Inner Tennis Playing The Game

The fall of 2006 was not a good one for Lawrence Jackson. Earlier that year, he had ended his sophomore season as a defensive end at the University of Southern California with 16 career sacks and his name high on a number of NFL draft boards. 'People were asking me if I was gonna leave after that year,' Jackson recalled recently. 'I decided to go back, and part of that was to improve my numbers.'

There is no other place to buy the best inner tennis playing the game for 2019 or for 2018 but on Amazon. It contains all the best brands and genuine manufacturers of such tool. Using it, you can find even 2017 (old models) and other models and brands trusted by consumers worldwide. Inner tennis: playing the game Item Preview remove-circle Share or Embed This Item. EMBED EMBED (for wordpress.com hosted blogs and archive.org item. The inner game: an introduction to basic principles -Leaving your mind and coming to your senses -Overcoming boredom -Feeling the difference: an introduction to body awareness -Self-image -The will to win -On winning the inner game. Responsibility: W. Timothy Gallwey. Editions for The Inner Game of Tennis: The Classic Guide to the Mental Side of Peak Performance: (Paperback published in 1997), (Kindle Editio. Timothy Gallwey has been called the catalyst for the era of sports psychology. Since the publication of Inner Game books on tennis, golf, and skiing, ' inner skills are considered to be as important as technical skills by athletes and coaches. Detailed mental and physical exercises designed to help a player increase body awareness and improve concentration and rhythm demonstrate strategies for putting into practice the inner-game concept.

But eight games into his junior year, Jackson's sack total remained stuck at 16. Against Oregon State, in October, the Trojans gave up 33 points, and USC was knocked from the national title race. Jackson hadn't managed a solo tackle, much less a sack. Fans changed his nickname from 'LoJack' to 'NoSack.' The following week, immediately after another sack-less game against Stanford, he learned that a close relative had been killed in a car accident. 'It was just a lot of pressure, and a lot anger and frustration,' he said. 'Nothing was going right.'

Stumped, Jackson requested a meeting with head coach Pete Carroll, who now coaches the Seattle Seahawks. 'You're pressing,' Carroll said in his office, before handing Jackson a book with a tennis ball on the cover. Carroll had discovered The Inner Game of Tennis, a guide to the sport's mental side, as a graduate assistant at the University of the Pacific, his first coaching job, in the 1970s. In the book, a Harvard-English-major-turned-tennis pro named Timothy Gallwey writes that he is trying to address the most frequent complaint he received from his students: that they kept making the same mistakes over and over even though they knew, and had practiced, better ways to play. The brain can be our worst enemy, Gallwey says, and, in the course of ten chapters, he gives little in the way of literal tennis advice on technique or strategy. Rather, Gallwey presents various approaches — concentrate on the ball to distract your brain from screwing up your swing; think about where your racket is, not what it's doing right or wrong — to help tennis players keep their mental state from getting in the way of peak physical performance.

Carroll had found the book so useful in his job as a football coach that he had since given it to USC stars Matt Leinart, Reggie Bush, and Carson Palmer, among many others. He was not alone in his admiration, nor was football The Inner Game's most surprising application. It's still the best-selling instructional tennis book around, but to only consider its effect on that particular sport would likely be to miss most of its influence. Al Gore gave the book to campaign staffers to improve their concentration, Itzhak Perlman recommended it to aspiring violinists, and a group of Canadian researchers identified it as a guide to better sex. Carroll liked The Inner Game so much that the latest edition has these four words on the cover: 'Foreword by Pete Carroll.'

Playing The Game Of Love

Jackson brought The Inner Game back to his dorm room. 'I thought it was kind of weird,' he said, of being told to read a book about a sport he had never played, except on a Wii. It sat unopened all week until, feeling no better, he brought it with him to the team hotel before a game against Oregon.

'What the hell are you reading?' his roommate, Alex Morrow, asked that night.

'I can't put it down,' Jackson said.

The next day, Jackson sacked Oregon's quarterback three times, and led the Trojans with ten tackles, four of them for a loss. By graduation, he had eleven more sacks, giving him 30.5 for his career. The Seahawks selected Jackson in the first round of the 2008 NFL Draft. Now entering his sixth season in the league, Jackson keeps a copy of The Inner Game with him as reinforcement. 'I don't want to compare it to the great works of the Bible,' Jackson said, pausing to avoid sacrilege. 'But it's been extremely important.'

