Success in Golf and meditation. The same skills?
Posted: Tuesday, September 13, 2005
by graham and julie
http://www.desktop-meditation.com
When we say to people that you need the same skills
to be
a successful golfer as you do meditator it usually raises a huge laugh.
Golf and meditation are miles apart. Some often suggest that in hitting the perfect
Golf shot you need to be in a focussed meditative state, but that’s as far as
it gets.
What do you think?
I know. You think we’re crazy. But let’s look at
the evidence. Let’s just look at what’s needed to be a successful meditator and
you can decide whether the same skills and behaviour patterns are needed to be
successful in golf.
Meditation, at least in our experience is very
rewarding but extremely frustrating. We often feel that everything is great.
Our concentration is high and we feel really peaceful and happy only to find
the next day that we are back to square one and cannot focus at all. Our
thoughts are all over the place.
During meditation we invest many hours thinking
about our strengths and how we may improve.
We know that in order to be successful we must sit
down and practice every day. In fact, at least twice a day. We know, to our cost, that we cannot afford
to miss a practice session. After all the more you practice the less surprises
you get.
The key to success is our thoughts. If we can get our
thoughts right the rest will follow. If we can keep focussed on our strengths
and positive thoughts then we can access our naturally peaceful and happy
selves. To us negative thoughts are no more, no less than waste thoughts. They
are a waste of our time and effort because they don’t produce anything they
just take away from us.
The feelings you get from meditation is so
addictive that before you realise it meditation becomes the key to your life
and you can’t manage a day without it.
Food is so important to maintaining concentration. When
we eat the correct food, food that is high in nutrients and vitamins we perform
better.
At the same time we must ensure that we drink
enough water because if we become dehydrated then our performance is impaired.
In other words instead of meditating we fall asleep.
The correct amount of Rest and Sleep are important
because if you skimp on either then you don’t perform. You cannot concentrate.
You cannot focus the mind. If your concentration is high then you reap the
reward. If your concentration is low your mind wanders and sleep invades the
space.
Meditation is a solo sport. Although, we can and do
sometimes meditate with a group. Although we can sometimes feel we perform
better when meditating with others. The bottom line is it is me and my
connection, me and my thoughts. It is not a team game even though others appear
to be doing the same thing.
But perhaps the most interesting of all is what
makes us and other mediators keep returning time after time.
WE LOVE
THE CHALLENGE
People who meditate love the challenge of calming
their minds. We love the thought that it is possible to rid the mind of all the
rubbish and concentrate on our strengths. We love doing things that test our
skills. We love questioning our ability. Meditation like Golf is the ultimate challenge
because it has not been beaten. There is no one who has completed the perfect
round. Although we all strive to be perfect, we are involved in pursuing an
activity where perfection is impossible. Therefore it is the ultimate
Zeigarnik effect.
The Zeigarnik effect: named after Bluma Zeigarnik,
a Russian psychologist is the drive within us to complete tasks. That part of
us that cannot stand the fact that something is incomplete. Hasn’t been
finished.
Both meditation and Golf are tasks that are, by
their very nature, incomplete tasks. They cannot be completed. There is no
perfect round. No one alive has reached that perfect state of being. Thus
people who follow Golf and meditation are drawn by the fact that it cannot be
completed. If it was possible to complete then we would leave them and try
something new.
Therefore we are addicted to meditation because we
are addicted to completion. The fact that we always leave our meditation
without reaching that perfect state of love, peace and happiness makes us return
to try again. To move towards “completion".
Is it the same for Golf? Are you addicted to that
perfect round? Do you constantly return to the course to improve your handicap.
Are you in search of the “completion".
We have many friends who have retired to perfect
their golf. Many of them now see their job as playing golf. Everything else is
secondary.
They like us want to learn. We all want to complete
the task. We want to be able to say we have completed the ultimate challenge.
Good Luck
Graham and Julie
To improve your intuition, initiative and energy levels
please go to:
www.desktop-meditation.com
It’s free.
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