speden
Active member
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2008
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- 913
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I was getting quite frustrated in that I had plateaued at a certain level, which was just a bit below a level that I had been at a few years prior (when I was playing a bunch more) and I started to mentally obsess about a whole host of the the mechanics of my swing, and I was getting worse
Then one day I just kind of stopped worrying about 100 minor details at once as I was trying to swing the club and just started playing. I got better with the same amount of practice as before.
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I think there's some science behind this. Physical skills are primarily controlled by subconscious parts of the brain. As you practice, the subconscious parts of the brain are being trained to perform the task better, even though the conscious mind has the illusion that it's controlling everything.
So if the conscious mind attempts to micromanage a physical activity, it's actually not designed for it and introduces lag and conflicting instructions into the process, like trying to play an internet game on a slow connection. So naturally you end up performing worse. This is what happens when a coach ices a kicker by calling a time out. The kicker would normally let the efficient subconscious processes handle the kicking mechanics, but when he thinks about how important the kick is, his conscious mind tries to step in to control the mechanics and then the kick is missed.