There are many different things I enjoy in life. I feel like
I have a very well rounded multifaceted life. It is always special when those
different facets come together. The way things I love and enjoy in my daily
life, the things I learn in my academic pursuits, and my life experiences intertwine
always fascinates me. I have always loved sports throughout my life. I love
watching sports, but I especially love playing sports. I have played, many
times not very well, several different sports. Last year I decided not to
participate in any organized sports for the first time in a long time. I felt I
was losing my enjoyment of sport through other frustrations involved in
participating.
This year I was asked if I would like to join a bowling
league, two leagues in fact. I had not bowled in a league or on any regular
basis since I was a young child and I had never really considered joining a
league as an adult. I decided to give it a shot. I was not expecting much out
of myself, or our teams for that matter. We were just there for the fun of it
and I was just learning how to bowl.
As the bowling season went on I gradually improved and out
teams gradually improved. I had the potential to bowl well but remained wildly
inconsistent. I bowled many games over 200 as well as some games where I did
not even reach 100. Towards the end of the season I became a little more
consistent. In one league going into the last week our team was locked into
second place. In the other league we were one game ahead in first place and
bowling the team in second place. The second place team was a very good team,
which we had not beaten many times during the season.
I was very nervous going into this matchup. I did not expect
to bowl well under the pressure of bowling for first place. In several games
this season when I had been bowling well I cracked under the pressure of simply
finishing out a good game and getting a good score. In the first game I was
clearly nervous and bowled a 125 which is 26 pins below may average at that point.
We lost that game by eight pins. We were now tied for first.
In the second game I was a little more relaxed because I
think in my mind the pressure was off because I didn't think we could win. As
the second game progressed I was bowling pretty well. I had 125 in the fifth
frame. I felt the pressure building as I began to think I could have a good
game and we could win this game. I had to work real hard to just relax and not
feel the pressure. I did not finish out the game as well as I would have liked
but I was able to bowl a 193. I did not have a single open frame in that game.
In the third game the pressure was still on. Neither team
had locked up first place. We still needed to bowl well to win, and this would
be the third and deciding game. I was really feeling the pressure now. I felt
the pressure of the moment. I also felt my own internal pressure to bowl well.
I am a competitor and when presented with a chance to win, even if I didn’t
expect to have the opportunity, I really wanted to win. Once again I stated off
the game bowling well and that increased the pressure. I began to be able to
feel my heart race and fell it beating against my chest. When I stepped up on
the lane to prepare to bowl, I felt the trembling. My legs were weak and
unsteady. I physically and mentally struggled through that game but through my
focus and determination was able to bowl a very good game for me. I matched my
season high of 233.
At the end of the third game we were in a tie for first
place, but not just a tie with the second place team. The third place team
bowled well and caught up to us too and now we had a three-way tie. There would
be a one game bowl off for first place. Team with the best score wins.
Just when I thought there couldn’t be any more pressure, I
was wrong. This whole thing was a very unique experience for me. In all my
sporting life I had never been a significant contributor on a winning team. As
an adult I had never been on a winning team at all.
In the bowl off, I continued to be stressed out and nervous.
It required all of my focus and effort to bowl well, and bowl well I did.
Despite the anxiety I was feeling I was able to manage a 195. I was very happy
and impressed with my performance. I was also very surprised. I had just bowled
the best three games in a row of my life. I had a better three game stretch
than anyone else on my team and I was a first year bowler. How in the world did
I do that? I think a large part of it was luck. I also think a large part of it
was due to my knowledge and education. There may also have been a small
component of skill as I have always been a decent all around athlete, never
really excelling in any one area.
I give the most credit to my mind. In order to have any
chance to bowl well I had to get my physical manifestations of the
psychological pressure I felt under control and that meant I had to get my mind
under control. Each time I stepped up to bowl I took several deep controlled
breaths to release the tension and energy causing me to shake and to help relax
myself. I tried to tune everything else out around me. (It didn’t help that
many people from the league stayed to watch the bowl off.) When I went back to
my seat after each frame, my heart was pounding. I tried to sit relax, take
some deep calming breaths, and maybe chat with people around. I just tried to
take my mind off of the game and off of my performance while there was nothing
I could do to affect it. I also took the time to do some mental imagery of
myself performing what was for ma a perfect shot, using the right arm angle,
hitting my mark, throwing the right speed with the right amount of rotation.
This helped especially after occasions where I did not throw good balls. I was
able to apply my knowledge of stress management and some sport psychology techniques
to my personal
experiences. It is particularly gratifying to use my education
in my own life for something fun.
I also think there is a component to me bowling well that
has to do with the fact that I did not expect to bowl well. In most sports, I have
played as an adult I am pretty good and usually one of the better players on
the team. This usually puts more pressure on me to play well, especially when
we don’t have a particularly good team overall.
However, in bowling I was our weakest bowler. I was just learning. I had
no prior expectation to do well. I did not go into this with any pressure to
bowl well. I think in some way that I cannot quantify this helped me.
My other thought is why was I suddenly able today to put
three good games together in a row? I had bowled two good games in a row before
but never three. I think another big part of that is psychological. I think it
has to do with the fact that there is an optimal level of anxiety/arousal
needed to perform well. For most of the season there was no real pressure to
bowl well. I often lost focus and could tell when I did. This resulted in poor
shots and poor games all together. In this game because of the pressure and
fact that I wanted to win I cared more about this match up and intentionally
paid more attention to my level of focus. This helped me to be more consistent
from frame to frame and game to game. There
was also a point in the match where I consciously decided I was going to stop
trying to make adjustments and just trust my natural motion to work. I am not
sure when this was but I know it was at some point after the first game. I
would like to believe it was right before I strung together a series of strikes
in the second game. That would really illustrate the point, but I cannot be
sure that is when it occurred. So once I stopped thinking about every little
component of my bowling motion from where to stand to my arm angle to my wrist
position and amount of rotation I began to bowl better. I simply focused on my
mark and bowled. This also illustrates another sports psych principle that when
you have a natural motion and then start breaking it down in your head and try
to control each little component of it as you do it you actually hurt your
performance instead of help it. The motion or skill is automatic and performed
better when left to the unconscious mind. My biggest problem was that I did not
believe I had an automatic learned skill. I thought I needed to pay more
attention because I was still learning, but once I let go I bowled better.
I was just glad to see all these pieces of my life come
together. I makes me happy and makes my life complete.
Hey Kyle- just found this blog while looking at some of your AMAZING photos. So great! Anyway- this is such a neat blog post because I can totally relate to what your saying (though not the sports backdrop;)
ReplyDeleteAnyway thanks for sharing, it helped me clarify tonight that I need to do a better job in some circumstances, actively managing my own nerves. And letting the adrenaline serve as a focus...but not letting it take me to a place where I am physically shaken.Lots of stuff to think about here- thanks:)