The John Hallett Podcast

What It Really Means to Earn a 5th Degree Black Belt With Tony Morrison

39 min · 27. juni 2026
episode What It Really Means to Earn a 5th Degree Black Belt With Tony Morrison cover

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WHAT IT REALLY MEANS TO EARN A 5TH DEGREE BLACK BELT What does it really mean to earn a 5th Degree Black Belt? Spoiler: It's not about how well you fight. It's about how many people you've helped. In this episode, John sits down with longtime friend, instructor, and newly promoted 5th Degree Black Belt Tony Morrison to discuss leadership, martial arts, self-defense, and what happens when training becomes bigger than yourself. Tony shares lessons from decades of martial arts experience—from karate and Japanese jujitsu to Krav Maga—and explains why higher black belt ranks become less about personal achievement and more about uplifting others. The conversation explores: * What changes after black belt * Why basics still matter * Teaching vs. performing techniques * Martial arts vs. self-defense * Retention and school ownership * Helping students become better people * The importance of gratitude and positivity Because in the end, the goal isn't simply to create better fighters. It's to create better human beings. KEY TAKEAWAYS * Higher black belt ranks become about service and leadership. * Great instructors can teach average students—not just talented ones. * Basics are what create advanced skill. * Martial arts and self-defense are related, but not identical. * Retention is built through challenge, fun, progress, and community. * Gratitude is one of the foundations of long-term happiness. WHO THIS EPISODE IS FOR * Martial arts instructors * Krav Maga practitioners * School owners * Parents * Black belts and aspiring black belts * Coaches and mentors * Anyone interested in leadership and personal growth THREE TRAINING PRINCIPLES > A black belt isn't about what you've achieved—it's about who you've helped. > Advanced students are simply people who perform the basics at a higher level. > Gratitude changes how you experience life. ONLINE TRAINING PORTAL: WWW.CLEARSKY.TRAINING

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174 Episoder

episode Why Kids Don't Quit Martial Arts—Parents Do cover

Why Kids Don't Quit Martial Arts—Parents Do

WHY KIDS DON'T QUIT MARTIAL ARTS—PARENTS DO WITH PAUL REAVLIN, FOUNDER OF REVGEAR What if one of the biggest reasons kids leave martial arts has nothing to do with the kids? In this episode, John sits down with Paul Reavlin, founder of Revgear, to discuss one of the most overlooked topics in martial arts school ownership: parent education. Parents often believe their child's desire to quit is simply a phase to manage or a decision to accept. Paul challenges that thinking by explaining why instructors should be training parents just as intentionally as they train students. The conversation also explores how building a strong community—not just teaching great classes—creates long-term student retention. Along the way, Paul shares the story of building Revgear from the trunk of his Mustang into one of the most respected martial arts equipment companies in the world. Whether you're a parent, instructor, coach, or school owner, this episode is packed with practical ideas that can strengthen your students, your school, and your community. IN THIS EPISODE • Why parents—not kids—often decide when martial arts ends • How to prepare parents before the "I want to quit" conversation happens • Why community is one of the greatest retention tools a school can build • The connection between equipment, commitment, and long-term success • Lessons from building Revgear over the past 30 years • Practical ideas every martial arts school owner can implement immediately WHO THIS EPISODE IS FOR * Martial arts parents * School owners * Instructors * Krav Maga practitioners * Coaches * Gym owners * Anyone interested in building stronger communities through martial arts GUEST Paul Reavlin is the founder and CEO of Revgear, one of the leading manufacturers of martial arts and combat sports equipment. For nearly three decades, he has worked alongside martial arts schools around the world, helping instructors grow successful programs while providing equipment trusted by professionals across Krav Maga, MMA, Muay Thai, boxing, and traditional martial arts. Learn more: ClearSky.Training RMSDF.com Train More. Suck Less.

18. juli 202631 min
episode Why Discipline Matters More Than Motivation | Train More. Suck Less. cover

Why Discipline Matters More Than Motivation | Train More. Suck Less.

Everyone wants confidence. Everyone wants to feel safer. Everyone wants to be stronger, healthier, and more capable. But very few people want the process required to become those things. In this episode, John and Josh discuss why motivation is overrated, why discipline matters more than ever, and how modern convenience is making people mentally and physically fragile. They break down: * Why social media rewires expectations * The difference between motivation and discipline * Why confidence is earned through reps * The danger of convenience culture * Why failure is necessary for growth * How martial arts and fitness build resilience Because under stress, you don't rise. You default. And if you want confidence, capability, and resilience—you have to earn them. KEY TAKEAWAYS * Motivation comes and goes. Discipline remains. * Confidence is built through repeated exposure to discomfort. * Modern culture rewards convenience over mastery. * Failure is necessary for adaptation and growth. * Real training requires consistency, not inspiration. * Doing hard things builds resilience. WHO THIS EPISODE IS FOR * Martial artists * Fitness enthusiasts * Parents * Entrepreneurs * Coaches and instructors * Responsible firearm owners * Anyone struggling with consistency * Anyone seeking greater discipline and resilience

