Using Your Mental Focus on Fitness to Impact your Chance of Success
May 20th, 2011
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by Richard · Filed Under: Anti-aging strategies · Senior Exercise and Fitness
How you apply your mental focus can have a dramatic impact on your chances for succeeding with any fitness program. What you think about your fitness can literally determine whether you succeed or fail. Let’s look at some of the major ways this happens.
First, if you think the program is not going to work, you are correct. If you believe that your program will fail, then the chances are that you will not do what is necessary to succeed. This is a subtile and sinister factor that can undercut your best intentions. In simplified form, here is how it works.
You start a training program, but deep down you don’t believe that it will give you the results you want. There are some movements that you have to learn, and they are a bit difficult at first. Rather than commit fully to learning how to do them properly, or put out a full effort, your mind says “what’t the point, this won’t work anyway”. As a consequnce, you give a half hearted effort, and never master the movements, or do enough work to produce a result. After a few weeks, you abandon the program because “it does not work” (like you expected it would not work).
A second type of mental subversion comes when you focus on distractions that prevent you from putting your energy and effort into training. This can take many forms, but the most common are looking at other people in the gym and thinking “I’ll never get to level where they are”; wondering if others in the gym are “looking at me” because you are a beginner; and feeling inept because you have not mastered certain parts of training immedately (a lot of training is difficult).
To succeed you need to focus on the tasks that YOU have to perform, and not on what everyone else is doing. You should understand that every person you see in a gym setting who is doing well had to start out as a complete novice. They mastered their craft one step at a time….the same way you will master the craft of being fit. If you feel inept at some point, remember, everyone else felt the same way at one point or another. You need to be persistent and focus on what YOU are doing. That way you will make progress, not get lost worrying about what others think of you.
A third way you can subvert your chances for success is to go into a fitness program is by holding a really negative self image about your fitness. It sounds like the reverse of what should be the case, but if you dwell on your shortcomings and lack of conditoning, you will grind your enthusiasm down with a constant stream of negativism. At the beginning of a program, you may not be in good conditon. However, you need to congratulate yourself on taking the steps to become more fit.
One of the things that sustains a person over a lifetime of fitness is that the “journey is enjoyable” rather than exclusive focus on the end result. If you constantly focus on the negative, you will find that your progress is stunted because eveything seems so frustrating and painful. Thus, at the onset of a new program, remind yourself that you are doing good things for your body, and that you can be proud of doing this.
In a forthcoming post, I’ll discuss one of the biggest reasons I beleive that many people fail at becoming fit. Again, this is counter intuitive, but the attitude known as “perfectionism” can be one of the biggest reasons people sabotage their own best intentions.
Richard


