Parents: A young soccer player’s brain is working against them, not for them!

Parents: A young soccer player’s brain is working against them, not for them!

Parents, did you know that your child’s brain is working against them to succeed in soccer? When I first learned about this concept, it blew me away, but it made perfect sense based on my own athletic experience.

Let me explain this further. Our brain has only one job to do. Can you guess what that is? Its only job is to keep you alive, and because of this, our brain makes automatic (subconscious) decisions for us.

Our brain has anywhere between 50,000 to 80,000 of these automatic thoughts per day, and they’re vital. It manages our heartbeats to make sure that we breathe, ensures digestion of our food and even helps us walk! We don’t stop and think about moving our right or left leg, it just happens.

Our brain is making these automatic decisions to keep us calm, relaxed and stress-free.

My question to you is this: How often during a competitive soccer game is a young player calm, relaxed, happy and stress-free? When I ask this question to a team I get two quick answers:

1) Never, Coach Gad, I’m always worried about something, or 2) Hardly ever, if we’re up by a lot with almost no time left, then maybe.

And that is 100% true. A young soccer player is hardly ever calm, relaxed and stress-free leading up to a competitive match, and especially during one.

Let me give you an example that I’m sure many players have gone through.

It’s the last minute of the game against a big rival team, the score is tied and unfortunately, your child makes a mistake that leads to the game-winning goal by the other team.

How do you think your child will be feeling after the game? I get answers like sad, angry, embarrassed, ashamed and disappointed. All of the se are perfectly valid responses to what happened.

Your child’s brain stores that memory for future use to keep him or her safe and alive. It says: “Today, against this team, this happened and I felt all these negative emotions.”

Now, what do you think the brain’s subconscious (automatic) thinking part is going to say to your child the next time they’re playing the team that they lost to because of their mistake?

It’s going to say something like this: “Why do you want to do this? This is stressful! Remember what happened last time? What if you make a mistake again?”

It then literally begins to shut down. It doesn’t give your child access to clean and smooth decision-making because of this subconscious worry and fear.

So your child goes to the game technically and physically ready, but they’re not prepared psychologically. No matter how hard they try, they won’t be able to play at their full potential.

They might still play fine, maybe even great, but the goal should be to maximize their full potential. They will never be able to do this until they learn how to have their brain working for them, instead of against them.

Step #2 in becoming a more confident player is understanding that the brain in its natural state is not working for an athlete, but against him or her.

That way, they will be proactive in making the necessary changes to get their brain on their side. We will begin to tackle this in Step #3 in the next article.

Source: https://www.soccerwire.com

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