Timothy Gallwey was working as a tennis instructor near Monterey, California, in the early 1970s, wearing white cable-knit sweaters on the court, when he decided to write The Inner Game. Gallwey had been captain of the tennis team at Harvard, where he majored in English literature, and was taking a break from a planned career in academia. After a few months of teaching, he grew frustrated that while his pupils were listening to, and trying to follow, his advice, they weren't seeming to make significant improvement. 'I was beginning to learn what all good pros and students of tennis must learn,' Gallwey wrote in his manuscript. 'Conscious trying often produces negative results. One question perplexed me: What's wrong with trying? What does it mean to try too hard?'

When Gallwey finished writing his book in 1972, his publisher predicted it would sell 20,000 copies, mostly to tennis hackers looking to improve their forehand. One million copies later, it has become the most influential tennis book ever published, praised by professionals — Billie Jean King told Gallwey the book was her tennis bible — and amateurs alike. Jimmy Carter admitted to reading it to help in White House matches with Zbigniew Brzezinski, his national security adviser, while Rainn Wilson — Dwight from The Office — told the Los Angeles Times that training under a coach who had given him the book was 'basically like playing tennis with Yoda.' Gallwey himself is still an in-demand teacher and guru — trying to schedule an interview with him for this piece was like trying to get a few minutes of face time with an entertainer on a press tour.

The Inner Game was published in an era when 'sports psychology' was a phrase few had ever heard. Its release was a relative sensation, and 40 years later, now one book among many in the ever-expanding self-help section, it continues to sell thousands of copies each year. It tops Amazon's sports psychology category, and falls behind only recent best-sellers by Jimmy Connors and Andre Agassi in the tennis category. (On the list of tennis instructional books, Brad Gilbert's Winning Ugly is a distant second.) The trade paperback alone has sold more than 150,000 copies since its release in 1997, according to Nielsen BookScan. Though pro tennis players are ironically loathe to talk about the mental side of their game, chances are good that many of the competitors at Wimbledon have read Gallwey's book.

And yet, despite such ubiquity, few people are able or willing to explain why they find the book so useful. Its proponents are hesitant to boil the Inner Game down to a formula in part because, the theory goes, thinking about the Inner Game defeats the very purpose of the Inner Game. When pressed, though, they offer something like this:

Performance = Potential – Interference

The upshot is that every professional athlete, and most amateur ones, already know how to perform — to properly swing a racket, shoot a basketball, or go up-and-under around an offensive tackle. The potential of an athlete with the physical gifts and technical training of a Roger Federer, a LeBron James, or even a Lawrence Jackson is practically limitless. The difference between that potential and their actual in-game performance is everything that can go wrong in the chain of communication between the brain and the body. 'Performance rarely equals potential,' Gallwey says. 'A little self-doubt, an erroneous assumption, the fear of failure — that's all it takes to greatly diminish performance.'

Gallwey's book is a rough guide for how a properly functioning mind should operate. He dedicated the book in part to his spiritual adviser, Guru Maharaj Ji, leader of the Divine Light Mission, an Indian religious movement, who, Gallwey wrote, 'showed me what Winning is.'

With chapter titles like 'The Discovery of the Two Selves,' 'Quieting Self,' and 'Trusting Self,' it should come as little surprise that the book is about the self. Specifically how one self can get in the way of another self, all within the same self. These are Self 1 and Self 2. To summarize, Self 1 is the brain, while Self 2 is the body. Self 1 instructs, Self 2 acts. We get into trouble when Self 1 tries to tell Self 2 how to do something the latter already knows how to do — when we try too hard.

The issue is given an allegory in Chapter 3, with a section describing 'the balanced movement of a cat stalking a bird':

Effortlessly alert, he crouches, gathering his relaxed muscles for the spring. No thinking about when to jump, nor how he will push off with his hind legs to attain the proper distance, his mind is still and perfectly concentrated on his prey. No thought flashes into his consciousness of the possibility or consequences of missing his mark. He sees only bird. Suddenly the bird takes off; at the same instant, the cat leaps. With perfect anticipation he intercepts his dinner two feet off the ground. Perfectly, thoughtlessly executed action, and afterward, no self-congratulations, just the reward inherent in his action: the bird in his mouth.

