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Does the mind inhibit or trick us at times?

Vital Signs

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Does the mind inhibit us at times?

I posted in another thread about how our mind is our best friend. If focused properly, it's influence on our training will push you that extra mile... burn that last rep, especially if you do not use a partner (such as myself).

Well, earlier today I worked my legs. My leg-curls have been stuck on the same weight for the past three months and 9 reps is all I could max. Even if I added just a measley 5 pounds, the form was bad and I couldn't squeeze properly. Well today when it was curl time, I started off with the usual weight and started counting in my mind. When I got to about 5, my mind wandered. I know that's a no-no in body building,... regardless, it wandered. So I'm counting, 13,... 14,... 15... and I suddenly stopped thinking, WTF..! And I could have easily done more! I rested about 90 seconds stretching the ham strings, then I slapped 10 extra pounds on and did 16 reps. Third set,.. I slapped another 10 lbs on and did 14 reps. Fourth set,... I slapped another 10 lbs on and did 10 reps.

I understand that if your stuck on a certain weight, be patient. Your strength in that area will eventually build and you can elevate to higher poundage. But 30 lbs in one day for one muscle group..???

Keep in mind, I've been stuck on this amount of weight for 3 months. So my question is:... does our mind at times convince us or trick us into believing that this is your max for an over-extended period of time,... even when the times comes when we are actually physically capable of exceeding that certain weight amount..???

My mind wandered, and my body took over, exceeding by leaps and bounds! I have been stupified all day long.

I am really interested in reading everyone's thoughts about this!

Thanks..! :cool:
 
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Yes I feel that the mind does limit us. My friend who for a while belived he was very weak would not dare bench more then the 50lb DB's b/c he had something in his mind that he just couldn't do it, I think it has to do with low self esteem or some shit like that. So I got rid of the 50's and moved the 55's to the top. His ussual he went to bench the so he though 50's but was actually doing 55's and he managed like 10 reps. I managed to tell him to at least try the 55's at the bottom end when in reality they were the 60lb ones. After I told him all of this he was blown away.

So in many ways the mind does limit us, you just need to learn how to break that mental barrier and work your ass off heh. But it also has a negative effect as well. If you are over confident you may use weights that will hurt you. Try and add to much weight to a lift and seriously screw yourself up.
 
The Russian powerlifter, Alekseev could lift 995 or so, but never was able to lift 1000 lbs. He failed every time. Then his trainers lied to him and told him he was lifting 995 or 999 or whatever, and he lifted it. Afterwards they told him that he had just lifted one thousands pounds.

(Anyone can correct me if I've told this wrong.)
 
The mind can have very profound effects on one's training. In fact, I no longer look at how many reps I did on exercises the previous week. That way I just push as hard as I can instead of just thinking about matching that number of reps. Granted, I remember the weights and reps on a few exerciess, but not all of them. I do think it helps a little bit.
 
for sure it does have an effect.

think of how much more you could lift if it was a life a death situation. actually you don't need to think, because in that situation more fibres will be recruited, near maximal
 
Vital Signs said:
I posted in another thread about how our mind is our best friend. If focused properly, it's influence on our training will push you that extra mile... burn that last rep, especially if you do not use a partner (such as myself).

Well, earlier today I worked my legs. My leg-curls have been stuck on the same weight for the past three months and 9 reps is all I could max. Even if I added just a measley 5 pounds, the form was bad and I couldn't squeeze properly. Well today when it was curl time, I started off with the usual weight and started counting in my mind. When I got to about 5, my mind wandered. I know that's a no-no in body building,... regardless, it wandered. So I'm counting, 13,... 14,... 15... and I suddenly stopped thinking, WTF..! And I could have easily done more! I rested about 90 seconds stretching the ham strings, then I slapped 10 extra pounds on and did 16 reps. Third set,.. I slapped another 10 lbs on and did 14 reps. Fourth set,... I slapped another 10 lbs on and did 10 reps.

