Coaching SUPER POWERS? What Coaches See | Archery Coaching Tips

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июн 2024
  • How does an archery coach spot what's wrong? Learn some tips on what coach will look for when they examine your performance.
    00:00 Introduction
    00:42 Mind Reading
    04:01 X-Ray Vision
    06:51 Motion Sensing
    10:30 Pattern Recognition
    13:30 Precognition
    ===
    Follow me on Facebook: / nusensei
    Twitter: / nu_sensei
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Комментарии • 16

  • @esnevip
    @esnevip 7 месяцев назад +4

    You are a super coach!

  • @JuztWylde
    @JuztWylde 7 месяцев назад

    Very true.
    Keep up the good work.

  • @ramoverde4133
    @ramoverde4133 6 месяцев назад

    That was great! 🏹✔👍
    What I tell my students : I give you a foundation and you can build on it what suits you...

  • @ecornely
    @ecornely 7 месяцев назад

    Very instructive ! Thanks.
    And how do you become such a great coach ?

  • @saveCOMPLETE
    @saveCOMPLETE 5 месяцев назад

    hi nusensei! curious, who did the art for the superpower cards?

  • @FruitLoops_
    @FruitLoops_ 7 месяцев назад +1

    I have a question. How do you go about training people with ADHD to follow a mental process? I ask simply because I'm having a lot of issues with this. I say my steps, I repeat my steps before nocking the arrow, after nocking the arrow, and before drawing, but when I go about actually executing it, my mind says X, but my body does Y. This usually manifests in me releasing before I even anchor, or releasing while my mind is saying "Hold". This doesn't happen every time, of course, but it happens a lot in some of the least good ways

    • @esnevip
      @esnevip 7 месяцев назад

      Are you overbowed?
      The extra sense of urgency from a heavier draw weight will really rush your subconscious.

    • @NUSensei
      @NUSensei  7 месяцев назад +6

      Try using a physical "safety" that you must feel before you proceed to the next step in your process. For example, you might introduce a step where you cannot aim until you smush the string against your nose twice. You can't proceed until you tap your foot three times. You can't release until you empty your lungs. Having these physical "hard" points can help direct your attention to this extremely small details. Tie your mental process with physical checks.

    • @FruitLoops_
      @FruitLoops_ 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@esnevip I also thought about that, but I came to the conclusion that I'm not. I tried a 20 pound and the exact same thing happened

    • @FruitLoops_
      @FruitLoops_ 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@NUSensei thank you very much for the tip! I'll try it as soon as I can!!

  • @christianbrienesse
    @christianbrienesse 7 месяцев назад

    Do you mind if I copy your left arm at 1:03 at all? Just wondering if it will help me at all. Hardest thing about my new bow I got in August is not gripping the thing for dear life.

    • @BG-rf1mx
      @BG-rf1mx 7 месяцев назад

      I'm a new archer too. I had the same problem but started using a finger sling a few weeks ago. It gives you the confidence that you won't drop your bow so you are able to really relax your grip (and stops you torquing the bow). Give it a go and see how a sling might work for you. I Wouldn't be without mine now.

    • @christianbrienesse
      @christianbrienesse 7 месяцев назад

      @@BG-rf1mxI’m using a finger sling too and I’ve been improving greatly with my own bow. I just noticed how the bow was being held at that point and think it might help me keep my index finger low. 🤔

  • @Australian_Made
    @Australian_Made 7 месяцев назад

    👍😇😇😇

  • @davidjensen2411
    @davidjensen2411 7 месяцев назад

    Can Robots ENJOY their shooting?
    Try not to let the _Human Element_ die...

    • @NofewFudtefcity
      @NofewFudtefcity 7 месяцев назад

      Some people do, and some people don't. I don't do archery personally, but several the general practices that NUSensei explains over their videos, are applicable to other things that I do.
      For example, while playing a video game called Ace Combat, I'd never enjoy playing it to absolute optimal perfection; I like to roam the map and see what's going on in other places, even if by "roam the map" I only mean "adjust my aim by a few degrees so I can see more of this other thing".
      On the opposite end, I'm one of the highest-ranked Zone players in WipEout. In this mode, you drive a vehicle around a fixed track and can only speed up, never slow down. The goal is to not hit walls. Especially at the level that I play at, everything must be utterly perfect. The developers never thought anybody would cope with speeds this fast, so the vehicle begins to clip through the floor at certain points on certain tracks if you don't take them exactly correct. Some errors that are so small that they're only visible for one or two frames. They then take nearly a full minute of corrections which are so finite that a typical computer's display can't even show them, to try and fix them before they snowball into far worse outcomes.
      I've been compared to a program, and I've been asked how I can possibly enjoy a video game, which categorically exists purely for entertainment, when I'm expecting myself to execute with this level of precision and wind up doing basically the same exact thing over and over for thousands of hours. The answer is, I'm actually still wildly varied; it's just that the variations aren't perceivable by a person who isn't as trained as I am, so to everyone else, it looks like I'm just not doing anything differently. In reality, I know what I'm doing, and every lap is still different, even decades later.
      I was asked once to narrate what I was doing as I did it. I couldn't in real-time because it takes me far too long to get the words out compared with what's going on, so I recorded a single lap and then commentated over that. The lap lasted about 30 seconds, while the commenting went on for about an hour and a half. It included things like, "My nose itches here but I couldn't move my hand to fix it, so I exhaled a little harder while collapsing my right shoulder to try to deflect air against the problematic spot. It worked, but tugged a hair a bit too hard, which instinctively made me curl my head down. My head moving down is a physical queue I use when I'm going over this hump in the track, and I was near-enough to that, that I thought I had already gone over it when in reality I was still cresting it. I realized this about half a second later and know I'll have to adjust for it over the next three to seven laps, and the adjustments to start getting into this position have to happen /right now/ since I'm already at such-and-such speed. I'm a little panicked now since I have no wiggle room; it's doable, but close. So, next lap (not pictured), I held my breath before going over that same hump to suppress my automatic reactions. I then forgot to resume breathing, and ultimately that ended the run a few laps later. Oxygen's important!". -- That whole explanation came about because of about 1/3rd of a second of video in the recording.
      There's also times where I don't think this hard and I really do just autopilot. I'm extremely prone to migraines, and WipEout is one of the only things where I feel that I can turn my brain off to find relief. In those moments, I'm really not consciously thinking, but I sure enjoy it!
      So don't confuse "skill" with "inhuman". Also, don't correlate "inhuman" with "universally unenjoyable". Different people are indeed different.