Thursday, April 16, 2009

Contact Us

Any suggestion or enquiry, kindly email us at:
spc.isnm@gmail.com

Tel :
03-8992 9600

Fax :
03-8996 8748


Address :
Pusat Psikologi Sukan @ Sport Psychology Centre
Institut Sukan Negara Malaysia,
Kompleks Sukan Negara, Bukit Jalil,
Sri Petaling, 57000 Kuala Lumpur

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

About Us


The goal of psychological support service is to consistently create the optimal psychological states that facilitate athletes to unleash their potential to perform at their best.
Our role is to educate and extend research based practices for performance enhancement in athletes.

Our services:

1. EDUCATION
The goal of education is to impart to all the scientific basis of psychological support services. In addition, education helps to uphold the growth and recognition of applying psychological concepts into an athlete’s training regime.

Our focus group is the athletes. We are also attending to coaches, sport psychology officers, sport officers, universities/school students, government/private institution and general community.


2. PSYCHOLOGY SUPPORT SERVICE
Psychology support service is conducted in different phases:


3. RESEARCH AND PUBLICATION
The department staffs engage in conducting surveys, short-term and long-term research. We disseminate the findings by publications and presentations.

Days 87 to 89 for FLM 2009

Ah no! bummer - I've got a tickly little sniffle. little bit of a sore throat, little bit of a cold. Certainly nothing to make me bed bound but just enough to make running uncomfortable.

First felt something on Easter Sunday when I did my last longer run (13 miles) with running club. Funnily enough, nearly all the club runners have come down with a little lurgy in the last week since beginning to taper. I guess the body is relieved to not being so hard pushed. I haven't looked online but there must a physiological answer out there.

It wasn't so bad, but the following morning I felt poor. Since then I've picked up and I'm upping fruit levels, and from now on, watching myself. Booze is off the menu till race day, and an application of vicks on my chest every night should clear this within a day.

Last night was tough. Our last session at the track before the big day. I pushed it hard and felt ok afterwards. Though on the second of the 5 x 1200 metres we did, I felt rough. Its best to fight these things head on I reckon and not one to complain, a rest day from running today will help. My final VO2 max test this friday awaits. Can't wait to see how I've done. It should, I hope provide the final set of data for me to tailor the speed at which I'll run the marathon. Then I can just enjoy the day in the knowledge I'm not going to expire too soon!

Gesundheit to all! s x

Stats

Sunday: 13.1 miles, in 1:45. Only 7 minutes outside PB for Half marathon distance!
Monday: 3.5 miles. A very slow loosener - in 35 minutes.
Tuesday: Track, 5 x 1200 reps (minute recovery), 2 x 300 sprint.

Music wise, been listening to the new Phoenix album, Benji B 1 xtra show, and loving Floating Points 'Vacuum'. Oh and Doves remixes for their new single.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Day 82 for FLM 2009 (or solo speedwork sucks!)

Due to a large workload, juggling commitments in the shop with life, the thesis, I've only ran once in anger since the last long run. I made it to the club and did a great 6 mile speed session on Thursday with Simon and Alfredo. Really felt good afterwards. It showed the benefit of pushing yourself with others in a speed session. I didn't want to necessarily go as quickly as Simon pushed the pace, but after his stag the previous weekend, he wanted to clear any remnants from his system!

Nearing the finish I had a quick flash through my mind that maybe I'd ease off rather than keep at the pace he was really pushing to the clubhouse. It was within sight, and for 5 seconds I was thinking 'just stop!'. But the competitor in me didn't relent and pushed on for a bit longer. The endorphins kicked in and I was glad to have done so.

Today I was supposed to up my speed work but a last minute opportunity to run the second part of my pilot study for my thesis meant that I was going to not make it. With half an hour to spare I ran to the local park and tried to push the pace on my own. To be fair, it was useful and I didn't slouch and took it seriously. But without the measurement of the track or a coach to instruct you, the motivation was that much harder. I finished strongly and felt better for the run.

