Beginners & New Practitioners

what martial art should i start? im 30, out of shape, and dont want to get punched in the face yet

title basically says it. im 30 years old, havent exercised seriously in years, and want to start some kind of martial arts. but the idea of getting punched in the face on day one is terrifying. what should i do?

what ive researched so far:

BJJ (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu):

  • no striking which removes the getting-punched concern
  • seems to have the best community/culture from what i read online
  • lots of options in DFW
  • concern: the close physical contact with strangers seems weird at first

Muay Thai:

  • striking art so i WILL get hit eventually
  • but apparently the first few months are mostly pad and bag work, not sparring
  • the conditioning benefits seem incredible
  • concern: brain damage from sparring long term

Boxing:

  • similar to muay thai in terms of eventually getting hit
  • simpler to learn the basics? only hands vs hands/feet/knees/elbows
  • cheaper than most martial arts gyms
  • concern: same brain health concerns

Wrestling:

  • no striking, very physical, incredible conditioning
  • concern: very few adult wrestling programs. mostly youth/high school focused

the "out of shape" factor: i know everyone says "you dont need to be in shape to start." but like... HOW out of shape are we talking? i cant run a mile without stopping. will i survive a class?

DFW martial artists: what do you recommend for a total beginner who is more interested in the fitness and community aspects than competing or fighting?

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 6:23 PM

7 Comments

just start. the worst thing you can do is spend 6 months researching which martial art to try while sitting on your couch. pick one, walk in, do a free class. you can always switch later. the hardest step is the first one through the door

muay thai is great and you will NOT get punched on day one. the first 3-6 months at any good gym is technique on bags and pads. sparring comes later and it starts LIGHT. the fear of getting hit is valid but good gyms ease you in gradually

wrestling is the best martial art for conditioning but you are correct that adult programs barely exist. the workaround is finding an MMA gym that has wrestling classes. several DFW MMA gyms offer wrestling as part of their curriculum and adults are welcome

BJJ is the answer for what you described. no striking, incredible community, you get in shape BY training (you dont need to be in shape first), and the close contact thing stops being weird after about 3 classes. you will be too focused on not getting choked to worry about personal space

the honest answer: do a free trial class at a BJJ gym, a muay thai gym, and a boxing gym. whichever one makes you want to come back is the right one. the best martial art is the one you will actually show up to

i started BJJ at 31 in worse shape than you described. could barely do 10 pushups. the first month was rough but your body adapts fast when you are doing something fun. i lost 30lbs in my first 6 months without changing my diet because i was training 3-4x per week and actually enjoying it

the brain damage concern for striking arts is valid and responsible. the key is finding a gym that emphasizes light technical sparring (80%+ of sparring sessions) rather than hard sparring every session. the gym culture around sparring intensity matters more than the art itself