Through its unique ability to harness the power of the subconscious mind, hypnosis is able to assist the sports person in achieving some really amazing results.
In the world of modern competitive sports, where national pride and huge sums of money are often at stake, it just makes sense that the sports person is able to utilise every legal means in order to obtain real results.
Indeed, hypnosis has a very long history in connection with sports of all kinds.
For years, the Soviet Olympic team used it in order to give them the edge, and because of their success, it didn't take long for other teams to rapidly incorporate hypnosis into their own elite athlete training with impressive results.
Competitive sports, of course, are intensely results oriented. Any strategy or approach that fails to produce champion results is quickly discarded, while those that do show themselves to have real value are rapidly incorporated into training.
The list of positive advantages that sports men and women gain from incorporating hypnosis into their training is varied and long. Benefits include enabling the athlete to remain calm under pressure, maintain focus and eliminate distractions, improve mental stamina and increase endurance, ease pre-competition nerves, as well as improve the athlete's attitude and motivation.
Very often, the athlete or mental coach uses words such as 'entering the zone' or 'creative visualization'. What this really means is that the athlete is enabled to access and work directly with the subconscious mind, that powerhouse of beliefs and driver of abilities, in order to program it for success.
Since he was very young, champion golfer Tiger Woods, for example, has used hypnosis on a regular basis. His mental coach and family friend, Jay Brunza introduced the golfer to this powerful tool when Woods was just thirteen years old.
States Woods: 'We worked on a way to visualize the target and pull it back into my hands and body and let my subconscious react. That's what's best for me.' So successful was this strategy that: 'It is inherent in what I do now', states Woods.
In the UK, WBC Heavyweight Champion Frank Bruno and WBC Super Middleweight Champion Nigel Benn both employed hypnosis in order to perform at their peak.
And in the 1996 WBO Super Middleweight title fight Chris Eubank was defeated by Steve Collins, who attributed much of his success to the mental preparation he had achieved with hypnosis.
Collins had worked with former champion bodybuilder Tony Quinn and was hypnotically programmed to deliver two punches for every one thrown by his competitor. In the fight, Eubank threw 300 punches, compared to over 600 from Collins.
But you don't need to be a professional athlete or sportsperson in order to harness the wonderful power of hypnosis. You too can learn to use it to enhance your game, allowing you to fully enjoy yourself and the results you get from your sporting hobby.
If you want to be at the top of your game, it makes sense to seek out a properly qualified hypnotherapist, someone who has both interest in and experience of working in the field of sports hypnosis.
Do that and you too can put yourself into 'the zone' and become even more of a winner!
Peter James Field has sinced written about articles on various topics from Hypnotherapy, Cure Anxiety and self improvement and motivation. One of the foremost British hypno-psychotherapists, with clinics in Birmingham and London, UK, Peter Field is the author of numerous articles on psychotherapy, hypnosis and health. He is a Member of the British Association for Counselling and Psychothera. Peter James Field's top article generates over 33100 views. to your Favourites.
Cancer Of Urinary Bladder A percentage of 5-year cure most often oscillates around 50-70 as for the I and the II degree, and 20-30 as for the III degree. Longer survival periods are rarely reported in the IV degree