37:19 Lena: Alright, so we've covered the theory and research. Let's get practical. If someone's listening to this and wants to start improving their mental game today, what should they actually do?
37:29 Miles: Great question. The key is progressive implementation rather than trying to change everything at once. Let's start with immediate actions you can take, then build toward longer-term development strategies.
37:41 Lena: What are the quick wins—things people can implement right away?
37:44 Miles: First, start tracking your emotional state before, during, and after sessions. Just awareness alone creates improvement. Use a simple 1-10 scale for factors like tilt level, focus quality, and confidence. This builds the self-awareness foundation everything else depends on.
38:01 Lena: That seems manageable. What about during actual play?
38:05 Miles: Implement the tactical breathing technique we discussed—4-7-8 breathing when you feel pressure rising. Also, create a physical reset ritual between hands. It could be as simple as touching a specific chip or adjusting your posture. These micro-recoveries prevent emotional buildup.
38:22 Lena: What about session structure? Are there ways to optimize that for psychological performance?
3:10 Miles: Absolutely. Establish clear start and stop criteria before you play. Decide in advance how many buy-ins you're willing to lose, how long you'll play, and what emotional states will trigger a session end. This prevents in-the-moment decisions when your judgment might be compromised.
38:43 Lena: Those sound like bankroll management decisions, but you're framing them as psychological tools.
1:55 Miles: Exactly. Bankroll management is psychological management. When you know you're playing with scared money or beyond your emotional comfort zone, your decision quality inevitably suffers. Proper preparation removes those psychological stressors before they impact your play.
39:04 Lena: What about longer-term development? How should someone structure their psychological improvement over months or years?
39:10 Miles: Create a systematic training program just like you would for technical skills. Dedicate 15-20 minutes daily to mindfulness practice—this builds the fundamental attention control that supports everything else. Start with simple breathing meditation and gradually work up to more advanced techniques.
39:27 Lena: How do you measure progress in psychological skills? It's not like you can track your win rate for emotional regulation.
39:34 Miles: Actually, you can track meaningful metrics. Time between tilt episodes, recovery speed after setbacks, consistency of focus across long sessions, quality of decision-making under pressure. Keep a mental game journal where you record specific situations and your responses.
39:51 Lena: What should someone focus on if they're dealing with chronic tilt issues?
39:55 Miles: Start with trigger identification. For one week, just note every time you feel tilted and what preceded it. Look for patterns—specific opponent types, game situations, external stressors. Once you know your triggers, you can develop targeted responses for each one.
40:11 Lena: And for someone who struggles with focus during long sessions?
40:15 Miles: Work on attention training through graduated exposure. Start with shorter sessions where you can maintain peak focus, then gradually extend duration while monitoring attention quality. Use strategic breaks every 60-90 minutes, and practice attention switching exercises during downtime.
40:31 Lena: What about players who get too emotionally invested in results?
29:49 Miles: They need to develop what researchers call "outcome independence." Practice evaluating decisions immediately after making them, before you see the results. Ask yourself: "Given the information I had, was this the right play?" Train your brain to derive satisfaction from good process rather than lucky outcomes.
40:53 Lena: Are there any technology tools or apps that can support psychological development?
40:59 Miles: Several. Heart rate variability monitors can give you objective feedback on your stress response. Meditation apps provide structured training programs. Some poker tracking software can identify psychological patterns in your play. The key is using technology to gain insights, not as a crutch.
41:15 Lena: What about working with coaches or mental game specialists?
41:19 Miles: That can be incredibly valuable, especially for identifying blind spots in your psychological approach. A good mental game coach can help you develop personalized strategies based on your specific challenges and playing style. They can also provide accountability for implementing changes.
41:33 Lena: How long does it typically take to see meaningful improvement in psychological skills?
41:39 Miles: Most players notice initial benefits within 2-4 weeks of consistent practice, particularly around tilt management and focus. Significant transformation usually takes 6-12 months of dedicated work. But remember, psychological development is ongoing—even elite players continue refining these skills throughout their careers.
41:59 Lena: What's the biggest mistake people make when trying to improve their mental game?
42:04 Miles: Trying to change everything at once, or expecting immediate results. Psychological change is like physical fitness—it requires consistent effort over time. Also, many players focus only on fixing problems rather than building strengths. You want to develop robust psychological capabilities, not just patch weaknesses.
42:24 Lena: Any final advice for someone just starting their mental game journey?
42:29 Miles: Be patient with yourself and celebrate small improvements. Psychological development isn't linear—you'll have setbacks and plateaus. The key is maintaining consistent practice and viewing challenges as opportunities to strengthen your mental muscles. Remember, every elite player has gone through this same development process.