I understand that if your stuck on a certain weight, be patient. Your strength in that area will eventually build and you can elevate to higher poundage. But 30 lbs in one day for one muscle group..???

Keep in mind, I've been stuck on this amount of weight for 3 months. So my question is:... does our mind at times convince us or trick us into believing that this is your max for an over-extended period of time,... even when the times comes when we are actually physically capable of exceeding that certain weight amount..???

My mind wandered, and my body took over, exceeding by leaps and bounds! I have been stupified all day long.

I am really interested in reading everyone's thoughts about this!

Thanks..! :cool:

FYI...for leg curls you want to focus on the eccentric portion of the lift. the lowering of the weight is where you build strength and stimulate hypertrophy in that exercise..
 
The mind wants to protect the body. The body knows nothing and the mind treats it like a retarded stepchild
Keeping it on a short leash, constantly whispering..."whoa down there big fella". While I know nothing about brain physiology and all that stuff I cant even spell I know the brain has layers of defensive positions that range from just a suggestion you stop, to actually putting you in shock or a coma. I am sure there is hormonal and metabolic defensive measures that go into action also.
Try to realize that you can go far beyond what the mind tells you, and learn to understand what the body tells you. Separate pain that inhibits from pain that cripples. Learn to mediate between the brain and body. Override the brain and what it does to limit you in the gym. Employ your own methods to override it. Positive thinking, music, fantasy whatever it takes. I read somewhere that when Arnold worked his arms he would imagine them expanding and expanding to the point that the whole gym was only filled with his arm. Sure Bizarre, but whatever it takes
 
these are some great articles from T-mag that I read a while back regarding this topic, read up:

The Psychology of Big ??? Part I
A Brief History of Mind Over Matter
by Chris Shugart
A Quick Experiment

Picture a lemon. There it is, sitting on your kitchen counter, its shiny yellow skin glistening and about to burst with juice. Pick up the lemon and fetch a sharp knife. Feel the tough peeling resist the blade for a moment and then give way as juice squirts into the air and runs down the back of your hand. You can just smell it, can't you?

Now visualize picking up half the lemon. Look at its meaty filling, glistening and pregnant with its sour juice. Lift the lemon in the air and tilt your head back. Now, without hesitation and with all your might, squeeze the juice into your mouth. Think of it filling your mouth, bathing your tongue, and running down your neck.

Now close your eyes and go through the steps again. Really try to picture this happening in your mind.

Did you do it? If so, then I???m guessing that your mouth is now tingling with saliva, and if you???re particularly imaginative you may have even grimaced and pulled a face. In short, you thought of something and your body responded, even though there was no real lemon present. Psychology overpowered physiology. Mind over matter.

Next up, full body levitation! Okay, maybe not. But there is something we can learn from this simple example.


Mind Over Muscle

Think about this. How many times have you caught yourself saying things like:

"I have crappy genetics for bodybuilding."

"My upper body is fine, but my legs suck. I just don???t have the body structure for big wheels."

"I???ve hit my genetic peak and can???t expect to gain much more muscle without drugs."

"I???ll never lift that much weight."

"I put on fat quickly."

"I have a slow metabolism."

"I overtrain easily."

"I???m a hardgainer."

I propose that if you???ve said these things in the past, either aloud or to yourself, then you???ve seriously damaged your ability to gain muscle and lose fat. You???ve unknowingly programmed yourself for slow progress or even total failure. You???ve told your body what to do and it has answered with a resounding, "You got it, boss!"

What the lemon experiment proves is that your mind can exert control over your body, much greater control than just telling the muscles to move. This control can be a help or a hindrance depending on its nature.

Compare the self-defeating comments above with those of Arnold Schwarzenegger, who once said he imagined his biceps as big as mountain peaks when he did curls. He visualized them growing with every rep and filling the room. Arnold went on to say, "I am positive that, had I believed there were actual physical limits to the potential size of my arms, they would never have gotten as big and muscular as they ultimately did."

These days all I hear in the gym are guys griping about their muscle insertion points when doing curls. Does this attitude make a difference in their physical development? You bet it does.


