garyinderry
Ryder Cup Winner
Absolutely humongous task getting hackers like us to reach a flow state. I am not even sure its possible to tell someone how to reach such a state of mind.
To get into this state when practising you really have to enjoy what you are doing. To fully immerse yourself and drop all your usual trains of thought I believe can happen but its not a switch that can just be turned on at will.
Nakamura and CsÃkszentmihályi identify the following six factors as encompassing an experience of flow. [3]
1.intense and focused concentration on the present moment
2.merging of action and awareness
3.a loss of reflective self-consciousness
4.a sense of personal control or agency over the situation or activity
5.a distortion of temporal experience, one's subjective experience of time is altered
6.experience of the activity as intrinsically rewarding, also referred to as autotelic experience
Those aspects can appear independently of each other, but only in combination do they constitute a so-called flow experience
Looking at these points id say I do sometimes end up in what is described as a flow experience. It only happens when I get the course to myself. Its one of the aspects of golf that I really enjoy. No matter what mood you are in you can go out and throw yourself into practice. Completely take your mind off normal life. I can get lost for hours chipping around the same green if no one shows up behind me. I can take 3hours to play 6holes as I become so engrossed in what I am doing. Hit multiple drives, a load of approaches then countless chips and pitches from various places until I move to the next hole. Only after a few hours do I actually realise how long I have been doing it and that I haven't even remotely thought about touching a cigarette in my pocket or anything other than what I am doing for that matter. I get extreme enjoyment from it, its not something I go out with the intention of doing, it just happens.
This behaviour ticks quite a few of those flow components. I think its just a natural state that comes around when you fully love what you are doing. Its the same for people who get lost in their own mind and removal from everyday distractions, be it golf, playing video games or reading a book!
Flow - Interesting reading none the less.
To get into this state when practising you really have to enjoy what you are doing. To fully immerse yourself and drop all your usual trains of thought I believe can happen but its not a switch that can just be turned on at will.
Nakamura and CsÃkszentmihályi identify the following six factors as encompassing an experience of flow. [3]
1.intense and focused concentration on the present moment
2.merging of action and awareness
3.a loss of reflective self-consciousness
4.a sense of personal control or agency over the situation or activity
5.a distortion of temporal experience, one's subjective experience of time is altered
6.experience of the activity as intrinsically rewarding, also referred to as autotelic experience
Those aspects can appear independently of each other, but only in combination do they constitute a so-called flow experience
Looking at these points id say I do sometimes end up in what is described as a flow experience. It only happens when I get the course to myself. Its one of the aspects of golf that I really enjoy. No matter what mood you are in you can go out and throw yourself into practice. Completely take your mind off normal life. I can get lost for hours chipping around the same green if no one shows up behind me. I can take 3hours to play 6holes as I become so engrossed in what I am doing. Hit multiple drives, a load of approaches then countless chips and pitches from various places until I move to the next hole. Only after a few hours do I actually realise how long I have been doing it and that I haven't even remotely thought about touching a cigarette in my pocket or anything other than what I am doing for that matter. I get extreme enjoyment from it, its not something I go out with the intention of doing, it just happens.
This behaviour ticks quite a few of those flow components. I think its just a natural state that comes around when you fully love what you are doing. Its the same for people who get lost in their own mind and removal from everyday distractions, be it golf, playing video games or reading a book!
Flow - Interesting reading none the less.