By Daniel M. Keller — 2019
Yips, a focal task–specific dystonia, may be more prevalent than previously thought, according to a new study of golfers.
Read on www.medscape.com
CLEAR ALL
Out in the chalk circle, my vision became tunneled, my stomach tied in knots, and I felt like I couldn’t hear anything but my own racing thoughts.
It’s called the yips, and it’s a sudden inability to play. I had to find my way out of it.
After graduating with his doctorate in sports medicine, Farias developed a neuroplasticity training program to help other dystonia patients recover, using his toolbox of strategies to teach them how to retrain their brains.
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The yips are a nasty ailment. They—along with the shanks—can appear out of nowhere and absolutely derail a golfer’s otherwise solid game. And worst of all, no one is safe from their wrath.
— New sports psychology articles raise research questions.
Task-specific focal dystonia is a movement disorder that interferes with the performance of particular tasks, such as writing, playing a musical instrument, or participating in a sport - a condition known informally as "the yips."
What if you had the chance to realise a dream you had harboured since childhood and it went horribly wrong?
It’s a theory of cognitive science called “ironic process theory,” which argues the more we try to suppress certain thoughts, the more likely we are to make them surface.
The putting yips. Outside of a stone cold shank, there’s arguably no more terrifying thought in all of golf
Given how commonly the yips are referenced in sports, it is surprisingly misunderstood.