Health and Fitness Coach
13 August 2009 4:29 am
Editors Note: This article is written by David Hodgeson a Performance Coach, Business Architect and Advisor. You can visit him at I-Acomplish or read more about him on the About Page

Your secret weapon is something you already have unlimited access to, is more powerful than any supercomputer and can be honed to your every whim. I think you already know what I’m talking about. The answer is your mind.
Our minds perform the most complicated tasks without us needing to think about them. This autonomous control in life’s critical actions hints at the potential of our minds. They say we use around 10% of our mind. This has proven difficult to prove and disprove. What we do know is that the minds ability to adapt is huge. The potential of our minds is incredible and yet we know so little about it. The following example demonstrates what training our minds the right way can do:
NASA, the US Army and numerous other elite athletes have undertaken some form of mind training. In 1987, Tony Robbins and a number of other Mind Trainers (using Neuro-Linguistic Programming) set about improving the pistol shooting in the US Army, the basic qualification at that time was ‘Marksman’, with ‘Sharpshooter’ and then ‘Expert’ coming above that – a Marksman being able to get 30 hits on target out of 45 rounds fired. Two groups of soldiers were taught side by side – one group getting the NLP based training, the other group – the ‘control group’- getting the standard army training.
The control group took 27 hours to get 73 per cent of the soldiers to Marksman level, with only 10 per cent of the group making Expert. The NLP based group took just 12 hours to get 100 per cent of the soldiers to Marksman level, with 25 per cent making Expert.
So what? I hear you say. Well, these same techniques that are undeniably successful can be easily translated to your training. There are a number of techniques that I can pass on and one of the most easy to adopt is using your imagination to increase your motivation towards a goal that you really want to achieve.
Now, you have just experienced your future event, achievement or whatever it was, what does it make you want to do? Do you feel more motivated to move towards accomplishing that goal? Do you notice that you feel a little more excited about achieving your goal and all those events and actions that you need to accomplish in order to succeed?
This was an example of a simple way that training your mind can help you achieve your goals. This technique works for everything. Have you used visualization in your training before?
David Hodgeson is a Performance Coach, Business Architect and Advisor, having created a niche in goal setting, performance and motivation. He works with the most respected organizations in the world and has brought their visions to life. David creates business and personal blueprints, assembles the right team to make the blueprint a reality and keeps everyone motivated throughout the process of accomplishing the goal. You can visit him at I-Acomplish
Tagged As: fitness, mind training, performance, psychology
[...] Amelia Burton wrote an interesting post today onMental <b>Training</b> for Performance: Your Secret Weapon is your MindHere’s a quick excerpt [...]
Wow. That NLP example is very impressive. Got to agree though. Your mental state has a lot to do with how well your workout goes. I find if I start a workout in the wrong frame of mind my performance really suffers.
Very True Tom,
Learning how to train your mind to focus is a skill that needs to be learned and practiced. After a month off running, the hardest thing for me was to retrain my mind to stay focussed and not let negative messages come in. Having a 3-4 word mantra helps.
Amelia
love it Amelia!
thanks, so so true. the mind is an incredibly powerful thing, good and bad. Learning to train your mind as well as the body is the key!
thanks
Therese
Is it possible,in order to be happy,you could train your mind into accepting ,even a little,something that normally makes you mad as a hornet?