You’re mid-rally. The ball is flying, feet are moving, everything’s speeding up.
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.
Today’s challenge:
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.