I applaud your willingness to experiment with your game if you're playing so well. I purposely edited your quote, because my thoughts have nothing to do with the system you mentioned. Only that you're still willing to experiment with something that could take you away from your success you were experiencing.
I'm far removed from my best game, so messing around doesn't threaten to dishearten me too badly.
Thank you.
It was a hard decision. I played (guessing) about 630 Fargo before I quit for 10 years. When I started playing again I knew I had to break down a lot of systems and rebuild in order to ever have a chance of playing better than that. Or maybe even getting back to that level. And I decided to put up with the frustration right away when I started playing again.
It was tough because I would lose to people I really didn’t think I should and then they would give me advice! It was humbling but I checked my ego and started rebuilding. First I reset my fundamentals with a lesson from Scott Lee and worked through Mark Wilson’s book. Then I spent hours and hours getting my instinctive speed control and aiming back while working on new and better ways to Aim. That is practice time to get used to being in the zone.
sometimes it does feel like I have too much going on in my head but I have multiple, reliable ways to get a read on a shot if I can’t see it right.
Obviously the best way to play is in the zone where you can make anything and put the cue ball,anywhere. But that doesn’t just happen by accident. you have to work on mindset as well to trigger yourself into a good state.
I believe my best pool by far is still ahead of me.