Monday, November 18, 2019
4 Secrets of Navy SEAL mental toughness and Olympian mental strength
4 Secrets of Navy SEAL mental toughness and Olympian mental strength 4 Secrets of Navy SEAL mental toughness and Olympian mental strength Know whatâs really interesting? Learning how Navy SEALs build mental toughness to handle deadly situations.Know what else is really interesting? Learning how Olympic athletes deal with the pressure of competition when the entire world is watching.Know whatâs the most interesting of all? When you find out they do a lot of the same things.âMental Links To Excellenceâ is a research study of what Olympians do to prepare for their big day. And so much of it lines up with what I learned researching SEAL training and talking to former Navy SEAL Platoon Commander James Waters.The best part is you and I can use these methods to perform better at work and in our personal lives.Letâs find out how . . .1. Talk positively to yourselfYour brain is always going. Itâs estimated you say 300 to 1,000 words to yourself per minute. Olympic athletes and SEALs agree: those words need to be positive.One of the Olympians said:Immediately before the race I was thinking about trying to stay on that edge, just letting myself relax, and doing a lot of positive self-talk about what I was going to do. I just felt like we couldnât do anything wrong. It was just up to us. I said, âThereâs nothing thatâs affecting us in a negative way, the only thing now is to do it, and we can do it . . . I just have to do my best.âSEALs use the same method - and they do it in a far more terrifying scenario. How terrifying?Youâre underwater with SCUBA gear. An instructor suddenly swims up behind you. He yanks the regulator out of your mouth. You canât breathe. Then he ties your oxygen lines in a knot.Your brain starts screaming, âYOU ARE GOING TO DIE.â But you have to keep cool, stay underwater and follow procedure to get your gear back in working order so you can breathe again.And this happens over and over - for 20 minutes. Welcome to the dreaded âpool compâ section of SEAL qualification.You get 4 attempts. Why? Because you need them. Only one in five guys can do it the first time out.The danger here is panic. And SEALs are not allowed to panic . . . even when they cannot breathe. They must think positive to keep calm and pass âpool comp.âSo how can you use this?Got a big presentation at work coming up? Encountering obstacles? You need to remember the 3 Pâs: Permanence, pervasiveness, and whether itâs personal.Pessimists tell themselves that bad events: Will last a long time, or forever. (âIâll never get this done.â) Are universal. (âYou canât trust any of those people.â) Are their own fault. (âIâm terrible at this.â) Optimists look at setbacks in the exact opposite way: Bad things are temporary. (âThat happens occasionally but itâs no big deal.â) Bad things have a specific cause and arenât universal. (âWhen the weather is better that wonât be a problem.â) Itâs not their fault. (âIâm good at this but today wasnât my lucky day.â) When talking to yourself, be an optimist, not a pessimist.(For more on how to think positively, click here.)Okay, so youâre talking to yourself positively. What else do Olympians and SEALs agree on when you need to be at your best?2. Setting goalsYou hear this a lot. But you probably donât do it. Specifically, ask yourself what you need to achieve right now.From the Olympian study:The best athletes had clear daily goals. They knew what they wanted to accomplish each day, each workout, each sequence or interval. They were determined to accomplish these goals and focused fully on doing so.SEALs are taught to set goals too. Sometimes really small ones, but itâs enough to keep them going when every muscle in their body is screaming for them to quit.âWith goal setting the recruits were taught to set goals in extremely short chunks. For instance, one former Navy Seal discussed how he set goals such as making it to lunch, then dinner.âAnd what happened when they achieved those goa ls? SEALs set new ones. The focus is on always improving. Hereâs former SEAL Platoon Commander, James Waters:Eric, this gets at my point of the SEAL experience, this constant learning, constantly not being satisfied. Thatâs one of the interesting things about the community: you never feel like youâve got it all figured out. If you do feel like you figured it out, you probably arenât doing it right. If youâre not willing to learn from other people then frankly youâre not doing all you need to do to be the best operator you can possibly be. Itâs a culture of constant self-improvement and constant measurement of how youâre doing. Thatâs a theme I think that all SEALs would agree is critical.So how can you use this?Ask yourself, âWhat do I need to do to make this presentation better?âWrite your goals down and track your progress. As Dan Pink notes in his bestselling book on motivation, Drive, nothing motivates you better than seeing progress.