Over the years I have read several books and articles as well as listened to speakers that make reference to the idea that what we think about ourselves will have an effect on the way we perform.
Today I again found more evidence supporting this theory. In an article in the WSJ Mental Tricks of Athletic Endurance inspired by the Olympics and a book that is coming out Endure by Alex Hutchinson.
Here is an excerpt from the article.
Perhaps the most powerful and widely applicable technique for changing how your brain interprets incoming signals is to train yourself with motivational self-talk. Whether you’re conscious of it or not, you have an internal monologue running through your head during difficult tasks, and it has a measurable impact on how effortful you perceive those tasks to be. It is possible to channel that monologue in productive ways.
Many athletes consider such techniques a little hokey. My college track teammates and I laughed our way through the mandatory self-talk training we received from a well-meaning sports psychologist, figuring that if we honed our muscles and our maximum oxygen uptake sufficiently, we wouldn’t need to worry about such flimflammery.
That’s now one of my greatest competitive regrets, given the mounting evidence of self-talk’s physiological impact. A 2016 study by Stephen Cheung, an environmental physiologist and avid cyclocross competitor at Brock University in Canada, gave cyclists two weeks of self-talk training before an all-out ride in a heat chamber at 95 degrees Fahrenheit. Replacing negative thoughts like “I’m boiling” with motivational statements such as “Keep pushing, you’re doing well” boosted their time to exhaustion from eight minutes to over 11 minutes. Most tellingly, it allowed them to push their core temperatures half a degree higher, on average, before quitting.
I am reminded that I must keep up the positive inner dialog with myself. I have been trying for a few months, but I must keep it going. Mike my brother is trying to keep a positive dialog going too. Dennis my other brother is deep into a philosophy of questioning ourselves when we bring up negative thoughts.
I am also going to add a Being Thankful portion to my website. I have heard and read a few things lately that being thankful makes us happier.