Simple Road To Gramby-s Script 〈Free Forever〉

Vowels are shown by where the next consonant sits relative to the line:

| Vowel sound | Position of following consonant | |-------------|--------------------------------| | A as in “cat” | On the line (normal) | | A as in “late” | Raised slightly above | | E as in “bet” | Lowered slightly | | I as in “sit” | On line + dot below | | O as in “hot” | Circle before consonant | | U as in “put” | Tick mark under |

In practice, most vowels are omitted between consonants unless needed for clarity.

Example: “cat” = K + T (consonants only, vowel implied by context)
“kite” = K + T with raised position (shows “long i”) Simple Road To Gramby-s Script


Before you try it on a resisting opponent, teach your body the script alone.

The 3-part solo drill:

Do this 10x per side every day for a week.
This builds the “gramby pathway” in your nervous system. Vowels are shown by where the next consonant

Identify ethical pathways to your goal. This could involve:


One-click button to flip all instructions for left vs. right side.
Essential for scripts teaching asymmetrical movements.

Let users reorder or isolate parts of the script: Example: “cat” = K + T (consonants only,

Before we map the route, we must define the destination. The Gramby roll (named after legendary wrestler Gramby Roller) is a method of inversion used to reverse positions. In wrestling, it turns bottom referee’s position into an escape. In BJJ, it serves three primary functions:

The "script" refers to the choreographed breakdown of the movement into three distinct acts: The Preamble (Angle Setup), The Activation (Shoulder Post), and The Resolution (The Turn). Most people fail because they skip Act One and jump straight to Act Three.