What do you say to yourself on the court? After a missed shot?
After a great point?
After your third straight unforced error? If you're like most players, that inner voice gets pretty loud — and not always helpful. But here’s the thing: You are always coaching yourself.
The question is — are you a good coach or a toxic one? At Mental Pickleball, I teach players to train their self-talk.
Because your words become your focus… and your focus becomes your game. Let’s break it down. 1. Notice Your Default Voice Is your self-talk harsh, critical, panicked?
Would you say those same things to a teammate?
Awareness is the first step to change. 2. Use Instructional Phrases, Not Insults Instead of: “What’s wrong with you?”
Try: “Get low and reset.”
Your brain responds better to direction than criticism. 3. Speak in Present-Tense Cues Use phrases like:
- “Play the next ball.”
- “Stay loose.”
- “Trust your swing.”
Short, active reminders keep you grounded and focused.
4. Balance Honesty with Support You can call yourself out without tearing yourself down.
Try: “That wasn’t your best… but you’re still in it.”
It’s not about fluff — it’s about staying in the fight. Today’s challenge:
Catch your self-talk in action — and upgrade it.
Replace one unhelpful phrase with something clearer, calmer, or more focused.
Because when your inner voice becomes your teammate, your game changes fast. Quiet Mind, Fierce Game.