Archive for November, 2008

How to Get and Stay Motivated-Part 1

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

My alarm went off at 4:00 AM today, but I didn’t really need the
alarm. In fact, I had woken up about 3:40 or so with pretty-good
energy and hopped out of bed at 3:58.

Why? Well, I’ve got a mission. And I’ve got a deadline.

This mission? To help as many people as possible enjoy the vast
benefits of fitness (same mission that I’ve had for years).

Deadline? Well, the mission has merged with the well-being of my
wife and I after I got booted out of the fitness facility that I
independantly contracted out of last week (they had found out that
I wanted to open my own place).

A powerful mission along with my motivation to put food on the
table seemed to get the job done in lighting a very hot fire under
my butt.

What I’ve found in the last six days is an amazing ability to cut
through the crap and make choices in a few moments that I had been
dilly-dallying with for months and months.

Having a clear goal (matched with my personal mission and beliefs)
and a deadline seems to be the perfect ignition for lighting that
fire under my butt.

And I think that same combination can work for you.

So what’s your mission? And how can you apply a deadline to it? Share your
thoughts by posting to this blog.

Later this week, I’ll share the second half of the equation that
will allow that fire to keep burning, whether in me, or you, or
anybody.

Break Through Your Barriers With Mental Training

Monday, November 17th, 2008

 While exercise and nutrition are very important, mental training is the most underappreciated aspect of peak performance in exercise, sports, and life. Because it’s underappreciated, you will have the proverbial “ace in the hole” if you are able to maximize this aspect of living.

Mental training is necessary for peak performance because it helps us overcome past negative experiences, the negativity around us, and builds confidence in our abilities to succeed.

Here is a list of mental qualities and practices that sports psychologists have found separate the winners and losers.

If you condition your mind towards achieving these mental characteristics in your life’s performances, you will be reaching your full potential.

-Finding your optimal energy for any given activity (you will find different optimal energy levels for different activities)

-Learn to view a moderate level of anxiety as performance enhancing, rather than performance detracting

-Learn how to relax when anxiety/arousal becomes too high (deep breathing works wonders)

-Imagine total focus, optimal energy, and successful completion of the given activity. Imagine the activity intrinsically (as if you were performing the activity) and extrinsically (as if you were watching as a third-person).

-During imagery, utilize all of your senses. What does the activity feel like? What does it sound like? What does it smell like? How does your body feel? What is your emotional state? Imagine the ideal.

-Become immersed in the activity. Focus on the tasks at hand. Do not focus on the outcome.

-Imagine your performance as effortless.

-Use positive affirmations. Although I often laugh about the character of Stuart Smalley on Saturday Night Live (”I’m Good Enough, I’m Smart Enough, and Doggone It, People Like Me!”), the use of positive affirmations helps counter-balance the mental garbage we are exposed to during the day.

There you have it. Review that list and put it to use. These are the skills of champions. Never a bad idea to emulate the “best practices” of the best performers.