Title: UNDERSTANDING SELF TALK
1UNDERSTANDING SELF TALK
- Damon Burton Bernie Holliday
- Vandal Sport Psychology Services
- University of Idaho
2WHAT IS SELF TALK?
- The steady stream of on-going thoughts or
internal dialogue that goes on in our minds
constantly. - Your self talk influences your moods, emotions,
and ultimately your behavior.
DQ 2 How constant is your self talk? Have you
ever noticed a time when your self talk was
really good or bad?
3THREE CHARACTERISTICS OF SELF TALK
- Rationality
- Trained minds learn to think more positively,
logically, and systematically. - Specificity
- Self talk becomes conditioned to success and
failure events, changing dramatically based on
the mindset created in particular situations. - Automaticity
- Extensive repetition creates highly automatic
thoughts, called beliefs. - Automaticity of self talk is a two-edged sword
when examining its impact on performance.
4SELF TALK ABCS
- A Activating Event
- No Inherently stressful situations or events.
- We are not disturbed by things, but by the views
of which we take of them Epictetus - B Belief about the Event
- Athletes attach positive or negative meanings to
neutral events based on their highly automatic
belief system. - C Consequences
- Our beliefs about the event lead to positive or
negative consequences, both emotionally and
behaviorally. - Thus, the meaning that we attach to events can
positively or negatively impact our emotions,
behaviors, and ultimately our performance.
5DOES SELF TALK WORK?
- Self talk patterns have been shown to be
important predictors of sport success. - Positive self talk predominates in more effective
performances, while negative thoughts more
frequently accompany poorer performances. - Van Raalte et al. (1994) tennis study
- Mental training packages that include self talk
training as part of the intervention promote
enhanced performance over 80 of the time.
6REPROGRAMMING SELF TALK
- Reactive versus proactive approaches to enhancing
athletes self talk - Most athletes prefer proactive approaches to self
talk reprogramming, rather than old school
reactive approaches. - The key to the proactive approach is to identify
and create positive, facilitating thoughts (e.g.,
reprogramming) that can enhance athletes
emotions and performance. - Self talk scripts are effective thought
reprogramming tools.
7TYPES OF SELF TALK
- Positive Affirmations
- Thoughts that focus on your desirable
characteristics and qualities. - Goals
- Thoughts that keep your mind positively focused
on the task-at-hand, promote high effort, and
enhance persistence. - Appraisals
- Thoughts that determine the degree to which a
situation is perceived as threatening or
challenging. - Self talk reprogramming promotes appraising
problems as challenges or opportunities to learn
and grow rather than threats and opportunities to
fail.
8TYPES OF SELF TALK
- Attributions
- Reasons or explanations of success and failure.
- Self talk reprogramming encourages performers to
attribute success and failure to factors they can
control and change, such as effort, ability, and
degree of preparedness. - Cue Words
- Quick reminders used during practice and
competition. - Keep the mind positively focused on
process-oriented, present-focused reminders that
should facilitate performance.
DQ 3 Which type of self talk do you feel would
be most effective?
9USES OF SELF TALK
- Elevate Motivation
- Intrinsic motivation occurs when athletes feel
competent and in control. Self talk
reprogramming should emphasize these factors. - Enhance Focus/Concentration
- Self talk helps athletes focus on their
priorities and goals, rather than on
distractions. - Manage Stress
- Controlling self talk, particularly limiting
negative or self-defeating thoughts, helps to
minimize the amount of stress athletes experience.
10USES OF SELF TALK
- Boost Self-Confidence
- Persuasive self talk can convince athletes that
they possess the competence and preparation to be
successful. - Maximize Skill Development and Performance
- Cues and goals can help athletes remain focused
on performance-relevant cues while disregarding
and avoiding irrelevant distracter cues during
skill development and performance.
11SMART TALK COMMANDMENTS
- 1. Be an optimist, not a pessimist
- Self talk is a choice. Choose the half full
option. See situations as challenges rather than
threats. - 2. Remain realistic and objective
- Think constructively, not just positively.
- 3. Here-n-now self talk
- Avoid woulda, coulda, shouldas, and what
ifs - 4. Process self talk leads to product
- 5. Concentrate self talk on controllable aspects
- Possibly the single most important factor.
- 6. Separate performance from self-worth
- We are not our performance.
DQ 4 Which commandment do you have the most
trouble with? Why?
12HOW TO REPROGRAMSELF TALK
- Focus on appropriate positive thoughts and repeat
those thoughts frequently. - Athletes are urged to develop self talk scripts
that can target one or more specific needs (see
slides 9-10) using a variety of self talk types
(see slides 7-8) as well as the more general
guidelines outlined by the Smart Talk
Commandments. - Scripts offer athletes a tool that can be used to
reprogram positive self talk.
13CORRECTING UNPRODUCTIVE THINKING
- Extremely difficult to change negative thoughts
due to their highly automatic nature. - However, irrational beliefs and cognitive
distortions are learned behaviors, so they can be
unlearned.
14DEALING WITH NEGATIVE THOUGHTS
- D1 Detect
- Self-awareness of unconscious thought patterns.
- D2 Detour
- Thought stopping.
- D3 Dispute
- Reframing using counterarguments.
