Beginners & New Practitioners

first 6 months of any martial art suck — heres why you should stick it out

if you are in your first 6 months of any martial art — BJJ, muay thai, boxing, wrestling, karate, whatever — and you are thinking about quitting, this post is for you.

the first 6 months are the worst. heres why:

month 1-2: the confusion phase

  • you dont understand anything. the terminology is foreign. the movements are unnatural
  • your body does not cooperate. your brain says "shrimp" and your body does a weird wiggle
  • you are the worst person in every class. not by a little. by a LOT
  • you are sore in places you didnt know could be sore
  • this phase sucks because you feel incompetent and humans hate feeling incompetent

month 3-4: the frustration phase

  • you understand WHAT you should be doing but you CANT do it
  • you watch the technique, you drill the technique, and then in live training your body reverts to panicking
  • you start comparing yourself to people who started before you. this is poison
  • the initial excitement has worn off and the reality of how long the journey is sets in
  • this phase sucks because you can see the gap between where you are and where you want to be

month 5-6: the breakthrough phase

  • something clicks. it might be one technique. it might be one position. but SOMETHING starts working
  • you catch someone with a move you drilled. the dopamine hit is unreal
  • you survive a round against someone who used to dominate you. progress
  • your body starts moving without conscious thought. muscle memory is forming
  • this is where people who stuck through months 1-4 get HOOKED

why people quit:

  • months 1-4 are uncomfortable and humans avoid discomfort
  • they compare their month 3 to someone elses year 3
  • they expected fast progress because they are athletic/smart/determined
  • they dont have a supportive gym community to encourage them through the hard part

why you should stay:

  • every single person in your gym went through months 1-4. every black belt was once a confused white belt who wanted to quit
  • the skills you build in martial arts (discipline, resilience, humility, problem-solving) transfer to every area of your life
  • the community you gain is unlike any other hobby. training partners become genuine friends
  • in 12 months you will look back and be amazed at how far you came. but only if you dont quit at month 3

DFW newbies: if you are struggling, post here. this community will talk you off the ledge. we have all been there.

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 4:33 PM

6 Comments

the breakthrough moment at month 5-6 is SO real. for me it was hitting an armbar from guard during live rolling. i had drilled it 500 times and it never worked. then one day my body just DID IT without thinking. i literally yelled out loud. that was the moment i knew i was never quitting

i almost quit muay thai at month 2 because i couldnt throw a proper roundhouse kick no matter how many times the coach showed me. kept going out of stubbornness. month 5 my kick clicked and my coach said "there it is." stayed for 4 more years

month 4 was my quit point and my coach texted me when i didnt show up for a week. that text — "hey man, missed you on the mat this week. everything ok?" — is why im still training 3 years later. find a gym where people notice when youre gone

the gym community point is crucial. at a good gym the other students help you through the hard months. at a bad gym youre alone and the difficult months become unbearable. choose your gym based on culture as much as technique

comparing yourself to others is the #1 killer of new martial artists. the person who started 6 months before you seems like a god. the person who started 6 months after you seems hopeless. its all relative. compare yourself to YOU from last month. thats the only metric that matters

this post should be pinned at every DFW gym. the attrition rate in the first 6 months is brutal — probably 70-80% of people who try a martial art quit within 6 months. the ones who survive that period almost always stay for years