I think this gave me a stroke...lolTo do it, overlearn a skill consciously then consciously overlearn how to do that subconsciously.
I think this gave me a stroke...lolTo do it, overlearn a skill consciously then consciously overlearn how to do that subconsciously.
Interesting... see I don't connect the visual focus on a ball to a subconcious action, unless you want to consider calling on memory a subconcious action. Which I guess it most certainly could be. I don't understand how the calling of memory works.
My goal is to not be in a subconcious state when I play the game. Not sure if that's even possible, and I'm fairly sure you consider that the opposite of what anyone should want. However I would greatly prefer to hold complete concious control over my actions. Case in point, and back to the original post. My eyes would dart rapidly back and forth from CB to OB. I considered that a subconcious effort to continually update shot/alignment data. Maybe I'm wrong, maybe I'm right. I won't pretend to have a firm handly on the subconcious. However when I became aware of that process I began to doubt my aim. Since then I have taken the steps mentioned in the first post to pull that subconcious darting of my eyes into concious control wherein a force focus on the OB.
If I understand the relationship correctly. Eventually my forced focus, will just become 'normal' focus and my subconcious will simply adopt the methodology.
There are countless activities that benefit from subconcious control over processes. Most of which I would consider anything that relies on reaction time. I can't think of a single aspect of pool that I would prefer to relinquish concious control over.
Gotcha... I like to think I have concious control over the activity of aiming. However just believing it doesn't make it a reality.Looking or focusing on the cb or the ob (or wherever) is 100% conscious effort. Thinking about position, planning a strategy, visualizing shots and outcomes is also 100% conscious effort. These things will also require conscious effort.
What you do with all of this visual and mental data, however (as far as performance goes), is primarily a subconscious process.
...and we've circled back to my first post. I, for some reason either trained or allowed my subconcious to control my eyes in what my concious mind seemed haphazard. It really wasn't until I started digging into my game that I discovered this habit. However once discovered, the subconcious eye movement wrecked havoc on my confidence. Hence my experiment and query to ball focus.Once you've developed a skill or a talent or a habit, the conscious mind hands the performance of that task over to the subconscious.
This is so the conscious mind can be free to do other things without having to micromanage the actual performance of the task.
Gotcha... I like to think I have concious control over the activity of aiming. However just believing it doesn't make it a reality.
...and we've circled back to my first post. I, for some reason either trained or allowed my subconcious to control my eyes in what my concious mind seemed haphazard. It really wasn't until I started digging into my game that I discovered this habit. However once discovered, the subconcious eye movement wrecked havoc on my confidence. Hence my experiment and query to ball focus.
Whew... took a while to get back to the root of it all...lol
...and that's the rub. I was a fairly decent shot with the haphazard eye darting. Dare I say, it didn't seem to effect me. Whether it was a bad thing or not I really can't say. I certainly wasn't upset with my success rate.Lol....yep... that's the bad side of subconscious programming through repetition: We can easily create bad habits or lazy routines that screw with our conscious awareness of what needs to happen.
What does "overlearn" mean?I had an old golf cassette tape where the guy explained it as:
"Consciously playing subconscious (pool)."
To do it, overlearn a skill consciously then consciously overlearn how to do that subconsciously.
Then consciously overlearn how to integrate that new skill with the rest of your shot and then overlearn how to do that subconsciously. whew!
It sounded easier when I heard it than it does when I type it.
Jeff Livingston
...and that's the rub. I was a fairly decent shot with the haphazard eye darting. Dare I say, it didn't seem to effect me. Whether it was a bad thing or not I really can't say. I certainly wasn't upset with my success rate.
I'm still forcing the focus at this point and at times it still feels (<-there's that word) odd. Starting to become habit though. Not sure if it will make any difference at all, but here's hoping.![]()
This is reminiscent of the quiet eye research....and that's the rub. I was a fairly decent shot with the haphazard eye darting. Dare I say, it didn't seem to effect me. Whether it was a bad thing or not I really can't say. I certainly wasn't upset with my success rate.
I'm still forcing the focus at this point and at times it still feels (<-there's that word) odd. Starting to become habit though. Not sure if it will make any difference at all, but here's hoping.![]()
Nothing wrong with building new neural pathways, even if you eventually decide to go back to your old method, it will still improve your overall game. I think to get better at pool, you need practice, but just as important, you need to keep learning new aspects of the game, no matter how minute. If you're not learning, it leads to boredom, at which point pool is no longer fun. I think the main difference between pool players and people who play pool is the level of enjoyment they get from learning and mastery....and that's the rub. I was a fairly decent shot with the haphazard eye darting. Dare I say, it didn't seem to effect me. Whether it was a bad thing or not I really can't say. I certainly wasn't upset with my success rate.
I'm still forcing the focus at this point and at times it still feels (<-there's that word) odd. Starting to become habit though. Not sure if it will make any difference at all, but here's hoping.![]()
What does "overlearn" mean?
pj
chgo
What does "overlearn" mean?
My example of 'overlearn' would be my extreme efforts toward learning to hold visual focus on the OB. I'm still currently looking at nothing but the OB for several feathers of my cue before pulling the trigger on the shot. Eventually the goal is to only hold it from back stroke pause to follow through. I'm "overlearning" the focus in an effort to fast track the desired results.It means go anal with whatever you're trying to learn. That's how I took it.
Slow down, go fully conscious, think of every move in detail, analyze, re-do, re-analyze, etc. etc. until you're so sick of it, the next time you do it, you don't even know how or what you did but you did it well.
I was reminded of the distinction between learning to make a shot and learning to the point you can’t miss the shot.My example of 'overlearn' would be my extreme efforts toward learning to hold visual focus on the OB. I'm still currently looking at nothing but the OB for several feathers of my cue before pulling the trigger on the shot. Eventually the goal is to only hold it from back stroke pause to follow through. I'm "overlearning" the focus in an effort to fast track the desired results.
I think that makes sense
I think semantics and situational differences in meaning are in play here.However I would greatly prefer to hold complete concious control over my actions.
Oh I have zero doubt of that...lolI think semantics and situational differences in meaning are in play here.
Rather than a curtain, it’s a doorway, a liminal threshold through which sensory awareness comes and goes.I'd rather actively process each step then have it computated behind the subconscious curtain.
........
I guess what I prefer is what you were talking about earlier. Wherein we can pull subconscious processes into the conscious. From there I'd want to monitor the process, make any adjustments, and reboot the subconscious. So to speak...