Lawrence Jackson says that he finished the entire book on his first read, but now, when he goes back to it, reads only this chapter. 'When you see a cat going for its food, it's not thinking, 'OK, I have to jump now,' or 'I have to do this,' Jackson said. 'As soon as the prey moves, he moves. That's what it's about, knowing what you have to do and just reacting.'

Like Jackson, many of the million copies Gallwey has sold have gone to people with little interest in improved groundstrokes. 'I knew when I wrote it that it was not just about tennis,' Gallwey says, estimating that about half of the 1 million copies have been sold to people outside tennis: NFL quarterbacks, Major League Baseball players, or high school rodeo champions, like Shelby Adney of California, who won the state breakaway roping title in 2008, and said The Inner Game was her favorite book. In 2006, Phillies second baseman Jimmy Rollins saw Gallwey being interviewed on television, bought the book during the offseason, then won the National League MVP. 'It gets me out of my way,' Rollins has said. 'It is like therapy, almost. It simplified me.' After going 0-for-10 in the first two games of the 2008 World Series, he reread the book. In the next two games he went 5-for-9, scoring four runs, and the Phillies took the MLB title.

Beyond just sports, Susan Batson, an acting coach who has worked with Nicole Kidman and Juliette Binoche, calls the book 'an essential guide' for actors. 'I suggest the book to actors who are in a struggle with what I call 'civilian issues,' Batson said. 'I can't do it. I don't think I can. I'm not good enough. All those civilian issues that block the actor.' Al Gore gave the book to aides on his 1984 Senate campaign, hoping it would help them eliminate the distractions of a frenetic campaign and focus on the tasks that actually mattered. In both cases, the Inner Game becomes a means of eliminating extraneous concerns in the hope that people trained to perform a specific task — perform Shakespeare, get out the vote — will be able to complete those jobs at their peak ability. (The internet didn't exist when Gallwey wrote his book, but one imagines The Inner Game of a Desk Job recommending limiting one's open browser tabs.) In a 2009 paper titled 'The Components of Optimal Sexuality: A Portrait of 'Great Sex,' published in the Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality, researchers mentioned The Inner Game as a guide to improved bedroom performance. As one participant noted, 'There's an intense focus on what's happening right here, right now, that just excludes everything else.'

After being fired as head coach of the New England Patriots, in 1999, Pete Carroll spent two years in the coaching wilderness. Worried that his next chance might be his last, Carroll called Gallwey looking for guidance on how to clarify his coaching philosophy. Gallwey, in turn, referred Carroll to Sean Brawley, a former professional tennis player from New Orleans and the only Gallwey-approved instructor in the voodoo of the Inner Game. Brawley had once been ranked 148th in the world, in 1984, but his career quickly tanked: By the end of 1985, he was 783rd, and he quit tennis to go into banking and real estate. Brawley started playing small tournaments again in the early '90s, but his results were lagging until he picked up a copy of The Inner Game. He won the next tournament he entered. 'I hadn't read any sports psychology books,' Brawley said recently, several decades of living in California having scraped away any bayou from his accent. 'In the '80s, it just wasn't very big.'

Brawley sought out Gallwey as a mentor, and realizing his career as a pro had likely peaked, no matter what books he might read, turned to coaching, first as tennis director at a country club, then as a mental guru for hire. He landed work at USC, his alma mater, where he worked with the university's golfers, its women's basketball team, and members of the track team. With his consultation, Brawley says the school of engineering began giving The Inner Game to its students.

When Carroll was hired as the head coach at USC, in 2001, he asked Brawley for help applying the Inner Game to his new job. 'He was afraid he might have only one more shot,' Brawley says. 'It was mostly him telling me what he thought he did well, and me telling him why it worked.' What Carroll had always done well was run a defense, so at USC, he decided to act as both defensive coordinator and head coach. Carroll's high school coach had handed out Maxwell Maltz's Psycho-Cybernetics, a self-help book that promotes goal-setting as the means to a successful life. Carroll, in turn, started giving out The Inner Game to some of his players at USC, and would occasionally quote from it in conversations with the team as a whole. He began referring to his goal of creating a 'self-actualized' football program that depended on 'divine nonchalance.' He later titled one chapter of his own book 'The Inner Game of Football.'

