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Your
Greatest Opponent!
You probably
have heard many times that your greatest opponent is
yourself, not your competition or old man golf. The following is a brief
explanation why.
Your brain or
computer starts working at a very early age.
Approximately three months prior to your birth, your
brain starts recording while you are still in your
mother's womb. It continues to record everything you do
and experience during your lifetime accumulating a data
base on YOU. For simplicity sake we will refer to your
brain's data base as your TAPE. Your tape is a conceptual
representation of the entire history of all your previous
thoughts and actions which comprise your present
performance level.
The concept
of your tape is important to comprehend because your
brain or computer is programmed to make similar decisions
in accordance to what is in its date base or tape. Since
your brain is programmed to make decisions similar to
what you have done in the past, the biggest challenge you
will face when trying to change your thoughts and actions
to improve your golf is your tape.
Your brain
will use all of your strengths and weaknesses recorded on
your tape to keep you at your present level of
performance or within your comfort zone. To improve your
golf, you must overcome your brain's programming to repeat what
is on your tape. This may seem like a simple explanation
of what you are up against, but it is crucial for you to
be aware that your tape will control you unless you
exercise control over it.
Fortunately,
you can change your past tendencies because the most
current portion of your tape has the biggest impact on
your decision making process. But make no mistake, it
will be a battle between your desire to change or improve
and your brain's programming to have you repeat what is
on your tape. Your tape doesn't care if it's positive or
negative, its job is to have you repeat the same thing
over and over.
When you go
to sleep, your brain reviews all your thoughts and
actions for that day. If you do something different from
your normal routine, your brain has to decide to either
assimilate this new behavior or reject it so it can make
spontaneous decisions once you awake. This is why the
best time to give your tape new instructions is just
before going to sleep and immediately upon awaking.
Otherwise, you will more than likely go right back to the
previous responses on your tape.
By successfully putting new
thoughts and actions on your tape consistently for a period of 30
days, your tape will assimilate these as new habits and they will
become part of your normal tape response. Either you control
your tape or your tape will control you. Your greatest opponent is always yourself as long as you allow your tape to repeat your previous negative thoughts and actions.
If
you have not read "The Mental Keys To Improve Your Golf", you will
benefit greatly from my book by seeing the whole picture instead
of just pieces contained in my mental tips.
I guarantee it! So
order now and lower your score.
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