Background
The human brain is capable of processing 11 million signals a second! Currently the average professional is only processing 40 signals a second in a conscious state. So what happens to the roughly 10,999,960 signals? The answer is that these remaining signals are processed in a subconscious state of mind. If we were consciously aware every function our brain controls we would simply get nothing done.
An example of this is walking; walking is nothing more than series of well coordinated falls, systematically orchestrated evolving over 200 skeletal muscles. This highly complicated task is normally mentally conditioned into an auto pilot function. This is the case for numerous complicated physical movements. Most assume that it takes years of neuromuscular conditioning to achieve this feat. We are ready to prove them wrong.
Implementation in Real World Training
Students have a preconceived notion of their own physical capabilities.
Every instructor must realize that most of their students inherently limit their true max potential. Generally, until a student physically proves to themselves that they are capable of a physical feat they will mentally restrict or hold back their true potential.
The sense of sight alone consumes roughly 30% of your active brain power. Our team has designed a specific protocol for controlling and filtering sensory inputs. We are proving that it is very possible to reprogram your student’s conceptual baseline by over exciting or masking a specific sensory input. Generally, most professionals will suffer the negative effects of the over dominating sense of sight.
Within the context of reading, ask yourself the following question. Can you read a paragraph in your head faster than you can verbally rehearse the words of that paragraph out loud? The answer to most people is quite obvious, yes.
We are currently using subconscious tuning to cut tenths of a second off of the deployment times for elite shooters and skilled marksman. We have also effectively used this system for rapidly implanting complex fine motor skills with edged weapons.
Before you can expect to improve an elite professional you have to recalibrate their own conceptual baseline of optimal performance. Then you can set them free. Our mind is sometimes nothing more than a mental prison. We are locked in this prison by our own current limiting beliefs.
Can we teach professionals to fly? In an airplane, yes like a bird, no. We can teach a novice to replicate the physical skill-set of an elite professional through our innovative subconscious tuning protocol.
This highly innovative method of instruction will save any agency significant time and money.
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