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Posts Tagged ‘Distractions’

Mentally “Intend” to Kick Ass on the Pool Table

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Mentally “Intend” to Kick Ass on the Pool Table

By Ernie Reynolds

Does anyone disagree that pool is a mental game? After you’ve paid your dues and learned how to shoot, what is the biggest detriment to consistently playing your best?

Concentration, lack of attention, forgetting the basics – in other words, your MIND.

Your mind is often the biggest saboteur to winning pool games on a regular basis – at least mine is.

For more info, visit my websites…
Pool For Beginners
Pool and Pocket Billiards Resource

In my 40+ years of playing pool, I have made most every shot hundreds of times. I have read the books and seen the videos. I know how to shoot. Then why can’t I do as well one day as I can the next?

I contend that the main problem is not external conditions or distractions. I have shot some of my best pool in a crowded, noisy bar with drunken people banging into my stick and TVs blaring overhead.

I have shot well with crooked pool cues and with lousy tips. Dead rails and soiled felt were the same disadvantages to my opponents as to me.

I do have my own pool cue now and I wouldn’t go back to using bar cues willingly. It certainly helps some. And yes, I do carry my own hand chalk with me.

At least in my case, neither the equipment nor the environment have that great of an impact on my ability to shoot consistent pool.

So, if the mind is the biggest culprit to causing your pool game to be inconsistent, what can you do? Is there a way to get a mental kick in the butt so you can get back on track?

“Intend” to shoot your best pool.

“Intend” to concentrate fully in the game at hand and not allow external distractions to divert your attention.

“Intend” to beat your opponent.

I have been a student of the mind for many years. I practice meditation, hypnosis, and other forms of mind control. I believe that “something else is out there” besides our everyday consciousness.

And I also believe that controlling the mind will allow me to better control my pool playing. If pool is indeed a mental game, then getting your mental facilties well in-tune with your pool game can only help, right?

When the mind is relaxed and at peace, the mental chatter and useless thoughts just sort of fade away. You are left with the ability to focus your mind on constructive ideas and enjoyable pursuits instead of wallowing in negativity.

One practice I have when playing pool is to occasionally take a deep breath and mentally tell myself to “relax” if I find that I am not playing up to par or feeling uptight or anxious. When I am behind in a pool game, I sometimes say a mental “relax and win” to myself. It’s amazing how many times my opponent will miss an easy shot or make some other mistake after doing this.

I do find, however, that the act of “intention” has the strongest effect on my pool game. If I actually intend to play my best pool, it often happens.

I play pool regularly every Friday night. When I wake up on Friday morning, before I get out of bed, I mentally “intend to kick ass on the pool table tonight.” I don’t always remember to do it, but when I do, it certainly makes a difference.

This time between being asleep and fully awake is an excellent time to make an intention, by the way. The mind is still in a suggestible state, and intentions get right into the subconscious mind and go to work. Hypnosis works in this manner by putting the subject in a suggestible state of mind.

So that’s my theory. I know it works for me and I’ll bet it will work for you as well. Try it yourself and see.

I’d like to hear some comments as to whether people think this is a crazy notion or something beneficial to use themselves.

“Point The Way” Review

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

“Point The Way” Review

By Ernie Reynolds


Point The Way book

I love the game of pool and have played for most of my life. I learned early on that pool is, in large part, a mental game. What I mean is, after you have played for a year or two and can put the balls where you want them, progressing to a higher level is largely a matter of getting your head together.

We can all make some nice shots once in a while. However, the great players can make these shots regularly and with consistency. They have trained their mind to concentrate only on the game at hand and block out all the extraneous distractions.

I read a good book recently that really puts these ideas into perspective in a big way.

“Point The Way”, by Tim “The Monk” Miller delves deeply into the mental aspects of the game of pool and billiards. He has taken a spiritual view of the game and its impact on a person’s life and attitudes. This is no “how to make a bank shot” fluff, this is a heavy-duty “why can’t I shoot consistently” mental tune-up.

The Monk has taken the game of pool apart and investigated why we sometimes miss easy shots, choke up when we play certain types of people, get nervous when we get to the 8-ball, and many of the myriad of trials and tribulations that can happen to us at the pool table. He explains that there are three main elements to playing pool – performance, learning, and social fellowship. To get the most out of the game, we naturally want to experience all three.

In addition to advice on improving our mental control and attitude, the book of course contains chapters on the fundamentals of the game, the variety of shots that are necessary for an all-around competent shooter, strategies for maximizing your practice and training, and even advice on preparing for local pool tournaments. There are many anecdotes to illustrate the various concepts.

For more info, visit my websites…
Pool For Beginners
Pool and Pocket Billiards Resource

One concept that I especially enjoyed was the section on the “Id” – that little voice in your head that sometimes talks you out of playing to your best potential. Another was the mental games you can play on your opponents to gain an advantage on the table and walk out with money in your pockets instead of going home broke. The Monk relates some of his many interesting experiences along these lines.

I had seen The Monk mentioned on the web before and wondered about the origin of his nickname. It seems he led a spiritual life for some years before getting into pool and was actually some type of religious monk. He has taken this inner spirituality and made deep studies of the “how’s” and “why’s” of our performance or lack of performance on the pool table. It makes for some very interesting reading.

If you find yourself struggling with the ability to play consistently solid pool like I did for years, the problem may lie with your mental game. Once you get into your head and straighten out all the attitude and emotional issues, you may find that you have stepped up your pool game to a much higher level. I have experienced this in recent years, and this book will certainly help me to achieve even greater consistency to my game in the future.

“Point The Way” is not your average, run-of-the-mill pool book. I would recommend it to anyone who wants to improve that aspect of pool playing that many of us overlook – “the game within”.


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