 6pm No Gi, 7:30pm gi Thursday 6pm advance BJJ, 730pm gi Friday 10am. Playful free rolling. Lots of laughter. Nothing serious.

During comp season I replace both wrestling and no gi with lifting heavy. And add a hard 2 hour Saturday session in. Plus Myotherapy weekly.

It’s important to note I roll/spar a lot. Like 80% of my training. And I’m disciplined about it. I’m always working on something and never rolling without a plan. I self critique a lot and I ask lots and lots of questions and feedback. My rolling is drilling. It is drilling but it’s against a resisting opponent. I learn more this way.

My diet is meat, veg, coffee, dark chocolate and strawberries. Barely any dairy. Glutenous foods are avoided. During comp season I start to intermittently fast (one day per week on non training days) and only eat starchy veg or white rice within half an hour of training. No starchy carbs at other times of the day. Loads of fish oil and always 3 litres of water a day.

You do a lot of competition and travel a lot for them, do you enjoy competing and how do you deal with the pressure?

jess winner

I have never loved competing but I love the gains I get from a hard training camp. I also love training at that intensity. I deal poorly with the stress and extra load though and it effects my personality in a negative way. Self absorption doesn’t suit me well but it gets the job done. I find that trade off difficult. I’m a bloody good sport at the events and take wins and losses very well but my anxiety and the extra load at training make me less fun and someone I don’t enjoy. I hate that about competing.

I value the gain of skill, understanding, technique, improvement, refinement. Not so much titles and not gold. I would rather lose a match that was epic and a battle and against an amazing opponent than smash my way easily to the podium. So when I hit the competition and tap hands with an opponent I’m not scared or worried. I’m not at all because she cannot possibly take from me what I’ve gained prior to that moment. So if I win or lose the match, I’ve absolutely already won. Outcomes can go either way but advancing and improving is always a win.

I’ve competed in over 50 comps. Most actively in my blue belt and first year of purple. It’s no longer the actual competition matches that I get a lot out of or learn from anymore. It was at white and blue but not so much now. For me now its the preparation that a get a lot out of. I think this then helps me feel no pressure on the day. The lead up though… There’s always at least one epic melt down. Usually more.

I also feel like that drive to prove myself is done. I no longer feel I need to prove that I’m doing well. I just ensure I am.

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What are the highs and lows of BJJ for you?

Lows are plateaus. They’re the worst. They always feel longer than they actually are. And you have them for longer and longer as you move up the ranks. For me these days, if I fix just one grip in a 3 month time frame, I’m happy. That’s a gain! Frustrated white belts missing a sweep twice but getting it the next week have no idea how lucky they are! Haha. That accelerated learning & daily improvement does slow down. I urge peeps to enjoy it now. And be less frustrated. Watching a white belt learn is like hearing a child learn to talk. It’s epic how much happens in a short amount of time in those early days.

The highs? When you’re rolling and you realise the plateau is over! It’s always suddenly and mid roll and in that moment you feel you’re a genius! You’re moving like a beast. Everything is smooth! Everything works! You nail a perfectly timed sweep and it sets up your favourite pass. It’s magical…it’s the greatest feeling in the world! Haha. Suddenly you’re in love with BJJ again. It’s what keeps me coming back. Even more fun to see others go through that.

The bigger picture life lesson here is that the peaks are only possible because of the plateaus. They are linked. Damn. That’s deep. Haha. But real.

You must have seen many people come and go – what keeps you going?

See above. Plus obsession. Plus believing that I can actually get good and be good at this thing. I have complete and utter belief in that fact. I don’t know why but I do.

What advice would you give other women who were thinking about starting BJJ or who have just started?

-Try to find a way to laugh at yourself at least once each session. Truly. Usually this comes easily in the form of a team mate who will be happy to help. Take the piss. Out of yourself and the situation. That’s what boys do in ALL sports. And they stick around.

-Refrain from bitching or critiquing other girls. It’s a habit. It will continue if you foster that habit. And stop if you don’t. Don’t make yourself miserable by saying mean shit. Even in private. Don’t be that girl.

-Don’t bring your existing understanding competitive nature to this sport. This sport is different than anything you have ever done so you need to approach it differently than anything you have ever done. Understand that your greatest competitor or best friend or least favourite person or weirdest team mate can succeed while you also succeed. It doesn’t have to be one or the other. You don’t even have to share and you will get better no matter what. That includes if other people do also. In fact. It’s inevitable. It’s how this sport works. Comparing yourself to others and creating your own hierarchy on where they/you should be at is a huge waste of time and not going to help you. Beat techniques, not people.

-Ask lots of questions. As a white belt you are discovering BJJ and learning how to learn it, not actually developing it yet. It’s heaps of fun and probably your entire obsession right now which is the perfect situation for advancing. You’ve gotta set up the frame work to make yourself no longer be a white belt. Learn how to be a teachable student. Learn how you process information. Learn who needs to deliver this to you. Sometimes it’s not only your coach. Be realistic in your assessment of yourself as a student. If you’re getting in the way of your own learning, no one can help you but you. Trust this old yoda on these ideas you should.

Australia Girls in Gi

Australia Girls in Gi

In your opinion what do you believe it takes to be successful at BJJ?

The ability to self assess honestly. And to hear and accept feedback without taking it personally.

Who inspires you?

