Play Better by Thinking Better
This article article is based on the proven premise that the
body responds to the thoughts that are going through your mind.
The major reason that golf is difficult to learn is that
the ball sits still and it gives you time to think. Other sports where a ball
is involved, such as tennis and baseball the ball is in motion and you simply
react to it. A batter in baseball does
not make a conscious decision to swing the bat. He simply focuses on the ball and
let’s his body react. In golf, the ball sits there waiting for the brain to
decide what to do and when.
This concept is important, even at the beginner level.
The brain says hit the ball and the body responds. The ball may only move a few
feet, but the body was successful. The instructions were to hit the ball –
contact was made. One of the biggest
challenges for a beginner is the desire to help the ball get up in the air
which is impossible.
The brain also only responds to the last thought - sometimes
known as the” little voice”. The brain does not respond well to negatives. The
thought “don’t hit it in the water on the right” will not and cannot produce a
good swing. It produces a negative or defensive swing. The result is never a
good shot. The “little voice” is
negative by default unless you override it with a positive thought. It is essential that you focus on what you
want to happen rather than on what you don’t want to happen. The only good
shots come from positive swing thoughts.
It is much easier to change your golf swing by changing what
you are thinking. You need to examine
what your brain is telling your body to do.
Are there so many thoughts it gets confused? Concentrate on one positive thought. A good instructor or coach will find out what
is going on inside your head. I have
found over the years that the things that need changing are most often things
that the student is trying to do because of bad information. What you believe about how to swing the club
correctly is often what is holding you back.
Learning to swing at the target, rather than the ball
will solve a multitude of swing problems.
Concentrating on trying to control the club at impact will create a
multitude of swing problems.
I always ask my students “What is the one thing you are
taking away from our lesson today?” I
find this necessary because what I think I am saying and what they are hearing me
say are often two very different things.
Just remember that you can only handle one swing thought
at a time and it has to be positive to drown out the “little voice”.
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