But with passover and Easter providing breaks to the routine, I feared how lack of running might impact marathon performance. However, having looked at what I'm doing between now and the big day I'm sure I'll be fine. That and now having to do core work every day to help my strength and conditioning. This will particularly come in handy for the last part of the marathon to hold up my upper body.

Music: Phoenix - Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
Food: Cereal, a smoothie, 2 boiled egg and toast, beans on toast, stir fried beef with rice.
Times: Pyramids of different intensities covering an overall distance of 3.85 miles in 28 minutes.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Hard Work Pays Off!

Hard Work Pays Off!

By Dr. Randy Borum
(Article first published in Black Belt Magazine, April, 2009)

“Hard work…”, yells the instructor. “Pays off” the kids respond loudly and in unison. This is how 2007 World Grappling Games Bronze Medalist Cristina Rodriguez (pictured at left) concludes every class she teaches in the children’s program at Gracie Tampa in Florida. It’s a good life lesson. And research shows she’s right.

When we see a martial artist who is truly exceptional, we often are inclined to focus on how talented or gifted that person it. Sometimes that’s true. But more often than not, even the talented ones only achieve excellence after a lot of practice. How much practice? Research estimates it’s in the neighborhood of 10,000 hours. They even refer to it as “the 10,000 hour rule.” That roughly approximates 20 hours of practice every week for ten years. Nobel Laureate Herbert Simon said: "It takes 10 years of extensive training to excel in anything." The 10,000 hour rule has held to be true for a variety of physical and mental tasks ranging from playing chess, to playing violin, to performing surgery. The advantage of practice over talent is even the subject of two recent, popular books: Outliers (Little, Brown and Company) by Malcolm Gladwell and Talent is Overrated (Portfolio Publishing) by Geoff Colvin

Before you decide to camp out in your dojo or gym just to rack up those hours more quickly, there is a bit of a catch. It must be deliberate practice, focused on improving and getting progressively better as a result of receiving and responding to systematic feedback. Another of Rodriguez’ mantras to her young jiu-jitsu students is that “Practice doesn’t make perfect; Perfect practice, makes perfect.” We have all had practice sessions where we just go through the motions. That’s not deliberate practice, and it does not necessarily facilitate improvement and excellence. It’s the difference between working on the heavy bag for thirty minutes, and working to improve you front kick for thirty minutes on the heavy bag by striking the ball of your foot within two inches of a target mark 90% of the time from optimal range, while maintaining proper upper body posture and leg extension. Making hard work pay off requires more than time and exertion; it requires focus.

What does this mean for you as a recreational or competitive martial artist? As a recreational martial arts practitioner, the idea that deliberate practice – not just raw talent – determines success and improvement means that you can get better, probably even get “good”, if you choose to do so. If you try something for thee months and quit because you determine you’re not good at it, at least be honest with yourself. You are quitting because it is not sufficiently important or rewarding to you to invest the time in deliberate practice, not because you lack the natural talent. You may also choose to stick with a martial art because you enjoy the physical activity, even if you decide not to strive for your best performance. That’s okay, too. You can’t pursue 10,000 hours of deliberate practice in everything. While numerous studies show that thousands of hours are required to excel, there is much less research on why people put in that kind of time and effort. You have to choose what’s most important to you.

If you are a competitor or just decide to pursue excellence in martial arts, there are a few tips that will help you succeed. First, check your assumptions about how success happens. It helps when you realize that what you do often matters more than what come naturally. Faithful readers of this column may recall a few months back, I discussed here Carol Dweck’s research on the “mindset.” She describes two basic mindsets for goal attainment: the fixed mindset and the growth mindset. The basic difference is whether ability is believed to be determined more by talent or by hard work. Those who give priority to talent tend to have a fixed mindset. They believe their success comes from a fixed trait that they either do or do not possess. Those with a growth mindset view natural talent just as a starting point – not an end point. They believe ability can be improved through commitment and hard work.

