Stop Thinking
Consistency.
You hear about it plenty with regards to ultimate, usually something like “if you can consistently complete a forehand/backhand to an open cutter, throwing ability will not keep you from playing elite-level ultimate.”
How do you get it? You know where I’m going because you’ve already read the title.
This is something I’ve mentioned offhandedly before–honing your skills to a point where they become unconscious–but this cannot be restated enough. It’s only when you get to a point where you don’t have to think about what you’re doing that you can really thrive. When throwing a forehand is as natural to you as walking (ok, perhaps nothing is quite THAT natural, but you get the idea*), you’re in a good place. How often do you stumble when you walk?
You really need to develop a mental state for performance. Part of that is avoiding distraction, and “distraction” includes what you do with your body. If you HAVE to think about your throwing technique while you’re doing it, can you really expect it to hold up under game-time pressure? If you need to think about your footwork mid-cut, are you really going as fast as you possibly could?
Levels of Competence
I believe it was in a book about Bruce Lee (if I had anyone who I’d say was a personal role model for me, he’d be the one) that I read the following about skills progression–specifically for martial arts, but the parallels with any physical activity are evident:
- As a beginner, your instincts are bad, unwieldy, inefficient at best.
- As an intermediate, your instincts are still bad, but you know what’s proper and can correct. (There are multiple intermediate stages, with “knowing you’re wrong” and “knowing what’s proper” and “being able to correct” each their own, discrete stage).
- At an advanced level, you again return to your instinct, but the old, inefficient ones have been replaced with the precise and the honed**.
It was due to this belief that Lee’s original school of Jeet Kune Do‘s first and final ranks were both symbolized by an empty circle (your intermediate ranks were a progression of the yin-yang).
Many people reach a high level of intermediate proficiency–able to consciously will themselves to perfection of a sort–and get complacent, missing the pinnacle: true unconscious competence.
That’s where you want to get. Every time you step on the field, you want to operate unconsciously. You don’t want to have to think about your footwork. You don’t want to have to think about your grip. Your thoughts and energies should be focused purely on recognizing your situations and responding appropriately–no logistics of how to get there, merely intended destinations. Many a D set has been thrown that succeeds simply by taking players out of their unconscious selves and forcing them to think. Don’t help out your opponent by doing it to yourself unprompted!
Developing Unconscious Competence
How do you develop this kind of unconscious competence? Well, it ain’t easy, but there is some transferal between tasks (usually you regard it as “talent” or something similar when a player seems “naturally good;” natural is a good word indeed, for these individuals are almost always allowing their body to take over, getting out of their own way–and I can guarantee you they went through the process of learning to let go at some point. Whether they realize it or not). Again, I’ll mention driving (esp. stick) as a nice example of an opportunity to learn to let go. I’m currently learning how to play guitar–instruments are another great analog.
Relevant reading: SciAm Mind’s*** latest on How to Avoid Choking Under Pressure, page 2:
“Let’s say you’re trying to play the piano. If you were relying on your motor memory”—just letting it fly—“your motor command would automatically read out the next note in about 50 milliseconds.” But consciously monitoring your performance brings this superfast sequence of motor commands to a screeching halt, resulting in a choking incident of epic proportions. “The feedback from the first note takes 100 milliseconds just to move from your cochlea up to your brain. So if you’re saying to yourself, ‘Okay, I just finished the C, now I have to go on to the D,’ you’re going to have problems.”
This sums it up perfectly. In order to become a good musician, athlete, public speaker, you have to learn to let go, to let your body simply DO. You have to hone your body’s skills to a point where you can let go with confidence.
If you can develop a regimen or strategy to learning this skill, you can continue to apply it elsewhere, too.
Deliberate Practice
The foundational building block of all unconscious competence is deliberate practice. I don’t mean deliberate, as in, you have the intent to practice, but rather in the sense that you do everything you do with purpose. You should always be working towards a goal, honing a skill, refining, testing, repeating. repeating. You sure as hell can’t expect to make all your passes in a game if you can’t do it when you’re simply out tossing, right?