The people closest to me are my biggest inspirations. Dave Hart my coach is this in an epic in this way. He’s shown me that BJJ as a sport for myself & a community can be anything I want it to be, I just need to put in the work. As far as athletes go, Luanna Alguzuir has movement I would kill for. I love her technique. Her game rocks.

What personal lessons have you learnt about yourself since doing BJJ?

Too many to list. So many that they’ve changed me forever. I’m a much kinder person than I was pre BJJ. I’m also more certain of myself. And able to communicate on all levels much much better. This has vastly improved all of the relationships in my life, my working environment and my life. I couldn’t be more thankful for that.

Where do you see yourself in 5 years time?

I see myself touring Australia as the black belt head of Australian Girls In Gi, offering seminars and private lessons to both women and men. I see myself gathering a shit load of knowledge about this sport between now and then and still be 110% driven to find a way to share that knowledge. I hope this vision becomes my life.

Is there anyone you would like to thank?

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Dominance MMA. The entire staff there. They are my closest friends and my life. Australian Girls in Gi for being my inspiration. I want to be the kind of leader that group deserves. And they deserve the world. Dave Hart, my coach. The Bear, my partner.

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Tess’s BJJ Training Week 31 – Part2


Friday

Rest day, body and mind is super tired. Looking forward to nap today!

Saturday 

What a weekend!

Saturday was full on, it started off with me running the kettlebell class. I then jumped in the ladies MMA, I only did the last 20mins though. At one point I partnered up with Danielle and I shot in for a takedown but I missed judged it and cracked my head on her hip bone, instant headache!!!

After class I headed home had shower, lunch and then Coach Adam and myself headed to Defensive Arts Academy (DAA), Lance (owner of DAA) was being awarded his purple belt plus Coach Adam’s Coach, John Will was over from Melbourne to run a seminar. The seminar ran for 2 hours and it was fantastic and huge congratulations to Lance for getting his purple belt, huge achievement!

Lance & Coach Adam

Lance & Coach Adam

After the seminar we headed back to AMMA Gym for the grading smash session. This grading was going to be very special – a few guys were going for their black belts and a few going for their purple belts. Coach Adam and myself had a bet on how many would turn up for the grading, I said 36 Coach Adam said 54…I believe 60 turned up. It was the biggest grading we have ever had at AMMA and the biggest amount of spectators too! We had people who travelled from Albany and Bunbury to attend, I find this incredible.

The atmosphere was electric, a lot of nervous tension – I was so excited to be there, for the first time I didn’t have to worry about the grading and I could just have fun. The first round was warm up and was the hardest, it was the longest 5mins ever and even though it was supposed to be a warm up, you automatically just go hard – you can’t help it. It was such an awesome night and everyone was smiling having a good time. The grading went for 3 hours and when it was finished the people who graded for their blue and purple belts were awarded their belt. The guys who graded for their blacks belts would have to wait until Sunday to be awarded their black belts.

Massive Grading!

Massive Grading!

There is a BJJ tradition on awarding people their belts, I personally don’t like it and am thankful I didn’t have to go through it when I got my blue belt. The tradition is – everyone lines up, making a sort of tunnel, the person who is awarded their belt walks between everyone holding their belt above their head and everyone in the lines has to hit the person with their own belt. Some people get very carried away with this tradition, not mentioning any names Riini 🙂 I really felt sorry for everyone walking through because they got pelted hard with the belts and their were 3 people who were celebrating their birthday which meant they had to walk through twice…ouch!!!

New blue and purple belts

New blue and purple belts

After the belts were awarded we all had pizza and beer to celebrated!

Blue Belts Awarded (back row of photo starting on the left)

Lance

Micah

Jeremy

Jamie

Levi

David

Purple Belts Awarded (front row of photo starting on the left)

Dean

Vince

Coach Adam

Reece

Kurt

Sunday

I woke up on Sunday pretty wrecked; I was sore all over and covered in bruises. We headed back to AMMA Gym for 8.30am; Coach John Will was running a seminar plus the black belts had to be awarded their belts. Everyone who did the grading and attended on Sunday were pretty tired, we all looked like zombies. It was fantastic to witness the guys getting their black belts, Coach Adam now has 6 black belts underneath him, which is a huge achievement.

Steve, Phil, Coach Adam, Sheldon, Luke & Nathan - all black belts!

Coach Steve, Phil, Coach Adam, Sheldon, Luke & Nathan – all black belts!

The seminar was fantastic again, it ran for 2hours and everyone really enjoyed it. I really like Coach John’s teaching style, his check list style really helps me remember each technique.

John Will's Seminar

John Will’s Seminar

After the seminar we headed to Nando’s for lunch, once I got food into me I was done. My socializing skills had been all used up and I needed to get some quite time.  All in all great weekend!

Black Belts Awarded on Sunday

Sheldon

Phil

Steve (yay Coach!!)

Black Belt – 1st Dan tips Awarded on Sunday

Nathan

Luke

Everyone who was awarded their belts and tips over the weekend were all well deserving. It is also a huge achievement for Coach Adam seeing all his students achieving such greatness. Coach Adam has taught most of these guys from white belt – it is his guidance, leadership, coaching skills, and friendship that has helped them achieve their goals and I think that is incredible! Well done Coach Adam!!

Coach Adam

Coach Adam

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