Colin Wilson is like the vast majority of hockey players in that he takes a nap before every game he plays. Unlike most hockey players, before and after every nap Wilson puts a metallic headband around his head, with an external wire connected to an app called Muse on his smartphone.
To the manufactured sounds of rain falling in a forest, or incoming tide on a beach, or wind swishing over sands of a desert, Wilson focuses in on his breathing for a form of meditation called Vipassana. Translated from the Pali language, Vipassana means “to see things as they really are.”
As Wilson relaxes to his inhalations and exhalations, it is his goal that the headband will record his brain waves as being in the Alpha phase – one of five brain wave phases and the one most commonly associated with relaxed, mindful meditation. Most of the time, Wilson will sit silent in a classic yoga position, legs crossed, shoulders back. Occasionally, he will slowly chant a mantra on the exhale.
It is something the 29-year-old Avalanche forward started doing early last year, and he credits it for bettering not only his life, but his hockey career.
“I just started looking for other ways to recover, other ways to calm myself down. Playing 82 games throughout the year is akin to really heightening your nervous system, so any way I can get a break and just come to a different understanding, it helps,” Wilson told BSN Denver.
If his brain waves didn’t quite achieve Alpha status before Game 5 of the Avs’ first-round series in Calgary, Wilson certainly achieved it on the ice with his play. He scored two huge goals in the Avs’ 5-1, series-clinching victory. It continued what has generally been a strong, bounce-back season for the 10-year veteran and, in the last year of his contract, certainly given Avalanche management something to meditate over whether he’ll get another offer or not.
Whether he’d get another contract offer or not – that’s something Wilson admits he would have seriously stressed about earlier in his career. Since discovering the methods of Vipassana, Wilson’s mind stays more in the present, as they are. Sure, he’d like another nice contract and he thinks about it, but worrying about such things isn’t going to do any good, he’s come to realize.
“I’m at the point now where I’ve played 10 seasons and this whole season I’ve just been like, ‘I want to enjoy it as much as I can,'” Wilson said. “That’s probably allowed me to take a little pressure off myself and let me just play my game.’
Vipassana isn’t the only form of meditation Wilson practices. Once or twice a week, for 90 minutes at a time, he lays on the top of heated salt water, entombed in a sensory deprivation flotation tank. Think of yourself floating in a coffin, to the sounds of dreamy ambient music, and you get an idea of what it’s like in a flotation tank.
“They’re great,” Wilson says. “And you get such a good sleep after them.”
Wilson has started to influence a few of his teammates too. Tyson Barrie so far is the only one to wear the headband and practice Vipassana on the Muse app, but “a few other guys” have tried the flotation tanks, Wilson said.
“It’s not all about just being calm,” he said. “Some of it, you have the calming effects, but at the same time it’s kind of staying in your center while you are nervous or while you are anxious before a game. It’s understanding and seeing it a little bit differently.”
Wilson prefers to keep his mantra private. Suffice to say, it’s probably not “Staaan-ley Cup”, but if it were, Wilson doesn’t mind looking that far ahead. That’s a team goal, and it’s OK to think about the future, too, even if you meditate.
The Avs are still longshots to win a Cup this year, but that’s OK, Wilson says. He’s been on an eighth-seeded team that made it to the Stanley Cup Finals before, with Nashville in 2016-17.
“This team reminds me a lot of the team in Nashville that went to the Finals. We were the last seed in and we knew how good we were, but we took quite a few games off during the year, but managed to get in,” Wilson said. “We had that 8-0-2 stretch where we were battling every day and I think it brought the group together. Now, we have a lot of belief in our team, at the right time.”
“If you want to conquer the anxiety of life, live in the moment, live in the breath,” – Amit Ray.

0 Comments (5 conversations)
Nels
Nice. Breathing meditation really helps me as well. Try it to fall asleep. It will put you right into a peaceful sleep. Just focus on your breaths, their more important than anything else you have going on in your head, esp. while you’re trying to fall asleep.
Nels
*they’re
Adrian Dater
AuthorI can say it has helped me some in falling asleep too, which for me is no easy task.
Bob_W
There is a process known as binaural beats wherein a sound of one frequency is listened to with one ear while simultaneously a sound of a slightly different frequency is listened to with the other ear and the human brain will change it’s own frequency to try and synchronize the 2 diffeerent ones. This has been scientifically verified to work. By selecting the two frequencies a person can be caused to enter the alpha or beta or even delta state. The frequencies can be embedded in music or nature sounds so that they are unnoticeable to the listener. This process is available commercially with sound recordings from a company known as the Monroe Institute and they call the process Hemisync.
Captain Evil
Man this is so cool! for a long time I’ve kinda wanted to go into teaching sports players how to see through the mind with simple techniques. NHL players are all so highly trained and skilled that the ones who master their minds are the ones who win. It’s easy to see how Wilson’s practice has affected team chemistry. They are playing loose, unpredictable, calm, and decisive. I knew something changed for Barrie over this year, he grew his game a lot and started playing with more awareness and making better decisions. Meditation is an amazing tool but eventually you realize that it is your natural state of awareness. When I watch these guys on the ice they are all in tune with each other working as a unit, that is Zen.
Cerveau
Truly wonderful article Dater.
Another process is pranayama breathing – good lessons on youtube.
As a hypnotist I have helped people with sleeping.
Our minds are truly miraculous indeed!
Adrian Dater
AuthorThanks, I will check that out.
teerav42
Great article, thanks AD.