Friday 4 October 2013

Attention and Focus



Some time ago I watched a National Geographic series called 'Test Your Brain'. One episode deals with Attention and it has some relevance to defense against multiple opponents.

Attention is what we focus on in our environment. It is limited, so we can really only focus on one thing at any given time and it is that one thing that we pay attention to in great detail. This means that most people cannot multi-task well. When you attempt to do tasks at the same time that use two different areas of your brain such as talking on a mobile phone while driving, then you will begin to perform poorly on the task you are not as engaged in, and not even realise it. This causes drivers to miss stop signs, pedestrians, red lights, etc.

Our brains are wired for us to be serial processors and we are good at switching back and forth between tasks. What this means is that your attention deactivates from one task and switches to performing the other task, and back again.

Every moment your brain is getting hit with millions of stimuli of images, sounds, smells, etc. Your brain has to decide which ones are important and process them to make them the subject of your focus. The brain filters out what it decides are distractions so we are only aware of what we notice and are unaware of what we miss.

The ‘attention filter’ can sometimes be over-ridden by the brain’s instincts in other areas. An example is a golf swing where your brain is trying to adjust the swing that your ‘muscle memory’ knows best how to perform.

If you focus on one opponent in a battle and then get hit from the side or from behind by another attacker, your brain was probably filtering out information from the world around you, making you vulnerable to the second attacker. We are not good at multi-tasking so we cannot effectively fight two people at the same time.

Whether you face a single opponent or multiple opponents, you cannot split your attention, as you can only focus on and do well, one thing at a time. Therefore you cannot worry about the opponent’s strikes and also deliver your own strategy. You can only fully energise if you focus on your own strategy and do not get involved in the opponent’s resistance as sensory input will take your mind away from its focus on freedom.

The brain normally focuses in on what counts, but Full Energisation requires you to seek darkness and so the brain has to focus in on freedom and ignore a lot of stimuli that would normally distract you.

Full energisation is achieved by your acceleration to the source of the attacker’s resistance, which drives you into real time where your perceptions turn to darkness for a moment. Darkness will limit the processing of visual stimuli, which will help stop your brain trying to react to the opponent’s actions. This allows you to keep accelerating and maintaining a highly energised state.

Getting into real time will force your brain to switch off its thinking side and you are then relying more on your reactive abilities. When you are accelerating through the attackers it is all you will have time for.

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