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Wednesday, November 24, 2021

What Confidence Looks Like Playing Bowls

"You can do what you believe you can do?"

I can’t buy this statement,  if this means something like, “I know I will bowl a resting toucher with my next bowl” I would be kidding myself. I’m trying to send a lie to my subconscious. 


Instead, if the statement means that I know that I might deliver a resting toucher with my next bowl, then it is trivial. Even a tyro bowler has a finite possibility of rolling a perfect bowl. Lawn bowls is not a sport like track and field where no one can deliver a world-class delivery without preparation. The tyro is physically capable of doing it. Sometimes it will happen. In bowls, it is consistency that sets the expert apart— not any single shot. 


The corollary seems more likely to be true: you cannot do what you believe you can’t do. Yes, yes- so true, so true. If you visualize failure, you will enable it. If you visualize success, you enhance that possibility.


So how does the confident bowler think? And how does that thinking get expressed in action? 


When the confident bowler delivers consecutive bad bowls or has a streak of garbage bowls, (s)he doesn’t question the delivery; doesn’t ask secretly, “What am I doing wrong?” (S)he doesn’t call upon him(her)self to bear down or concentrate more.


Instead, for the confident bowler, it is obvious that something external has intervened. Something just ‘happened’ and there is no reason to get upset or disturbed.  To the confident bowler, the misfortune that has happened is most likely due to factors beyond the bowler's control, and most likely these factors can as easily disappear as persist. The last bowl doesn’t affect the present bowl. The deviation could have been the green or the wind or a change in temperature. So of course take these into account, but your delivery can be the same; the same relaxed, smooth, step and swing.


The confident bowler never ‘fixes’ a delivery because ‘fixing’ means making a conscious adjustment from the previous execution. The confident bowler visualizes what is wanted, corrects any deviations from expectations about the environment, and bowls that same groovy delivery with every expectation of a good result. 

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Cataract Surgery Will Improve Your Lawn Bowls

 



I am 75 years old and the sharpness of my eyesight has been slowly deteriorating. As with so many people, I was told I needed cataract surgery on both eyes. My ophthalmologist said to tell her when I thought would be a good time. With the pandemic and the consequential reduction in lawn bowls activities, I said I was ready. In this last month, I have had both operations. The second eye was done just over a week ago.


Today I went to James Gardens LBC which has an outdoor carpet that keeps it playable. The temperature was 12℃ and the sun was unobstructed. I wore a jacket, but I perspired. My vision in both eyes is now 15/20 ( that is better than 20/20). Everything is brighter and sharper but the most noticeable effect is on my estimation of distance. I practiced playing a game of ‘jacks wild’ alternately delivering two different colored sets of my bowls. My weight control seems noticeably improved.


Bowlers— if you need a cataract operation get it now— practicing while you can’t see properly is a waste of your time and a personal frustration!