my performance in battle is a reflection of how I train.
I work very hard on the practice table, no one has ever suggested that I need to work harder..
best advice I received was from randy, he said practice should not be a form of punishment. This is when I stopped dreading practice and began craving it. I worked even harder because I got pleasure from the repetition and consumed the feedback with an addiction.
Fast forward several years about 5 im a stronger player and I'm stuck. I need to do more or do something different except I can't create more time in my life. So I fall for the be more productive at the practice table trap. Work smarter not harder hustle. This year I have tried to do so much bull shit that it has become torture and I'm going through withdrawals without the feedback.
Form follows function and I need to trust that I am doing what I need to do in training based on what I see when I'm in competition.
training is the process and my performance in competition is the results.. results is pure feedback.
I must have a direct connection between the process and the results so I keep a notebook and record my training and document the results.
I have certain drills and shots that produce positive results.
these drills are very basic and repetitious. This leads to the desire for something new and opens me up to a false belief of mastery.
I've spent last 2 months with other people in my head and I am now lost.
I have no training process and get no feedback from competition other than score. My practice is chaotic form of this and that and to a certain extent not even practice.
I'm going back to what works, I'm going back to the process so I can reconnect with the feedback.
I do this I get that.
I've decided the word results needs to be replaced with the word feedback. I hear people say be process minded not result oriented.
I say be feedback minded and because I believe form follows function the process naturally becomes more productive.
I am going back to my training.
There is no easy path no short cuts you can suffer from the effort required to get better or you can find pleasure in the effort.
Hike your own hike...
I work very hard on the practice table, no one has ever suggested that I need to work harder..
best advice I received was from randy, he said practice should not be a form of punishment. This is when I stopped dreading practice and began craving it. I worked even harder because I got pleasure from the repetition and consumed the feedback with an addiction.
Fast forward several years about 5 im a stronger player and I'm stuck. I need to do more or do something different except I can't create more time in my life. So I fall for the be more productive at the practice table trap. Work smarter not harder hustle. This year I have tried to do so much bull shit that it has become torture and I'm going through withdrawals without the feedback.
Form follows function and I need to trust that I am doing what I need to do in training based on what I see when I'm in competition.
training is the process and my performance in competition is the results.. results is pure feedback.
I must have a direct connection between the process and the results so I keep a notebook and record my training and document the results.
I have certain drills and shots that produce positive results.
these drills are very basic and repetitious. This leads to the desire for something new and opens me up to a false belief of mastery.
I've spent last 2 months with other people in my head and I am now lost.
I have no training process and get no feedback from competition other than score. My practice is chaotic form of this and that and to a certain extent not even practice.
I'm going back to what works, I'm going back to the process so I can reconnect with the feedback.
I do this I get that.
I've decided the word results needs to be replaced with the word feedback. I hear people say be process minded not result oriented.
I say be feedback minded and because I believe form follows function the process naturally becomes more productive.
I am going back to my training.
There is no easy path no short cuts you can suffer from the effort required to get better or you can find pleasure in the effort.
Hike your own hike...
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