Eventually, Brawley began working with specific Trojans — 'Some athletes don't have time to read a book,' he says — including Lawrence Jackson and Kyle Williams, an offensive lineman who considered leaving the team after he was called for three false starts in one game. ('I wish I had known about it sooner,' Williams said of The Inner Game.) One year, when Carson Palmer looked sloppy during spring drills, Brawley determined that Palmer was simply bored and unfocused — 'They repeat the same drills and the same play over and over,' Palmer complained to him — and worked with offensive coordinator Norm Chow to adjust practices accordingly. Chow, now the head coach at Hawaii, gives The Inner Game to many of his quarterbacks.

As a sophomore, Reggie Bush was struggling as the team's punt returner. 'There were two games where he had two fumbles in both games, and suddenly developed a fear of dropping the ball,' Brawley said. 'He was always thinking, Don't fumble, don't fumble.'

Over lunch, Brawley quizzed Bush.

'When the punter kicks the ball, can you see it?'

'Yeah.'

'OK, once the punter kicks the ball, start counting to eight, and get to eight right when you catch it,' Brawley told Bush. It worked. 'It doesn't matter if he gets to six or eight. The counting already takes his mind off fumbling,' Brawley said. Bush went on to lead the Pac-10 in punt return yardage.

The practical lessons of The Inner Game — not getting bored, counting in your head — can sound so simplified as to become meaningless. When pressed to explain their techniques, or why people should buy into the philosophy, proponents are insistent that the very question is inappropriate. 'I don't want anybody to buy in,' Brawley told me. 'There isn't an Inner Game approach.' I told him it was unclear to me how The Inner Game had helped one Trojan, a kicker who had been missing field goals to the right, and began making them again only after Brawley instructed him to intentionally miss the ball to the right. Brawley replied, via email: 'I'm not surprised you're unclear!! Many IG coaching techniques or interventions seem 'paradoxical' at first glance.' There was no further explanation.

Yet coaches have found the book useful in many disciplines, especially working with athletes whose role is solitary. Scott Owens, head coach of the men's hockey team at Colorado College, gives it to his goalies. Al Golden, head football coach at the University of Miami, gives it to his quarterbacks. Paul Westhead, the former NBA head coach, now with the University of Oregon's women's team, distributes a handout with key points from The Inner Game and uses it to work with free-throw shooters. 'I just talked to one of my players who'd been a little erratic on her free throws,' Westhead told me. 'In the book, the concept was, Just hit the ball over the net, and don't care where it goes. You're just trying to strike the ball properly. So I stood in front of her and said, 'I want you to shoot the ball as if I'm a photographer for Sports Illustrated and all I care about is your form. The camera won't see where the ball goes.'

News that coaches are using the book's techniques is especially heartening for Gallwey and Brawley, both of whom believe that breakdowns in athletic performance first occur not in the brains of athletes but in their relationship with coaches. 'Coaching tends to focus fairly exclusively on technique as most important,' Brawley said. 'And it is important! But you can improve technique without giving technical instruction. Skateboarders and snowboarders are great examples. The top guys don't have a coach. If there's no coach, how did they get so good?' Scotty Lago, an American snowboarder who won a bronze medal at the 2010 Winter Olympics, kept a copy of The Inner Game in his room at the Olympic Village.

In recent years, Brawley has worked with hitting coaches in the Yankees minor league system to improve hitters' ability to track pitches — during batting practice, players were told to yell 'pitch' when the ball was thrown and 'hit' when they made contact — and both he and Gallwey were asked by the Pittsburgh Pirates to explain The Inner Game to the team's coaching staff. (The Pirates' director of mental conditioning explained in an email that they also planned to host several other 'master teachers,' including a Navy SEAL, an expert in 'instinctive shooting,' an instructor in the official Israeli Defense Force martial arts program, and an improv coach.) 'As soon as you say sports psychology, everyone thinks of mental toughness and visualization, but there's an underlying natural way that people learn,' Brawley said. 'It's hard to realize that, as coaches, we might actually be interfering with the learning process.'

Last year, Brawley and Gallwey opened the 'Inner Game of School of Coaching,' to coach the coaches. Brawley helped teach the first courses in Brazil, but the pair had a falling out — Brawley declined to elaborate, but said it wasn't the first time — and he is now preparing to offer a Master Class Coaching Certification course of his own, through a new school he has decided to call the The Brawley Institute, the details of which are pretty much all pending.