- E New more beneficial effects
15DETECTING NEGATIVE THOUGHTS
- Cognitive distortions are general types of faulty
thinking. - Irrational beliefs are more specific, but highly
automated, negative thoughts that create
behavioral and emotional problems for athletes.
16COMMON COMPETITIVE COGNITIVE DISTORTIONS
- Catastrophizing
- Expecting the worst.
- Exaggerating the consequences.
- Overgeneralization
- Forming conclusions based on insufficient
information. - Blaming
- Not accepting responsibility for mistakes.
- Musturbation
- Musts, shoulds, and ought tos.
- A form of concrete, inflexible, and unforgiving
thinking. - Polarized thinking
- Good or bad, right or wrong, succeed or fail,
etc. - Leaves little room for mistakes or being human.
17COMMON COMPETITIVE IRRATIONAL BELIEFS
- Fear of Failure
- It is terrible and unbearable when my game is
not the way I want it to be. - Social Approval
- I must win the approval of others and impress
everyone who sees me perform. - Control-based irrational belief.
18COMMON COMPETITIVE IRRATIONAL BELIEFS
- Perfectionism
- I should be completely competent in every aspect
of my game at all times, never have ups and
downs, and never make mistakes. - The team that makes the most mistakes usually
wins Coach John Woodens philosophy on playing
hard and mistakes. - Mistakes are a normal and necessary part of
learning.
DQ 5 Which types of mistakes are more acceptable
in sport, school, life?
19COMMON COMPETITIVE IRRATIONAL BELIEFS
- Equity
- Life should be fair and if I diligently work at
my game, I should improve, play well, and get the
rewards I deserve. - Life is not fair!
- Hard work increases your chances of success, but
there are no guarantees. - Social comparison
- The behavior and performance of other
competitors is extremely important to me and can
destroy my game. - Cannot control others performances nor can they
control your own performance.
20DETOURING NEGATIVE THOUGHTS
- Thought stopping uses intense internal cues such
as a word, image, kinesthetic movement (e.g.,
snapping a rubber band), or some combination of
cues. - Stop the stream of negative thoughts as quickly
as possible so you can begin focusing on
reframing the situation.
21COUNTERARGUMENTS TO DISPUTE NEGATIVE THOUGHTS
- Productive way to view the situation.
- Put your negative thoughts on trial.
- Argue why the negative belief is irrational and
unproductive and provide a more logical and
helpful view of the situation. - Counterarguments are solutions, not cover-ups!!
22PHASES OF SMART TALK TRAINING PROGRAM
- Education
- Acquisition
- Practice
- Performance
23EDUCATION PHASE
- General Education
- Understanding the mental training tool and how it
relates to the athletes performance. - Personal education
- Athletes self understanding of their self talk
patterns. - Two dimensions
- Quantity -- negative thought count on Day 1.
- Quality -- complete Smart Talk Log for Days 1-6,
assessing three positive and three negative
situations as well as your predominate emotions
and thoughts for each situation. - Quality rate your daily PMA from 1-10 for Days
1-6. - Quality -- Develop counterarguments and
believability ratings for each negative situation
on Days 1-6.
24ACQUISITION PHASE
- Stage 1 Reprogramming Self Talk
- Day 7 -- develop a self talk script using the
Smart Talk Script Development Form and Handout. - Your script should take no more than five minutes
to read (2-4 minutes, ideally). - You may record this onto an audio cassette or CD
and include background music. - Stage 2 Repetition to Automate Thoughts
- Days 7-12 -- read or play your script 4-5 times
daily.
25ACQUISITION PHASE
- Stage 3 Reframe Remaining Negative Thoughts
- Stage 4 Monitoring Improvement in Self Talk
Patterns - Days 7-12 Stages 3 and 4 can be accomplished by
continuing to complete the Smart Talk Log, PMA
rating, and counterarguments/belief ratings while
noticing similarities and changes in self talk
patterns. - Day 12 Complete a second negative thought count
to examine changes in negative thought quantity.
26PRACTICE AND PERFORMANCE PHASES
- Stage 1 Advanced Self Talk Monitoring and
Programming - Day 13 onward continue to monitor PMA daily.
- If PMA drops below 5, then identify problematic
situations and develop counterarguments. - If PMA drops below 5 for three straight days,
then complete the Smart Talk Log Form for three
subsequent days. - Day 13 onward continue to use script, but
decrease the frequency to 2-3 times daily.
27PRACTICE AND PERFORMANCE PHASES
- Stage 2 Video Recreation of Self Talk Patterns
- Video is an effective way to enhance recall of
thoughts and feelings during critical competitive
moments. - Stage 3 Imagery Practice
- Day 13 onward Develop a list of negative
situations that you have difficulty reframing.
Several times each week, imagine using your
counterarguments during these moments to
successful reframe these situations so you can
perform your best.
28PRACTICE AND PERFORMANCE PHASES
- Stage 4 Use Smart Talk in Practice and
Competition - Use the 3D reframing strategies to combat any
remaining negative thoughts during practice and
competition. - Detect, detour, and dispute any remaining
negative thoughts. - Modify your script to reprogram these thoughts
using more positive and helpful alternative
statements.