The Mental Mindset series is written by Ron Schmittling, MPM, who is a certified Mental Performance Coach, an NFCA Coach of the Year finalist, and author of Winning Starts Within, which is available now on Amazon and on his website, CoachRonMPM.com.
After more than a decade coaching and directing a national fastpitch program with a 100% college placement rate, Ron now trains the mental side of the game helping athletes stay composed under pressure with the tools to reset fast, and compete with clarity and confidence.
He can be followed on Instagram: @coachronmpm and can be reached by email at ron@coachronmpm.com. For more on his 1:1 Coaching or Team Informational Sessions, click HERE.
In today’s edition of The Mental Mindset, Ron teaches a 5-second procedure to effective bounce-back after a mistake…
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She struck out with the bases loaded, two outs early in the championship game.
The inning that could have buried the opponent instead ended with her walking back to the dugout—head down, replaying the strikeout in her mind.
Three innings later, she’s still stuck there. Another at-bat. Another strikeout.
The mistake didn’t just cost her team three runs… it cost her the rest of the game.
Sound familiar?
I watched this pattern derail talented athletes for years: one mistake becomes three and one bad game becomes a slump.
Not because they lack ability—but because no one ever taught them how to bounce back.
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Most athletes spend more time dwelling on mistakes than making them:
According to research, how long does it take:
The difference isn’t talent… it’s a trained recovery system.
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For over a decade coaching, I’ve used the same bounce-back system with everyone from 14U to college athletes:
Your entire reset in five seconds… here’s how to do it:
State the event as a fact, not a judgment.
Facts stop the spiral; emotion accelerates it.
Shift from dwelling → learning → opportunity.
Reframing moves the mind forward.
Choose an action. Do it immediately.
Then the moment is gone—and you’re back!
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Your brain can’t focus on the past and the present simultaneously.
The 3 R’s interrupt the spiral before it begins.
Try it. You’ll recover faster!
Practice the 3 R’s on every mistake in practice.
Remember: when the stakes are low, the habit builds strong.
Teach it.
After an error, give five seconds, then ask: “What’s your response?”
Skip the mistake replay on the ride home.
Ask instead: “What did you learn?”or “What will you adjust next time?”
Mastering the 3 R’s doesn’t eliminate mistakes—it eliminates the hold they have on you.
And that’s what separates champions from quitters!
— Ron Schmittling/Winning Starts Within
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