Last week, after the best player on our 55+ baseball team tragically ripped his hamstring while trying to beat out an infield hit, I modified that cliché. Which means, I guess, it’s not a cliché. The new phrase is, “mind over emotion” or “mind over reaction” or “mind over impulse.”
Let me explain the issue and the concept. Every year when our baseball team gets new players, I advise them to watch how they run the bases, to build up to their stop speed, and NOT to take off sprinting like the cops are chasing you.
This is all well and good (another cliché). Telling people to use their head and not their reactions or emotions though is like talking to a wall. They might hear you and even agree with you, but their spirit says, “run as hard as you f..cking can to first base to try and beat the throw to first base.”
That’s baseball. For any of you who’ve played it, or other active sports, you recognize this. You put everything into the play at hand.
In baseball that leads to many injuries. Witness star players hurt in the major leagues. Now consider the bodies of men 55-years-old and older. We are not as limber. The joints and muscles don’t respond and heal as quickly as they did 20 years ago. In fact, the joints and muscles just won’t do certain things that you used to be able to do.
Hence the need to use your mind to defeat emotion (reaction). Think before you run. Recognize your limitiations.
This is TREMENDOUSLY difficult, as you can imagine. Witness the injury of our star player noted above.
Every year I warn new players to protect their bodies and let the engine warm up before hitting the accelerator button. They all nod, knowingly. But, yes, every year, we lose a player or three to a massive hamstring pull or calf strain or groin muscle popping. You can count on it.
All this got me to thinking about how incredibly difficult it is to moderate your sports reactive nature. No matter how much someone explains to you the possible injuries, players still give the game a full physical onslaught. Can we only learn by hurting ourselves?
That seems to be a really good question. How do we learn about our aging bodies and what we are capable of? If our minds stay in a younger mindset (“yeah, I can still do this”) then we set ourselves up for failure. But you don’t really find out that your body can’t do certain things until you do it, and experience the side effects (injury).
No matter how much I explain and warn new players, they don’t fully absorb the message. They generically understand, but somehow it doesn’t apply to them until they hurt themselves (or they are just incapable of slowing down and playing at 60 percent speed).
Somehow us players need a form of speedometer on our wrist to monitor our actions so our minds defeat our emotions. “You’re running at 60 percent effectiveness. Don’t go higher,” the watch should loudly (it needs to be a loud message because of how bad the hearing is with most older players) tell you. Maybe we’d listen then. But, I doubt it.








