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WELLBEING THERAPIES

SPORTS PERFORMANCE

Living a healthy balanced life, is a goal most of us aspire to.  For instance, being the best we can be in our chosen Sport or Business, you can only get so far with technique and physical practice, mental training is also crucial to you being the best you.

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We understand the benefits of adopting healthy lifestyle choices, losing weight, exercising, eating healthy foods, drinking in moderation and quitting smoking. However, knowing what’s right and actually doing it are two different things. It is not easy to make positive lifestyle changes and it’s even harder to make them stick. If it were easy, there would be far fewer self-help groups, fad diets, addiction-beating aids and burgeoning gym memberships at the start of each year.

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So if you want to sharpen your game and increase your psychological fitness and also take yourself to the next level in your chosen sport or business let us help.

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Golf sports performance image

I believe that positive change comes about when people feel in control and happy about their choices. I don’t think that by being angry with ourselves we can force ourselves to achieve some goal or other. I work with clients to have them identify what’s really behind their desire for change and help them see the way forward as a positive process, rather than a pressured effort to achieve some outcome.

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Good coaches will use and follow these principles:

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  • Listening is more important than talking

  • What motivates people must be understood

  • Everyone is capable of achieving more

  • A person’s past is no indication of their future

  • People’s beliefs about what is possible for themselves are their only limits

  • A coach must always provide full support

  • Coaches don’t provide the answers

  • Coaching does not include criticising people

  • All coaching is completely confidential

  • Some people’s needs cannot be met by coaching and coaches recognise clients with these needs and adapt with other tools.

THE NINE MENTAL SKILLS OF A SUCCESSFUL ATHLETE

You don’t have to be a professional athlete or an Olympic champion to be a successful athlete. Nor do you have to have a room full of trophies, win a state championship, or make the front page of the sports section.

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What successful athletes have in common is that their sport is important to them and they’re committed to being the best that they can be within the scope of their limitations – other life commitments, finances, time, and their natural ability.

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They set high, realistic goals for themselves and train and play hard. They are successful because they are pursuing their goals and enjoying their sport. Their sport participation enriches their lives and they believe that what they get back is worth what they put into their sport.

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There are nine, specific mental skills that contribute to success in sports. They are all learned and can be improved with instruction and practice. We believe that our work is worthwhile because the same mental skills that athletes use in achieving success in sports can be used to achieve success in other areas of their lives.

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A Brief List of the Nine Mental Skills OF Successful Athletes:

  1. Choose and maintain a positive attitude.

  2. Maintain a high level of self-motivation.

  3. Set high, realistic goals.

  4. Deal effectively with people.

  5. Use positive self-talk.

  6. Use positive mental imagery.

  7. Manage anxiety effectively.

  8. Manage their emotions effectively.

  9. Maintain concentration.

MENTAL SKILLS TRAINING

These nine mental skills are necessary for performing well in sport as well as in non-sport performance situations.

  • We believe that these skills are learned and can be improved through instruction and practice.

  • We begin our work with each individual by assessing his current proficiency in each of the skills.

  • We develop a plan for teaching and enhancing the specific skills that need improvement for the individual.

  • We periodically reassess the client’s proficiency in each of the skills in order to evaluate our progress.

Although each of the nine skills is important, its primary importance will occur during one of three phases: long-term development, immediate preparation for performance, and during performance itself.

Level I – These mental skills constitute a broad base for attaining long-term goals, learning, and sustaining daily practice. They are needed on a day-by-day basis for long periods of time, often months and years.

Level II – These skills are used immediately before performance to prepare for performance. They maybe used just before competition begins, or immediately before a specific performance action, such as a golf shot or a free throw in basketball.

Level III – These skills are used during actual performance behaviour.

The pyramid below represents the relationship of the nine skills to one another. Each of the higher levels incorporates and is based upon the skills of the preceding levels.

