Gymnastics Mental Blocks and
Performance Anxiety
What if football players were judged as they crossed
the goal line and had points deducted for less than perfect
form? I wonder how many baseball player's bodies would
last past their teens if their training included getting
beaned by pitches on a regular basis. The typical golf pro's
career can easily extend into his/her 60's. Gymnasts' bodies
are usually done by their 20's.
Gymnastics has got to be one of the most mentally-demanding
sports there is. How many other sports involve pushing your
physical limits to the brink while simultaneously going
directly against your genetic programming to not all and to
survive the effects of gravity? And you have to do all of
this under a very subjective, sometimes even
political scoring system that does not have instant replay.
It is normal and natural for us humans to be afraid to fall.
This response mechanism is regulated by
the unconscious mind and comes up in the form of a feeling or
maybe a voice of warning. The gymnast can sometimes overcome
this through sheer willpower and desire. She can
also re-train the unconscious mind through a process
of desensitization; that is, falling over and over and
surviving withut serious injury.
Becoming mentally tough to compete in
gymnastics is to be able to accomplish that and it
requires a total rapport between your conscious mind and
your unconscious mind. Some athletes are either gifted or
have situations in their life and training that
are conducive to having this happen normally and
naturally. Others, have to continually be on guard and
train their mind as much as their body.
This "rapport" means that your unconscious
mind and your desires to compete and
win must be in agreement. When you have negative self talk
and fears and doubts about your ability, that is your
unconscious mind letting you know that you are going
against your own stored values and programs. Some of those
are learned and some of those are inborn. When you get a
mental block about a new skill, that's your unconscious
mind kicking into gear and "protecting" you from throwing your
body into dangerous situations.
You can talk about your fears and mental blocks until
you're blue in the face but none of that will have
any effect if it doesn't reach the unconscious level of
your mind. Your unconscious mind is the domain of emotions and
will always win out over willpower.
Hypnosis is the most effective way to
achieve that communication
Performance anxiety happens because of self doubt and this
comes from past mistakes or poor performances.
I always teach my athletes that they must have selective
amnesia about those performances. The margins
between winning and losing in gymnastics are so slim here
and happen in fractions of a second that this
sport can easily take it's toll on the
psyche. Gymnasts are even more susceptible to this
since they are usually in the midst of huge personal change in
their younger years. Perceived failures in life and at the gym
get stored and re-triggered at the wrong times and wrong
places.
Therefore, emotional mastery and mental toughness is even
more important in gymnastics than most sports. Those perceived
"failures" have to be cleared or neutralized in the unconscious
memory banks. The unconscious always seeks to reinforce what it
"knows" to be true. You want it to repeat past successes and
learn from every lesser performance so as to improve.
Correct perceptions stored in the unconscious is the goal
here.
In and out of hypnosis, together we will:
- Clear the mental baggage
- Associate signals to trigger an optimal
performance state
- Teach your unconscious mind that these skills are safe
and desirable
- Create neural pathways that lead the thoughts to
confidence
- Access the consistency mechanism
- Discover how to purposely find the zone state
You will learn much more than how to win. You get
personal development that includes life-time skills to be used
in relationships, academics and simply creating more happiness
and joy in your life. The teen and pre-teen years
are often the most difficult period of adjustment we will ever
make in life. Throw in the pressures of training, body
image, and internal and external expectations for winning
and it's a recipe for a lot of stress.
Give me a call or email me to get started on becoming
mentally tough for gymnastics...and life
425-457-7777
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