I first read The Inner Game of Tennis last year. I had hit a rut in my tennis game and considered the usual solutions: New racket? New shoes? New, less skilled opponents? Then a friend loaned me the book. My competitive days and commitment to the game were too far-gone to expect any huge improvements, but I did notice myself changing my approach. Lessons I knew from childhood — watch the ball all the way into the racket — suddenly became more instinctive. Before, I had to think consciously about them. By not thinking about them at all, they occurred naturally.

Eventually, I got in touch with Gallwey. He was hard to reach. He lives in Malibu, but I finally caught him in Paraguay, where he was in the middle of a 20-day corporate speaking tour across South America. He had been in Buenos Aires and Montevideo, and was soon off to Sao Paolo and Bogota. He is now in his seventies, with his hair in the same part as when he was a tennis instructor, though now much thinner. He still plays tennis when he can, but most of his work is now of the team-building, executive-training, conference room-inspiring variety. He charges in the tens of thousands of dollars for speeches, and his Inner Game empire has expanded to include books on skiing, music, stress, work, and golf. He has worked as a consultant for AT&T, Coca-Cola, Apple, IBM, and Rolls-Royce, among many other companies. 'Now it's become almost a fad,' he said, of his career as a conditioner of mental strength. 'Every CEO has their coach.'

No question there: Not only does every CEO have a coach, but you can find life coaches who specialize in helping doctors, lawyers, and practically anyone else. Tim Ferriss has made a career dividing people's lives into four-hour increments, while Tony Robbins promises inner peace and outward success on the other side of a rug of hot coals. San Francisco 49ers COO Paraag Marathe declared at the latest MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference that the next frontier in the race to objectively quantify athletic performance will be sorting out how and why some athletes' brains function more calmly and coolly than others.

In other words, 40 years after his book's release, Gallwey's movement has finally caught up with him, and he believes his book's influence might actually be understated. 'Top athletes are sometimes a little shy to say they're working on the mental side,' he said. Lawrence Jackson told me that he had yet to admit to any of his NFL teammates that he had read the book.

When I asked Gallwey if he had any actionable advice for my tennis game, he offered only koans, some straight from his book: 'The opponent within your own head is more daunting than the one on the other side of the net.' His voice is now more grandfatherly than inspirational, but given that Gallwey's career has arced so far from the plan he intended, his success seemed a fitting recommendation of his book's central concept: unconscious submission. He boasted that, given 20 minutes and a willing pupil, he could teach an untrained adult to hit a tennis ball, consistently, without missing. Any lingering uncertainty was all in their head. 'It's a worthwhile endeavor to take the time to realize that we actually have more potential than we think,' he said. 'That's a thought worth engaging consciously.'

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Preview — Inner Tennis by W. Timothy Gallwey

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The Inner Game of Tennis will help you: use the mind/body connection and learn to trust yourself on the court; find the state of 'relaxed concentration' that allows you to play at your best; utilize the 'inner game principles to make the most of traditional instruction techniques; focus your mind to overcome nervousness and self-doubt; and build skills by smart practice, t...more
Published November 12th 1976 by Random House (first published January 1st 1974)
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Popular Answered Questions
This question contains spoilers…(view spoiler)[In this book the author says ' One day while I was wondering about these matters, a very cheery and attractive housewife came to me for a lesson...'
Why does he mention that the woman is ' a very attractive cheery housewife'? I read the book and this sentence seems so not to belong this book and I'm sure that those who read it understand what I'm asking. (hide spoiler)]
MaryBecause it was originally published in 1974. ;)
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Rating details

