Understanding the 'Flat Skis Mental Cue' mental cue for straight run & gliding. When to use it, what it feels like, and how it helps beginner skiers.
“Imagine your skis are floating on water - keep them flat and level as you glide.”
This mental cue targets Straight Run & Gliding, a beginner-level skill. It gives you a specific thought to hold while practicing.
Your brain can only process one or two things consciously while skiing. Everything else runs on autopilot. A good mental cue directs your limited conscious attention to the thing that matters most for your current development.
Without a cue, your mind tends to wander — thinking about lunch, the lift line, or the skier who just passed you. A focused cue keeps your practice productive.
At the top of the slope, take a breath and bring the cue to mind. Say it to yourself or picture what it looks like in action. Do not try to combine it with other cues — one at a time is enough.
Let the cue sit in the back of your mind as you ski. You do not need to think about it on every turn. Just having it as your primary focus shapes your movement patterns subtly but consistently.
On the chairlift, reflect briefly. Did you notice anything different? Could you feel what the cue was pointing at? Even partial awareness is progress — you are training your attention alongside your body.
When this cue is working, you should notice a sense of control and intention in your skiing. The movement it targets becomes less automatic and more deliberate, which is exactly what practice requires.
You might also notice things you were not aware of before — pressure points, timing, or body positions that had been invisible. That increased awareness is the real value of mental cues.
Overthinking it. The cue is a gentle focus, not a rigid instruction. If you are tense and analytical, you have gone too far. Relax and let it be more of a suggestion than a command.
Using it on hard terrain. Save cues for terrain where you are comfortable. On challenging slopes, your attention needs to be on safety and navigation, not technique refinement.
Combining multiple cues. One cue per run, maximum two per session. Trying to think about three things at once means you are not really focusing on any of them.
This cue connects to the broader Straight Run & Gliding skill progression. As you develop this technique, different cues become relevant for different aspects of the movement.
Explore more mental cues to find the right focus for your current practice goals.
Imagine your skis are floating on water - keep them flat and level as you glide. This cue focuses your attention on a specific aspect of your technique, making it easier to develop the right movement patterns.
Use this cue when practicing straight run & gliding on terrain where you feel comfortable. The best time is during focused practice runs, not when you are skiing challenging terrain or conditions.
Focus on a single cue for 3-5 runs, then take a break and ski freely. Trying to hold a cue for too long leads to overthinking. Short, focused bursts produce better results.
Turn Lab organizes mental cues, drills, and progression milestones into a structured path from beginner to expert. Free for all beginner skills.
Download Free for iPhone