| Stress, Anxiety and Energy | |||||||
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| Too much stress and anxiety can seriously affect your ability to focus on your skills and flow in a performance.
It is important that you realize the you are responsible for your own stress levels. Very often they are a product of the way you think. |
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| Stress
A certain level of stress is needed for optimum performance. If you are under too little stress, then you will find it difficult to motivate yourelf to give a good performance. Too little stress expresses itself in feelings of boredom and not being stretched. An optimum level of stress will give you the benefits of alertness and activation. Excessive levels of stress can damage performance and damage your enjoyment of your sport. These excessive levels occur in the following circumstances:
The negative effects of stress are:
Stress and Adrenaline When you are in a competitive environment, or are in an environment in which you are being evaluated, adrenaline may enter your bloodstream. This has the following positive and negative effects on your body: Positive Effects:
Negative Effects:
You will experience the flow of adrenaline into your body typically as "butterflies in your stomach." In sports such as shooting where fine motor control is important, adrenaline may be a negative factor. However in sports like sprinting or power lifting, where explosive activity is required adrenaline may be useful in generating optimum performance. You may currently view high levels of adrenalive in your body negatively as stress. You may need to review this, perhaps welcoming adrenaline as an aid to your performance. Similarly you might like to consider using a "psych up" routine to raise your adrenaline levels if you are not sufficiently aroused. Anxiety Anxiety is different from stress. Anxiety comes from a concern over lack of control over circumstances. In some cases being anxious and worrying over a problem may generate a solution. Normally, however, it will just result in negative thinking. There are five main unrealistic desires or beliefs that cause anxiety:
Mental Energy You need mental energy to be able to concentrate your attention and maintain good mental attitudes. If you are concentrating effectively then you can conserve physical energy by maintaining good technique when your muscles are tired, can maintain focus and good execution of skills, and can push and drive your body through pain and fatigue barriers. You can waste mental energy on worry, stress, fretting over distractions, and negative thinking. Over a long competition these not only damage enjoyment, but also drain energy so that performance suffers. It is therefore important to avoid these by good use of sports psychology, and by resting effectively between events and by ensuring that you sleep properly. |
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