This athlete is concentrating and imagining a 500m race.
I think this is a perfect example of what I have been trying to describe. The concept is to imagine the best possible outcome of the thing we want to achieve. To go through in the mind second by second what we are going to do.


Ex: If I have to play a musical phrase, before I play I have to imagine it and sing it in my mind with the most beautiful sound I can think of. When this is clear inside our mind we can play.


During this daily study I realised that this concept is strongly linked to GOAL SETTING. The exercise of imagining and thinking FIRST about the sound you want to achieve is actually asking yourself: What sound do I want? What dynamics do I need? etc.
It simply helps you to have a clearer objective, a precise goal, which we have seen is very important.
Imagining, thinking, creating, it's not a difficult process, anyone can do it. It is more complicated to be constant in this. An hour of study with this level of concentration and continuous search for the sound and the goal is extremely more tiring on a mental level, but much more profitable and effective.

The goal I set myself is to never play until I have the sound I want in mind. Then it will become automatic. 
Constancy and effectiveness.

II.4. Imagery

 

Here we come to the aspect that has most revolutionised and made my daily practice efficient. 

Visualisation or imagery techniques form the basis of various mental training methodologies, supporting the voluntary creation of a mental experience that reproduces the actual experience. In the assessment phase the individual has to identify images/scenes to evoke in view of performance and investigate the meaning and emotional reactions associated with them. Imagery can be viewed from an internal perspective, as if one were actually performing the piece in question, or from an external perspective, as if one were listening as a spectator. A specific imagery can be used by the player to experience some physically demanding passages in relation to dynamic aspects or note pitch. It can be very significant when preparing for an exam (or a competition or a concert) as it allows the trumpeter to approach the study in a more conscious and focused way, so as not to waste unnecessary energy. A typical mistake, for example, is to keep repeating difficult passages and playing too much before an exam or competition, and then not having the energy to play the only time that really counts.