WARNING THIS BOOK CONTAINS BIRDIES. BIRDIES ARE HIGHLY ADDICTIVE. GET HOOKED NOW!
WARNING THIS BOOK CONTAINS BIRDIES. BIRDIES ARE HIGHLY ADDICTIVE. GET HOOKED NOW!
Kenneth Fuller, M.D., an avid weekend warrior and leading psychiatrist, shares his performance enhancement tools to lead you to better, more enjoyable golf.
This established authority on mental triumph delivers a methodology that uses autosuggestion to help you master your thoughts and induce a conditioned reflex. The automatic technique creates brain focus to find your best performance zone.
Dr. Fuller practices psychiatry in Thomasville, Georgia. His more than thirty-five years of treating patients, teaching medical students, and writing in medical journals have led to multiple honors. He now turns his psychotherapy talent to writing a series of books on therapeutic suggestions for golfers.
The golf psychiatrist shows the path to better golf. It works.
Dr. Fuller uses a blend of time-tested psychotherapy, self-hypnosis, medical science and condition-reflex training tools. This layering of concepts is a powerful force for the reader. Dr. Fuller's most highly valued skill is helping others become better — to function at their absolute highest level. Direct and indirect therapeutic suggestions form the backbone of his communications. His advanced techniques work for the benefit and welfare of each reader.
Dr. Fuller explains:
"I write weird, in steps and stutters, like a therapist talks. A seventh grader might recognize my unreliable language usage, awkward comma splices, bizarre capitalization patterns, choppy paragraphs, lack of transitions, odd reasoning, or the overly forced first-person narrative. I place each language error for a particular therapeutic effect.
"I admit my unreliable narration confuses the reader. I do it on purpose. When a patient or reader is confused, even momentarily, the mind sucks in the first sensible bite of information it gets. This allows therapeutic suggestions to be accepted -- ready for use -- to become instinct.
“‘Keep it short,' my therapy mentor preached, 'and use simple words like a first grader.' Over the years my style of therapy evolved to see his wisdom. I believe many distressed individuals cannot process mature prose or full paragraphs. So I now write, and talk, for all ages in short, simple, childlike 'mind bites'.
"Mind bites are ultra-short, memorable phrases directed into the subconscious. By avoiding conscious screening, the mind bite message registers instantly and becomes available for use. Seeing, hearing, reading 'mind bites' drives advice into the brain like 100 mph fastball into the catcher's mitt.
"My weird writing style mirrors the subtleties of my therapy. The best strategy, I believe, avoids the same old tired writing and teaching style that might frustrate seventh grade grammar students.
"Keep it short,
Hide therapy messages,
Use simple words,
Break grammar rules.
Have fun doing it."
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