The deliberateness comes into play when you’re not content to just toss, but instead choose to toss with preconditions–you only throw from a full-extension pivot, you only throw after a fake, etc. And then, being deliberate at those things is another layer on top of that–is your full-extension as far as you can make it? Can you get to that point and also keep your balance, throw convincing, effective fakes, not pull a hamstring? When you throw fakes, are you working mechanically on the fake itself, or are you moving beyond that, visualizing a game situation and a covered defender (poor conditions, an aggresive mark) causing you to make that fake? Seeing the ensuing change in conditions that enable the one you do throw?
Visualization is the bridge between deliberate practice and effortless performance. You work on your throws deliberately, get the hang of throwing a forehand with touch…then, you stop thinking about how you’re throwing and instead start thinking about where you’re throwing. You picture a cutter. Does the throw still go where you want it, how you want it? What if you picture a mark up against you, defender tight your receiver’s hip? Can you place a pass where it won’t be D’d? If yes…can you do it again? And again? And again? Get to that point, and you might be ready for primetime.
Developing the mindset for mental toughness and applying it in-game is another component of being successful, particularly when the going gets tough, but you can go a long ways towards getting there if you can learn to simply
Stop.
Thinking.
It’s a long race when you’re chasing flow****. As they say in Japan, ganbatte.
*to be completely honest, your best comparisons for throwing a frisbee would be with other activities which involve a high degree of coordinated movement of the arms combined with stabilization through the core and a significant transfer of power from the lower limbs, as well as involving a dynamic component to projecting an implement–which make things like basketball shooting, baseball pitching/throwing, tennis ball hitting, or football throwing your truer comparisons. (Adding in the extra factor of a rotational component trims the list farther). Looking for some cross-disciplinary reading to do for ultimate? Look in that direction. Looking for some off season cross-training? You could do a lot worse than the same (I especially recommend a sport like squash, which incorporates a lot of the same sorts of lunging and one-handed motion that throwing does).
**this is otherwise known as the point in which you become a killing machine. Lee worried about some joker challenging him on the street (or one of the stunt men during a film shoot), because his instincts were honed such that in a real fight he might not be able to stop himself from, at the very least, seriously injuring his opponent.
***as I exclaimed to a friend on first discovery: “it’s like somebody made a magazine just for me!” I eat this stuff up. Highly recommended for anyone who cares to understand humanity better.
****fast forward to the last 5-8 minutes for the good stuff.



As a player who feels a lot of the effects of thought on the field, I really like this post. When I’m playing well, it’s usually because I feel like I’m completely unconscious. When I’m not, it’s because I’ve got a thought for every move I make.
After a rough practice a couple of weeks ago, our captain commented to me that he saw me thinking too much. His suggestion was to make a habit of doing my thinking well before stepping onto the field– the night before a tournament, during a slot of personal time before games start, etc. While I’ve done this before, I hadn’t really thought of it that explicitly, and I think that doing so from here on out will be of use. Making a mental checklist of what you think you need to bear in mind during the game well before it confronts you puts you in a state where you’re ready to make it happen.
On another note, mind explaining how to make a cut so that I don’t have an entire post on the front page of the blog?
Thinking before you play is a great suggestion.
I’ll probably write a post on this at some point, but “programming” yourself through visualization is pretty much it. Think of situations, visualize them, learn to recognize them (rather than analyze them) in-game and react appropriately.
And the pre-point checklist…mine always includes the force for that point, am I in the 3-4, who’s handling, and maybe if I know my opponent how I want to play my man/their team on D or how I want to set up my chump for destruction on O.
As for the expandable post summaries…blogger help saves the day.
As a beginner who was searching youtube for videos on how to throw, I came across your blog and couldn’t stop reading. I’ve never been so inspired to be a better player. Thanks!
Rita,
Thank YOU for making my day.
Fact. A simple analogy is the power position throw, where I, as an average hucker, can suddenly put a 70-yard flick into a reciever's lap in stride because they went deep, hard, as I started my dump cut. Even without a mark, if that rhythm is interrupted, the throw is considerably less likely to be perfect.
It looks like this is applicable for any new venture be it a sport/hobby . A real good one.Practice is the ultimate.