Live from the Octagon with Michel Jarjour
Top photo: Michel Jarjour leads a CU GOLD activity. (Photo: Michel Jarjour)
Undergraduate student balances passion for high-risk combat sports with neuroscience studies, aiming to make mixed martial arts safer for all fighters
Michel Jarjour knows what itās like to love something that could hurt him. Ģż Ģż Even after years of avid mixed martial arts (MMA) fandom, the third-year undergraduate student at the University of Colorado Boulder still finds the UFC scary. āYou look at these fights, and theyāre getting kicked and punched to the head. Itās terrifying.āĢż
Though an active participant himself in both Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and Muay Thai at the ĪŽĀėŹÓʵ Rec Center, Jarjour insists that a career in professional fighting is off the table. āYouāre putting your body through hell and back. Youāre taking so much damage,ā says Jarjour. āIām not willing to give my life to that⦠My brain is a little important [to me].āĢż
A junior on the pre-health track, Jarjour is pursuing a degree in neuroscience with minors in Spanish, sports media and biochemistry. He balances his studies and involvement in the Miramontes Arts and Sciences Program with his passion for high-risk combat sports, which he shares with listeners in a live monthly radio show on Radio 1190, Join the Octagon. āThere is something so beautiful, something so adrenaline-based about the live commentary that I absolutely love,ā he says.Ģż
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Michel Jarjour is a rising senior on the pre-health track, pursuing a degree in neuroscience with minors in Spanish, sports media and biochemistry. (Photo: Michel Jarjour)
Beyond the octagon
Since Fall 2024, Jarjourās radio show has covered main card, pay-per-view UFC events that occur roughly once a month. In January, the. Jarjour shares that these changes have led to scheduling disruptions that have put Join the OctagonĢżon a temporary pause. āItās unfortunate,ā he says, āand itās also made me recognize that I want to do more with the Join the OctagonĢż²ś°ł²¹²Ō»å.ā
Jarjour credits the leadership skills he has gained as director ofĢżCU GOLD with helping him guide Join the OctagonĢżin new, expanded directions. CU GOLD, which stands for āGaining Opportunities through Leadership Development,ā is a free leadership development program that is open to all CU students. Beyond events and conferences, the program provides both introductory and advanced leadership courses.Ģż
After leading a group of over fifteen people at CU GOLD, Jarjour says he is confident that he can effectively manage a team and delegate tasks. With a recently assembledĢżteam of like-minded volunteers tackling everything from marketing to betting analysis to social media, an is now under construction, and plans for a research-backed podcast are in the works.Ģż
With the new, extended platform, Jarjour strives explore UFC events through the lens of his others passions: āI would love to combine my love for neuroscience with my love for UFC and MMA, and the best way Iām going to that is either by have a conversation [and] putting it into the show, the podcast, the radio show, social media, whatever, and [then], by becoming a sports neurologist.ā
'I want to become a sports neurologist'
The UFC, which wasĢż, is still a relatively new organization. For MMA fighters, medical practitioners and combat sports enthusiasts alike, growing fears parallel the growing awareness of the long-term effects of brain damage.
Jarjour, who has been tuned into the UFC for years, addresses the difficulty of watching a former MMA fighterās health deteriorate in real time: āYou can just tell [something is wrong by] the way theyāre talking and acting, and itās scary⦠UFC fans are seeing [the] news and are generally worried.āĢż Ģż Ģż ĢżĢżĢż
As a sports neurologist, Jarjour says he hopes to help UFC fighters recover from persistent symptoms associated with traumatic brain injuries. While some medical doctors for the UFC serve ringside, making calls on whether a fighter is stable enough to compete and continue a fight, Jarjour stresses that his pursuits transcend octagon-side intervention.
