Hit the Reset Button For a Winning Golf Hypnosis Metaphor
The ability to learn from your bad shots and release them from your mind is one of the keys to winning golf.
You only have to look at the world's greatest ever golfers to see this.
I don't ever recall seeing the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Nick Faldo dwelling for any length of time over a bad shot or allow one to affect a subsequent shot they had to play.
They certainly got over it before they played their next shot and just went back to their regular routine.
One of the key techniques in the application of golf hypnosis is the use of metaphor to communicate a concept that may be rejected or over analysed by the conscious mind.
As an example, if I wanted someone to swing their golf club naturally and unconsciously, I might talk to them about the way they throw a ball of paper into a wastepaper basket or skim a stone across a pond - without any conscious thought.
So I'm always on the lookout for a good metaphor and right now I need one to use in my golf hypnosis to help people with their post-shot routines.
In particular, to help them to learn whatever they can from a bad shot and then forget about it and move on "in the zone" or "in the now" to their next one.
Perhaps that's too difficult a concept for many of us and it's always difficult to remember to forget something when you're blowing a fuse after hitting a bad shot.
So, imagine my delight when I was listening to Nick Faldo on the television commentating on the Tour Championship.
Tiger Woods had just pushed his tee shot way out to the right and was just in the middle slamming his driver into the ground with a dramatic lunge.
Then suddenly he just seemed to switch off, his eyes glazed over like he was in a light hypnotic trance and he calmly bent down, picked up his tee and walked off in the direction of his ball.
As he did so, Nick commented about Tiger hitting the "reset button" and getting back "in the now".
A very large, if metaphoric, light bulb lit up in my head and I just knew that I have to include that idea in my work.
So, the next time you're feeling bad or angry after a bad or unlucky shot, just mentally hit your "reset button" and learn from the shot, consign it to the past where it can't hurt you and step back into the now.
But how do I do that, Andrew? Well, you could try in vain to consciously remember a time when you hit a bad shot and followed it with a good one, but it would probably be in vain as you'd be consciously pre-occupied with your anger and forget.
The best way, if you're familiar with self hypnosis, is to incorporate it into your hypnotic post-shot routine and it'll just happen unconsciously.
Alternatively, you could create your own "reset button" with an NLP anchor that fires off automatically whenever you're in that situation.
You only have to look at the world's greatest ever golfers to see this.
I don't ever recall seeing the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Nick Faldo dwelling for any length of time over a bad shot or allow one to affect a subsequent shot they had to play.
They certainly got over it before they played their next shot and just went back to their regular routine.
One of the key techniques in the application of golf hypnosis is the use of metaphor to communicate a concept that may be rejected or over analysed by the conscious mind.
As an example, if I wanted someone to swing their golf club naturally and unconsciously, I might talk to them about the way they throw a ball of paper into a wastepaper basket or skim a stone across a pond - without any conscious thought.
So I'm always on the lookout for a good metaphor and right now I need one to use in my golf hypnosis to help people with their post-shot routines.
In particular, to help them to learn whatever they can from a bad shot and then forget about it and move on "in the zone" or "in the now" to their next one.
Perhaps that's too difficult a concept for many of us and it's always difficult to remember to forget something when you're blowing a fuse after hitting a bad shot.
So, imagine my delight when I was listening to Nick Faldo on the television commentating on the Tour Championship.
Tiger Woods had just pushed his tee shot way out to the right and was just in the middle slamming his driver into the ground with a dramatic lunge.
Then suddenly he just seemed to switch off, his eyes glazed over like he was in a light hypnotic trance and he calmly bent down, picked up his tee and walked off in the direction of his ball.
As he did so, Nick commented about Tiger hitting the "reset button" and getting back "in the now".
A very large, if metaphoric, light bulb lit up in my head and I just knew that I have to include that idea in my work.
So, the next time you're feeling bad or angry after a bad or unlucky shot, just mentally hit your "reset button" and learn from the shot, consign it to the past where it can't hurt you and step back into the now.
But how do I do that, Andrew? Well, you could try in vain to consciously remember a time when you hit a bad shot and followed it with a good one, but it would probably be in vain as you'd be consciously pre-occupied with your anger and forget.
The best way, if you're familiar with self hypnosis, is to incorporate it into your hypnotic post-shot routine and it'll just happen unconsciously.
Alternatively, you could create your own "reset button" with an NLP anchor that fires off automatically whenever you're in that situation.