TOM'S ONLINE TENNIS LESSON
- The "here and now" has just passed!
In tennis many of you have heard the phrase
"play in the here and now." This means to play for
the moment and not dwell on what has happened in the past
or what will happen in the future. Play without psychological
baggage from the past or future; play only for that moment
of time. After the point is over, you play again and focus
on the next moment of time. In other words, focus on action
not results.
One of the main reasons players have difficulty
with playing in the "here and now" is they do not
condition themselves to play with that mindset during practice.
When practicing most players are focused exclusively on results
and not on the action of the doing at the moment. When they
miss a shot they always think, "What did I do wrong?
Why did my ball go long? Why did my ball go in the net? What
can I change to make it work?" The ONLY thing they should
change is their mental attitude of being preoccupied with
the results.
When you are preoccupied with results you never
see the solution! The
solution of course is to become focused on the action of the
moment and just doing the shot. When you become preoccupied
with the present action of doing, you learn to stay in the
"here and now" and to not over-think the past (what
did happen) or the future (what may happen). Accomplishing
this mindset is an art in itself that requires extensive practice.
The first thing I attempt to accomplish with
my students is to have them become preoccupied with the action
of doing the stroke over and over again.
Of course they fight this procedure all the way. Everyone
wants a reason "right now" why they failed. I usually
oblige them and give them a reason.
"The reason you failed is you do not practice enough.
Now get back to the doing!" Not exactly what they wanted
to hear. This of course does not mean you never do a little
analysis of the failure; just keep the analyzing to a bare
minimum.
The principle: How are you ever going to play
in the "here and now"in match play if you will not
stay in the "here and now" during practice?
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As a bonus, when you have learned to stay in
the "here and now" in practice as well as match
play you have created an environment that will teach you how
to play successfully. Many of the principles of match play
as well as mastering a stroke will be learned through self-discovery.
Your job is to constantly create that environment to learn.
As a result (see, now we have a result) you do not over-think,
you stay more relaxed, you let it happen in your match play
and you begin to learn. Learn what? Well, all kinds of things.
You could begin to be alert in seeing the opening on the court
to win the point. You could begin to learn how to construct
a point. You could begin to learn when to go for a winner
and when not to hit a winner. You could begin to learn how
to slow down and relax. You could begin to learn that you
do not have to do that much to win points. You could begin
to learn
that I was right all along and why didn't you figure it out
a year ago!
You will begin to learn that tennis is fun and exciting again.
Every time you head to the courts you may learn another piece
of the tennis puzzle. That's exhilarating!
There is no greater illustration of this self-discovery
principle than
precocious children that practice so much that the doing teaches
them...even without instruction.
Example:
"The Road To Excellence (The Acquisition
of Expert Performance)" edited by K. Anders Ericsson
contains a description of the development of expert performance
in a variety of fields.
Ellen Winner, a professor at Boston College, explains how
precocious children and savants in the visual arts practice
incessantly at the ages of 3 - 6 years old. I quote:
"They (savants) draw early and a lot,
and they also stand out as different from ordinary children
in the same ways as do precocious drawers. They discover perspective
and foreshortening and other depth techniques on their own,
they can begin a drawing from any part of the object, they
draw with astounding confidence and fluidity of line, and
they can draw from memory objects and pictures they have seen
months or years ago."
Now granted these are exceptionally gifted
children, but the principle of repeated action ("they
draw early and a lot") still holds true. Without staying
in the "here and now" and just doing it, there would
have been NO self-discovery, even for these exceptional children.
You must do the same when you are learning
tennis and let it overflow into your match play. If you can
master playing in the "here and now," your thinking,
as well as your results, will change completely. And who knows,
maybe there is a precocious child inside of you just waiting
to unveil itself to the tennis world!
Your tennis pro,
Tom Veneziano
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