Get Mental! The Psychology of Strength
submitted
by Josh Hewett www.teambarbarian.com
“True strength comes from
within”.
We’ve all heard similar sayings.
Most successful athletes know that their mentality plays
a strong role in their performance. Many recreational athletes
and trainees also realize on some level that their thoughts
and moods affect their workouts. But very few actually dedicate
sufficient time to their Mental Conditioning (to “train
their brain”). The fact is that the mind (especially
the subconscious mind) actually has INCREDIBLE power that
many don’t acknowledge. Our mind has the ability to
make us stronger, more muscular, more athletic, more powerful,
even wealthier and happier! Sound unbelievable? As this
article will explain, your inner world creates your outer
world.
The intention of this article is to share
some of the basics of exercise and sport psychology and
to illustrate the importance of our thoughts and emotions
relative to our physical goals. I will also describe some
simple techniques that you can use regularly to improve
you performance. This information is directed to those readers
who are already participating in a regular bodybuilding
or strength training program and are motivated to achieve
greater results.
The truth is that it’s our mind
that determines what results we will achieve. The process
goes something like this: Your thoughts and beliefs lead
to your emotions, which in turn lead to your actions, which
cause your results. Unfortunately, most of us put up our
own psychological barriers that interfere with our performance
and limit our success. The four-minute mile was a famous
example of a psychological barrier. For years runners were
apparently not able to run a mile in under four minutes,
although many came close. That led to the common belief
that this was physically impossible. Incredibly, within
a year and a half after Roger Bannister’s famous breakthrough,
16 other athletes accomplished it! It wasn’t because
these athletes were suddenly training harder. They were
no longer limited by their beliefs once Bannister had demonstrated
what was possible.
What I’m saying is that with a
bit of mental conditioning you can expect far superior results
from your training, and in many cases it’s all that’s
holding you back.
The four basic principles of mental conditioning
are as follows:
1. Set SMARTER Goals.
2. Create a strong, clear mental picture of these goals
using Visualization and Imagery training.
3. Reinforce these ideas often using Affirmations.
4. Maintain a positive focus on your objectives and employ
interventions such as negative thought-stopping techniques.
The field of exercise and sport
psychology is significantly more involved than
this, but these principles provide a great starting point
for developing a mental training program.
Setting SMARTER Goals
Studies have shown that appropriate goal
setting leads to performance enhancement, with moderate
to strong effects. To remember the key principles of effective
goal setting, think SMARTER; your goals should be:
Specific – Indicate precisely what
is to be done. Avoid vague alternatives
Measurable – You should be able to
quantify your goal
Action-Oriented – develop concrete
plan of actions required to move toward your goals
Realistic – start with moderately
difficult goals, rather than too easy or difficult to reach
Time-Constrained – Set specific time
limits for both short term and long term goals
Evaluated – Record and monitor your
progress regularly
Reversible – In cases of injury,
or failure to achieve a difficult goal, reset goals as needed
Take some time right now to write down
your short term goals as well as your long term “dream”
goals (the ones that may seem a long way off and harder
to achieve). Writing your goals down is the basis of a contract
with yourself. It also helps to publicly acknowledge your
goals.
Short-term or daily goals are the most
important because they provide a focus for our training
in each and every session. Past research on elite athletes
found that setting daily training goals was one factor that
distinguished the successful performers from the less successful.
Many have also found it useful to write
a Mission Statement for themselves, which summarizes their
basic goals and primary objectives in their life.
Relaxation and Visualization
Scientific research has shown the use
of Visualization (or Imagery) to be an important adjunct
to physical training. This is why world-class, elite level
athletes and coaches use imagery techniques regularly. In
fact, past studies have demonstrated that athletes using
visualization dramatically improved their performance by
comparison with those who didn’t.
With clear and vivid visualization training,
certain parts of our brain can be stimulated to illicit
small neuromuscular signals and specific hormonal changes
that can lead to real physical changes in your body and
your performance. In addition, we can reprogram our subconscious
mind to develop stronger neural “connections”
that will reinforce those positive thoughts and beliefs
that empower us to achieve our goals.
