Concern over gun leads to lockdown (Los Angeles Daily News)
We worked for a few minutes on the practice tee discussing how to simplify his approach. I showed him how to stop over-analyzing and use his natural feel to perform like an athlete, and not a mechanized robot.
We can say the same for your mental game. When you make your performance too complicated by over-thinking or over-analyzing, your body will not respond well.
Simplify Your Mental Game
He liked my approach to make his thought process simple. Although Joe only scored a top 40 that week, but he won his next two events!
Your sports performance is no different. If learning a new backhand or beam routine becomes too complex for the student, no learning happens and nothing gets accomplished.
Have you heard the saying, "paralysis by over analysis? "
The makers of computers have made them simple for us to use (most of the time). If computers were too complex, we would not perform at our peak efficiency.
A few years ago, I was at the Buick Invitational in San Diego working with some golf students. Joe Durant approached me saying he was thinking too much about his preshot preparation.
Mental training should not be complex, but some mental coaches do not abide by this principle. They use psycho-babble and complex terms such as inverted U hypothesis to try to explain concepts that should be easy to understand.
He went on to talk about how he was over-analyzing the final steps in his routine. He was thinking too much about what to do before he executed a shot and could not pull the trigger.
Simplify Your Mental Game
His over-thinking was sabotaging his natural athletic ability.