Forget arms and legs. In top pressure, your head is a post. In bottom guard, your head is a hook. The PDF teaches the "Dynamic Head Post" – moving your forehead from their sternum (to flatten) to their jaw (to turn) to their far armpit (to pass).
Your power comes from your hips; so does your vulnerability. The exclusive principle: Always keep your hip line higher than your opponent’s hip line when playing offense (mount, back) and lower when playing defense (half guard, deep half). Change the height of your hips, change the outcome. Pillar 2: Biomechanical Levers (Principles 6–10) Principle #6: The Wrist as a Rudder Arm drags work. But the PDF reveals the "21 Exclusive" twist: The wrist is not a handle; it is a rudder. Steering the wrist across the centerline automatically rotates the shoulder, which destroys the opponent’s base. Light grip, massive effect. mastering jiu jitsu pdf 21 exclusive
When applying a submission, the first 80% of pressure should take 80% of the time (slow, incremental). The final 20% of pressure takes 0.5 seconds. This gives your opponent time to tap safely. The PDF condemns "explosive submissions" that destroy training partners. Forget arms and legs
The is not a single, copyrighted, mass-market book like Jiu-Jitsu University by Saulo Ribeiro. Instead, it is a conceptual compilation – a "greatest hits" of advanced BJJ principles often taught in exclusive seminar series (e.g., John Danaher’s “21 Principles of Pin Escapes” or Ryan Hall’s “Defensive Guard”). The PDF teaches the "Dynamic Head Post" –
In a defensive shell, your elbow and knee must touch. If there is a gap, there is a pass. The exclusive drill: Practice shrimping while maintaining a static elbow-knee connection. This cuts the passing options by 70%.
Escapes fail because people turn flat (0 degrees) or fully to their belly (90 degrees). The exclusive detail is the 45-degree angle. From mount or side control, turning exactly 45 degrees creates the strongest frame against the mat and the smallest target for submissions. Memorize this angle.
What if you could condense the essence of high-level BJJ into a single, focused roadmap? What if 21 exclusive principles could replace the noise of infinite YouTube tutorials?