For visualization / imagery training to be most effective
you need to be in a relaxed state with as few distractions
as possible. The following simple Progressive Relaxation
exercise will help achieve this.
Progressive Relaxation:
1. Choose a quiet, relaxing place where
you won't be interrupted.
2. Before you start, do a few gentle stretching exercises
to relieve muscular tension.
3. Make yourself comfortable, either sitting or lying down.
Close your eyes.
4. Start to breathe slowly and deeply, in a calm and effortless
way.
5. Gently tense, and then relax, each part of your body,
starting with your feet and working your way up to your
face and head.
6. As you focus on each area, count backwards from 10 to
1, relaxing more deeply with each number. Think of warmth,
heaviness and relaxation.
7. Push distracting thoughts to the back of your mind; imagine
them floating away with each breath.
8. Don't try to relax; simply
let go of the tension in your muscles & let them become
relaxed on their own.
9. Let your mind go empty. Some people find it helpful to
visualize a calm, peaceful place such as a garden or meadow.
10. Stay like this for about 15 to 20 minutes, and do your
affirmations (see below). Then take some
deep breaths and open your eyes, but stay sitting or lying
for a few moments before you get up.
While you are in this relaxed state it
is a perfect time to practice visualization training for
a few minutes. This is an important part of your mental
conditioning program. The key points to remember when practicing
your creative visualization are as follows:
1. Your imagery should be as vivid
and clear as possible.
2. Always visualize positive and controllable
scenarios.
3. Try to imagine in real time: the visualization of an
experience should last as long as the actual event (i.e.:
1 minute). Often we imagine events more quickly than we
actually experience them. Model your imagery in “real
time”.
4. Visualize both the process of achieving your goal, as
well as the positive outcome.
Here are a few simple suggestions of
visualizations you can do, to get you started:
• See yourself getting up in the
morning and being really excited about your goals. See yourself
so excited you can't stay in bed any longer.
• Mentally rehearse your training drills, picturing
perfect performance in real time.
• Imagine in vivid detail how much faster,
stronger, more muscular, more powerful, more athletic
you are becoming and how smoothly your body responds.
• Visualize how successful you will be in competition
or training.
• Visualize your self as a warrior, with unlimited
energy. See yourself as unbeatable.
• Imagine that you have already achieved these goals
you have. How does it feel? What do you see? What would
you be hearing? Picture every detail as if it’s real.
Strength Affirmations & Negative
Thought Stopping
The next step is to learn to actively
stop any negative thoughts that arise and replace them with
a positive affirmation. Affirmations are positive statements
used to reinforce that which you want to achieve.
All of us have negative thoughts of some
kind that creep into our minds and interfere with our goals,
such as “I’m a hardgainer. I can’t put
on muscle; I’ve tried before and failed,” or
“That guy always beats me!” Several methods
exist to interrupt our worrisome or negative thought patterns
before they spiral out of control. These methods can include
visual, physical, or verbal stimulus. One of my favorite
techniques, which I have applied with several of my clients,
is the Rubber Band Method. This simply
involves wearing an ordinary thick rubber band around your
wrist and upon noticing a negative thought enter your mind,
‘snap’ the band on your arm and say the word
“Stop!”
In order to reprogram your subconscious
mind, once you have interrupted the distracting or disturbing
thought process you must then replace it with a verbal affirmation.
Here are the key principles as well as some examples to
consider when creating your own affirmations:
1. Be personal - (Use
I, me, my, or your first name)- “I AM RESPONSIBLE
FOR THE INTENSITY OF MY PERFORMANCE.”
2. Be positive - (do
not focus on what you “don’t want”)- "I
CONSISTENTLY STRIVE TO COMPETE AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL OF MY
POTENTIAL!"
3. Use the present tense and
phrase the affirmation as if the goal was already accomplished-
"I NOW HAVE A HEALTHY DIET THAT GIVES ME ALL THE STRENGTH
AND ENERGY I REQUIRE.”."
4. Change yourself not the other
person -"I STAY FOCUSED ON MY GOALS AND I
AM UNAFFECTED BY THE BEHAVIOR OF OTHERS."
