WHAT A TYPICAL FAMILY TRAINING DAY LOOKS LIKE
A weekday evening at Method Jiu-Jitsu tells you everything you need to know about how family training actually works here. It is not complicated. It is efficient. And after a few weeks it becomes one of the best parts of your family's routine.
ARRIVING TOGETHER (5:45 PM)
The family pulls into the parking lot at the same time. Kids head to the changing area with their gi. Parents change into their own gear. Everyone signs in. The lobby is already moving — other families going through the same routine, coaches on the floor warming up. It feels like somewhere you belong, not a waiting room you've been dropped into while you scroll your phone for an hour.
PARALLEL CLASSES (6:00 PM — 7:00 PM)
The kids class starts on one side of the mat at 6:00 PM. The instructor opens with movement games that build grappling patterns — shrimping, hip escapes, grip challenges — then transitions into technique appropriate for the age group. Across the mat, the adults class is running simultaneously. Parents warm up, drill, work positional rounds. Both classes are fully coached, fully structured, and happening in the same space at the same time. Parents can glance over and see their kids working. Kids can look up and see their parents doing exactly the same thing.
THE TRANSITION MOMENT (7:00 PM)
Both classes end around the same time. Kids find their parents on the mat. Parents find their kids. The natural conversation starts — "What did you drill?" "Guard passing — you?" "Armbar defense." Both have something to share. Both can show the other in the living room later. The drive home is genuinely different when everyone has been somewhere together rather than being ferried to separate places.
OVER MONTHS: THE COMMUNITY EFFECT
BJJ gyms tend to form unusually tight communities, and Method is no exception. Family memberships here mean your kids develop friendships with other kids who share their values and training habits. Parents develop real relationships with other adults putting in the same kind of effort. The gym becomes a third place for your family — somewhere beyond home and school where people know your name, where you're expected and welcomed, and where the community actively invests in each other's growth.