Sunday 06/05/2012 - Rest Day at Blue Lake CrossFit
Something to think about during the hard times of a WOD...
Breaking
the mental barrier - By Josh Bridges
Reposted
from Rogue Fitness's Atheltes Blog
The mind is a powerful thing, it can help you get through tough times, or it can cause you to crumble like Greg Norman in the ‘96 Masters. The strong learn how to handle and control their mind when it starts to rant, rave and tell you to stop what your doing. The weak let it take over and OWN them.
The mind is a powerful thing, it can help you get through tough times, or it can cause you to crumble like Greg Norman in the ‘96 Masters. The strong learn how to handle and control their mind when it starts to rant, rave and tell you to stop what your doing. The weak let it take over and OWN them.
Is it
possible to develop strategies to break your mental barrier? Absolutely.
I prevent this little boss in my head from taking over in a couple of ways.
“One more
rep.”
When that
voice inside your head is screaming at you to “put down the barbell” or “get off
the bar,” you fight back with one more rep. Completing just one more rep when
everything inside of you is telling you to stop is a sure way to grow your
mental muscles, and the next time you might do two more reps. Over time, this
builds and you begin to control that voice.
Small
Goals.
When I am
in the middle of a workout, I always have small goals in my head. Small goals
add up to big goals. For example, if my workout calls for 30 heavy thrusters,
my first goal might just be to get to 5 thrusters. When I get to 5 and
still feel good, I start thinking, “good, I’ll do 5 more without rest,” and
when I get to 10 and start to feel fatigued I might just talk myself into “two
more.” But at 12, I might use the “one more rep,” and then do it again.
After a few “one more rep” goals, I am at 16 or 20 . . . and all of a sudden I
might be close enough to 30 to either take a quick break and knock out the rest
in one set, or even finish it off by chipping away on more rep at a time.
“Break
through that wall.”
My old
wrestling coach used to yell at us when he saw us start to break mentally,
“Break through that wall, it’s the only way to get strong.” He would say it
over and over again. We would barely be able to stand up on the mat, but we
never wanted to lose the mental battle, so we would fight and fight until we
physically could not stand any longer. That became so deeply engrained that now
when things get rough I can still hear his voice yelling “Break through that
wall.”
Your body
can handle more than your mind thinks it can. Don’t let that little boss in
your head beat you; go out there and show it that you are the boss!
A bit of "real life" reading for you as well: You Are Beautiful. Courtest of Again Faster - applies to the blokes as well.