Jitters or nerves

There’s some interesting replies here, if for nothing than to see how different people perceive things. We’re human, and the adrenaline/nerves you feel are a natural physiological response in situations that are of importance to you. Your bodies way of getting you prepared for whatever that is.

The key to dealing with it is perception. In the case of this game, I’ve read posts here that speak of “pressure”. I don’t really believe in pressure, or the assertion that others, or a situation, can “apply pressure you”. Pressure only exists where it is created, nurtured and fed, in your own mind. Your opponent, or certain situations, can’t “apply it to you”. It is you who creates it, by your perception of your opponent or a particular situation.

If you put in the time, the work, play and compete regularly, then you have done what is required to have the skills to play this game. In your practice, you learn your strengths, your weaknesses. If there is a shot that you consistently make in practice 9, or 10 out of 10 tries and you do it with no thought at all, then it is, or it should be the same in competition.

So when competing, when faced with this shot, to say, win a tournament, or to close out a set in a gambling matchup, why do some feel what is referred to as “pressure”?
The shot is exactly the same as it is in practice, where you feel no pressure. So why do you feel “pressure/nerves” in those pinnacle moments in competition? It’s that you are placing an importance on this shot in those situations that is not present in your practice sessions. The shot is the same, it’s your perception that is different. That change in perception, by placing that importance on it, is what causes you to “create” or give birth to “pressure, those nerves you feel”.

The best way to overcome this is mindfulness, being present in the moment and focusing on the process, instead of the outcome. Breathing helps with this tremendously, as does a solid PSR, the ritual of a PSR is something that can be relied upon in those moments to keep your mind focused on the process instead of the outcome.
 
Fight or Flight.
Google said:
The fight or flight response is an automatic physical and psychological reaction to a perceived threat that prepares the body to either confront the danger ("fight") or run away from it ("flight"). It's a survival mechanism triggered by hormones like adrenaline.
Something that I see in my posture. My balance needs to be aggressive. Leaning into the shot. (The fight) Just like striding into the pitch in baseball. 🤷‍♂️
The Tiger on the front is easy knowing I have the Jack Rabbit for plan B. 🤷‍♂️
A favorite comment; "The last fight I was in, I won by 20 yards." 🤷‍♂️
A martial art wisdom is the mindset. Going into battle with the "die with honor" mindset relieves my pressure. My opponent seeing that expressed in Body Language is one thing. Playing to my best then makes it magnified.
Magical Magni fi sense is the name I lay on the Nirvana scale.
Be Here Now
Performance of a Magical feat early can get free shots later. The tighten of the opponent is a huge factor.
 
There’s some interesting replies here, if for nothing than to see how different people perceive things. We’re human, and the adrenaline/nerves you feel are a natural physiological response in situations that are of importance to you. Your bodies way of getting you prepared for whatever that is.

The key to dealing with it is perception. In the case of this game, I’ve read posts here that speak of “pressure”. I don’t really believe in pressure, or the assertion that others, or a situation, can “apply pressure you”. Pressure only exists where it is created, nurtured and fed, in your own mind. Your opponent, or certain situations, can’t “apply it to you”. It is you who creates it, by your perception of your opponent or a particular situation.

If you put in the time, the work, play and compete regularly, then you have done what is required to have the skills to play this game. In your practice, you learn your strengths, your weaknesses. If there is a shot that you consistently make in practice 9, or 10 out of 10 tries and you do it with no thought at all, then it is, or it should be the same in competition.

So when competing, when faced with this shot, to say, win a tournament, or to close out a set in a gambling matchup, why do some feel what is referred to as “pressure”?
The shot is exactly the same as it is in practice, where you feel no pressure. So why do you feel “pressure/nerves” in those pinnacle moments in competition? It’s that you are placing an importance on this shot in those situations that is not present in your practice sessions. The shot is the same, it’s your perception that is different. That change in perception, by placing that importance on it, is what causes you to “create” or give birth to “pressure, those nerves you feel”.

The best way to overcome this is mindfulness, being present in the moment and focusing on the process, instead of the outcome. Breathing helps with this tremendously, as does a solid PSR, the ritual of a PSR is something that can be relied upon in those moments to keep your mind focused on the process instead of the outcome.
Great post, I read a book along time ago where the author said " the eight ball doesn't know it's the eight ball" I think this sums up your post quite well , as for me, I have started using a Full Shot Routine, it is the entire PSR but adding the only thing you can control on a shot, making sure the cue stays on the intended shot line all the way to the end of the follow through, I noticed that I had a tendency to stroke to the ball instead of through the ball and I would pull the cue back, needless to say my draw stroke was non existent launch the cue ball off the table to over drawn depending on how far my follow through was, by focusing on a good natural follow through down the entire shot line has really helped me in every shot that I take and I am developing a consistency I've never had before, my biggest problem now is having the discipline to follow the routine on every shot because you know when you think this shot is easy, it is .... until you miss it, I guess I need a new cue.......
 
Do you guys get the jitters or nervous playing in tournaments? I can't seem to shake them and play like crap. Lately I've been playing good enough and when I get in a tournament I suck. How do you cope if you cope and how do you do it? I know it's not easy.
I think you have to find a way to practice under the same conditions. One poster said trying to set your high run at straight pool can help, and I agree! I play the best player in my state for $50 sets. I was shaking during our first few sessions, but now I'm perfectly comfortable playing great players! Since I started doing that, I've played streamed matches against Styer, Bergman, Henderson, Matlock, Deuell, and some Euro-champs. I felt comfortable during all of those matches, and I 100% think it's because of my "practice".
 
