Can you make another drawing for the "feel method" and how it's determined, visualized, and linked up between the two balls? What is the fail safe part of it that makes it better to use than one of the above?
Uh.....no. That's as silly as asking someone to make a drawing that will explain or illustrate how they can drive a car while carry on a conversation or thinking about other things that have nothing to do with driving the car.
Believe it or not, when you consiously repeat the same actions over and over, based on visual input or other sensory input, your brain is being programmed to eventually perform the action without the need of conscious effort. It's an automatic process, and it happens with everyone in any task or skill that is being learned.
This includes aiming pool shots, regardless of what method anyone uses, after enough conscious repetition, conscious fine tuning/adjustments, the process ends up being embedded into the subconscious part of the mind. It becomes automatic. The best anyone can do is explain or show how they learned to it initially, the steps they used that eventually led to the ability to perform automatically without actually having to think about it.
In other words, the best you can do is say, "Here, do this...Stand right here and look there, then there, then lineup here and put you cue in line here, then shoot. It's that simple. Just see and do."
Sure, it's simple to you because you've developed the ability to do it automatically, no longer consciously making any adjustments to make it worj
K. You've done it enough times that those little adjustments eventually became automatic, something you no longer think about. You see, then do. In other words, you consciously privide visual input, which then prompts the subconscious program you so diligently worked to develop. The person you're teaching will have to develop their own subconscious program as well before your instructions materialize into a consistent working method.
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