r/judo • u/douglasbarbin shodan • Jul 23 '25
Other Got my Shodan last weekend
I hope this post helps inspire some people who are considering Judo but are doubting themselves. Whenever some of the younger people at the dojo say, "I can't do this", I tell them that if I can do it, they probably also can. For context, I started my Judo journey in 2019, almost exactly 6 years ago, at age 37 (almost 38 at the time). I am currently 43 years old and will be 44 in about a month.
After white belt, the next few belts (yellow, orange, and green) came pretty easily to me. However, brown belt (Sankyu, Nikyu, and Ikkyu) was more of a grind for me. I had an old shoulder injury flare up during the end of Ikkyu, and I was doing physical therapy for a while until my shoulder pain improved. I believe some dojos (especially outside of the United States) have blue and/or purple belts before brown belt in the kyu ranks, but I am aligned with USJA and their ranking system has Sankyu, Nikyu, and Ikkyu all as a solid brown belt, so my belt color didn't change for a few years until last Saturday.
Shodan is the first Dan grade in Judo. While it does not signify mastery (like a black belt "automatically" does for some martial arts), it does signify a high level of competence in Judo. All of that to say, if I can do it, you can at least get to that next kyu rank! Keep getting on the tatami and practicing until the belt changes color.
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u/One_Friend1567 Jul 23 '25
OSU!! Welcome to the club!