JaZen Jiu Jitsu

JaZen Jiu Jitsu "As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another." Here to sharpen our skills through Jiu-Jitsu Fast forward from Jr.
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“Tap early, Tap often”, it’s a saying that Professor Jason Schilbach’s students hear often. Very few people can say that their career started when they were only six years old. Jason recalls, “I remember growing up in Germany watching TV. The first time I saw two guys wrestling I immediately started wrestling and pinning my childhood friends, I was only six years old “. It was only after Jason and

his family relocated to the United States during his early teen years that he began to take a serious interest in the wrestling program in school. High, to High and then University, Jason’s never-ending drive to further develop his body and skills turned him into a highly competitive athlete.

“I remember back when I was just training, studying, eating and sleeping, I wanted to be the best, I felt unstoppable! Unfortunately, that was also during the time that I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. I remember seeing the doctor, hearing the news and then thinking I’ll just go home and deal with it. The doctors of course had other plans for keeping me alive so reluctantly I was admitted into the hospital for treatment.``

Taking a gap year in college so he could focus on his health resulted in Jason getting cut from his wrestling team. “Training and wrestling became such an integral and necessary part of my life that I needed to find a replacement so I began to search for an alternative to replace my wrestling. I remember going up against various other martial artists and I would dominate them with wrestling.“

The turning point came when Jason was introduced to a fighter, then a blue belt, Prof. Caleb Mitchel, who was skilled in Brazilian Jui Jitsu or BJJ. “He was a small guy. All I remember was being the proverbial cupcake attacked by a monkey. I remember laying there on the mat and thinking to myself, ‘I’ve found what I’ve been searching for’.”

It wasn’t long after that Cesar Gracie dropped by to roll with Jason. “I had no idea who Cesar [Gracie] was, all I remember is him destroying me,'' says Jason laughingly. “Afterwards Cesar invited me to come train under him. I would then spend the following 16 years training, rolling and hanging out with people like Nick and Nate Diaz, Jake Shields, Gilbert Melendez, Caio Terra, and on and on. The academy was where many of professional MMA fighters learned their submission and ground game. For me it was not only a place where I could train with the best, it was also a place where I could clear my mind and bring introspection into those areas of my life I wanted to focus on.”

When asked: “So why did it takes almost 20 years to get your black belt?” Professor Schilbach replies, “It took so long because I don’t like getting punched in the face! But seriously, at the time only the professional MMA fighters were getting black belts, there was definitely a glass ceiling under Cesar Gracie when it came to non-professional fighters. After four years as a brown under Cesar I was very close to shattering that glass ceiling to getting my black belt.“

In the summer of 2016 Jason left the US to go live in London to study and train under the 10 time world Champion, Roger Gracie. “I spent another two plus years having to reprove myself under Roger”. In December of 2018, Jason would be awarded his black belt in the London based RGA (Roger Gracie Academy). Professor Schilbach has dedicated his life to the study and advancement of BJJ. He has overcome countless challenges throughout his life. Just last year during a routine checkup they discovered early signs of colon cancer. “We caught it early and dealt with it aggressively.” he stated. "I was told it would take a year [to fully recover] but it wasn’t long after I was walking that I was back on the mat training and teaching again”. Part of his recovery was to spend some time in the Philippines for some R&R with some close friends. It didn’t take him long to find some local BJJ practitioners in Manila, where he is now residing. He use to begin by (half) jokingly saying to his new opponents, “Take it easy on me, I’m still recovering from my cancer surgery”. Of course the possibility of any sympathy immediately vanished once they began rolling. Don’t let his calm and relaxed demur fool you. He’s a sleeping giant that awakens like a beast that will have you tapping out before you even realize what just happened. His years of experience and techniques are self evident and now we are fortunate to have him here in the Philippines. You can find him in some of the local gyms around Makati City, rolling and giving critical feedback and instructions.

“I came here to enjoy the beaches and hang out with my friends but what I discovered was a people who were filled with love and respect for God and each other. Now I want to bring the Gracie style of BJJ to the Filipino people and to the Philippines, I’m excited with the opportunity to teach and train with a new group of people”.

“The greatest good that you can imagine, go for it with all your heart.” -Jason’s favorite philosopher Jordan Peterson.

The most dangerous thing about becoming an expert is that I slowly lose the ability to listen..It’s the classic trap: Wh...
06/06/2026

The most dangerous thing about becoming an expert is that I slowly lose the ability to listen..

It’s the classic trap: When you are a hammer, everything looks like a nail. 🛠️

As a Jiu-Jitsu black belt, I am incredibly guilty of this. Because I know firsthand how much the mats can transform someone, my immediate instinct is to prescribe it to everyone, for everything. But I had a humbling realization today that stopped me in my tracks. The moment we think we have the solution, we stop listening. We start trying to fix a situation we don’t actually understand yet.

A friend of mine brought his kids to the academy today. They didn’t get on the mats; they just sat on the sidelines and watched.

Every fiber of my being wanted to get them moving. My coaching brain instantly went into "fixer" mode, wanting to push them out of their comfort zone so they could experience the magic head-on.

But my friend pulled me aside and whispered that we needed to ease them into it.

Thank goodness I actually listened instead of forcing my agenda. I stepped back and let him take the lead with his kids.

But sitting in that position of restraint was incredibly uncomfortable. It is brutal to hold the very thing you believe will help someone and force yourself not to apply it.

