@ouraring@BarrieCrampton I wish my wife could love your ring. It got lost in the mail, then a "replacement" was sent; only to find out the customer service agent stretched the truth because the size was out of stock. Then, replaced the order with in stock, and 2 weeks later...nothing.
@RotoStreetWolf I’m trying to decide if I really wanna deal with another week of Josh Jacob’s? I have Corum sitting on my bench whispering 14+ points to me.
@leajansenpb 2b. Repeat 2a, but this time, go to a court and do it for an hour. Then do it again but in a game setting at practice. The key to this is to learn it could happen. But with enough time, yips go away on their own. Trying to avoid them is the problem that brings them back.
@leajansenpb As a mental health counselor & player, seen yips a few times in clients. Presents different, yet what seems common in all cases is the anticipatory fear. “Oh gosh, it’s happening again” or “what if it happens again.” We usually try a few things. 1st up is something you won’t like
@leajansenpb 2a. Do imaginary yip exposures. Someone couldn’t serve anymore. Another couldnt pitch. imagine those situations going horribly wrong & dont fix it. just accept it COULD happen. Do this imaginal exposure for an hour. By the end, your brain will be bored to tears
@leajansenpb 1. Try to get the yips. Seriously. Try to have the worst case of yips you can. Not only will this help you accept them if it comes, it usually shuts them down completely. It’s like trying to panic. When stop fighting it, the worry goes away making it easier to move on
@TweenerKing I guess it depends on your view of the sport and the model you have in mind. Coming from tennis, I’d expect minimal contracts and bigger purses. As a player and viewer, I want what will attract the best talent for the well-being of the game for a long time.