5. Do not compare yourself with
anyone -"I AM IN IDEAL PHYSICAL AND MENTAL
CONDITION!" Avoid: "I am in better shape than
Herman!"
6. Use action words, and keep
it short, simple and powerful - "I TAKE CHARGE
OF MY THOUGHTS AND FEELINGS WHENEVER I TRAIN OR COMPETE."
7. Be realistic, but stretch
- "I HAVE THE ABILITY AND SELF-DISCIPLINE
NEEDED TO CONSISTENTLY FINISH IN THE TOP THREE."
8. Personalize it and use feeling
words (involve emotion) - "I LOVE THE FEELING
I GET FROM COMPETING AT MY BEST!"
Some other examples of effective affirmations
that you can use are listed below:
• I respect, admire and model very
successful elite athletes in my sport / activity!
• I enjoy training intensely and my body recovers
easily and quickly.
• When I train, I train hard. When I rest, I relax
deeply.
• I create my reality and I create the exact amount
of my success.
• I am an excellent athlete! I have unlimited performance
potential!
• I am getting bigger and stronger every day.
• I am grateful for all of my athletic successes so
far.
• I am grateful for my health, my strength, my speed,
my power, and my abilities!
Try to make a list of your own personalized
affirmations and read them aloud first thing in the morning
and before sleeping in the evening, or at anytime you wish
during the day. Create a feeling of belief in your affirmation
statements; don’t listen to your doubts. The more
frequently you use them the more effective they will be.
Psychologists estimate that it takes about a month to overwrite
our old negative programming and establish a new positive
pattern in your brain. Stick with it.
Your Daily Mental Conditioning
Routine
To help you implement these techniques
on a regular basis, I have organized them into a simple
daily regimen that you can follow. Obviously you will include
your regular activities as needed.
• AM Hour of Power:
Make an effort to get out of bed as soon as the alarm goes
off. Also try to get as much natural sunlight as soon as
you can each day; open the curtains and look outside. This
will help to stimulate your RAS (Reticular Activating System)
which will increase wakefulness. Take some deep breaths,
choose one affirmation to say out loud, and visualize a
positive outcome for the day to come. Rinse with cool water
after your shower.
• Positive Environment:
During your day, try to avoid interacting or associating
with “negative”, non-supportive people. Those
who put you down, complain often or who view themselves
as “victims” could hold you back from your success.
• Rubber Band Method:
If you feel a negative, non-supportive thought arising during
the day, snap the elastic band on your wrist, and say “Stop!”
Immediately after, rub your wrist gently and repeat an “opposite”,
supportive affirmation to yourself.
• Record Your Successes:
At the end of each day, in the evening, write down 5 successes
in your journal, regardless of how big or small they are.
This could be anything from ‘hitting a new
P.R’. or ‘winning a contest’,
to something like ‘brushing your teeth in
the morning’.
• Visualizations and Affirmations:
Repeat your list of affirmations out loud, then take some
time to relax and visualize yourself having already achieved
your goals and think of how great that makes you feel. Review
your “Mission Statement” and your goals each
day as well.
Conclusion:
Achievements are based not solely on
talent and hard physical conditioning, but on mental strength
and a clear vision of where you want to go. You need to
decide what you want, know why you want it, and develop
a strong desire to achieve it.
Once you have done this, to change your
results you must overwrite old negative programming and
install positive new programming into your subconscious.
This is accomplished through techniques such as effective
goal setting, positive self-talk (affirmations), and mental
imagery (visualization). As you progress you will increase
your belief that you will succeed. Because your beliefs
shape your reality, you will be surprised at how quickly
you achieve results that you thought impossible a few short
months ago.
-Josh Hewett
“All we are is the result of what
we have thought.” -Buddha
About The Author
Josh Hewett holds a
degree in Kinesiology from the University of Western Ontario,
as well as personal training qualifications from several
agencies including CanFitPro. He is a qualified fitness
professional with over 14 years of involvement in the health
and fitness industry including employment, academic, competitive,
and volunteer experience.
You are invited to contact Josh Hewett
if you have any questions or are interested in a training
program. Check out his websites at:
www.teambarbarian.com
www.top-form-fitness.com