I realized that if I had forced those kids onto the mat today just because I felt it was right, I probably would have overwhelmed them and scared them off completely. By rushing to apply my "cure," I would have completely ignored what they actually needed: time to just watch and feel safe.

Sometimes, the gentle hand catches more flies. 🪰✨

Today was a stark reminder that being a good coach—or a good leader—isn't about having all the answers. Sometimes, the best thing you can do is put the hammer down, step back, and just listen.

06/06/2026

Full day today! Come to our classes.

9am - Jiu Jitsu Kids
10:30am - Jiu Jitsu Teens +Adults
1:45pm - Aerial Hammocks Kids
3pm - Aerial Hammocks Teens + Adults
4:30pm - Tumbling with Stunt Clinic

See you! 🤩

The Battles Within: Finding an Intermediary on the Mats 🧠⏳A massive amount of the stress we carry every day doesn't actu...
05/06/2026

The Battles Within: Finding an Intermediary on the Mats 🧠⏳

A massive amount of the stress we carry every day doesn't actually come from our external workloads, our traffic, or our chores. It comes from within. It comes from the unresolved conflicts we harbor against ourselves—the crushing weight of holding our current selves to unmeetable standards, or chasing expectations built by a younger version of who we thought we would be.

Let’s be completely honest: Jiu-Jitsu will not magically resolve these inner conflicts. It won’t instantly quiet the demons or erase the unrealistic standards you place on your own shoulders.

But while that conflict persists within you, Jiu-Jitsu can step in as the perfect intermediary.

When you step onto the mats at JaZen JiuJitsu, the noise has to stop. The crushing expectations of the future and the regrets of the past are forcefully stripped away because you have a physical puzzle to solve right in front of you. For one to two hours, you are entirely anchored to the present moment.

Jiu-Jitsu forces a profound connection between your mind, your body, and your soul. It balances out the chemical chaos of stress, flushes your system with endorphins, and gives your mind a much-needed sanctuary to breathe while you figure the rest of life out off the mats.

You don't have to have your whole life figured out to start taking care of yourself. Let the mats be your peace while you fight your battles.

📍 Find your balance with us at AMVEL East Arcade, C5 Extension, Parañaque.
💬 Send us a message today to try a class.

05/06/2026

Ouch

05/06/2026

Finally!




05/06/2026
🧠 Want to protect your brain? Start with your heart.Most people don't connect the two — but they should.Your brain is th...
04/06/2026

🧠 Want to protect your brain? Start with your heart.
Most people don't connect the two — but they should.
Your brain is the most resource-hungry organ in your body. It runs on blood flow. The moment your cardiovascular health starts to decline, your brain is one of the first things to feel it. Memory, focus, processing speed — all of it depends on clean pipes and a strong pump.
Here's what nobody tells you: you probably can't get smarter. But there are a hundred ways to slowly become less sharp — and most of them come from doing nothing.
Jiujitsu fixes that on two levels.
First, it keeps your heart working at different rates — not just a steady jog, but surges, recoveries, bursts of intensity. That variation is exactly what your cardiovascular system needs to stay strong. And a strong cardiovascular system means your brain stays fed.
Second, jiujitsu never gets easier. That's the point. Every class, every partner, every new technique adds another layer to the puzzle. It's the only sport I know where the moment you think you've figured it out, someone hands you a problem you've never seen before. Your brain has no choice but to stay sharp.
You're not just training your body. You're maintaining the one thing you can't afford to lose.
The mat is the gym for both.
👇 Are you training for your brain or just your body? Drop a comment — I'd love to know.

04/06/2026

Check it out

03/06/2026

When you love your teammates too far you want them to feel same as you😅

😂



🥋 Is Your Child Falling Behind — Or Just Waiting for the Right Challenge?I see it every week on the mat.A 12-year-old wh...
03/06/2026

🥋 Is Your Child Falling Behind — Or Just Waiting for the Right Challenge?

I see it every week on the mat.

A 12-year-old who's never done a forward roll. A 15-year-old who freezes when asked to do the most basic gymnastic movement. Seven-year-old boys who cannot sit still for 30 seconds — but the moment you say "tag," they're laser-focused and ready to go.

Here's the truth no one talks about: kids miss developmental milestones all the time. Coordination, body awareness, the ability to control their own movement — these windows don't slam shut, but they do get harder to open the longer you wait.

The good news? Jiujitsu is one of the best tools I've ever seen for catching kids up.
Not because it forces them to sit still and listen. But because it meets them where they are. It's physical. It's alive. It's basically structured tag — and suddenly that same kid who "can't focus" is dialed in for an entire class.

And that 12-year-old who never rolled? Within weeks, they're doing things they never thought their body could do. The confidence that comes with that? You can't buy it.
If your child missed some of those early movement milestones — whether it's coordination, balance, or body control — it is NOT too late. Their brain and body are still plastic. Still hungry for the right stimulus.

Jiujitsu might just be it.



👇 Drop a comment if you've seen this in your own kids. I'd love to hear your story.

Address

AMVEL East Arcade, C5 Extension
Parañaque
1709

Opening Hours

Monday 5pm - 6:15pm
7pm - 8:30pm
Tuesday 8am - 9am
4:15pm - 5:30pm
Wednesday 5pm - 6:15pm
7pm - 8:30pm
Thursday 8am - 9am
5pm - 6:15pm
Saturday 9am - 10am
10:30am - 12am

Telephone

+639560854387

Website

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