If you’ve golfed competitively you’ve no doubt felt nerves affect your game. When I say competitively I don’t just mean competing on a professional or mini-tour. If you have a $5 bet with a colleague or friend it’s still competitive! Whether you’re a 27 handicap or scratch you are likely to feel at least some nerves during your round.
For many people it doesn’t even have to involve golf competition at all. Just stepping to the first tee can cause a serious case of nerves. Maybe it’s when you must make a put to tie a hole or to win on the 18th green. If you’re standing on the 17th hole in a match and you’re 1 down then you have to deliver. Period. If you can’t channel your nerves you had better hope that swing you’ve been grooving for the past 6 months holds up now!
Interview with Wade Pearse
Regardless of skill level and/or on course scenario there will be times when you’ll require some way to calm your nerves so they don’t adversely affect your stroke/swing.
Have you made any conscious attempts to reduce your experience of nerves in your game? What did you try? What have been your results? Did they work and if so was it immediate? Or did you, like most every golfer alive, simply fill your head full of self talk saying things like, “ok, calm down. Just breathe…there’s nothing to be nervous about…hey, maybe he’ll miss his putt….yeah…miss-miss-miss!…”
Does this sound familiar?! Have you noticed that this doesn’t really do all that much to reduce your nervousness? Unless of course your playing partner does miss the putt!
Seriously though, you must have a means of noticing the onset of nerves and a method for not only calming them but using them to your advantage…
Wade does a great job of showing you how to transform nerves into actually playing your best golf under pressure. He provides a few excellent methods you can use right away that will improve your performance on the golf course.
Breath is a very powerful state enhancer. What I mean is that your breathing provides deep physiological links to your internal states. So when you’re nervous the last thing you want to do is take short, shallow breaths. Quick breaths actually instruct the brain to respond in a “fight or flight” manner. The brain is hard-wired to respond to fast breathing by being on the lookout for an emergency. This is not the most effective place from which to make a smooth putting stroke on that 10 footer.
Tip #1
1) While waiting for your turn to hit stand aside and follow this breathing pattern:
Inhale – 4 counts
Hold – 5 counts
Exhale – 6 counts
Long, deep, slow breaths. This process interrupts the breath influenced aspect of your state and directly instructs the brain to become still. Another adverse affect of nerves is a noticeable loss of feel in your hands. Sometimes you may even wonder if you’re even holding the club!
Tip #2
2) Simply hold a golf ball in your hands. Now squeeze it gently and hold for a few seconds. Then release. Then squeeze once again but this time do so very firmly and hold for a couple seconds then release. Roll the ball around in your hand and make a note of how the dimples feel.
Repeat this sequence 2 or 3 times and you will immediately increase the feel in your hands. Nervousness and shallow breathing directs extra blood to the brain, diverting it from your extremities. By doing applying this simple technique blood will flow back into your hands and improve your feel.
These 2 exercises work quickly. Self talk alone can’t compete with the psycho-physiological intensity of nervousness. Many more inside this Development Training program.
I only endorse something and put my name behind it if I am completely confident that the product lives up to, and/or exceeds, its stated values. So what does that mean to you? It means I’ll share my honest opinion with my readers so they can make an informed decision.
What if there was a way to transform nervousness into a calm, inner confidence? To actually have the onset of nerves “trigger” an inner calm. How powerful would that be in improving your performance?
Check out Wade’s Golf Mental Game Coaching Development Training here…
Enjoy Your Game!
-Michael
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Really good tips. Absolutely right – self talk won’t do the job. I find the mind works best with feelings and pictures. Nerves are only time travelling into the future imagining what you don’t want – so they are there as a reminder to focus on what you do want and feel good about it!