When the Game Speeds Up — How to Slow Down Internally
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About this listen
Your heart rate spikes. Your thoughts blur. Your body tenses.
You’re in a fast game — but internally, you feel out of control. What do you do? Here’s the key: when the game speeds up, your job is to slow down — internally. At Mental Pickleball, I coach players to build an internal rhythm that stays calm even when the external pace feels frantic. Here are 3 core strategies:
- Lead with Breath
Between points, take one slow, controlled breath — 4 seconds in, 6 seconds out.
Let it anchor you.
Breath is your reset button. - Shift from Thinking to Feeling
Fast games often trigger overthinking:
“Do I speed up here?”
“Should I dink again or drive?”
When you catch this spiral, switch to physical awareness:
Where are your feet? How’s your paddle position? What’s the ball doing?
Let your body lead. Trust your training. - Use Rhythmic Cues
Create your own mental tempo.
Simple phrases like: “Soft hands.”
“Stay low.”
“Next ball.”
Repeating these in your head slows your inner pace and helps you stay grounded.
Next time the match pace ramps up, practice slowing your mind instead of trying to match chaos with chaos. Anchor to breath, body, or rhythm — and watch your decisions get sharper, not shakier. Because playing fast doesn't mean playing frantic. Quiet Mind, Fierce Game.
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