Talent and the Brain

By admin | January 31, 2009
Rating 3.00 out of 5
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Submitted by Pool Shooter Blog

For the last several months I have been reading and considering the revelations in two books that have nothing to do with pool. But after reading them, it’s clear that they can be a major benefit to my pool game. The books are “Talent is Overrated” and “The Brain That Changes Itself”. The first, about talent, simply says that we make our own talent by focused practice over a long period of time. The second book, about the brain, offers many case histories to demonstrate the plasticity of the brain, or how we can cause physical changes in our brains by what we choose to think.

Together, these books indicate that lots of hours of focused practice can be traded for other activities which produce the same changes in the brain and therefore give the same results. For example, simply watching or visualizing matches of pool competitions can produce an increase in skill level.

I like to watch matches on DVD, so I can pause, rewind, slow-motion forward, etc. This sort of active participation, and actually studying a match in detail, has got to pay far greater dividends than simply watching passively, once.

One of my favorites is Thorsten Hohman winning the final of the world straight pool (14.1) championship. Another favorite DVD is Efren Reyes vs. Corey Deuel in an IPT match up in 8-ball, race to 8.

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