You can trick yourself into believing you’ve had an experience (let’s say succeeding at the next level of play from where you are now), by repeatedly and vividly imagining it happening.
In order to succeed at the next level you need to create a new self-image. That is, you need to see (imagine) yourself as being capable of performing at that level.
You can’t outperform your self-image.
All the Big Leaguers I’ve talked to say the final break-through they needed to really stick there was to believe they belonged. Their self-image was such that they saw themselves as fitting in with that elite crowd.
If you can’t see it, you won’t be it.
Mental Game Power Tool #2
“You are what you repeatedly do.”
I forget who said that, many smart people have said it in different forms, but the second power tool is HABIT.
I’ve heard that 95% of our actions are done by habit, leaving only 5% to conscious choice.
If that’s even close to true, the lesson for baseball performance is huge: develop great habits.
Under pressure you revert to your dominant (most strongly engrained) action. That’s why your new swing doesn’t show up in a game right away. And that’s why habits are more powerful than good intentions.
All other things being equal, the players and teams with the best habits will win.
Great players do the right things every day.
They practice right, they condition right, they think right.
Over time the right things become habits. The players take the actions that improve their performance each day, and those actions become hard-wired into their bodies.
Researchers usually say it takes around 30 days for a new behavior to become a habit.
Combine today’s two power tools and you get the
following: Over the next 30 days, make a habit of imagining yourself doing things greater than you already do them.
If you can do that, more power to you!
Coaches, you can use this information by simply asking a player if he can see himself playing great at the next level. If he says yes, ask him for some details on what he sees, what he hears and what he feels when he’s imagining it.
Just getting him to describe a scene or two where he’s the hero or plays great will get him on the right track. Then encourage him to do that every day.