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338 reviews for:
The Inner Game of Tennis: One of Bill Gates All-Time Favourite Books
Zach Kleinman, W. Timothy Gallwey, Pete Carroll
338 reviews for:
The Inner Game of Tennis: One of Bill Gates All-Time Favourite Books
Zach Kleinman, W. Timothy Gallwey, Pete Carroll
What a fantastic book. Broadly applicable to life. Some key learnings:
- Self 1 is your ego and judgmental self, Self 2 is your innate, child like, unconscious self. Get Self 1 out of the way, and let Self 2 take over
- Rather than judging yourself and telling yourself to just do something, instead: 1) observe behavior nonjudgmentally, 2) picture desired outcome, 3) let it happen and trust self 2, 4) nonjudgmentally observe results
- There's a variety of games that are played on the court, outside of actual tennis - desire for perfection, to be better than others, attention, friendship, health, enjoyment, or learning - which games are you playing?
- Focus is the key to getting out of your ego and instead living in the present, enjoying the moment, being aware of what's going on and your body
- Self 1 is your ego and judgmental self, Self 2 is your innate, child like, unconscious self. Get Self 1 out of the way, and let Self 2 take over
- Rather than judging yourself and telling yourself to just do something, instead: 1) observe behavior nonjudgmentally, 2) picture desired outcome, 3) let it happen and trust self 2, 4) nonjudgmentally observe results
- There's a variety of games that are played on the court, outside of actual tennis - desire for perfection, to be better than others, attention, friendship, health, enjoyment, or learning - which games are you playing?
- Focus is the key to getting out of your ego and instead living in the present, enjoying the moment, being aware of what's going on and your body
Bottom line: don’t overthink anything and just let your body do what it naturally does.
Interesting, hard to apply. Idk, don't exactly agree with a lotta things in this book, but it's interesting. It kinda goes against things like deliberate practice
Excellent book on the mental aspect of performance, understanding systems 1 and 2, losing ego, and not judging yourself.
Many people have an inner critic, and this book is about silencing that voice and egoless observation.
One of the most groundbreaking insights is actually that opponents are your greatest co-operators (Spoiler they push you to be your best self).
Many people have an inner critic, and this book is about silencing that voice and egoless observation.
One of the most groundbreaking insights is actually that opponents are your greatest co-operators (Spoiler they push you to be your best self).
informative
informative
slow-paced
informative
reflective
relaxing
slow-paced
I really liked a lot of the concepts that were mentioned in this book. A lot of self reflection and inner thinking!
Business Insider just published a piece about how this book guided the Golden State Warriors through their historic 2016-17 season. The piece shows a photograph of one of the best paragraphs of the book, which Tom Brady tweeted, showing where he wrote in the margin next to it. The Inner Game of Tennis has helped a lot of successful people get where they are today by focusing on a critical, but unemotional mindset.
I first read The Inner Game in the spring of 2004, at the end of a mostly unsuccessful freshman year in music school. The demand for hours of daily practice is one of the major reasons that people drop out of music school. Spending anywhere from 2 to 8 hours per day alone in a small room with your instrument, fighting to meet the standards of yourself and your professors, can quickly drive you insane.
A practice session often follows this 10-step process:
1. Warm-up for 20 minutes.
2. Practice sight-reading 20 minutes.
3. Start working on music for a 1-2 hour session.
4. Make a mistake that you are not happy about.
5. Try again. Make the mistake again. Get mad.
6. Try again. Make the mistake again, plus a new mistake on a part you had been playing right.
7. Repeat, increasing frustration and number of mistakes as long as you can.
8. Lash out and destroy something in the room–hopefully not your expensive instrument.
9. Give up and come back later, hoping it will be better.
10. It won't.
The Inner Game broke me out of this funk by teaching my how to quiet the part of my mind that reacts emotionally to my performance and awaken the part of my mind that thinks critically, but unemotionally about it. The author, Timothy Gallwey, explains how this process works with his tennis students, but it applies brilliantly to other sports and really any activity that involves training your body and/or mind.
My practicing became much more rewarding and productive when I started following Gallwey's advice. It was amazing what I started accomplishing. This book and some other things that came into my life at that time completely changed my life for the better. About 75% of the students in my program changed to another major, dropped out of music school, transferred to another college, or dropped out of school altogether. I became one of the 25% of survivors, and this book had a lot to do with it.
