>meditation
play with changing your perception, learn about the different types of perception. i have been doing a now two year foray into flow states - spending a few months using a hyperfocused perspective then a few months trying to perceive as much as possible, ie a wide angle view, then a few months investigating how i personally already use sound/music to offload processing/timing/coordination/workload from the brain, now looking at how switching states works, work at switching faster etc. just have fun looking at how your brain works and you will find ways to optimize processes.
Go back in time and get your parents to fund you racing go carts at the age of four and have them quit their jobs to follow you around as you practice every day for the next 15 years and maybe then you can go pro
This is the unfortunate reality of racing; there are few drivers in F1 who didn't either grow up rich or in a racing dynasty and they all had parents who went to extreme lengths to fund their racing careers.
Racing is a sport for the rich only, with very few exceptions
actually I didn't. It was just that your topic of discussion was so incredibly boring it was more fun to comment on what goes into being a race car driver
There are probably some genetic hard limits, but it can be improved
Much like with strength training, if you put your body in a situation where reflexes are necessary, it will learn to do react faster over time. Fast paced shooter games are unironically great for this, racing sims too, to a lesser extent
Beyond that, https://humanbenchmark.com/tests/reactiontime can probably be used as training
Practice
I recently got back into motocross racing and reaction time is the main thing that I've lost over time
Going into corners while bouncing around at 20-40mph trying to pick the best line in a split second
There's a speed that's faster than your brain can handle and it just looks like a blur
There are meme 'exercises' like picking 4 spots on a wall and looking at each as fast as possible
But nothing is going to compare to being in the actual situation
You can't train reaction time but you can train a specific scenario so you know its coming sooner.
You train focus just by doing it lots.
However you'll never be a pro driver.
have a proper sleeping and eating routine
N
>meditation
play with changing your perception, learn about the different types of perception. i have been doing a now two year foray into flow states - spending a few months using a hyperfocused perspective then a few months trying to perceive as much as possible, ie a wide angle view, then a few months investigating how i personally already use sound/music to offload processing/timing/coordination/workload from the brain, now looking at how switching states works, work at switching faster etc. just have fun looking at how your brain works and you will find ways to optimize processes.
Go back in time and get your parents to fund you racing go carts at the age of four and have them quit their jobs to follow you around as you practice every day for the next 15 years and maybe then you can go pro
This is the unfortunate reality of racing; there are few drivers in F1 who didn't either grow up rich or in a racing dynasty and they all had parents who went to extreme lengths to fund their racing careers.
Racing is a sport for the rich only, with very few exceptions
Who the frick even watches that shit?
rich people
you wouldn't get it.
Everyone I know of means, sees this sort of thing as pleb stuff.
lmao of course. like I said, you and your kind wouldn't get it.
The only people who brag about how much they have are middle class people or entertainers etc. with no class.
As if being an enthusiast of car racing wasn't a big enough indicator of this in the first place kek.
your seethe is only furthering my point. carry on.
You got exposed m8, keep coping.
nootropics, dmha, caffeine, eria jerenesis
>op is a generic image of a guy with good reflexes
>tards in the thread think I want to be an f1 driver
actually I didn't. It was just that your topic of discussion was so incredibly boring it was more fun to comment on what goes into being a race car driver
>I want to be an f1 driver
In all fairness, who doesn't?
There are probably some genetic hard limits, but it can be improved
Much like with strength training, if you put your body in a situation where reflexes are necessary, it will learn to do react faster over time. Fast paced shooter games are unironically great for this, racing sims too, to a lesser extent
Beyond that, https://humanbenchmark.com/tests/reactiontime can probably be used as training
train incredibly high for years then go sober and unleash ur true potential
Unironically boxing.
Practice only goes so far. Musculoskeletal response time is mostly genetic.
gimi
gimi
gimi
gimi
gimi
gimi
Practice
I recently got back into motocross racing and reaction time is the main thing that I've lost over time
Going into corners while bouncing around at 20-40mph trying to pick the best line in a split second
There's a speed that's faster than your brain can handle and it just looks like a blur
There are meme 'exercises' like picking 4 spots on a wall and looking at each as fast as possible
But nothing is going to compare to being in the actual situation
I have great reflexes and I believe it's the result of 2 things
1) FPS video games
2) Pic related
put ropes in your garage and cry racism whenever you see it
first you have to train going left
you take panzerschokolade
Kwabis Kwabilton will never win ever again