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Jul 31, 2012Jake Taylor rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
This was one of those books that I will never regret reading. The Inner Game of Tennis is well written, engaging, and probably the most practical and applicable book to my own life that I have ever read. I don't even play tennis and this book has helped my mental and physical approach to and performance in sports, namely basketball. I have always hindered my own performance by doing all the wrong things: trying too hard, criticizing myself, always trying to correct things but never actually perf...more
Sep 26, 2013Urban Sedlar rated it really liked it · review of another edition
By reading the title you'd think it's about tennis, but it only touches it. It talks more about the inner game of *everything*. First, it breaks down the Self into Self 1, which is basically your thinking brain (always analyzing and judging), and Self 2, which is your 'feeling and doing' brain. The book gives ample evidence (that's also quite easy to relate to) that Self 2 can master almost everything in a short amount of time, while being 'in the flow', if only Self 1 doesn't interfere. Thus, t...more
Jan 20, 2018Emma Scott rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
ETA: My husband's Goodreads account is inexplicably linked to mine. So when he finishes a book, his review shows up here. I have not read this book but I trust the reviewer. He's pretty keen. ;)
His review:
An enlightened view
Some simple and profound insights. Practical and theoretical guidance on the power of attention and focus, and the pivotal role these essential skills play in the game of tennis and the game of life. Highly recommend. A swift and engrossing read with lasting value.
Aug 28, 2017Nicolay Hvidsten rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: favourites, headspace, non-fiction, philosophy, re-read, audible
I bought this book twice, if that's not a testament to its quality I don't know what is.
Immediately after I finished listening to the audio book version I went over to amazon and once more gladly gave them my money in exchange for a physical copy. 'Why?' you ask? Because this is not a book you read once, then forget about. This is a book that needs to be absorbed over time, then put aside while you contemplate its messages and let them grow, before once more picking it back up and solidifying wh
...more
Oct 09, 2014Mario Tomic rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Honestly this is one of the best book I've ever read, it really spoke to me on so many different levels. If you've played any sports or games you know what it feels like to be In The Zone, everything is flowing and you play the best you've ever played. This state is familiar to most of us but what is preventing us from being in the zone every game? Well, this book addresses that exact issue and I found it extremely valuable to help me reach a new level for my gym workouts. One other thing I real...more
Feb 20, 2018Anthony rated it really liked it · review of another edition
It’s Buddhism, secularized and westernized and applied to sports. Bloody brilliant if you ask me.
Mar 12, 2014Jeremy rated it it was amazing · review of another edition

Quotes:
Images are better than words, showing better than telling, too much instruction worse than none, and… trying often produces negative results.
The “hot streak” usually continues until he starts thinking about it and tries to maintain it; as soon as he attempts to exercise control, he loses it.
The first skill to learn is the art of letting go the human inclination to judge ourselves and our performance as either good or bad.
Judgmental labels usually lead to emotional reactions and then to ti
...more
May 10, 2012Stacey rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Preface: I am not a tennis player. However, I am an ultimate Frisbee player/athlete and a lot of what Timothy talked about (perfecting your 'Inner Game' via mental acuity & awareness) can be readily applied to any non-contact/competitive sport- especially ultimate Frisbee which is very much a thinking/mental game after you've mastered the basic skills. My friend, and some would say 'coach,' gave this to me to read- believing that it would help me get over a few things that I have been strugg...more
Jun 21, 2008Ryan rated it liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: psychology, owned-books, non-fiction, hobbies
Definitely a worthwhile read for the athlete and non-athlete alike (but especially for the athlete). Some amazing insights given that this book preceded all of the empirical work within the field of psychology concerning the dual role of the conscious vs. unconscious mind in shaping behavior. The most difficult part is figuring out how to institute some of the suggestions in specific situations (especially in other sports). Most of the examples are of course heavily dependent on the tennis mediu...more
Jul 25, 2010David rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I am a musician, and this was recommended to me by another musician friend. As it turns out, many of my colleagues have read this book, so it seems as though I am the last! 'The Inner Game' has, without a doubt, been one of the most beneficial books I have ever read. Before I had even finished, some of the insights of the book had already begun to change the way that I practice, audition, and perform! I wont say that the author has come up with any ideas or concepts so revolutionary that they ha...more
Jan 14, 2015Tigran Mamikonian rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
The Inner Game of Tennis by Tim Galloway is one of the best book I’ve ever read. Tim wrote this book in 70s and since then this book became classics, it even kicked off new profession - coaching…
The key idea of the book is that all of us are perfect from birth to death, so only limitation to achieve full potential are self-limitation we put on ourselves by being judgmental, unfocused and egocentric. Tim illustrates this by saying that in ourselves there are 2 selves: Self 1 - teller, thinker, c
...more
Sep 16, 2013Ben rated it liked it · review of another edition
I don't play tennis. But now I don't have to because I have locked down the inner game.
This book isn't really about tennis, it's about wu wei. Flow. The zone. Being 'unconscious.' It's about silencing the inner critic, detached observation, and naturalism. I read it from the perspective of a musician, although I am not much of one anymore, and felt like there was some great wisdom there.
Jan 26, 2016Arash Narchi rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
If you want to understand how to better focus and get in a mental state to excel your performance, this is a great book for that.
Apr 13, 2019Vishal Katariya rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: tennis, mindfulness, reread-every-once-in-a-while
Enjoyed it. I realized pretty soon that this isn't a book about tennis at all, instead it's about how to control your mind while doing anything. Turns out, you can't control it. Instead, you let the body dictate and find its natural rhythm. You have two selves, Self 1 and Self 2 (Kahnemann and Tversky anyone?). Self 1 is the intellectual self that tells you, 'take a longer backswing!' whereas Self 2 just does. The book veered off from tennis to get into breathing, meditation, concentration, cons...more
Jul 24, 2019Daiva Sindaravičiūtė rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I picked up this book since primarily I was interested to learn more about tennis. By reading the title you'd assume that it's purely about tennis, yet tennis is used as an example.
This book explains more about the inner game of “everything”.The book breaks down the Self into Self 1, which is basically your thinking brain (judging), and Self 2, which is your 'feeling' brain.
Author also gives an interesting perspective on winning, derived from surfers. Surfers want to ride the biggest wave not
...more
May 07, 2019Sergio Reyes Armas rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Woow. Incredible book. It breaks down our selves into two. Self 1 - your analytic side, always judging and caring about what other people think and Self 2, your feeling and doing side. So basically, Self 2 can master everything if Self 1 doesn't interfere. In order to achieve it, you have to learn how to quite your Self 1. The book gives some strategies about how to focus in important moments and also a great perspective about winning and losing.
Jun 16, 2018John rated it it was amazing · review of another edition

