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ELECTRONIC BRAIN SURGERY ON OLYMPIC GOLD
MARKSMAN!
London, Oct 24,2000: The
first Olympic Gold Medallist to admit using the Alphalearning Institute’s
brainwave training equipment. Richard Faulds says, “Alphalearning helped
make the vital difference between the gold and silver medals at Sydney. The
ability to focus, concentrate and keep cool under pressure – keys to
performance.” A few weeks before Sydney, Richard Faulds had his brain
trained electronically to switch instantly from excitement to concentration
to relaxation. Did it work? He says, “Brainwave technology is the
future for competitive sports.”
Why would a world-class
athlete risk his brain to electronic equipment only a few weeks before the
Olympics? Stress – the bane of precision athletics, a bad shot = stress =
more bad shots. With control of the brain frequencies, the stress can be
controlled and the brain reset between each shot. Whether a shotgun, rifle,
golf club or tennis racquet is used, the common denominator is the ability
to recover, rest and concentrate very quickly between shots.
The Brainwave I system is
a combination sophisticated bio-feedback EEG to record the condition and
instantaneous changes in the brain and an optical-acoustical neuron
stimulator that synchronizes the firing frequency of the brain’s 300 billion
neurons and simultaneously balances the left and right hemispheres.
The equipment has been
used extensively for intellectual achievement and is now coming into sports
and physical training on high levels.
Dominic O’Brien – world
memory champion (7 times and current), “I’ve been using Brainwave I for 3
years and just keep breaking my own records”.
Sean Adam – world
speed-reading record holder. “Brain training took me from 1,500 to 3,800
words per minute – I’ve used the Brainwave I for many years”.
Jan Verfaellie – Belgium
Jr. golf champion, “With Brainwave I training, I can play 20 hours of
golf in 15 minutes – in my head – perfectly”.
Other applications have
been in Formula I racing, David Coulthard; balloon racing, Sir Richard
Branson; and jet pilots as in the photo above.
Henry Hopking, the
Alphalearning Institute chief sports trainer, has recently also trained
skeet shooter Ben Brunton, who says, “Alphalearning taught me to focus and
concentrate under pressure. Without a doubt, it helped me to become the
youngest ever World FITASC champion”.
Performance under
pressure – the equipment developed for the high-pressure executive is now at
home in the world of sports.
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