Limitless Learning

Limitless Learning

Understanding this info can transform your life.

The information here is just as relevant whether you are learning any other sport, skill or task. As a golf coach, I am constantly giving people information on ‘what’ to learn. But the more important thing to understand is ‘how’ to learn it. Without understanding this, you are likely to not learn it at all, or severely hamper your progress and slow it down.

In this post, I am going to identify a few strategies that you can use in your own practice. Use these to speed up your learning, and incorporate the new idea into your swing as quickly as possible.

limitless

Understanding these principles can help make your learning limitless

Want A FREE Ebook?

Before we read on, I just launched a completely FREE Ebook showing you

  • The “one thing” all golfers must improve if they want to get better
  • How to fix a shank/toe shot instantly and hit the sweet spot more often
  • How to turn a slice/hook into an accurate golf shot in just a few swings
  • An amazing drill to quickly change your swing path and turn any slice into a draw, or neutralize any hook

Why am I giving this away FREE? Because I want to make you a raving fan of mine, and I know I can help you do that.

In order to get this course, simply enter your email below. Remember, it’s FREE!

 

Fully understand

Understand the task – what is it you are trying to do? A good golf coach will help you do this – but if they ask you “Do you understand?”, you have to be honest. Make sure you ask as many questions about the information as possible.

Would a soccer player have much success if they thought the aim was to get the ball over the top of the goal, like in American Football/Rugby? I know this sounds silly, but 95% of pupils I initially see have not got a clue as to what they are trying to do.

They have been told a million things about how they should move to do ‘it’, but they don’t know what ‘it’ is.

rugbyball

 Wait…. what am I trying to do?

Sit with your eyes closed, visualize yourself doing whatever it is you are trying to do. Visualize it from all angles, and at differing speeds. Visualize from your first person perspective, and from the view of someone looking at you.

Understand the stages of learning

Learning is not a case of new info = better instantly. It is a process of assimilating and acclimatizing to that info until it is ingrained. During this process, we can sometimes see a small backward step, before we shoot forward and ahead of where we were.

Read more here

Stages of Learning

Paradox of Change

Slow it down

I’m not a massive fan of slow mo swings all the time, but they can help in making a breakthrough.

Holding the position you wish to achieve can help, moving into and through it, and then implementing that feeling into a slow motion swing. Gradually increase the speed of it as you progress.

There are different forces applied during a real swing, so the feels of slow motion swings can be less realistic, but they still help to send the message to your brain of what you are trying to achieve. Ben Hogan used this drill very effectively. I have used “slowing down” to help me learn other things, such as languages and musical instruments.

Ben Hogan showing his slow motion drill

Take away the result

This can be a vital step in the initial stages of learning. You don’t want to do it for too long, as we need out brains to link up the movement with the result.

blind basketballer

Taking away the result can help us if our old move is so ingrained (through visual perception-action coupling)

You can do this by;

  • Making a mental commitment to ignore the ball flight and focus on the thing YOU are trying to acheive, probably the most powerful thing you can do
  • Using more practice swings in the initial stages and less golf balls
  • Transition to hitting a tee, paper ball/whiffle ball
  • Transition to hitting a ball on a tee
  • Try closing your eyes as you are swinging and hitting the ball, so you get a better feeling for the swing and it’s easier to let go of a bad result if it happens.
  • Put 100% concentration – all your mental processing power – into the one thing you are trying to learn. If you are trying to learn 2 things at the same time, try and split your practice session into 33% one thing, 33% the other thing and 33% trying to find a common feeling that unites the two, but generally less thinking.

Include Variance

Something a lot of people are frightened to do is to experiment with the opposite extreme. Obviously this is a bad idea during a round of golf, but in the initial stages of learning, I would experiment with doing something ‘too much’ and ‘too little’, so it is much easier to find that middle ground.

Read this article on Differential Practice for more info

Get Feedback

Get quality information as to whether you have achieved your goal or not. Better yet, get info as to how far away your were from your goal specifically.

feedback

I use feedback as my main form of improvement with players. I see people having extraordinary ability to automatically learn better techniques without knowing about it, simply by giving the brain the right information.

The above tips can be utilized when learning almost anything, especially a physical skill. Whilst they are not always necessary, see if you can apply them to the thing you are learning right now. The message here is to maximize your concentration on the thing you are trying to achieve, minimize concentration on anything extraneous and experiment with extremes of speeds and amounts.

To read more about Learning quicker than ever before, get “The Practice Manual –  The Ultimate Guide for Golfers” by clicking below.

click here advert

One Comment

  • Lee Martin

    Hey Adam, just stumbled across your blog on facebook….some good stuff. I too am running a golf blog http://golfjourney11anddown.blogspot.co.uk
    documenting my journey in golf to play to the best level I can. Blogging is a tough game (I've found)just getting enough interest/followers but I'm enjoying documenting my progress and love for the game. It would be great to here some feedback from yourself or just for you to check out my blog and drop me a comment, thanks, Lee.

Post A Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.