Inner Tennis Playing The Game Pdf

Wow, thanks Made You Think podcast. I was so short sight in avoiding this and thinking I needed to focus instead on technique and the physical.
This book is life changing, I will be reading and re-audiobooking it soon.
May 14, 2019Daniel rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I generally dislike self-help books, but the Inner Game of Tennis is different. It is concerned as much with philosophy and meditation as it is with tennis, or as it states:
All these skills are subsidiary to the master skill, without which nothing of value is ever achieved: the art of relaxed concentration. The Inner Game of Tennis will next explore a way to learn these skills, using tennis as a medium.

The book does this quite well, astoundingly so given that it was published about 40 years befo
...more
Nov 13, 2011Betsy rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: non-fiction, education, music, psychology
This book isn't just about tennis, it's about learning to do anything more naturally. Our brains/ego -- 'self 1' -- are not as smart as we think they are. There is no way that our brains can think through all of the small movements our body needs to do to hit a fast-coming ball with a tennis racket, or control our vocal chords to sing a song, or play a fast-paced jig on a fiddle. To do these sorts of things, we need to stop thinking and let our unconscious self - 'self 2' - take over, trusting s...more
Aug 09, 2011Eva rated it really liked it · review of another edition
I am an emotional tennisplayer, which I hate! So when I heard about this book I ordered it immediately. I didn't read it all the way through, but when I felt I needed some support I read some chapters. It really helped! Not that I am as cool on the court as I should be, but it did help me set my mind in the right direction... coping with the other me that always gets mad or dissapointed when I don't hit a ball right. Still have ups and downs, but now that I am more selfaware I can control the em...more
Aug 06, 2009Gwen Skrzat added it · review of another edition
This book is a classic -- if you play tennis it's a must read. The author is a renowned sports and life coach who became famous with this book, in a large part because Harry Reasoner thought the principles in it couldn't possible work and challenged to author to prove them. He did, and it changed the reporters mind, and the way many of us look at how we play sports and also how we live.
It's primary thrust is to help the reader learn to apply some basic principle of non-judgment and focus to thei
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Feb 14, 2013Mark Bao rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
A very good book on the 'selves' involved in learning, as well as how to learn naturally. Applied to tennis, naturally, but this can be applied to many things. This was a really good book on the fundamentals and techniques on natural learning (or 'inner game' learning).
I found it goes pretty well with the dual process theory presented in Thinking, Fast and Slow, connecting 'self 1' to 'system 2' and vice versa.
Sep 12, 2017Margaret Ashton rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
This book is one of the most important books out there for overcoming our own mental barriers to any activity. It was actually recommended to me by my oboe teacher, but has also been brought up by shooting coaches and, yes, tennis coaches. Definitely worth a read to get great ideas on how to trust your subconscious and overcome your own tendencies to over-think performance - and thereby not perform as well as you can. Highly recommend - for everyone, not just tennis players!
Oct 07, 2010Elizabeth marked it as to-read · review of another edition
Jan 27, 2019Oleg rated it really liked it · review of another edition
It is a short book that punches way above its weight. Surprisingly, it packs a lot of wisdom for such a small size. Perhaps, it is because it was written in 1975 when authors didn’t feel compelled bloating book sizes for the sake of sales.
This book teaches you an interesting concept. As a player of any kind of game, you should be competing not against an opponent, and not even against yourself, but to test the limits of your abilities and uncover the ultimate levels that you did not know you po
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Inner Tennis Playing The Game Pdf

