it is accepted scientific truth
Timmy,
This is indeed accepted scientific truth. That means the experts in the field believe this to be the truth. Something else may be accepted truth a hundred or two hundred years from now but this is current theory. More importantly, it is an excellent working theory.
If I'm down on a shot where the cue ball is a natural scratch, I can focus on "don't scratch, don't scratch, don't scratch" and all too often do exactly what I don't want to do. I can also mentally picture, verbalize in my mind, and focus on the cue ball hitting four inches from the corner pocket and going two rails out to near center of the table. It usually happens just that way. It isn't very effective for me to focus on not doing something, much more effective for me to focus on doing something.
It doesn't matter to us if the scientific theory is dead wrong if we get the results we need. The most knowledgeable man I knew in practical application in his field had about a third grade education. He believed in witchcraft and the effects of the moon on both the earth and all animals. I was sometimes pretty sure that when he told me to do something or not do something that his underlying belief of why I should do things that way might be wrong but what he actually told me to do would be spot on. He was an old farmer that worked at a state university lab farm. He was proven right over the PhD's an embarrassing number of times in practical matters.
Research has proven that if the absolute statement you focus on, basically the sentence stripped of it's modifiers, is an unwanted action you are more likely to get that result than if you focus on nothing at all or positive statements. Some research should turn up supporting documentation if you are interested, I delved into this years ago and have long since forgotten my sources and the sources they referenced.
Hu
What do you base that on? It sounds like a great philosophy, but to pass it off as a scientific truth.... sheesh!! I don't suppose it matters, if it helps your game![]()
Timmy,
This is indeed accepted scientific truth. That means the experts in the field believe this to be the truth. Something else may be accepted truth a hundred or two hundred years from now but this is current theory. More importantly, it is an excellent working theory.
If I'm down on a shot where the cue ball is a natural scratch, I can focus on "don't scratch, don't scratch, don't scratch" and all too often do exactly what I don't want to do. I can also mentally picture, verbalize in my mind, and focus on the cue ball hitting four inches from the corner pocket and going two rails out to near center of the table. It usually happens just that way. It isn't very effective for me to focus on not doing something, much more effective for me to focus on doing something.
It doesn't matter to us if the scientific theory is dead wrong if we get the results we need. The most knowledgeable man I knew in practical application in his field had about a third grade education. He believed in witchcraft and the effects of the moon on both the earth and all animals. I was sometimes pretty sure that when he told me to do something or not do something that his underlying belief of why I should do things that way might be wrong but what he actually told me to do would be spot on. He was an old farmer that worked at a state university lab farm. He was proven right over the PhD's an embarrassing number of times in practical matters.
Research has proven that if the absolute statement you focus on, basically the sentence stripped of it's modifiers, is an unwanted action you are more likely to get that result than if you focus on nothing at all or positive statements. Some research should turn up supporting documentation if you are interested, I delved into this years ago and have long since forgotten my sources and the sources they referenced.
Hu