Touch your nose with your finger and you are coordinating two moving objects in three dimensional space. How do you do that?
I think that “feel aiming” is about gaining experience and allowing the mind to control the phenomena. You cannot tell someone how to ride a bicycle. It is something you have to learn through body learning. All the words won’t do it. However, we can set up aids to assist one learn.
I think it is unfortunate when players do not allow themselves to learn where the front of the cue ball is on every shot. They do not allow themselves to learn to “see” angles nor do they learn from the experience of simply watching how two balls react when various kinds of spin are used.
All of these things require closely observed experiences in which we learn how hand, eye, and muscle interact to produce an outcome. With sufficient experience one can learn to “thread a needle,” see that a shot will or will not go, and can “see” that a particular position can or cannot be obtained.
When playing pool we call it “feel” when riding a bike we call it “balance.” It is all different types of non-verbal body learning, nothing mystical just something that cannot be communicated in words.
No systems player can tell us the exact amount of power, exact cut angle or relative spin they place on a cue ball. The permissible error on some shots is so small that such numbers would have to be related in thousands of an inch, 100th of oz of power. And if they could tell us these things they would not be able to tell us how to calibrate the muscles or determine the relative angles for many shots. Someone stated before. It is all feel.
Joe,
I agree with so much of what you said. There just isnt a mathematical explanation for something you need to be able to feel. For some players they are so far off from it that I feel they need a formula to get them close enough so that they can see it and learn to communicate their intuition with a game that they cannot seem to be able to understand.
That is what you will find in my book and only time will tell if people will consider it valid or not. I know its surely valid for me so I have no doubt whatsoever.
Reference systems can get you close enough to be able to see it, once you see it you begin to understand how to apply the feel.
A great banker once showed me something a long time ago that was a reference he used and then he looked at me and said, "All I know is that is a really powerful point in pool" just think about it when you pass those balls.
I did some and couldnt make any sense of what he told me and went back to what I was doing which wasnt working. Then one day I got to thinking about this reference point and went back and it clicked, I had to figure out how to make those banks work based on finding the reference point and I had to try my findings based on that reference point and I did and now I rarely miss a passover bank shot near the bottom rail and I hit most of the others.
This taught me a lot about pool when it comes to reference points.
They themselves are not perfect answers to equations involving shot making, banking etc. however
They are perfect references for learning how to see what you need to see to be able to do what you need to do therefore they are visual, they adjust your visual intelligence and in my humble opinion are about as perfect as its going to get.
336Robin :thumbup: http://274928807619529663.weebly.com/
aimisthegameinpool@yahoo.com