White Belt Survival Guide: How to Get Through Your First Year in BJJ
White belt is the hardest belt. Not because the techniques are complex, but because everything is new, nothing works, and everyone taps you. Here’s how to survive your first year in BJJ and actually enjoy the process.
Embrace the Suck
You’re going to get submitted. A lot. By everyone. The 140-pound purple belt, the athletic blue belt, the other white belt who started three months before you. This is normal. This is the process. Every black belt in the world went through exactly what you’re experiencing.
Focus on Survival
Before you learn to attack, learn to survive. Defend your neck, protect your arms, don’t let people flatten you out. If you can survive for five minutes against a higher belt without getting submitted, that’s progress. Offense comes later.
Train Consistently
Two classes per week beats five classes one week and zero the next. Consistency matters more than intensity. Your body needs time to adapt, your mind needs time to process, and the techniques need repetition to stick.
Ask Questions
After you get submitted, ask what happened. Higher belts generally love explaining techniques. Learn from every roll, every tap, every mistake. The white belts who improve fastest are the ones who treat every session as a learning opportunity.
Trust the process. One year from now, you’ll be the one helping new white belts understand that getting smashed is just part of the journey.
