Ruth Malone

The Secret To Your Success



Posted: Monday, January 18, 2010

by
achieve more health and fitness training

Improving your performance when it comes to sport can be frustrating work. Our bodies are expert at adapting to the strains we put them under, and whilst this is a driving principle that makes us fitter, it’s also the reason that we often find ourselves in a plateau.

It’s relatively easy these days to find advice on how to improve our fitness, but I think it’s less well-recognised that when it comes to improving at sport, the psychological factors hold just as much weight as the physical factors.

So rather than focusing on how to get stronger, or how to increase your endurance, I wanted to look at how we can give ourselves the edge from a psychological point of view. Essentially, is there something we can do to improve our performance aside from working harder and sweating more?

Lessons can be learnt from examining the psychological characteristics of the top performers in sport. One thing that really differentiates the highest performers from the rest is the way they attribute their successes in sport.

Before we go into this, just ask yourself the following question and make a quick note of your immediate answers. Firstly, think about a time you were successful in your chosen sport. What were the reasons for the success? What caused it? What factors can you attribute the success to?

Having done that, you might be interested to learn that the top performers tend to attribute their success in the follow ways:

Attributing success to their own skills and talents

They say they won because their technique, skill and fitness were the best. They do not believe they won because the competition was weak.

Attributing success to stable factors

They say they were successful because of their experience, or their genetic talent, a factor that will always be there. They do not put their success down to luck, such as conditions on the day.

Attributing success to factors in their control

They will tell you they came top because they stuck to the training plan and ate well. They’ll talk about factors in their control. They’re less likely to talk about a supportive crowd or how the competition performed: factors out of their control.

So what can take from this? We need to learn to view our successes in the same way that a top sports person would. At the end of a training session we need to look back on what went well and remind ourselves how these things are down to our own skills and our own hard work. Importantly we need to remind ourselves that the progress we make is largely in our control.

Essentially, talking to ourselves in this positive way is all about increasing our motivation. If we are able to recognise what we do well we will feel more motivated to continue. Similarly, if we can attribute our success in sport to internal factors in our control we will feel more pride in our success than we would if we put it down to luck.

So, looking back on the answers you just jotted down, what can you change about the way you talk to yourself? Could you do more to recognise what you do well?

Ruth Malone is a fully qualified personal trainer.  As well as training clients in one-to-one session she offers health and fitness resources. http://www.achievemore.me.uk/fitness-resources/
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Top-level comments on this article: (2 total)
» left by Seamus Maguire
1 year 361 days ago.
2 fans.
Very perceptive and quite true from my own experience
» left by Ruth Malone 1 year 331 days ago.
7 fans.
Thanks Seamus.
» left by Katie McMurray
1 year 361 days ago.
15 fans.
HEART, the hand does not reach for what the heart does not yearn for....PLUS we are such creatures of habit, it is important to know, to believe that any bad habit can be replaced with a good one, just keep at it and keep working on the change. Thought is vital, think about what you want STOP thinking about what you don't want. YOU WANT TO BE FIT, LEAN and STRONG! :) Happy 2010 Katie
» left by Ruth Malone 1 year 331 days ago.
7 fans.
Thanks Katie.
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