Mar 24, 2019Jesse rated it really liked it · review of another edition
I took from this book two important insights. First, a refreshed view on thinking fast and slow, or systems 1 and 2, in situations that require many sub-second decisions. Slow thinking is simply unable to keep up with the rate of events, significantly reducing performance and preventing a state of flow. Unfortunately, it seems we are unable to turn off slow thinking on command. To keep it in check, let it pay attention to a single object or recurring event, offloading the majority of computation...more
Apr 28, 2018Sid rated it really liked it · review of another edition
A simple book with a powerful message - to quiet the mind, allows the body to excel. Ever see a cat inch up on its prey? The cat has utmost focus and every muscle is acting out of instinct. Contrary to the cat, human minds continue to be bombarded by the outside world. Learning to filter what is important and what is not, is imperative in excelling in this chaos. Learning to give up something, is what allows us to be free. How do we gain such focus? How do we become lucid? There are techniques d...more
Jul 08, 2018Matjaz rated it really liked it · review of another edition
The book is quite strange to read if you go into it without any plans to start learning tennis in the future but you read it anyway because of all the high recommendations. And sure enough with a bit of patience you can pull out quite a few gems of wisdom till you get to the last third. Some of the thoughts on why and why should we compete in various areas of life are quite interesting. Sure some of the suggestions of letting go of judgments and go with the natural flow are as old as humankind i...more
May 21, 2019Tommy Johnson rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Really good read for anyone devoted to self-improvement. Though the theory put forth in this book about Self 1 and Self 2 might not be wholly indicative of reality, it is at least a helpful paradigm for both critically assessing one's performance while also being kind and gentle with oneself. The big takeaway for me is that stressing over performance and overthinking your mistakes is actually harmful to improvement, something 'Endure' by Alex Hutchinson also stresses convincingly. Having this bo...more
Aug 28, 2019Rex rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Ok, READ THIS BOOK!! I cant emphasize enough how much value I got from this amazing book. So much that I literary decided to re read the book again right after I finished it. This is the first book I have read back to back. I was so blown away by the teachings this booked offered that I wanted to make them concrete in my mind causing me to re read it from again from start to finish.
The book made it clear in my mind the difference between us and our ego. He called them Self 1 (ego mind) Self 2(ou
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W. Timothy Gallwey (born 1938 in San Francisco, California) is an author who has written a series of books in which he has set forth a new methodology for coaching and for the development of personal and professional excellence in a variety of fields, that he calls 'The Inner Game.' Since he began writing in the 1970s, his books include The Inner Game of Tennis, The Inner Game of Golf, The Inner g...more
inner Game(7 books)
“When we plant a rose seed in the earth, we notice that it is small, but we do not criticize it as 'rootless and stemless.' We treat it as a seed, giving it the water and nourishment required of a seed. When it first shoots up out of the earth, we don't condemn it as immature and underdeveloped; nor do we criticize the buds for not being open when they appear. We stand in wonder at the process taking place and give the plant the care it needs at each stage of its development. The rose is a rose from the time it is a seed to the time it dies. Within it, at all times, it contains its whole potential. It seems to be constantly in the process of change; yet at each state, at each moment, it is perfectly all right as it is.” — 71 likes
“It is said that in breathing man recapitulates the rhythm of the universe. When the mind is fastened to the rhythm of breathing, it tends to become absorbed and calm. Whether on or off the court, I know of no better way to begin to deal with anxiety than to place the mind on one’s breathing process.” — 14 likes
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