4. juli 202618 min
episode What It Really Means to Earn a 5th Degree Black Belt With Tony Morrison cover

What It Really Means to Earn a 5th Degree Black Belt With Tony Morrison

WHAT IT REALLY MEANS TO EARN A 5TH DEGREE BLACK BELT What does it really mean to earn a 5th Degree Black Belt? Spoiler: It's not about how well you fight. It's about how many people you've helped. In this episode, John sits down with longtime friend, instructor, and newly promoted 5th Degree Black Belt Tony Morrison to discuss leadership, martial arts, self-defense, and what happens when training becomes bigger than yourself. Tony shares lessons from decades of martial arts experience—from karate and Japanese jujitsu to Krav Maga—and explains why higher black belt ranks become less about personal achievement and more about uplifting others. The conversation explores: * What changes after black belt * Why basics still matter * Teaching vs. performing techniques * Martial arts vs. self-defense * Retention and school ownership * Helping students become better people * The importance of gratitude and positivity Because in the end, the goal isn't simply to create better fighters. It's to create better human beings. KEY TAKEAWAYS * Higher black belt ranks become about service and leadership. * Great instructors can teach average students—not just talented ones. * Basics are what create advanced skill. * Martial arts and self-defense are related, but not identical. * Retention is built through challenge, fun, progress, and community. * Gratitude is one of the foundations of long-term happiness. WHO THIS EPISODE IS FOR * Martial arts instructors * Krav Maga practitioners * School owners * Parents * Black belts and aspiring black belts * Coaches and mentors * Anyone interested in leadership and personal growth THREE TRAINING PRINCIPLES > A black belt isn't about what you've achieved—it's about who you've helped. > Advanced students are simply people who perform the basics at a higher level. > Gratitude changes how you experience life. ONLINE TRAINING PORTAL: WWW.CLEARSKY.TRAINING

27. juni 202639 min
episode Why BJJ & MMA Training Alone Is NOT Complete Self-Defense cover

Why BJJ & MMA Training Alone Is NOT Complete Self-Defense

WHY BJJ & MMA TRAINING ALONE IS NOT COMPLETE SELF-DEFENSE BJJ works. MMA works. Boxing works. Combat sports create tough, capable athletes who can fight under pressure. But self-defense is bigger than fighting. In this episode, John and Josh discuss the critical differences between fighting ability and complete self-defense preparedness. They break down why pressure-tested combat sports training is incredibly valuable while also explaining the missing layers that many gyms never address: * Awareness * De-escalation * Legal use of force * Multiple attackers * Weapons * Family protection * Post-incident decision making Because real-world violence doesn't happen inside a cage. There are no referees. No weight classes. No agreed-upon rules. And no guarantee you'll be fighting only one person. KEY TAKEAWAYS * Fighting and self-defense are not automatically the same thing. * MMA and BJJ develop valuable real-world fighting attributes. * Pressure testing is one of the most important components of effective training. * De-escalation is a self-defense skill, not a weakness. * Legal consequences matter just as much as physical outcomes. * Weapons and multiple attackers completely change the problem. * Awareness and decision-making often prevent violence before it begins. * A great fighter can still make poor self-defense decisions. WHO THIS EPISODE IS FOR * BJJ practitioners * MMA athletes * Boxing students * Krav Maga students * Self-defense instructors * Martial arts school owners * Concealed carriers * Parents responsible for family protection * Anyone interested in real-world violence prevention THREE TRAINING PRINCIPLES > Pressure reveals the truth about your training. > Self-defense is bigger than fighting ability. > The goal isn't to win the fight. The goal is to go home safely.

20. juni 202614 min
episode Why Letting Kids Quit Too Soon May Be Hurting Their Future cover

Why Letting Kids Quit Too Soon May Be Hurting Their Future

THE PARENT'S GUIDE TO RAISING A BLACK BELT MINDSET Most kids don't quit martial arts. Parents let them quit. That statement may sound harsh, but after more than 30 years teaching martial arts and self-defense, John has seen the same pattern repeat itself over and over. Kids get frustrated. They get embarrassed. They compare themselves to others. Something new grabs their attention. They have a bad day. And suddenly they want to quit. The real question isn't whether a child wants to quit. The real question is: What happens next? In this episode, John and Josh discuss the role parents play in developing resilience, confidence, commitment, and what John calls a "Black Belt Mindset." KEY TAKEAWAYS * Most quitting is emotional, not logical. * Confidence comes from overcoming challenges, not avoiding them. * Every future black belt has wanted to quit at some point. * Parents often accidentally reinforce quitting by solving temporary discomfort. * Martial arts isn't about earning belts—it's about developing character. * The lessons learned through struggle often matter more than the techniques themselves. WHO THIS EPISODE IS FOR * Parents of children in martial arts * Parents of young athletes * Martial arts instructors * Youth coaches * School owners * Anyone raising children who wants to build resilience and confidence THREE TRAINING PRINCIPLES > Confidence comes from doing things you once thought you couldn't do. > The black belt is just the vehicle. The real goal is developing the person. > If you teach your child to persevere instead of quit, that lesson will serve them for life.

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