CONCEPT
Choking Under Pressure
The degradation of skilled performance caused not by insufficient ability but by Self 1's attempt to consciously control what Self 2 already knows — muscles tighten, timing falters, fluency disappears under the weight of analytical supervision.
Choking is the canonical illustration of
Gallwey's interference principle. It is the phenomenon every athlete, musician, and performer recognizes: the moment when skill that was reliable in practice abandons you under pressure, when the body that knows how to execute the movement freezes or fumbles at the moment the performance matters most. The conventional explanation treats choking as a failure of nerve, a psychological weakness that better mental toughness would overcome. Gallwey's explanation is structural: choking is what happens when Self 1, activated by the pressure of the situation, attempts to take conscious control of movements that Self 2 has automated through thousands of hours of practice. The golfer who thinks about her grip during the backswing. The pianist who monitors his fingers during a difficult passage. The public speaker who evaluates her performance while delivering it. In each case, the conscious supervision does not improve the performance. It degrades it, because the analytical mind is too slow, too