(For more secrets on how to build grit - from my interview with Navy SEAL platoon commander James Waters - click here.)Youâre thinking positive and setting goals. But how do you get ready for the unexpected problems that always pop up at the last minute?3. Practice visualizationClose your eyes. See the big challenge. Walk through every step of it. Sound silly? Maybe, but the best of the best do this a lot.From the study of Olympians:These athletes had very well developed imagery skills and used them daily. They used imagery to prepare themselves to get what they wanted out of training, to perfect skills within the training sessions, to make technical corrections, to imagine themselves being successful in competition, and to see themselves achieving their ultimate goal.Again, SEALs are taught to do the same thing:With mental rehearsal they were taught to visualize themselves succeeding in their activities and going through the motions.So how can you use this?Visualize that presentation. But donâ t merely fantasize about being perfect and just make yourself feel good. That kills motivation:Results indicate that one reason positive fantasies predict poor achievement is because they do not generate energy to pursue the desired future.You want to see the problems you might encounter and visualize how you will overcome them.Dan Coyle, the expert on expertise, says itâs an essential part of how U.S. Special Forces prepare for every dangerous mission:â¦they spend the entire morning going over every possible mistake or disaster that could happen during the mission. Every possible screwup is mercilessly examined, and linked to an appropriate response: if the helicopter crash-lands, weâll do X. If we are dropped off at the wrong spot, weâll do Y. If we are outnumbered, weâll do Z.(For more lessons from top athletes on how to be the best, click here.)Youâre visualizing the big day and walking through how youâll deal with adversity. Cool. But how do you take that to th e next level like the pros do?4. Use simulationsVisualization is great because you can do it anywhere as often as you like. But in the end you must make practice as close to the real thing as possible.From the study of Olympians:The best athletes made extensive use of simulation training. They approached training runs, routines, plays, or scrimmages in practice as if they were at the competition, often wearing what they would wear and preparing like they would prepare.And SEALs didnât just visualize either. Before the raid on Bin Ladenâs compound they built full-size replicas of the location so their training would be tailored to what they would face.Via Daniel Coyleâs excellent book The Little Book of Talent: 52 Tips for Improving Your Skills:When U.S. Navy SEAL Team 6 mounted its May 2011 raid on Osama bin Ladenâs compound in Pakistan, it prepared by constructing full-scale replicas of the compound in North Carolina and Nevada, and rehearsing for three weeks. Dozens of tim es the SEALs simulated the operation. Dozens of times, they created various conditions they might encounter.Special Forces Lieutenant Colonel Mike Kenny agreed:In Army parlance they say, âtrain like you fight.â Donât screw around and say, âOkay, when itâs for real then weâll really ramp up.â No, you need to do that now. You need to train as hard and as realistic as possible, because this notion that when itâs for real and the stakes are high, thatâs when weâll really turn it on and rise to the occasion⦠thatâs not what happens. You will not rise to the occasion. You will sink to the lowest level of your training. Itâs the truth.So how can you use this?How will you deal with the fear of standing in front of a big crowd when you give that presentation?Susan Cain, author of Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Canât Stop Talking, and an introvert herself, is now a professional public speaker. How did she overcome public speaking fear?She pract iced in front of small, supportive groups to desensitize herself - she used a simulation.From my interview with Susan:I really had to desensitize myself to my fears of public speaking. I did that by practicing in very small, very supportive and very low-speed environments where it didnât matter if I screwed up. And eventually you get used to the strange feeling of being looked at, which used to make me feel horrified. You become accustomed to it over time and your fear dissipates.(To learn how to overcome your problems the way Special Forces operatives do, click here.)So Olympic athletes and Navy SEALs agree on a lot. Letâs round up what weâve learned and see how it can work for you.Sum upHereâs what Olympic athletes and Navy SEALs both do to be the best and achieve mental toughness: Talk Positively To Yourself: Remember the 3 Pâs: tell yourself bad things arenât permanent, pervasive or personal - but good things are. Setting Goals: Know what you want to achieve. Write it down. Focus on progress. Practice Visualization: Donât fantasize about getting what you want but see yourself overcoming specific obstacles. Use Simulations: Always make your practice as close to the real thing as possible. Olympians and Navy SEALs, by definition, are the best at what they do. But the methods they use to get there are things we can all use.And those techniques arenât based on muscles or natural talent. Theyâre all about good preparation and hard work. Apply those and you can get there too.As Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, âWhat lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.