Article

To Enter the Zone and Reach Peak Performance – Try Less

Topic: SportsBy Dr. Patrick CohnPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 2,044 legacy views

NASCAR champions use a popular motto: "To speed up, slow down. " This may sound contradictory, but in mental game coaching, I use a similar motto: "To perform better, try less. "

Just like in auto racing, it's common for other athletes to think that 110% effort is the optimal path to peak performance. Many athletes push it to the maximum.

Racers try to drive the car to the limit. This mindset causes some drivers to overdrive their car and thus make more mistakes, losing valuable seconds. This is called trying too hard, which can short-circuit your performance.

The no-nonsense truth is that trying too hard to peak perform can actually slow you down because you make more errors. The best athletes have learned how to perform with a feeling of ease - in essence trying less.nn-Champion athletes describe the zone as if their performance was easy or effortless.nn-Athletes with the fear of failure think they must try hard, force it, and make it happen to win.

Why is there a huge difference in mindsets between champions and athletes who hold themselves back by fear of failure?

Under pressure, the mind can plan tricks. Your *trying mind* or analytical mind wants to control the performance. Your mind senses a greater level of importance in competition, '"I had better try hard now so I do not embarrass myself. "

This mindset sounds correct and legitimate when the game is on the line. But champion athletes know better.

If you think a controlled performance helps you perform well, you are wrong. Training is controlled and can be hard. Your performance should flow from your training and feel effortless. This means trying less.

Champion athletes know how to find the right balance between trying and letting it happen. They trust what they have done in practice to prepare for competition.

Just like in racing, you must find the perfect balance between maximum speed and effort. I call this effortless speed in racing.

You want to perform at your peak, but with precision effortlessness - void of tension that comes with trying too hard. Your goals should be to discover how to push yourself to the edge, but at the same time find effortless performance.

However, before you can perform effortlessly, you must first uncover mental barriers that get in the way of effortless performance.nn*Fear of failure, anxiety, and tension will lead to over control and prevent you from performing effortlessly!*

Perfectionist, highly motivated, and very goal-oriented athletes are the athletes who struggle the most with fear of failure and trying too hard.

The harder you try, the better you perform, right? Wrong!

If you have a hint of perfectionism, fear of failure, or lack of trust in your performance, you block your ability to find the zone of effortless performance.

Article author

About the Author

Want to learn simple, proven mental toughness skills that you can apply to competition? Grab my free online mental training newsletter, Sports Insights Magazine - for athletes, coaches, and sports parents:nhttp://www.peaksports.com/free_newsletter.php n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dr. Patrick Cohn is a master mental game coach who work with professional and amateur athletes, sports parents, and teams of all levels. Visit http://www.peaksports.com for more information.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

TIME FOR A NEW SURGE—OF PATRIOTISMn We joke about political pork. We laugh at the Defense Department paying $600 for a toilet seat. We tolerate the confused craziness of the farm subsidy program. Forty years ago, former Illinois Republican Senator Everett Dirksen said, “A billion ...

Related piece

Article

True or False: I have no real need to get anywhere when I run; I enjoy running for hours only to end up in the same place I started. True or False: Any sport in which people have been known to literally die of exhaustion while participating is just the kind of sport I’ve been looking for. True or False: I’m interested in finding out exactly how many muscles I have in my legs. True or False: I’ve been sleeping way too much, so I’ve been looking for something to take up a few hours on my Saturday mornings.

Related piece

Article

Sports Wisdom (Or, Why We Watch the Games) Why do we watch sports, other than to see who wins? Political and baseball author George Will gave one outstanding response: “Sports serve society by providing vivid examples of excellence.” Sports are a 21st century version of ...

Related piece

Article

Now that the off-season has officially come to an end and I am getting back to regularly scheduled programming, I thought it appropriate to talk about training in the cold. Thankfully, I live in Northern California, where what I consider ‘cold’ weather may be thought of more as chilly or crisp in somewhere like New York or Michigan, and maybe even balmy to my friends in Canada. But… I will admit I am a bit of a pansy when it comes to cold. I hate being cold! If I lived somewhere else, I think I would hibernate for at least a few months.

Related piece