Perspective
This classic chalice/faces picture can be viewed in more than one way and our brains happily jump between these different views, trying one and then switching to another. But experiments show that if we are rewarded for seeing the picture one way rather than the other - rewarded with a jellybean, a dollar bill, or a friendly pat on the back - our brains begin to hold on to the rewarding view, and the picture stops changing. The lesson here is that things can be viewed in many ways, but human brains like the most rewarding view and thus they search for and hold on to that view whenever they can.
If this is possible with this picture, then it is also true of other things: BJJ, martial arts, marriage, business, etc.
If, in training, we are rewarded for trying one technique over another, or rewarded for thinking about something in one way over another, then we tend to begin to ‘lock in’ that particular viewpoint. It’s often all a matter of persective.
JBW
Comments
Andy.
I shall see if I can dig it up - I actually learned that a long time ago and cannot remember where I got the info from. It may well have been when I was studying psych at uni - a lifetime ago - I shall see what i can find.
JBW
no problem. I re-read that idea recently somewhere, and so was inspired ti write that blog. I do a fait bit of reading - but damn if I can remember which book. At the airport now - so can't sourse my library. Will try to remember after a weekend of seminars and some gruelling flights take their toll.
I m glad their are people like you out their in the medical profession taking their jobs seriously, Thanks Andy
JBW
I may have missed your point asking this but; did you mean we (as BJJ Students in particular) should try to see both points of view and not "lock in" a rewarding view (or point of view).
Regards
bought a couple of books on psychology at the airport (amazing) read one this weekend in an attempt to track down this study - to no avail. Sorry I cannot recall.
JBW
thanks for your comment. My meaning is that we quickly become 'locked in' to one particular view - particlurly if that view is rewarded. About anything! This can lead to limited thinking - and limited capacity in problem solving. Always, be prepared to go outside the box.
best wishes
JBW
Andy.
PS i just read your last blog on action. i agree, -i think i should get out of bed and do something with my day. haha