Professional Athletes Using Hypnosis to Enhance Mental Toughness and Peak Performance

As they get older and put more mileage on their bodies, proactive thinking professional athletes look for an edge. Much of the training and coaching that professional athletes receive works on the logical brain, the left brain. Game plans, strategies, knowing what to do in a specific situation…all fire up the left brain.

Frequently, the right brain is ignored. Balance, music, emotions, visualization and self-hypnosis all involve the right brain. The smart athlete practices skills that tap into both the left and right brains.

I receive calls weekly from professionals who recognize that their bodies will not always be able to support the wear and tear and therefore, they would like to learn mental skills to compensate. There are many techniques that Certified Sport Psychologists use to help such athletes, but by far the most powerful technique in my arsenal is Hypnotic Sport Psychology.

Those Sport Psychologists who teach hypnosis and self-hypnosis to athletes help them with such skills as intensity, focus, consistency, concentration and anxiety and anger control. Moreover, hypnosis can be used with teams to enhance team dynamics, intra-team communications, mutual goal setting and intra-team cohesion.

A favorite technique that I use with huge success, I call the hypnotic mental toughness game plan. I use this technique with athletes whose sport involves going up against an opponent(s), such as football, basketball, boxing, motor sports, tennis, soccer, wrestling, hockey, etc.

I ask the athlete to describe in detail everything he/she knows about her/his opponent. For example, for an NFL football player, I want to know what specific techniques and moves the opponent has used in the past against my athlete. Accordingly, what specific techniques and moves has my athlete used with success against him? For a tennis player, I want to know how the opponent has won games from my athlete in the past, what she/he does in certain game situations (such as moving toward the net), and what strategies have worked for my athlete against this specific opponent (even if only a few games were won against him/her).

The same data that would be obtained in breaking down film is very valuable for me (utilizing the athlete’s specific language) in designing a hypnotic program aimed at overcoming the opponent when they next meet.

This hypnotic technique goes well beyond “visualization” that is often taught to athletes. While under hypnosis, my athlete is not only visualizing success in his next game, but he is planting optimistic seeds in the beautiful garden of his subconscious mind that are each related to specific moves and strategies that are designed to work against a specific opponent, whom he can visualize defeating.

So, with the athlete’s help, we design a mental toughness game plan each week and (if the athlete is not local) I fed ex a CD series of that game plan each week for the athlete to master. This certainly gives the pro athlete an edge and I refer to it as the athlete’s “unfair advantage!”

(Obviously, these techniques are not simply reserved for professional athletes, but the use of game films, for example, to design my game plans are harder to come by with junior athletes. In such cases, I rely on the athlete and coaches to give me the information I need.)

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Author's Bio: 

Dr. Jack Singer is a licensed Clinical, Sports and Industrial/Organizational Psychologist, author, trainer and consultant. His expertise includes a Doctorate in Industrial / Organizational Psychology and a Post-Doctorate in Clinical / Sports Psychology. Jack has been recognized with Diplomates from the American Academy of Behavioral Medicine, the Society of Police and Criminal Psychology, and he has been awarded with a special Diplomate in Sports Psychology from the National Institute of Sports Professionals. He has a special Certification in Clinical Hypnosis from the American Academy of Clinical Hypnosis and Jack has taught in the Psychology departments of seven universities, including four years as an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the U.S. Air Force Academy. Dr. Jack can be found on the web at http://drjacksinger.com