Mental Skills Training: Staying in the Present.
Being able to stay in the present is a skill that most elite athletes develop and have to use on a regular basis. To sum up breifly what staying in the present is, I will say this, staying in the present means focusing one what you are trying to achieve right now. There is no fear, no worrying, no dwelling on past mistakes, only focusing on trying to achieve your objective right now. That can be a specific skill that you are working on or a pitch of a golf shot or shooting a free throw.
Another aspect to staying in the present is blocking out interference when it sneaks in. Interference can be a number of things, worrying about the next play or perhaps winning the game, or dwelling on something that you did wrong or a mistake. These forms of interference can sneak in at any time during a competition. Interference can also be external, perhaps thinking about stress at home, school or work, just life in general can be a form of interference unless you learn how to stay in the present.
Now there has been a lot of talk about tiger woods lately and how will he play during this masters tournament. I will just share how I feel about the matter, tiger is a great athlete, who is also human and makes mistakes, but many have been saying that he will not be able to perform well because of the distraction from the media about how the public is treating or viewing tiger, but the fact of the matter is, tiger is a great athlete and he was very good at performing at a high level when he had this big secret about is lifestyle that he was keeping from everybody. Now everybody knows about it, still the same situation, if he stays in the present he will perform very well. Elite athletes who know how to use the skill staying in the present they are very good at compartmentalizing their life. In tigers case, when he is on the golf course he in on the golf course only focusing on hitting the next shot. He does not let interference sneak in, he doesn’t worry about poor previous and he is not worried about how he will put if he is not on the green. Only the next shot. His life is his life but off the golf course.
This is a tremendous skill to develop that will help you perform at a very high level, because you are able to maintain focus on your objective and not worrying or being afraid or distracted by other aspects of life. Tiger is very good about staying in the present even when he was trying to fix his life after everything hit the fan, he stepped away from golf for a minute and then fixed his life to the point that when he stepped on the golf course he would perform well.
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Determination in the face of adversity
July 15, 2010 - 9:00 am
Tags: Confidence, Dr. Craig Manning, fearless mind book, high performance, Overcoming Adversity, performance enhancment
Posted in Confidence, Focus, Overcoming Adversity | No Comments
I had an unfortunate experience a couple of days ago. The funny thing is I just blogged not long ago about how high performing individuals seem to focus their energy on what they can do and don’t appear to waste energy on what they can’t do or on judging others. They are busy working hard [...]
Young Phenom stays Calm amid Hype
July 14, 2010 - 9:00 am
Tags: adversity, alanta braves, baseball, Confidence, confident athletes, Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, high performance, jason heyward, Mental Skills, Mental skills journal, Mental Skills Training, Mental Skills training sports, Mentall skill sets, Overcoming Adversity, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, psychological skills training, psychology of athletes, psychology of sports, psychology sports, Sport Psych, sports psychology
Posted in Confidence, Focus, Overcoming Adversity | No Comments
In the modern era, sports have become a lot more then a recreational past-time. The pressure to perform can be very intense. The stakes have gotten so high in specific arena’s that individuals will do almost anything to get an edge. A side effect that often comes from individuals dealing with large amounts of stress [...]
Another form of Interference-homesickness (Part 2)
July 13, 2010 - 9:00 am
Tags: Confidence, Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, Focus, high performance, homesickness, Mental Skills, Mental skills journal, Mental Skills Training, Mental Skills training sports, Mentall skill sets, Overcoming Adversity, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, psychological skills training, psychology of athletes, psychology of sports, psychology sport, psychology sports, Psychology Sports Training, Sport Psych, sports confidence, sports psychology, the fearless mind
Posted in Focus, high performance | No Comments
Homesickness has a couple of effects on our performance. First, homesickness directs our focus to what we don’t have in our lives, namely our family, friends, familiar environment etc. This unfamiliarity creates a feeling of a lack of control. Whenever we don’t feel like we have control anxiety goes up and we start to approach [...]
Another form of Interference-homesickness
July 12, 2010 - 9:00 am
Tags: confident athletes, Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, high performance, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, psychology of athletes, sports psychology, the fearless mind
Posted in Focus, high performance | 2 Comments
Obviously achieving high performance is not solely about just the physical components of whatever it is that we do. In fact, the interference that takes our focus away from what we need to do, what we CAN DO often comes from directions we least expect, and sometimes from bizarre directions.