âJoin over 205,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.Related posts:How To Stop Being Lazy And Get More Done â" 5 Expert TipsHow To Get People To Like You: 7 Ways From An FBI Behavior ExpertNew Harvard Research Reveals A Fun Way To Be More SuccessfulThis article originally appeared at Barking Up the Wrong Tree. 4 Secrets of Navy SEAL mental toughness and Olympian mental strength Know whatâs really interesting? Learning how Navy SEALs build mental toughness to handle deadly situations.Know what else is really interesting? Learning how Olympic athletes deal with the pressure of competition when the entire world is watching.Know whatâs the most interesting of all? When you find out they do a lot of the same things.âMental Links To Excellenceâ is a research study of what Olympians do to prepare for their big day. And so much of it lines up with what I learned researching SEAL training and talking to former Navy SEAL Platoon Commander James Waters.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!The best part is you and I can use these methods to perform better at work and in our personal lives.Letâs find out how . . .1. Talk positively to yourselfYour brain is always going. Itâs estimated you say 300 to 1,000 words to yourself per minute. Olympic ath letes and SEALs agree: those words need to be positive.One of the Olympians said:Immediately before the race I was thinking about trying to stay on that edge, just letting myself relax, and doing a lot of positive self-talk about what I was going to do. I just felt like we couldnât do anything wrong. It was just up to us. I said, âThereâs nothing thatâs affecting us in a negative way, the only thing now is to do it, and we can do it . . . I just have to do my best.âSEALs use the same method - and they do it in a far more terrifying scenario. How terrifying?Youâre underwater with SCUBA gear. An instructor suddenly swims up behind you. He yanks the regulator out of your mouth. You canât breathe. Then he ties your oxygen lines in a knot.Your brain starts screaming, âYOU ARE GOING TO DIE.â But you have to keep cool, stay underwater and follow procedure to get your gear back in working order so you can breathe again.And this happens over and over - for 20 minutes. Welcome to the dreaded âpool compâ section of SEAL qualification.You get 4 attempts. Why? Because you need them. Only one in five guys can do it the first time out.The danger here is panic. And SEALs are not allowed to panic . . . even when they cannot breathe. They must think positive to keep calm and pass âpool comp.âSo how can you use this?Got a big presentation at work coming up? Encountering obstacles? You need to remember the 3 Pâs: Permanence, pervasiveness, and whether itâs personal.Pessimists tell themselves that bad events: Will last a long time, or forever. (âIâll never get this done.â) Are universal. (âYou canât trust any of those people.â) Are their own fault. (âIâm terrible at this.â) Optimists look at setbacks in the exact opposite way: Bad things are temporary. (âThat happens occasionally but itâs no big deal.â) Bad things have a specific cause and arenât universal. (âWhen the weather is better that wonât be a problem.â) Itâs not their fault. (âIâm good at this but today wasnât my lucky day.â) When talking to yourself, be an optimist, not a pessimist.(For more on how to think positively, click here.)Okay, so youâre talking to yourself positively. What else do Olympians and SEALs agree on when you need to be at your best?2. Setting goalsYou hear this a lot. But you probably donât do it. Specifically, ask yourself what you need to achieve right now.From the Olympian study:The best athletes had clear daily goals. They knew what they wanted to accomplish each day, each workout, each sequence or interval. They were determined to accomplish these goals and focused fully on doing so.SEALs are taught to set goals too. Sometimes really small ones, but itâs enough to keep them going when every muscle in their body is screaming for them to quit.âWith goal setting the recruits were taught to set goals in extremely short chunks. For instance, one former Navy Seal discussed how he set goals such as making it to lunch, then dinner.âAnd what happened when they achieved those goa ls? SEALs set new ones. The focus is on always improving. Hereâs former SEAL Platoon Commander, James Waters:Eric, this gets at my point of the SEAL experience, this constant learning, constantly not being satisfied. Thatâs one of the interesting things about the community: you never feel like youâve got it all figured out. If you do feel like you figured it out, you probably arenât doing it right. If youâre not willing to learn from other people then frankly youâre not doing all you need to do to be the best operator you can possibly be. Itâs a culture of constant self-improvement and constant measurement of how youâre doing. Thatâs a theme I think that all SEALs would agree is critical.So how can you use this?Ask yourself, âWhat do I need to do to make this presentation better?âWrite your goals down and track your progress. As Dan Pink notes in his bestselling book on motivation, Drive, nothing motivates you better than seeing progress.