Quote Originally Posted by Andre View Post
You 've heard of people saying of any sportsmen he was unbeatable that day he was just in the zone.

Makes you think about coke in the 60's and 70's in sports,but I digress.(which just shows how good Georgie Best and the English squad were cause they'd be out all night on the piss then up against some sth Americans who were pinging off their tits the next day.

So there a few pondering areas of thought really..

Skills earned through training and instruction only and natural ability; where and how can you blend the two to perfection.

Then you have zero thought mode, which allows you to fight in the zone like on automatic piolet .
Piolet piglet Pilot Haha auto correct..

I think with brain wave patterns Alpha beta and delta being modes of brain activity that allow for ease of different bodily activities that there is a definitive link between slipping between some different wave patterns in regards to 'receptive analytical responses'. (I may have just made 'that' up)

What Im wondering aloud here just for the fuck of it; is for instance if you had a fighter who was being picked apart and set up by someone who had his number on the day and he was getting schooled,but you knew damn well he knew all the stuff the other guy was setting him up with; do you think it possible if you had trained him how to change his mind set from alpha to delta via certain practices (theres even electronic ones these days in headphones) Could you help to get him to fight more in the zone?

Im a believer that everything is in the mind first and the links to it have to free flow in order for you to be at your best and Im just dreaming a bit here about future advancements and training routines that may or may not come into the sport.

Bit like that new sport where you fight a round and then do a chess move in between rounds for a few minutes then back to fighting the next round. Its an Interesting thing they are trying there.
Hans berger took a photograph of the electrical activity of a dog's brain. Berger confirmed the existence of electrical activity in the human brain. He first did this by presenting a stimulus to hospital patients with skull damage and began measuring the natural rhythmic electrical cycles in the brain. The first natural rhythm he documented was what would become known as the alpha wave.

"Biofeedback theory" relating to brain waves referred to as a kind of neurofeedback, relating to alpha waves--- is the conscious elicitation of alpha brainwaves by a subject. Two different researchers in the United States explored this concept through unrelated experiments. Dr. Joe Kamiya, of the University of Chicago, discovered that some individuals had the conscious ability to recognize when they were creating alpha waves, and could increase their alpha activity.