JoeW said:Here is a revised article on hypnosis, what it is, what it can be used for and how it can be used.
JoeW said:ChefJeff: I agree that step three is the best solution. However, seems there is always a however, one way to get to this solution is to make it a habit by changing behavior. Eventually the player will find that using their "walk" leads to better playing and this is reinforced to the point that it becomes a habit. Self talk will engrain the habit as an attitude or a cognitive style that is now, miriculously turned into cognitive change. This technique is used as part of psychotherapy and would work for changing one's appraoch to the game as well.
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chefjeff said:I'm an integrator, so I agree with the multi-faceted approach. My only concern with the behavior first approach is that one might become "addicted" to it and require it to be able to control emotions. This would seem to limit ones abitlities, in the long run, perhaps. Maybe not.
The thinking-about-the-emotion part requires honesty about the situation. Whereas, simply emoting means judgment (he is wrong, I'm right) is involved and, if rationality is not there, these emotions that are not fully integrated with the facts can lead one astray, regardless of physical behavior. This would seem to be a cancer of sorts that needs to be dealt with eventually.
I'm not disagreeing at all with you here. I'm thinking this three step process is a circle and one can start anywhere on the circle one wants...as long as one completes the circle when dealing with emotional control. It may not even matter whether clockwise or counter clockwise is the direction?
Jeff Livingston
whitewolf said:Thanks Joe for you psychogical input. I didnt' have time to read all the articles however....maybe later.
Being a Virgo I sometimes tend to be critical, especially of psychologists since my wife is one (smile). So here goes.
I think these experiments may work for the short run, but what if you are in a 10 hour match. There are too many currents and eddies to rely on emotion.
The walk you mention, in pool, should be associated with rhythm. This is how to play pool - get into a rhythm. And this is the quickist way to go into the zone. To my knowledge, nobody gets into the zone by flitting around the table (roll-eyes). When one practices a certain amount of time should be spent playing the ghost, and practicing your rhythm, emulating just how you would like to play in serious competition.
IMHO, I think one should play pool with no emotion what-so-ever. A killer instinct with even, methodical play is what wins.....not dancing around the table like a fairy. Do you see Holman dancing around the table? Or Ralph? Or Efren? Or anyone for that matter?!!!!! Maybe Vivian, but this may be the reason she chokes so bad in that she lets her emotions take her completely over.
JoeW said:This is a new technique...
deadwhak said:ive noticed i have been throwing my stick around and hurling chalk across the pool room a lot lately...no wonder im playing so bad right now guess i have to be more happy when i miss..at this rate ill be happy a lot!!!
JoeW said:This is a new technique that I tried last night. It is based on my years of experience as a professional psychologist and scientist. The finding is strong enough that I think that it needs its own thread with some of my other articles. First, the trick and then why it works -- and it does work.
You have a way of walking when you are in a really good mood. Maybe it's that John Travolta walk from "Saturday Night Fever." Whatever it is, there is a bounce to your step, a musical rhythm to your walk that simply feels good. Perhaps you need an Ipod plugged into your ear to get in the mood. Whatever your style is, when you get up to shoot, walk to the table with that walk and that rhythm -- I'm in a great mood walk. It will put you in the right frame of mind and then use your usual techniques for staying in that mood while you walk around the table and shoot.
Here is why it works. Many years ago Bib Latanne from Ohio State University among others were trying to determine if your emotions effect your behavior or if your behavior effects your emotions. The scientists gave something like adrenaline to a group of subjects who thought it was orange juice to see its effect on intellectual performance (yeah we are known for sneaky studies like this).
Anyway the pumped up subject is in a waiting room prior to the intellectual performance test. A confederate of the experimenter comes in and sits down next to the subject. In one situation the confederate is angry and makes ugly statements about the experiment, the subject too gets angry as one way of explaining their pumped up system.
In another situation the confederate starts joking around, laughing and throwing paper airplanes at the waste basket. The subject too easily starts laughing and joking around as the explanation for the adrenaline.
There were other conditions to control for possible problems in the study. This study is often cited as one of the better studies in the social sciences and has been replicated many times.
The conclusion is that our emotions follow our behavior. If we act upbeat, our emotions will shift to upbeat. If we act angry, our emotions will become angry. In general, you can change your emotions by changing your behavior.
If you act upbeat, you will get into an upbeat mood and that will improve your game. Now you can see misses for what they are -- a part of the game.
So, I suggest that you give it a serious try, say 15 - 30 minutes of your upbeat walk and personal tempo to get in the right mood for playing pool. From what we know in the experimental sciences it will improve your game.
Pay it forward and it will make everyone's life / and game better.
There is another aspect of this technique. If you fake it until you make it, no one can get you down because your behavior will constantly bring you back to a better state of mind. You enjoy the game for yourself and the other person's behavior does not affect you.
I have been debating with myself about posting some of my other articles about psychology and pool. With the indulgence of the moderators I will place four or five additional posts that are not copyrighted. Some of these articles were written several years ago and are based on a review of the scientific psychological literature as it applies to playing pool.
They are not copyrighted and can be used by anyone for any purpose though it would be polite to cite the source (Joe Waldron, Ph.D., Psychologist, Youngstown State University) if these ideas are used in other texts.
I am not a professional pool player, but I am a professional psychologist (retired) and these ideas may be of use from that perspective. AZB seems the best place to put this information that others can consider an use as needed.
JoeW said:Thank you Robert Raiford. Now I have to go get Loehr's books. I think that it is neat when I re-invent the wheel. It says that an idea I came up with independently has indeed been found to be useful. That is really cool in my thinking.![]()
JoeW said:Thank you Robert Raiford. Now I have to go get Loehr's books. I think that it is neat when I re-invent the wheel. It says that an idea I came up with independently has indeed been found to be useful. That is really cool in my thinking.![]()
Pushout said:"Mental Toughness Training for Sports", Stephen Greene Press, 1986. I read this, and still have it, shortly after reading "The Inner Game of Tennis". Also helpful, "Winning: The Psychology of Competition" by Stuart H. Walker, 1980. W. W. Norton.