This saddle fungus has never come back these last few years.
No. 1
Reason Practice Makes Perfect
The Brain Science of Muscle Memory
Christopher
Bergland
My father was born the son of Montana missionaries in the 1930s.
Becoming the Montana State tennis champion as a high school student was his
ticket out of Glendive. He got a scholarship
to attend college, went on to Cornell medical school and became a
neurosurgeon.
He said, "Of this I am absolutely positive, becoming a
neurosurgeon was a direct consequence
of my eye for the ball." This quotation sums up The
Athlete's Way because it captures the parallels
between sports and career that
come into play for all of us. It also captures why I am so interested
in the link between brain science and athletics--and the link
between 'practice, practice, practice'
and success.
Although being a state tennis champion is technically what got my
father a college scholarship,
that 'trophy' is secondary to everything else that he learned on
the tennis court that stuck
with him for the rest of his life. His brain was rewired through
his daily workouts. He was able to transfer his 'eye for the ball' into 'focus'
and remain intellectually sharper than the rest.
His daily tennis practice gave him the physicality, dexterity, and
stamina to be a world-class surgeon.
My father wanted me to be the next Björn Borg. I put a lot of
pressure on myself to succeed from a very young age. I wanted my father to be
proud of me and I worked very hard on the tennis court. When I was growing up,
tennis was our only real alone time and we played every Sunday. His coaching was
based on an understanding that
muscle memory is
stored in a part of your brain called the "cerebellum" (Latin:
little brain). My dad's mantra to me as a kid was:
"Carve the grooves into the cerebellum, Chris. Think about
hammering and forging your
muscle memory with every stroke." The cerebellum is the #1
reason that practice makes perfect.
He knew from tennis and surgery that you had to do the same thing
again and again and again
to hardwire it into long-term muscle memory that is stored in the
cerebellum. I played tennis
for the first time in almost a decade a few weeks ago and was
amazed how quickly all those years
of playing with my dad and the hours and hours of hitting a ball
repetitively against a backboard came rushing back. It is exactly the same 'cerebellar'
(pertaining to the cerebellum)
long-term muscle memory we refer to when we say: "It's just
like riding a bike." You never forget how to do it once you've hardwired
it into the skill center of the cerebellum through practice.
Before you read any farther, please watch this short 2-minute
cartoon compiled by the DORE programs of the UK that brilliantly explains how
the cerebellum relates to your cerebrum
when learning and mastering new skills. Video unavailable.
The word cerebellum was coined by Leonardo da Vinci in 1504
when he was making anatomical wax castings of the brain. The
cerebellum is the size of a kiwi
and is tucked under the much larger cerebrum in the base of your
skull.
The average cerebellum only weighs one-quarter of a pound but
ounce-for-ounce packs a walloping punch. Although the cerebellum is only 10% of total brain
volume it holds more than 50%
of the brain's neurons. Because
of this disproportionate distribution of neurons my father
always said of the cerebellum, "Whatever it's doing, it's
doing a lot of it." He was obsessed
with trying to unravel the mysteries of the cerebellum and passed
that obsession on to me.
As a kid the word 'cerebellum' and 'cerebrum' seemed too complex
so I coined the term 'up brain' for the cerebrum and 'down brain' for the
cerebellum. I know that these terms may seem grammatically incorrect but they
are a direct and cogent response to the terms 'left brain'
and 'right brain.' In the 70s there was a lot of talk about
the left brain being your 'intellectual' brain that was good with words and
numbers; and your right brain being your 'creative' brain
that was good with images and art.
If pushed to categorize the cognitive differences
between the down brain and up brain,
I would say that the up brain is the house of your conscious
'thinking mind' and the down brain
is the house of your
intuitive 'subconscious mind.' However, I am fully aware that
dividing the brain and mind into a rigid dichotomy of 'down brain-up brain' is
an oversimplification
and not 100% scientifically accurate. Nonetheless, I still find
this split-brain model
a useful paradigm for facilitating self-understanding and
improvement.
All parts of the brain work together in concert for everything we
do. Assigning specific traits
solely to one hemisphere--or any portion of the brain--is
generally considered to be 'bad science.' That said, I would still encourage
you to use the terms down brain-up brain as a simple and visual way to
categorize an aspect of your psychology when you are taking inventory of your
mindset
and behavior. As a split-brain model it is helpful for isolating
habits and character traits.
Once you have identified an area that needs work, you can then
make changes that will maximize your potential and improve your performance in
sports and in life.
For example: Arthur Ashe said, "There is a syndrome in sports
called 'paralysis by analysis'." One helpful way to avoid being too
'analytical' is to tag that mindset as being too "up brain" or
cerebral. If you are over-thinking things, your very large prefrontal cortex
stored in the up brain
is getting in the way and blocking the more intuitive 'down brain'
from working it's non-thinking
and completely fluid muscle memory magic.
The up brain is so big and so powerful that it is hard to turn it
down sometimes. When you choke
in sport, or become over-excited, it is because your up brain is
overpowering your down brain. Remember this visual and literally shift your
consciousness away from the prefrontal cortex
by relaxing the backs of your eyes, taking some deep breathes and
'letting go.'
To create super fluid performance you need to seat yourself in the
down brain which has –
practiced, practiced, practiced - and have your actions spring
from there.
I call this state of peak performance "Superfluidity."
You become super fluid in sports - and in life - when you have freed up the
working memory of your cerebrum to strategize and keep tabs on
the more cerebral aspects of everything that's going on while
completely trusting your gut
and the intuitive powers of your cerebellum.
In closing, please watch this video of Roger Federer and Lleyton
Hewitt
having one of the most incredible rallies in tennis history.
<iframe width="560" height="315"
src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/wS5GisEQ_j8"
frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
This is Superfluidity in
action! Listen to the rhythmic timing of Roger Federer's footwork
(he's in the white shirt.) The down brain is running the show for
both of them throughout
the early part of the rally. They almost look like robots
repeating the same motion again and again and again as if they are both hitting
against a backboard. It creates a trance like feeling
but the up brain is waiting in the wings and calculating when to
make a break and begin to play
the game of chess necessary to win the point with a strategic and
unexpected placement.
This video holds many clues on how to maximize the use of your up
brain and down brain on and off the court. Watch it again any time you need motivation to
stick with it and practice, practice, practice anything that you want to become
world-class at.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-athletes-way/201110/no-1-reason-practice-makes-perfect
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