āItās not just a split-[second] decision that I want to make. Itās an āI want to be able to be in your life and help you out and make sure that youāre living a long and healthy lifeā [kind of thing].āĢż
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Michel Jarjour rappels down the side of a skyscraper. (Photo: Michel Jarjour)
In addition to his interest in sports neurology, Jarjour is minoring in Spanish, with the hope of connecting with more of his patients on a deeper level: āI would love to be a Spanish-speaking doctor who can help not only English-speaking patients, but also immigrants from Hispanic countries and Latino countries, to be able to make them feel more comfortable throughout the entire medical process.ā
While Jarjour says his interest in the medical field in general began in middle school, the choice to pursue higher education was solidified in the summer after his senior year of high school. In the middle of the night, he recounts waking up to a knock at the door and the sight of his distressed neighbor. ā[Iād] never interacted with her in my life,ā he says, ābut sheās clearly in a state of panic, and sheās like, help. Please, help. My husband is on the ground, I have no idea what to do⦠so I go over to the house, call 911, make sure that heās comforted, okay and breathing and all that.ā
Around twelve hours after the paramedics arrived to take Jarjourās neighbor to the hospital for treatment, Jarjour and his mom went to check in. He recounts that moment in the hospital: āI sit down with him and talk with him for a while, and I hear about his life story and the experience and all that. And then a few weeks later, I go to his house, and I find out that he's been consistently going to the hospital ever since that moment, and [he] told me that he trusted me more than the doctors that he's been going and talking to. And I told him, well, you still need to trust your doctors. I'm not a doctor. Don't listen to me entirely. Go listen to the medical professionals.
āBut at the same time, there was something about that. He basically said that I'm taking the time to listen to him and connect with him and understand what he's going through, and the fact that he said thatāĢż [it] was the last, final pillar that I needed to reassure myself, especially before going into university, a big, pivotal moment of my life, it was the last pillar that reassured me that medicine was for me.ā
A surge of adrenaline
In high school, Jarjour spent two years on the Arapaho Rescue Patrol, a team of volunteer high-school students that responds to emergency calls in the Front Range. While Jarjour says the patrol teaches very basic medical knowledge, on that night when his neighbor was in need, it was more than helpful.Ģż
āI found myself realizing consistently that the medical component of the patrol was one of, if not my favorite, part of the patrol,ā says Jarjour. āI love the rescuing; I love the searching. I love the hiking and camping and all that. But the medical component was always what drew me in.āĢż
Beyond helping others through medical intervention, he admits that he loves the adrenaline rush. āI think Iām a bit of an adrenaline junkie⦠Any time that [search and rescue] alarm goes off, you are just pumped with adrenaline, and itās something Iāve always appreciated.ā
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Michel Jarjour (front, black cap) with colleagues recording a program for Radio 1190. (Photo: Michel Jarjour)
That ability to respond to pressure at a momentās notice has been essential for his duties as an RA. In his experience, Jarjour has found that āa lot of people donāt like the āresponding to incidentsā component of the position because itās stressful, itās tiring. You know, it could be the middle of the night, and you donāt want to be doing that.ā Yet Jarjour says he appreciates the call to action: āI love [getting] the phone call⦠thereās something going on, please respond. I do appreciate that adrenaline rush. And, obviously, I want to make sure everyoneās safe. Iām not wishing for anyoneās downfall⦠I do like helping people out. Itās a very fundamental value of mine, just helping people out. And so, thatās what Iāve loved about the RA positionāIāve been able to do that.