(For more secrets on how to build grit - from my interview with Navy SEAL platoon commander James Waters - click here.)Youâre thinking positive and setting goals. But how do you get ready for the unexpected problems that always pop up at the last minute?3. Practice visualizationClose your eyes. See the big challenge. Walk through every step of it. Sound silly? Maybe, but the best of the best do this a lot.From the study of Olympians:These athletes had very well developed imagery skills and used them daily. They used imagery to prepare themselves to get what they wanted out of training, to perfect skills within the training sessions, to make technical corrections, to imagine themselves being successful in competition, and to see themselves achieving their ultimate goal.Again, SEALs are taught to do the same thing:With mental rehearsal they were taught to visualize themselves succeeding in their activities and going through the motions.So how can you use this?Visualize that presentation. But donâ t merely fantasize about being perfect and just make yourself feel good. That kills motivation:Results indicate that one reason positive fantasies predict poor achievement is because they do not generate energy to pursue the desired future.You want to see the problems you might encounter and visualize how you will overcome them.Dan Coyle, the expert on expertise, says itâs an essential part of how U.S. Special Forces prepare for every dangerous mission:â¦they spend the entire morning going over every possible mistake or disaster that could happen during the mission. Every possible screwup is mercilessly examined, and linked to an appropriate response: if the helicopter crash-lands, weâll do X. If we are dropped off at the wrong spot, weâll do Y. If we are outnumbered, weâll do Z.(For more lessons from top athletes on how to be the best, click here.)Youâre visualizing the big day and walking through how youâll deal with adversity. Cool. But how do you take that to th e next level like the pros do?4. Use simulationsVisualization is great because you can do it anywhere as often as you like. But in the end you must make practice as close to the real thing as possible.From the study of Olympians:The best athletes made extensive use of simulation training. They approached training runs, routines, plays, or scrimmages in practice as if they were at the competition, often wearing what they would wear and preparing like they would prepare.And SEALs didnât just visualize either. Before the raid on Bin Ladenâs compound they built full-size replicas of the location so their training would be tailored to what they would face.Via Daniel Coyleâs excellent book The Little Book of Talent: 52 Tips for Improving Your Skills:When U.S. Navy SEAL Team 6 mounted its May 2011 raid on Osama bin Ladenâs compound in Pakistan, it prepared by constructing full-scale replicas of the compound in North Carolina and Nevada, and rehearsing for three weeks. Dozens of tim es the SEALs simulated the operation. Dozens of times, they created various conditions they might encounter.Special Forces Lieutenant Colonel Mike Kenny agreed:In Army parlance they say, âtrain like you fight.â Donât screw around and say, âOkay, when itâs for real then weâll really ramp up.â No, you need to do that now. You need to train as hard and as realistic as possible, because this notion that when itâs for real and the stakes are high, thatâs when weâll really turn it on and rise to the occasion⦠thatâs not what happens. You will not rise to the occasion. You will sink to the lowest level of your training. Itâs the truth.So how can you use this?How will you deal with the fear of standing in front of a big crowd when you give that presentation?Susan Cain, author of Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Canât Stop Talking, and an introvert herself, is now a professional public speaker. How did she overcome public speaking fear?She pract iced in front of small, supportive groups to desensitize herself - she used a simulation.From my interview with Susan:I really had to desensitize myself to my fears of public speaking. I did that by practicing in very small, very supportive and very low-speed environments where it didnât matter if I screwed up. And eventually you get used to the strange feeling of being looked at, which used to make me feel horrified. You become accustomed to it over time and your fear dissipates.(To learn how to overcome your problems the way Special Forces operatives do, click here.)So Olympic athletes and Navy SEALs agree on a lot. Letâs round up what weâve learned and see how it can work for you.Sum upHereâs what Olympic athletes and Navy SEALs both do to be the best and achieve mental toughness: Talk Positively To Yourself: Remember the 3 Pâs: tell yourself bad things arenât permanent, pervasive or personal - but good things are. Setting Goals: Know what you want to achieve. Write it down. Focus on progress. Practice Visualization: Donât fantasize about getting what you want but see yourself overcoming specific obstacles. Use Simulations: Always make your practice as close to the real thing as possible. Olympians and Navy SEALs, by definition, are the best at what they do. But the methods they use to get there are things we can all use.And those techniques arenât based on muscles or natural talent. Theyâre all about good preparation and hard work. Apply those and you can get there too.As Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, âWhat lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.âJoin over 205,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.This article originally appeared at Barking Up the Wrong Tree.You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.