One
Under Par
A Newsletter courtesy of
KeyGolf.....for KrookedStix.Com
Choking, Yips and other Mental Aberrations
You may want to call this edition of
our newsletter "Rantings from Mumford." It is becoming
a matter of sheer consternation to me and some of those familiar
with the Double Connexion, Clear Keys and our approach to the
mental game (actually, it's been that way for me for quite
awhile) to see, read and hear the sounds of missed realities,
misrepresented principles, zealous overstatements of
self-aggrandizement suggesting that whoever is speaking is the
only "true word" about golf and everyone else is
slipping somewhere along the road to the nether regions. All I
can say, in the least offensive way possible, is "Show me
the evidence, the references from research and investigation.
Don't just throw opinions and wive's tales around. Everybody has
one or more of those. Let's get some truth into this arena."
The following subject is not the
private venue of any one sport or activity. For our purposes
here, however, we will look primarily at golf. Much shows up in
print about "yips," "choking,"
"anxiety," "performance anxiety, "
"fear" and "panic." Some say they are the
same, or at least come from the same box. Others protest that
they are different, even to the point of having no similarity. So
let's look at some evidence.
We have watched closely the claims that
come out of the Mayo Clinic and The U. of New Mexico, in
particular, over the past year or so. Neither of them gives any
recognizable clue that they fully understand the issues, but they
continue to publish one assertion after another. (I understand
that there even may be some enmity between them, which surely
points to the fact that much other than genuine research and a
quest for truth is going on).
If you take time to examine studies and
papers going back to the 50's and 60's, you will notice that
anxiety is the major player in all of the "expressions of
choice" that we pointed to above. There is fairly common
agreement among credentialed authorities that anxiety precedes
"choking," precedes "yips," precedes
"performance anxiety," and indeed is even a precursor
of "panic." Anxiety is the basic engine of all the
others. In fact, it will be found that anxiety is the primary
under-carriage of all of the other "named
dysfunctions." So anxiety is not a synonym for the other
named "agents of doom." It is the parent, the
precipitant, the driving force behind the others.
Some want to believe, and seem to need
others to do the same, that fear and anxiety are the same. While
they are shirt-tail relatives, they are different. Fear relates
to something that is present and accounted for. You can see what
causes fear. Anxiety arises from imagined threats. You won't see
it. It just floats free all over the place, because it is related
to something out of the past. It is not visible because it
relates to things a person has long since transformed through
repression of some other, probably childhood, terror, singular or
multiple.
In their book, "Introduction to
Psychopathology, Frazier and Carr define anxiety as "an
affect characterized by feelings of apprehension, uncertainty,
and helplessness which are not attached to a real, external
danger." An "affect" is defined as follows:
"a subjective feeling state or emotion, e.g., depression,
guilt, anger, anxiety."
All of the states of angst that get
popular press have some things in common, but they also have some
distinguishing marks, mostly to be found in intensity. Anxiety is
at the root of all of them. Choking is less intense than yips,
and performance anxiety is just short of the yips, but more
intense than choking. Panic is the advanced and crippling stage
of anxiety. It is more intense and debilitating even than yips.
In other words, we are dealing with a
continuum here, not totally separate issues.
Yips is what you get from anxiety in
situations in which one feels personally threatened (tight tee
shots, bad lies, important short putts, etc.) and is a result of
some form of inward, personally experienced pressure emanating
from long ago. It tends to isolate itself in chronic relationship
to some kind of physical movement (as in putting or swinging a
club). Choking is also a result, but not quite as severe as yips.
It is more processive than yips and falls more into the realm of
playing the game rather than swinging a club. It can, if unabated
lead to yips, but it is more identified with subtle psychological
distraction than with physical disability (starting to think
about results, worry over something in the swing, etc). Yips
shows up as a physical manifest. Choking causes a person to loose
mental tracking and have breakdowns in thinking and planning,
with either a flood of thoughts or an outright vacuum. Yips
changes the motor activity. Choking may look like it changes the
motors, but it only binds or over-clutches the steering wheel.
Panic is even more debilitating than
any of the others. It strikes at both the thought process and
motor activity, and renders them highly lacking, if not
non-functional. Panic has most of the charateristics of both fear
and anxiety, thus causing sharp disorganization and erratic
behavior.
Performance anxiety is a social
disorder. It is derived from a fear that one may look bad to
others or somehow fail to measure up. Performance anxiety and
choking may look a lot alike, but they come from different
stimuli. Yips does not require social implications, nor does
panic, although that may be involved with either. Choking, while
presenting a less drastic form, can issue either from the
presence of other people and fear of shame or from a totally
ego-centric mis-perception that comes out in the form of
self-chatisement.
With yips, a physical manifestation may
cause hesitation in and malfunction of a putt or any other shot.
With choking, misses may be a matter of disorganized execution or
something as mundane as mismanaging the distance and direction
factors coming from disturbances of normal planning functions.
Our reckoning is that all of these are
cut from the same basic fabric, with anxiety at the root. They
are, therefore, amenable to a common solution - that is, if one
is willing to look very carefully at what is going on. If that
solution is aimed at the parent - anxiety - it will take care of
the others in the process. We suggest that if you know how to
manage anxiety, you will, in effect, have managed all of these
manifestations, no matter where they come from or by what name
you choose to identify them.
Why? Because the common etiology of all
of them is found in anxiety signaling the immune system to do its
job. The function of the immune system is to defend us - our life
and health. In doing so, it throws up a blocking action against
anything it perceives as an invader, and it makes no distinction
between what we may believe to be "good" or
"bad." It is non-discriminatory. It doesn't make any
difference to the human system what that indicator is, how it
looks, whether it is real or imagined, what size or shape it has.
It only knows to do its job. (See any of the works on
"stress" from Hans Selye, MD). It is that blocking
action by the immune system that manifests itself in what we may
variously refer to as choking, yips, panic, etc. Anxiety is the
chief "invader" for all of us, in life and golf. It is
not going away, so learn to manage it and coexist with it.
Take further note. The management
process is the very same for all of these apparent culprits. It
is not necessary to see them as different and suppose that
different solutions are required. One solution is sufficient. It
is only necessary to keep one's self in the present. There is no
anxiety in the present . Anxiety is found only in the future and
the past. If you wish to curtail anxiety, you must do it in a way
that refrains from arousing the immune system when it gets thrown
a dose of anxiety by a golfer (or anyone else) facing water on
the left or OB on the right (for instance). Certainly, there are
some players out there who have suffered human insults sufficient
to undermine even the most normal approaches to everyday emotion
and thinking. But we will guarantee that even so, if one knows
how to keep the mental processes in the present, even those who
have suffered unreasonably will be able to contend in balance and
without undue ill effects from any of the above named
malefactors.
That's the reward for developing an
understanding of, and ability to manage, anxiety.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In their special issue on the mental game in
1990, Golf Magazine placed Carey Mumford among the top dozen golf psychologists
in the country, and Golf World Magazine devoted two pages to his second book,
"The Double Connexion," in the Pro-Report section of their June 19, 1992 issue.
For more information and to get Carey Mumford's
essential reading "The Double Connexion", go to
http://www.clearkeygolf.com