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My friend Jack N. Singer, Ph.D. (Certified, Licensed Sport Psychologist) shared some interesting and important info with me that I wanted to pass on to you.

“As they get older and put more mileage on their bodies, proactive thinking professional athletes look for an edge. Much of the training and coaching that professional athletes receive works on the logical brain, the left brain. Game plans, strategies, knowing what to do in a specific situation all fire up the left brain. Frequently, the right brain is ignored. Balance, music, emotions, visualization and self-hypnosis all involve the right brain. The smart athlete practices skills that tap into both the left and right brains.

I receive calls weekly from professional athletes who recognize that their bodies will not always be able to support the wear and tear and therefore, they would like to learn mental skills to compensate. There are many techniques that Certified Sport Psychologists use to help such athletes, but by far the most powerful technique in my arsenal is Hypnotic Sport Psychology.

Those Sport Psychologists who teach hypnosis and self-hypnosis to athletes help them with such skills as intensity, focus, consistency, accelerated sports healing, concentration and anxiety and anger control. Moreover, hypnosis can be used with teams to enhance team dynamics, intra-team communications, mutual goal setting and intra-team cohesion.

A favorite technique that I use with huge success I call the hypnotic mental toughness game plan. I use this technique with athletes whose sport involves going up against an opponent(s), such as football, basketball, boxing, motor sports, tennis, soccer, wrestling, hockey, etc.

I ask the athlete to describe in detail everything he/she knows about her/his opponent. For example, for an NFL football player, I want to know what specific techniques and moves the opponent has used in the past against my athlete. Accordingly, what specific techniques and moves has my athlete used with success against him?

For a tennis player, I want to know how the opponent has won games from my athlete in the past, what she/he does in certain game situations (such as moving toward the net), and what strategies have worked for my athlete against this specific opponent (even if only a few games were won against him/her).

The same data that would be obtained in breaking down film is very valuable for me (utilizing the athlete’s specific language) in designing a hypnotic program aimed at overcoming the opponent when they next meet.

This hypnotic technique goes well beyond “visualization” that is often taught to athletes. While under hypnosis, the athlete is not only visualizing success in his next game, but he is planting optimistic seeds in the beautiful garden of his subconscious mind that are each related to specific moves and strategies that are designed to work against a specific opponent, whom he can visualize defeating.

So, with the athlete’s help, we design a mental toughness game plan each week and (if the athlete is not local) I FedEx a CD series of that game plan each week for the athlete to master. This certainly gives the pro athlete an edge and I refer to it as the athlete’s “unfair advantage!”

Obviously, these techniques are not simply reserved for professional athletes, but the use of game films, for example, to design my game plans are harder to come by with junior athletes. In such cases I rely on the athlete and coaches to give me the information I need.”

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Hypnosis for sports performance is a recognized field that is used to enhance the performance of athletes, both at the amateur and professional level.

More recently the incredible power of hypnosis for athletes had been becoming more widely accepted here in the U.S.  For years in the Eastern European nations have used hypnosis with their athletes and have experienced a tremendous difference in their athlete’s performance.

If you look at the top 10% of athletes what separates the elite 1-2% from the rest?

It’s not that they’ve practiced more or have more skill and talent, at this level of performance they’ve all put in the hard work and honed their skills to a fine science.

So what does make the difference?

Their mind…specifically their imagination and their use of imagery.

Imagery and Hypnosis

Mental imagery is the method used to recreate experiences in the mind using information from real events.  This information is stored in our memory. Dreaming is a scattered form of imagery and the imagery.  The imagery of interested here is structured imagery, where the athlete uses his or her imagination in a controlled fashion to recreate specific images for a precise goal.

There is a difference between visualization and imagery.  Imagery is full body sensation, i.e. see, feel, smell, and touch the experience.  Visualization is only “seeing” the experience.  It has been found that imagery is the more powerful of the two.

There a three main ways of imagery and visualization.  1st person, you see the event thorough your eyes as you are the competitor.  2nd person, you’re watching from the standpoint of a spectator, and 3rd person, it’s like you’re watching a movie.

Research has shown that the most effect perception to use is 1st person.  In addition, research also shows that the more able an athlete is to control his or her imagined movements, emotions, sounds etc,  the greater the potential performance enhancement.

As for hypnosis, there’s nothing mythical about it…all hypnosis is self-hypnosis.  The process of hypnosis is nothing more then getting the brain into the Alpha state.  This is a state where there is direct access to the sub/un-conscious mind.  Basically this is simply a method of inducing a state of heightened relaxation and awareness.  And when achieved, provides an ideal mental environment in which to practice imagery.

Indeed, the effects of imagery can be even more powerful when practiced in an Alpha state (hypnotic).

How Imagery Works

Research has shown that visualizing a specific muscle movement (in the mind) can create electrical activity in that same muscle even though there’s no actual movement in the muscle itself!  In addition, the specific pattern of muscle activity closely resembles that seen during actual movement.

So what does this mean?

•    Detailed and controlled imagery can stimulate electrical impulses in the desired muscles, and then those ‘primed’ muscles are ready for the physical activities that follow.
•    Physical skills can be maintained or even improved by proper imagery when practice isn’t possible, i.e. injury, off season, etc.  Evidence also suggests that using imagery can even accelerate rehabilitation and recovery after injury.

As for the best type of imagery to use, until recently evidence suggested it depends on what you’re trying to achieve. For the acquisition or improvement of sports skills, it was thought that using an external perspective (i.e. that of spectator) was best for learning or retaining those skills. For ‘psyching yourself up’ or priming yourself for an event, an internal perspective (i.e. imagining the feelings in the muscle) produced better results.

Now, new research indicates that the best results are archived when using first person or internal perspective, although there are benefits from the second person perspective as well.

Combined with other techniques, such as the use of music, imagery can enhance performance or enter the Alpha state.  Combining both mental imagery practice and physical practice can be more effective than physical practice alone. Data from various studies have also shown that mental imagery conducted in a state of hypnosis (Alpha) results in far more vivid and realistic imagery than without.

The practical use of imagery while in hypnotic (Alpha) state is numerous.  It can be used for skill learning, preparation for an event, injury healing and what if scenarios.

Practical Use of Hypnosis

Aside from being extremely relaxing and enjoyable in its’ own right, hypnosis can enhance the efficacy of the imagery techniques outlined above and assist in developing mental strength. The heightened state of awareness that hypnosis produces will enable you to experience a more vivid mental rehearsal, and so benefit from more effective ‘muscular reprogramming’, whatever your sport. Remember, if you can imagine it, you can achieve it!

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