Many athletes experience mental blocks over the course of their season.
A mental block is a psychological obstacle that prevents you from achieving your objective. Your mind has convinced you that the particular task at hand is impossible. Your thoughts dictate your actions and your actions dictate your reality.
They appear in many different guises to us as athletes.
For some, self doubt creeps in and you start to believe that you are unable to maintain a faster run pace or increase your swim speed.
For example, you glance down at your watch and see your run/swim speed is faster than usual so you back off and run/swim slower. In this instance, your fight or flight response is being triggered by your thoughts that you won’t be able to maintain this pace so you slow down.
In some cases, it’s fear based. The athlete may be afraid of descending fast downhill after experiencing a bike crash.
Here, the fight or flight response is triggered every time you come to a hill so you slow down in anticipation of a crash.
The emotional part of the brain, which takes over in fear situations, subconsciously associates any situation that looks, sounds, or feels like the traumatic/feared event, with a threat to survival, and immediately activates the fear response.
The following are tips and tools that can be used to counter these responses.
Positive Self Talk
Positive self-talk is conscious statements that we say aloud or in our mind to change a particular belief. These beliefs are housed in our subconscious mind and dictate our reality.
State a positive affirmation or belief in the present tense, “I am,” or “I feel” within the first three to five minutes of waking or during the few minutes right before going to sleep. This window of time is critical because our brain is in the theta state, which is the gateway to your creativity, learning and intuition, allowing you to access the power of your unconscious mind, which is inaccessible during our awake, alert state.
Try to add emotion to the statement, for example, “I felt wonderful when I swam fast during drills last week.”
Visualization
Next you must visualize or imagine a successful outcome. In doing so, you are actually stimulating the same region of the brain as you would if you were to physically perform that same action.
Sit, close your eyes and focus on an element that created the mental block and imagine a positive outcome and positive emotion to accompany it. You are in essence, creating a memory for the brain to recall next time you are in that situation.
It is important to utilize all of your senses during this process. What would you see, hear, feel, smell and taste?