Negativity
Feel is the most essential fundamental
if one wishes to excel as a tennis player.
There is only one way to develop feel: through trial and error. No amount of reading, listening or studying
can help you in this endeavor. Often,
negativity on the court arises after errors in the mistaken belief that errors
are bad. Obviously, on a short-term,
result-oriented, superficial level errors are bad. However, when one looks deeper and takes a
broader perspective, and if one is tuned into becoming the best tennis player
one can be, then, in a way, errors are good because they help you develop the
feel that will ultimately determine how well you will play this game. Errors, winners. miss-hits or well hit shots
are all an essential part of the learning process because it is through these
varied experiences that feel is developed.
Technical: Observe, don’t judge!
The root of good technique is
feel. Good technique does not happen in
some scientific laboratory, but on the tennis court by hitting balls. If one is relaxed, open-minded and perhaps
guided ever so little, good technique will happen. Good technique is natural for the body, it is
not something that one needs to struggle with……..unless one already has poor
technique. Bio-mechanically sound
execution will be consistent with the natural movements of the muscles and
joints. If one is relaxed, smooth and
graceful, sound movement will often result.
A great deal of the awkwardness found on the club scene is a result of
tension.
Negativity is mental activity; it
is a judgment of what happened.
Negativity is not silence; consequently, negativity creates an obstacle
to developing feel. You hit a ball well
and that has a certain feel to it; you hit a ball poorly and that also has a
certain feel to it. If you can remain
silent and present through both experiences, your body will develop a greater
sensitivity. This greater sensitivity to
the experience of hitting a ball is feel and developing feel will ultimately
improve your technical ability to strike a ball. Feel is something learned by and for the body;
the conscious mind is not needed for it to happen. Technique very rarely fluctuates from day to
day, but performances and players’ ability to execute does; in my understanding
the root of these fluctuating fortunes is mental and not technical.
Strategical: Play every point the same!
To play at the highest level of
this game, shot selection must be instinctual.
The conscious mind is simply too slow to make the necessary decisions
while the point is being played. Being
negative can lead to tentativeness or over-hitting and an inability to execute
shots freely in a loose and relaxed way.
If missing is so painful, then obviously one will be less willing to hit
out and play instinctively or one will hit out without being centered, either
way disaster will result.
Basically, anger, frustration and
negativity affects judgment. Shot
selection needs to be made on specific criterion and one needs to be present to
the situation (relaxed intensity) to make these judgments accurately.
Emotional: Let-Go!
Tennis, because of its high skill
level requires a certain mind-body balance and a wide range of fluctuating
emotions make it extremely difficult to return to that centered balance
immediately. It is extremely difficult to
become angry and frustrated and 25 or 90 seconds later muster the physiological
centeredness necessary to hit balls precisely.
That is why, for emotional players the tempo of a match spurts and
stutters rather than flows. The emotional
highs and lows make a constant flow impossible.
To let go of the last shot, be it a winner or an error, is essential if
peak performance is to happen.
Emotion is a double-edged sword and
a very untrustworthy friend if one wishes to excel at this game. Positive emotions do not exist in a vacuum,
consequently, when you invite these emotions in, you will discover that the
negative emotions have also walked in through the back door.
Negative
emotions create tension in the body and extended periods of holding on to
tension will physically drain the body, thus making it susceptible to fatigue
and all kinds of injuries.
Ultimately,
being negative indicates that one is not confident about oneself or in one’s
ability to play this game. This is
significant not because of the weakness it shows to one’s opponent, but because
of the doubt it reflects at the root. You
do not need false bravado, but doubt will not allow you to reach your potential
because it will not allow you to swing freely or play loosely.
Also, becoming negative reveals the
inability to accept responsibility. To
become frustrated and angry is an inappropriate response because it does not
help in any way whatsoever. It is
bailing out, instead of facing adversity boldly in the face and searching deep
within oneself for a solution. When you
can do that consistently, you will become a much better competitor.
Spiritual: The bottom line is peace of mind!
Constant
negativity, make no mistake, is intrinsically painful. Many competitive players have tremendous
talent, but unfortunately all these skills have brought them no intrinsic joy
or peace of mind from playing this game.
Is there any value to success or material abundance, if spiritual well-being
does not accompany it?
The ability
to accept and love oneself allows us to live freely without fear of
failure. In the athletic arena, this
feeling of well-being is essential if we are to realize our full
potential. Conversely, the fear of
failure that is at the root of all negativity, will never allow you to live
fully or to play to your very best.
In my understanding, almost every
player experiences some degree of negativity during a match. Some players express their negativity, while
others suppress and control it. The
focus should be on the inner experience and not necessarily on the outer
manifestation. The goal is not to
control or suppress anger and frustration, but totally transcend it, so that
one does not feel it.
The long-term key to transcendence of
the negativity is understanding, on some level, the nature of these emotions
and its consequences on the individual and on his performance. This understanding will reveal that all
negativity and fear is coming from one’s own mind. The root is the mind and one could analyze
each individual episode, or one could simply go to the root. The root would be cutting off all mental
activity. When one is silent, one is
present and when one is present to the moment no negativity can enter. Peak performance happens in that silence,
which is both relaxed and intense at the same time. Find that balance and you have unearthed a
great treasure!