Thursday, 29 June 2017

The Importance Of Mental Resilience In Fitness Challenges




SKYNESHER VIA GETTY IMAGES
Everyone knows that insanely good feeling of achieving a personal 
fitness goal, whether it’s your first 10k, lifting a PB or completing a
And we all know it’s not just the physical training that gets us through,
 it’s also our minds telling us not to give up.
But some people decide to go one step further, taking on extreme
 fitness challenges like a series of marathons in consecutive days.
So how do they do it?
Mental toughness is crucial in achieving success, and having the
 ability to persevere when your body is telling you to stop. 
“Your mental training is just as important as your physical training,
 your hydration, your nutrition, your race plan,” Carrie Cheadle,
 expert
 in mental skills training and author of ‘Mental Skills to Maximize 
Your Athletic Performance’ told HuffPost UK. “It’s another spoke 
in the
 wheel.” 
                                                                                                      VGAJIC VIA GETTY IMAGES
“Any fitness performance is 50% physical and 50% mental,” said 
Cheadle.
“You would never show up to your event not having done your
 physical training and preparation, so why show up not having done 
any of your mental training and preparation?”
Some people may take on a fitness challenge feeling confident from
 the start that they’ll get to the finish line.
 He was 64 when he ran his first marathon. Simpson didn’t train
 himself mentally, because he has always “accepted things as they
 happen in life” and has never been a worrier.
“Marathons are never easy, and there is no way of predicting how 
any race will go,” he told HuffPost UK.
“But I always feel if I get past 20 miles feeling OK, the last six miles
 will not be a problem. With that attitude, not too many races have
 been real struggles.” 
                                                                       KEITHSIMPSON
                                                   Keith Simpson ran 26 marathons in alphabetical order.
But Cheadle said anyone can “reach into the depths of their
 mind” 
and pull out strength they need to get through a challenge. 
“I tell my athletes that it’s their physical preparation to get them
 to the start line and their mental preparation that gets them to 
the finish,” she said.
“Anyone can perform well when they’re having a great day,
 the stars are aligned, and everything is going exactly the way 
you wanted it to. But rarely is there an event where you’re not
 faced with some unforeseen challenge or obstacle.
“Your mental strength is what helps you get through those
 challenges and be able to continue on the path to your goal.”
                                                                                                SKYNESHER VIA GETTY IMAGES
Phil Payne, 32, has completed a range of challenges including 
the Iron Man, Marathon des Sables and a 100-hour spin. He said 
all these
 have been more mentally challenging than they have physically.
“It’s just a question of telling yourself that this feeling won’t last 
forever 
and just how good it will feel when you overcome it,” he said, 
explaining how his mind helped him get through. 
“Having people behind you and support helps loads and having a
reputation of doing things that most people can’t do is a boost as 
you want to maintain that.
“Some of the quotes from ‘Rocky’ films help me loads, too. I replay 
them in my head.
“Mental resilience is about not being afraid to go into that dark 
place where no one is around and you feel so, so alone.” 
Teaching yourself to be strong

is possible, but not easy.Amy Hughes, who ran 53 marathons in 53 days.
Amy Hughes, who ran 53 marathons in 53 days, as well as running 
521 miles on a treadmill in one week, puts her successes down to
 mental preparation.
“Teaching yourself to be strong is possible, but not easy,” 
she told HuffPost UK. “My training consisted of more mental
 preparation than physical.” 
“I tried to get more hours on the road than miles so mentally I knew
 I could stay on my feet. I also tried not to focus on the negatives.
 It’s easy to get wrapped up in what experts say you ‘should’ be 
doing.
“It’s easy to let the negatives take over. It’s easy to let worry and
 self
 doubt take over but once that goes, it’s hard to pull yourself 
through tough times.”
                                                
                                                                 Amy Hughes.
But that’s not to say it came easy to Hughes. In every challenge
 she’s undertaken, her mental strength has been tested to the
 extreme.
“I am the most stubborn person I know, so that is a big help, but
 sometimes it’s hard to breakthrough the pain barrier when you 
feel like you can’t go on,” she said.
“It might sound a bit cheesy but I created a mantra. When I get
 tired or really want to quit, I repeat it in my head and it slowly turns
 my self doubt into ‘I’ve got this’.
“I don’t know where it came from or why I chose these words 
but it’s: ‘You are strong, you are fearless, don’t stop’.”
Gaining mental strength is a process, said Cheadle, and not 
something that will come with the click of your fingers.
“Mental toughness is absolutely something you can develop,”
 she added. “Your mental skills are just like physical skills in that
 they can be built and strengthened with training and practice.”
Cheadle said it’s down to three things:

1. Commitment

“Motivation might be the thing that gets you going, but commitment
 is what keeps you going,” she said. “When you are committed
to the goal, any setbacks you encounter are temporary and it’s
 not a matter of if you accomplish your goal, but when.”

2. Focus

“One of the characteristics of mentally tough athletes is that
 they are able to perform under pressure and able to perform
 consistently,” she said.
“When you are mentally tough you stay in the present moment,
 keep your focus on the things that are in your control, and aren’t 
distracted by things irrelevant to your performance.”

3. Attitude

“You have to believe you can do this,” she said. “Mentally tough
 athletes have an unshakeable belief in their ability to accomplish
 their goals and know that one bad day doesn’t define them.
“You use failures as feedback. Failures don’t make you want 
to throw in the towel, they make you want it even more.”
(Source:Huffington Post, UK)


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