He is an example, quiet a [...]
Conclusion to the Barry Zito article (Part 3)
July 10, 2010 - 9:00 am
Tags: Barry Zito, baseb, baseball, Confidence, confident athletes, Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, fearless mind book, high performance, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, psychological skills training, psychology of athletes, Sport Psych, sports psychology
Posted in Confidence, Focus, Overcoming Adversity, high performance | No Comments
After talking about the root of his problem which is summarized best as he was setting himself up for failure with the goals and expectations he was putting on himself. He talked about hitting rock bottom. He said “I almost took it too seriously instead of just playing baseball.” When we are in an interference [...]
The Barry Zito article (Part 2)
July 9, 2010 - 6:00 am
Tags: Barry Zito, baseball, Confidence, confident athletes, Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, Focus, high performance, Mental Skills, Mental skills journal, Mental Skills Training, Mental Skills training sports, Mentall skill sets, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, psychological skills training, psychology of athletes, psychology sport, Psychology Sports Training, san fransico giants, Sport Psych, sports confidence, sports psychology, staying in the present
Posted in Focus | 1 Comment
Barry then said “I was trying to control things that I couldn’t control—like what the batter would do. It was frustrating, to say the least. Now I know I can control only how I prepare for a game and how I throw the baseball. However hitters react to it, I have to just forget and [...]
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July 8, 2010 - 8:58 am
Tags: Barry Zito, baseball, can do mentality, Confidence, confident athletes, Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, Focus, high performance, Learn from the best, Mental Skills, Mental skills journal, Mental Skills Training, Mental Skills training sports, Mentall skill sets, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, psychology of athletes, psychology sport, Psychology Sports Training, san fransico giants, Sport Psych, sports confidence, sports psychology, staying in the present, thinking the wrong way
Posted in Focus | No Comments
In the June 11th issue of Sporting News magazine there is an article about Barry Zito, a pitcher for the San Francisco Giants in major league baseball. The article is the perfect example of what happens to our performance when we start thinking the wrong way. Meaning what happens when we allow interference to enter [...]
Fatigue is toxic to maintaining high levels of performance
July 7, 2010 - 11:29 am
Tags: Confidence, Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, Fatigue, Focus, high performance, Mental Skills, Mental skills journal, Mental Skills Training, Mental Skills training sports, Mentall skill sets, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, psychological skills training, psychology of athletes, psychology of sports, psychology sport, psychology sports, Psychology Sports Training, Sport Psych, sports psychology
Posted in Fatigue, high performance | No Comments
I had another post ready to go today, or at least I was close to having it ready to go when I felt prompted to go in another direction. I think the post today follows nicely off of yesterdays.
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Observation of High Performing Individuals
July 6, 2010 - 7:56 pm
Tags: Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, Focus, high performance, high performing individuals, Mental Skills, Mental skills journal, Mental Skills Training, Mental Skills training sports, Mentall skill sets, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, psychological skills training, psychology of athletes, psychology of sports, psychology sports, Sport Psych, sports psychology
Posted in Focus, high performance | No Comments
High performance individuals spend their energy focusing on what they CAN DO. They spend very little if any time on putting others down. The reason I say very little, even the highest performing amongst us at times will “stick it” to there greatest rivals or adversaries at times. This lapse in focus from high performing [...]
Differences between practice and match play (Part 1)
July 5, 2010 - 4:00 pm
Tags: adversity, Confidence, confident athletes, Craig L Manning, craig manning, Dr. Craig Manning, fearless mind book, high performance, Match Play, Mental Skills, Mental skills journal, Mental Skills Training, Mental Skills training sports, Mentall skill sets, performance journal, Performance Journal Training, Practice, psychological skills training, psychology of athletes, psychology of sports, psychology sport, psychology sports, Psychology Sports Training, Sport Psych, sports confidence, sports psychology, Tennis
Posted in Confidence, Focus, Overcoming Adversity | No Comments
The difference between practice and match play for so many is a matter of time management. For example I had a tennis player a while back that was very talented and played extremely well in practice. She was close to the best player on our team in practice. But under pressure during match play—a different [...]