Secondly, seek feedback and use it. Ask for input from instructors, coaches and respected training partner. Don’t just frame the question as “What did I do wrong?”, but “What are some other ways to do it?” One of the best tools is to videotape yourself training or competing. Every martial arts competitor I know – even those at the elite level – learn new and valuable things about their game by watching themselves perform. It gives you a new way of understanding feedback from others and a new perspective on the fine points of your movement. Watch the video closely. Compile a list of what you think you should be doing with posture, speed, agility, strategy etc and how your torso, limbs and head should be positions at each juncture. Consider watching several times, each time looking only at one specific element of your performance. If you see something that needs correction, take a moment to picture in your mind how it would look doing it the right way. Pick something to work on next time, and compare the tapes to see if you are more closely approaching where you want to be.

Thirdly, be systematic. To make deliberate practice work, you can’t just plan to put in a given number of hours, but you must set and monitor specific goals for every workout and practice session. Goals will help your motivation, they will give you focus, and they will guide your ability to learn and improve. In setting goals, think about how a given practice fits within your larger, long term objectives. Ask yourself, how will meeting my goals today move me closer to what I ultimately wish to attain? Make a plan and follow through.

Finally, be persistent. Deliberate practice – when done correctly – is highly effortful and often not very much fun. By itself, it will probably not provide you with much satisfaction or motivation. That’s where goals and feedback come in. You might get at least a bit of satisfaction from having achieved your goal for the session or seeing your improvement from one videotape to the next. Learning to persist, even when it’s not fun, is one of the benefits – yes, benefits - of deliberate practice. You build a measure of resilience and mental toughness by persisting through adversity. You’re likely to need it to get those 10,000 hours of hard work to finally pay off.




Sunday, March 29, 2009

Days 72 to 74 for FLM 2009

3 mile Handicap and 3rd 20 mile training

Thursday night completed the 3rd successive Club handicap - and the last of the winter season - round Wells Street common. A run that was once seen as a chore is now a challenge to see how far I can beat my previous effort.

No Dave R to push me this month. I was set off on a time of 19 minutes and felt far less fleet of foot than previously. The first lap went well. The new guy who set off with me had me in his pocket though and I was in his trail of dust early on. No problem though. I kept at it, running my own race and trying to ensure I didn't do myself a disservice. Second lap was a real struggle but I pushed on and whilst feeling that I wasn't on the pace, came home in 18:55 beating last months time by 25 seconds. Nicely, the mental strength was there and from training hard and focusing, I'm seeing the effect on the times coming down in most of my running.

On the 3rd of my longest training runs this morning, I ran just under 20 miles in 2 hours 40 minutes. Compared to last week, I was much more comfortable and didn't take long to recover. On the mental side, I flagged a bit again at 17.5 ish miles and didn't think the legs would carry me home. By pushing on and getting nearer the finish though I found the pace quicken and with my fellow runner made it back to the clubhouse with a sprint finish. Really happy about that. After the disaster with my carbohydrate intake last week, today was a much more comfortable experience. I felt calm in the stomach from start to finish moreorless and didn't need as much as Lucozade had been recommending me the previous week.

On little sleep due to a fundraiser I'd held the previous night, it was satisfying to know I could pull such a run out of the bag. As I've said before, for every bad run there are many more better ones. Perfect temperatures ensured this was the case today and though I have a hectic week for my last taught week at University, I'm feeling full of confidence.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Day 71 for FLM 2009

A quick update. Went to the track last night for speed work. Definitely felt good after Sundays exertions, which was good to see in recovery terms.

Pushed it hard but not silly on the track. We had a couple of 2 kms to do on the track and I cut back on one of them when I felt a slight pull in my knee. Rested up and was able to go on the next 2 km and did very well. We then ran a couple of 400s and finished on 2 200 sprints. Clocked 36 and 34 seconds respectively. Again, I can go quicker. But I could see and feel the difference of the last few months in my times yesterday. The stamina has built up and having been to meditation earlier in the day, I was able to regulate my breathing more comfortably.

Rested tonight and got a time trial tomorrow after work. Will let you know how I get on with the 3 mile handicap. It will be a toughie!

Food:
Fruit smoothie
3.5 hot cross buns
Houmus and salad wrap
1 banana
2 apples

Red Thai Chicken curry and rice, with a small bit of daal.
2 x coffee
2 x tea
2 x beer