āIāve responded to poop on the floor, Iāve responded to residents vomiting, Iāve responded to people dead in the mountains. Especially since I want to be a doctor, Iām probably going to see the worst of the worst issues.āĢż
'My love, my life, my hobby'
A key to navigating his very full calendar and the high-intensity situations to which he is drawn has been an awareness of and care for his mental health. āOne thing that I tell people when they ask me (how I do it) is, find your Thing.ā For Jarjour, the one activity that makes it all work for him is Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. āIāve been doing it for 11 years of my life, and it is [the Thing]. Itās never going to end. I tell myself all the time,ā says Jarjour, āJiu-Jitsu is the one thing that I will do until the day I die. Itās my love, itās my life, itās my hobby.ā
A hobby with risksā¦
At the age of 11, during a practice with the adult class, Jarjour learned how risky. āSomeone rolled me, placed my hand on the mat, just [acting on] instincts, and crack, crack, crack.ā
The aftermath was four broken fingers on his right hand, which he recalls were āfloppyā and extremely painful. Yet, after about four months of healing, Jarjour was back in the gym with his parentsā full support: āIāve just been a very athletic and energetic kid my entire life⦠[my parents] never really told me, like, hey, youāre not going back. They loved the community; they loved the gym.āĢż
With support from his parents, Jarjour continued to immerse himself in Jiu-Jitsu: āThe beauty of Jiu-Jitsu,ā says Jarjour, āis that you think you learn it, you know a technique, and you know all there is behind one position and then boom, thereās about 700 million other techniques just for that one position alone. And then you find out thereās hundreds of positions that you can be in.ā He likens the sport to a game of chess: āYou have to be able to move your piece, know what each move could do, and at the same time, predict what your opponentās going to do.ā
These mental gymnastics happen every moment throughout a fight. Yet, within the confines of the controlled, regulated gym space, Jarjour finds the high-intensity sport relieving: āIāve gone back through my middle school and high school years, [and] all that stress would have really put a toll on my mental health, as well as the fact that Iāve gone through traumatic events, tough moments with the patrols, for example, all of these super high-stress, impacting events. And the reason why I am able to sit in front of you right now, and [say], Iām more than okay and Iām happy in life is because I found my Thing.ā
He adds that it may be the sport, it may be the community, it may be a blend between the two, ābut I know for a fact that I will never leave that sport because of how much itās impacted my life. Iāve walked into the gym, and I felt terrible. Iāve walked in saying I donāt want to go. Iāve walked in with tears in my eyes. Iāve walked in having experiencedāIāll get real with you for a secondāa school shooting, and Iāve come out every time from those experiences feeling so much better.ā
In his own words, Michel Jarjourās āsystem is systeming.ā From hosting a radio show to directing CU GOLD to peer mentoring for both theĢżMiramontes Arts and Sciences Program (MASP) and the math department, not to mention responding to incidents around the clock as an RA and much, much more, it is fair to wonder if Jarjour sleeps at all. Here are just a few of the things that work for him:
ĢżĢżGiving yourself grace
Jarjour stresses that comparison is unproductive: āDonāt compare yourself to me, and the reason I say that is because we all have different limitations. We all have our limits. We all have our aspirations, goals, values, etc., and that is a huge determinant on what you should be doing and how much you should be doing.ā
ĢżĢżGoogle Calendar
āPeople look at my Google Calendar and have a heart attack,ā says Jarjour, and, yes, his Google Calendar is an explosion of overlapping color at seemingly all available hours of every single day, but itās a system, itās reliable and it works for him.Ģż
āItās even like, if I literally just need to shoot [someone] an email, I will put it in my Google Calendar. [If] I need to call someone, put it in my Google Calendar⦠I have every single thing that I can possibly need to know in that Google Calendar, so that way, Iām always on top of it.ā
ĢżĢżANDing
āANDing is something that ĪŽĀėŹÓʵ actually taught me,ā says Jarjour. āThe whole concept of ANDing is that you literally take two things, or a couple of things that youāre passionate about, and you bridge the gap between those two. So, for me, thatās neuroscience slash medicine and sports, and thatās why I ANDed them together.āĢż
Jarjour says that many people are already ANDing subconsciously, but finds āwhen you make it a known thing, you can actually go and seek it a little bit more. . . . Now I know that I can go do these things on a more consistent basis, and itās allowed me to combine so many of my fields of study, my interests [and] my hobbies.ā
ĢżĢżFinding your āThing,ā finding a community
For Jarjour, training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is the key to managing his busy lifestyle. He urges others to find the āThingā that makes it all worth it, one that is tailored to each individualās personal interests. With so many ways to get involved, Jarjour says it would be impossible for him to champion a single program above the rest. Regardless, whether itās all things media, music and entertainment at Radio 1190, or what he describes as āthe most amazing, tight-knit community Iāve ever been a part of in CU GOLD,ā Jarjour remains adamant that mental health flourishes when individuals actively engage with their own communities, pursue personal interests and, as he puts it, find their Thing.
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