Do you guys get the jitters or nervous playing in tournaments? I can't seem to shake them and play like crap. Lately I've been playing good enough and when I get in a tournament I suck. How do you cope if you cope and how do you do it? I know it's not easy.
Nerves naturally trigger adrenaline—and that’s not a bad thing. Instead of resisting it, anticipate the surge and use it to your advantage. Adrenaline can sharpen your focus and help you enter the zone where your best performance lives.

Just be aware: adrenaline often leads to stroking or hitting harder than usual. To stay in control, shorten your bridge and choke up slightly on your grip. These small adjustments help maintain precision and keep your mechanics steady under pressure.
 
Thanks for all the replies/suggestions and believe me I'm paying attention! Today was my best at bat sofar and boy it felt good. I felt great at the table and played about 50% and beat the old guy pretty handily. I was dialed in,my break was working and playing on new cloth was no problem other than a few draw shots that got away on me.
 
Ah the Natural adrenaline. Stay on the natch. I have witnessed the precision some could produce with chemicals assistance. They are long gone now. 🤷‍♂️
Uh oh a story 😉
It was a $10 ring game at 3 handed , when the Samoan (Big Samoan is re dun dent())
Anyway, it was My break when he entered. His aggressive presentation and Mean Assed look to Me.......Inspired me to break and run. Just because I wanted to see it again. He did it again and so did I. He dropped the look as he racked again. The other 2 players apreciated his free money. Well prospect of it. 🤷‍♂️
Gotta love Prospecting. 😉

Can't find the post I wanted to respond to but this will do for a start. Samoans are monsters! Big, mean, and their toughness isn't even on the human scale. There have been a few in the NFL but I always thought if I were a NFL coach I would go to Samoa for my entire front line!

First I have to tell you, you have enough great posts in this thread to be the framework for a book. Fantastic stuff!

Naturally I'll comment about the one thing I disagree with.(grin) Somewhere you said something about basically a fight until I die attitude. That I disagree with. Some general I believe it was said the idea wasn't to die for your country but to make the other son of a bitch die for his! Sounds like Patton but I don't remember. Anyway, that is always my idea going into battle of any kind. I might be satisfied with second place after the smoke clears but before the battle, during the battle, no second place only a first place loser! I came to win.

One of my doctor's was a pro tennis player. He was interested in shooting pistols. I mentored him early on, then he trained with some of the best in the country. I was old enough to be on the downhill slide and he was treating me for injuries so he had a good idea of the shape I was in. To his frustration it didn't matter what kind of matches we shot, he couldn't beat me! A handful of times he thought he had me going into a match only to come out the other side busted and disgusted.

One quiet weekday at the range we were the only two on the line. I was using the steel plate gun I had built complete with compensator and optic sight, the only thing I had been shooting for over six months. He had been training with the very best, shooting with iron sights, no compensator. As I walked by behind him he stopped me to try his gun. This was a five inch .45 with full house IPSC loads before the last couple of reductions. No compensator, no optics.

I saw the smirk on his face, he was going to finally show me up. He was practicing mostly speed, shooting at nine inch paper plates at ten yards. Awkward to come up from the ready position when used to drawing but his gun didn't fit my holster. I came up from low ready and started. His front sight was serrated and I never blinked or lost sight of the serrations running the fifteen or sixteen shots out of the magazine. The front sight would come up out of the notch of the rear sight, as it settled I would have white paper behind it. Before the front sight stopped coming down I would break a shot as it came level with the rear sight. Ran the gun empty like that in four or five seconds. He looked, "Oh, but there are a couple holes beside the plate in the target backing."

I didn't even look up from picking up brass. "Go count the holes in the plate." He did and came back past me muttering "God damn somebody that can shoot iron sights." The holes had been in the backer before I started. The old dog was still the big dog, nevermind that he was an inches taller athlete. I had the mojo on him and he never did beat me although he had his share of second places behind me!(grin)

I don't come to go down in an honorable or even glorious defeat, I come to win. Go to a world class event and there are ten or twelve people, maybe more, that are there to win. Those are who you have to beat, you can forget about the people that think there are one or two people there they can't beat. My experience is that these people will place behind everybody that is really trying for first place.

I went to a benchrest invitational. People from all over the nation, a few from Europe and other places. I hadn't been shooting long and just looking at 120 of the best was a bit intimidating. Then I took my usual stroll around the field of competitors. Few were willing to admit they were there to win, maybe thirty. I knew barring something unusual I could forget the other ninety people. I had often beaten thirty people at one thing or another over the years, thirty was a number I could deal with.

Stay away from those ninety people by the way. Hang with the people there to win or stay alone. A winning attitude is contagious, so is a losing attitude!

Hu
 
Do you guys get the jitters or nervous playing in tournaments? I can't seem to shake them and play like crap. Lately I've been playing good enough and when I get in a tournament I suck. How do you cope if you cope and how do you do it? I know it's not easy.
Immersion therapy. Play and compete at every opportunity (matching up or tournaments). No more funsies. You'll get comfortable in battle.
 
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