My Hat Size Got Bigger, My Feet Got Bigger, I Grew a Half An Inch In About a Year and a Half And I'm Pretty Sure Whole Brain Power Played A Big Part Of That

Published: Sept. 4, 2012, 7:36 p.m.

b'Chuck Mellick is currently 41. He\\u2019s a husband and father of two children and a successful businessman. Chuck is also an avid baseball player. Chuck resurrects his baseball dreams seventeen years after giving up the game. But this time, he decides to activate ambidexterity in his pitching prowess. Originally a natural right handed pitcher, Chuck begins to train to throw left handed. Tapping into his mix handed nature and having the natural ability to write with his left hand, Chuck begins an incredible journey and pitch ambidextrously at the professional level.\\n\\nLavery discovers Chuck Mellick\\u2019s pitching prowess on YouTube, and the two correspond via phone and through email. Chuck decides to have Lavery coach him to accelerate the Whole Brain Power Coaching Methodology. Chuck immediately goes on Whole Brain Power Coaching methods designed by Lavery. Chuck becomes a stellar all-star of doing all of the tenets prescribed. These include the two handed penmanship with mirror image left-handed, juggling two pound metal balls while reciting powers of two up to the 60th, being able to code the alphabet where A is one and also where Z is one and Y is two and from the end to the middle and the middle and out. Chuck undergoes a radical metamorphosis of his motor skills as well.\\n\\nAt the time Chuck begins the Whole Brain Power journey, he\\u2019s pitching baseballs approximately 85 miles an hour. Within two years of training, he develops the ability to throw a baseball in excess of ninety two miles an hour right-handed, and now his left-handed fastball is approach eighty miles an hour. He is a man on a mission to become the first person in history to throw a baseball more than ninety miles an hour from both sides.\\n\\nChuck believes that he\\u2019s still getting better against all odds concerning his age. Even having performed at a major league baseball camp, he impressed the baseball camp supervisor. This scout shook his head in disbelief after seeing a man at thirty-nine, throwing the ball past baseball hitters that were being drafted to play major league baseball.\\n\\nThis is an exclusive interview from Michael Senoff at www.wholebrainpowercoaching.com.'