My story with The Inner Game doesn't end there. About 9 years after the book changed my life it came into my life again.
I had a private lesson student who was going through some of the same struggles I had in high school and college with practicing. I assigned him to read a chapter of the book each week, along with his weekly practice goals. I reread the book to keep up with him and have discussions about it, and this amazing thing happened. The book saved me again.
A year earlier, I had accepted an extremely challenging teaching job, running a large program with a strong competitive history, and I felt like I was failing at it. I felt like I hadn't fully met any of my goals. I was evaluating everything and trying to figure out where I had gone wrong. It seemed like my entire approach was fundamentally flawed. It was one of the most frustrating, uncertain, and terrifying times in my teaching career. My career was probably in jeopardy if I didn't turn it around.
While rereading The Inner Game, I realized that the problems in my planning, rehearsing, teaching, administrating–in every aspect of my job and career–were mostly caused by ego compromising my judgment, just like it had in the practice room back in college. When a teacher or leader behaves that way, it spreads into everyone else too, and it ruins the culture of a program very quickly. I shifted my attitude and my strategy by following the advice of the book again, and every aspect of my teaching has improved significantly every year since then.
No matter what you do, whether its your hobby, your job, or just trying to get better about following a fitness routine, The Inner Game is a quick read that will get your brain evaluating itself and reprogramming itself to serve you better. I highly recommend reading it... perhaps reading it at least two times!
I first read The Inner Game in the spring of 2004, at the end of a mostly unsuccessful freshman year in music school. The demand for hours of daily practice is one of the major reasons that people drop out of music school. Spending anywhere from 2 to 8 hours per day alone in a small room with your instrument, fighting to meet the standards of yourself and your professors, can quickly drive you insane.
A practice session often follows this 10-step process:
1. Warm-up for 20 minutes.
2. Practice sight-reading 20 minutes.
3. Start working on music for a 1-2 hour session.
4. Make a mistake that you are not happy about.
5. Try again. Make the mistake again. Get mad.
6. Try again. Make the mistake again, plus a new mistake on a part you had been playing right.
7. Repeat, increasing frustration and number of mistakes as long as you can.
8. Lash out and destroy something in the room–hopefully not your expensive instrument.
9. Give up and come back later, hoping it will be better.
10. It won't.
The Inner Game broke me out of this funk by teaching my how to quiet the part of my mind that reacts emotionally to my performance and awaken the part of my mind that thinks critically, but unemotionally about it. The author, Timothy Gallwey, explains how this process works with his tennis students, but it applies brilliantly to other sports and really any activity that involves training your body and/or mind.
My practicing became much more rewarding and productive when I started following Gallwey's advice. It was amazing what I started accomplishing. This book and some other things that came into my life at that time completely changed my life for the better. About 75% of the students in my program changed to another major, dropped out of music school, transferred to another college, or dropped out of school altogether. I became one of the 25% of survivors, and this book had a lot to do with it.
My story with The Inner Game doesn't end there. About 9 years after the book changed my life it came into my life again.
I had a private lesson student who was going through some of the same struggles I had in high school and college with practicing. I assigned him to read a chapter of the book each week, along with his weekly practice goals. I reread the book to keep up with him and have discussions about it, and this amazing thing happened. The book saved me again.
A year earlier, I had accepted an extremely challenging teaching job, running a large program with a strong competitive history, and I felt like I was failing at it. I felt like I hadn't fully met any of my goals. I was evaluating everything and trying to figure out where I had gone wrong. It seemed like my entire approach was fundamentally flawed. It was one of the most frustrating, uncertain, and terrifying times in my teaching career. My career was probably in jeopardy if I didn't turn it around.
While rereading The Inner Game, I realized that the problems in my planning, rehearsing, teaching, administrating–in every aspect of my job and career–were mostly caused by ego compromising my judgment, just like it had in the practice room back in college. When a teacher or leader behaves that way, it spreads into everyone else too, and it ruins the culture of a program very quickly. I shifted my attitude and my strategy by following the advice of the book again, and every aspect of my teaching has improved significantly every year since then.
No matter what you do, whether its your hobby, your job, or just trying to get better about following a fitness routine, The Inner Game is a quick read that will get your brain evaluating itself and reprogramming itself to serve you better. I highly recommend reading it... perhaps reading it at least two times!
informative
medium-paced