Stressed but prepared athletes enter a state of flow where they are so engaged with what they are doing that they disappear into their actions. This isn't an act of imagination where they are thinking about what they look like from the outside, it's self awareness through the act itself. This is a truer mirror of the self than any imaginative act.
Many people consider self awareness to be this moment of recognition where you're constructing how you think you fit into the world around you, but this is ultimately fictional and prone to psychological abstraction. A doubting person won't see themselves as they are any more than an arrogant person would. It might provide you with a vague sense of your place in the world, but it isn't trustworthy.
Bull Durham is one of my favourite sports films. The moment when Crash Davis catches himself thinking when he should only be a quick bat is a great example of an athlete being aware of a break in their state of flow. |
When a talking head asks an athlete what they were thinking about when they were performing, the athlete always seems confused by the question. When they ask if the audience was a factor in their performance they are baffled. If you're rolling ideas around in your head while you're trying to perform you know you're not at peak performance, you're not the moment itself.
One of the reasons I enjoy riding motorcycles is because I've been doing it long enough that I can get into the process and become a part of the ride. Zen monks use physical tasks like sweeping the floor to put themselves into the present. I find riding a motorcycle does the same thing for me. The complexity of using all of my limbs and my whole body to operate the machine allows me to let go of my conscious self and become something more.
In a more extreme case like Guy Martin's, he is able to get into a flow state while doing almost two hundred miles an hour on a motorbike on a public road. This can seem like breath taking daredevilry, but it isn't, it's a master in the state of flow. The mind is clear, you're aware of more than you ever can be when you're looking through the pinched viewpoint of your conscious mind.
That expansive state of awareness is what happens when you're in flow, and it feels wonderful. You can see out of the back of your head and your body seems capable of reflexes that would confound you if you tried them consciously. If you've ever experienced that moment of bliss, you know it's worth finding again.