Since late in the year 2000, I have been concerned with and I have been training folks to re-build their 'innate' rhythm circuits. This means I have been re-building the brain circuits which a person uses for rhythm, coordination, accuracy, and timing.
Up to that point in time, most coaches and trainers understood that an athlete's ability to sense the rhythm-of-the-game was some innate trait and there was some refining which could be done through training reps, but for those with poor thythm, there was little that could be done for the would-be athlete.
Now that I have had experience with taking a variety of athletes, and others, through my regimen, I understand that anyone can re-build their own rhythm circuits and achieve the levels which we normally associate with superstar athletes.
I know that some will wonder if improving rhythm and timing will actually help an athlete's performance. I've worked with pro, college, and high school athletes. They have all been able to boost their performance levels to very high levels.
A pro baseball player was facing free agency at the end of the season and was only batting 225. With me he boosted his average to 325 and was picked up by another team for a multi-million dollar contract.
A college football player had such poor rhythm that he was not allowed to suit up for two seasons. In the Summer before his junior year, he re-built his rhythm circuits with me and he blew away his coaches. He not only suited up, he started most games of the season.
A high school baseball player improved his rhythm with me and then started batting around 500. He maintained his batting average in that range for the last three years of high school.
I worked with a young lawyer in a South American country who loved to play tennis. He wanted to improve his game, so he always played with players who were better than him. As we went through the process to improve his rhythm, he was starting to win with those other players who had always beat him in the past. By the time we finished his training, the only players who could beat him were the traveling tour pros who lived in the area (yet, he won about 50% of the time with them). After he finished training with me he won the country's clay court open tournament and won a trip to Roland Garros.
I worked with a retired lawyer in that same country. He had always loved golf and had played a game a week for over 40 years. And for all that time he had maintained a 30 handicap. Lessons with pros had never made a dent in his handicap. After going through my training program, he started shaving one point off his score every two months. Almost three years later his handicap is in around 80. He is now retired and in his late 60s and he still is active and plays golf once per week.
I worked with a 35-year old accountant who would run 5K three times per week for recreation. Two months after finishing the training with me, she sent me an email telling me that she continues her runs as normal, but for some reason, she has shaved minutes off her running time. She is not running harder or trying for more speed, she is simply, naturally faster.
The applications of this process are endless:
1) Improving the performance of starters to boost the performance of the whole team.
2) Improving the performance of those on the bench to boost the current and future performance of the team.
3) Improving the performance of an individual athlete.
4) Improving the performance of a team. I have developed a program which improves the rhythm circuits of all the individuals of a team and the natural synchronization of them as a team.
Now, My Question:
How can I market this? I have only done this face-to-face and by word of mouth. I learned how to do this as a method of rehab for developmental problems and for stroke and brain injury patients. Many folks take this training to improve focus and concentration, and the sports performance results were a byproduct. But, the sports implications are dramatic and athletes started asking for the training program.
Who has some ideas about where to go with this?
Rodger Bailey, MS
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