THE PERFORMANCE PYRAMID

DETAILED DESCRIPTIONS OF THE NINE MENTAL SKILLS

1. Attitude

Successful athletes:

  • Realise that attitude is a choice.

  • Choose an attitude that is predominately positive.

  • View their sport as an opportunity to compete against themselves and learn from their successes and failures.

  • Pursue excellence, not perfection, and realise that they, as well as their coaches, team mates, officials, and others are not perfect.

  • Maintain balance and perspective between their sport and the rest of their lives.

  • Respect their sport, other participants, coaches, officials, and themselves.

2. Motivation

Successful athletes:

  • Are aware of the rewards and benefits that they expect to experience through their sports participation.

  • Are able to persist through difficult tasks and difficult times, even when these rewards and benefits are not immediately forthcoming.

  • Realise that many of the benefits come from their participation, not the outcome.

3. Goals and Commitment

Successful athletes:

  • Set long-term and short-term goals that are realistic, measurable, and time-oriented.

  • Are aware of their current performance levels and are able to develop specific, detailed plans for attaining their goals.

  • Are highly committed to their goals and to carrying out the daily demands of their training programs.

4. People Skills

Successful athletes:

  • Realise that they are part of a larger system that includes their families, friends, teammates, coaches, and others.

  • When appropriate, communicate their thoughts, feelings, and needs to these people and listen to them as well.

  • Have learned effective skills for dealing with conflict, difficult opponents, and other people when they are negative or oppositional.

5. Self-Talk

Successful athletes:

  • Maintain their self-confidence during difficult times with realistic, positive self-talk.

  • Talk to themselves the way they would talk to their own best friend

  • Use self-talk to regulate thoughts, feelings and behaviors during competition.

6. Mental Imagery

Successful athletes:

  • Prepare themselves for competition by imagining themselves performing well in competition.

  • Create and use mental images that are detailed, specific, and realistic.

  • Use imagery during competition to prepare for action and recover from errors and poor performances.

7. Dealing Effectively with Anxiety

Successful athletes:

  • Accept anxiety as part of sport.

  • Realise that some degree of anxiety can help them perform well.

  • Know how to reduce anxiety when it becomes too strong, without losing their intensity.

8. Dealing Effectively with Emotions

Successful athletes:

  • Accept strong emotions such as excitement, anger, and disappointment as part of the sport experience.

  • Are able to use these emotions to improve, rather than interfere with high level performance

9. Concentration

Successful athletes:

  • Know what they must pay attention to during each game or sport situation.

  • Have learned how to maintain focus and resist distractions, whether they come from the environment or from within themselves.

  • Are able to regain their focus when concentration is lost during competition.

  • Have learned how to play in the “here-and-now”, without regard to either past or anticipated future events.

 

Application of the Nine Mental Skills to Non-sport Performance Situations

The nine mental skills associated with athletic success are the same mental skills associated with performance in a wide variety of non-sport, performance situations. Let’s take a look at some of these.

 

Characteristics of A Performance Situation:

  • The situation is often scheduled or anticipated in advance.

  • The situation usually has a defined beginning and an end.

  • The circumstances are known in advance.

  • The rules and constraints are known in advance.

  • The results are evaluated by standards (or natural consequences) that are usually known in advance.

  • The results are uncertain and may involve psychological risk and/or danger.

  • The results are important to the performer.

  • The performer’s behaviour is goal-oriented.

  • The results are influenced by the performer’s skillful behaviour

 

Examples of Performance Situations

  • An important job interview

  • Performing a solo with a symphony orchestra

  • Auditioning for a role in a drama production

  • Giving a class presentation

  • Taking a driver’s examination

  • Giving a talk to the PTA

  • Testifying in court

  • Taking the state medical exam

  • Performing brain surgery

  • Landing an airplane

  • A firefighter entering a burning building

  • Participating in a military or police attack

  • An astronaut landing a vehicle on the surface of the moon

  • Rock Climbing

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