Thoughts that Heal, Thoughts that Kill

Need proof that your thoughts can play a huge role in your progress in the gym? All you have to do is look to basic psychology where there are hundreds of examples of this phenomenon. Here are a few standouts that prove mind over matter is very real.


Bone Pointing: Old and New

"Bone pointing" is not what happens when you walk by the fitness model hoochie booths at the Arnold Classic. Actually, real bone pointing is an example of mind over matter at its most dramatic.

American physiologist Walter B. Cannon wrote about this mystery in 1942 calling it "voodoo death." Once used by Australian Aboriginal tribes, bone pointing involves "loading" a piece of bone or other object with magic. This object is then used as a weapon to punish those who break tribal law. The shaman of the tribe would point the bone at the victim and chant a death song, probably something by ???N Sync. In many cases, the person at the wrong end of the bone would simply fall over dead. Other times he would die a few days later.

Of course, there???s no such thing as lethal bones. The real killer here is the victim???s own mind. He believes so strongly in the power of the shaman that his body simply obeys what his mind believes. In that sense, the magic is real because his mind makes it real.

The term "bone pointing" has been applied in modern times to describe the AIDS epidemic. Some experts believe that the diagnosis of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, contributes to the patient???s rapid decline in health. After all, most people think the diagnosis is an automatic death sentence. They think, "I have HIV???I???m going to get AIDS and die" and the body listens. True, the disease has no cure, but is their attitude opening the door wider for full blown AIDS? It???s a controversial issue.

Dr. George N. Hazlehurst, an internist during the mid-???50s with the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission (a commission that studied the long-term effects of the first atomic bomb blast in Japan) noted a similar occurrence. It seemed there was a shocking difference in the death rate between the exposed and the non-exposed population. The difference couldn???t be explained by the long-term physiological effects of radiation exposure from ten years earlier. He soon realized this "A-bomb Disease" was largely psychosomatic. That means these physical disorders had a strong psychological basis. This is known now as a psychophysiological disorder.

Similar occurrences have been observed when studying feelings of hopelessness and helplessness. When mice are placed in tanks of water with no hope of escaping, they simply give up and drown. They do this long before their bodies fatigue. Mice who are given some hope of escape, like a little raft floating in the tank with them, will go on for hours trying to reach it. There is hope and therefore there is life.

Case studies of humans show a similar phenomenon. Hundreds of psychological disorders, both mild and severe, have one thing in common: the individuals feel as though they have no control over their lives; they feel helpless. Their feelings were the catalysts for other problems, many of those physical in nature. Many psychologists also believe that the healing powers of prayer can also be attributed to the mind???s power over the body and not divine intervention.

The theme is simple. In all these examples, nothing more than thoughts led to physical changes in the body.


Placebos and Pygmalion

You???re probably familiar with the placebo effect. In a traditional sense, a placebo is an inert pill (like a sugar pill) given to a patient to relieve their illness when no real drug is available. If the patient reports feeling better (or whatever effect the drug is supposed to have), then this is called the placebo effect.

Another such effect is called the Pygmalion effect or a self-fulfilling prophesy. This was first observed during an experiment on school children. A teacher was told that several students in her class had been tested and the tests showed these kids were on the verge of real intellectual breakthroughs. They were little Einsteins in the making.

In truth, the students were chosen at random, but by the end of the year, the "gifted" children began to show signs of higher-than-average intelligence and better grades. The teacher believed they were smart, probably told the kids they were smart, and sure enough, the kids became smart. In short, they fulfilled the prophesy imposed upon them.

(The opposite is also true. A person called dumb or slow as a child will adopt this designation and have trouble in school from that point on. In the old days, many kids with hearing or visual problems were simply thought to be stupid and placed in special education classes. Sure enough, these kids became "slow," although they were probably of average intelligence like the rest of their classmates.)

The placebo and Pygmalion effects can be displayed, often hilariously, at parties. In one university study, a group of students were either given real alcoholic drinks or drinks that tasted and smelled like alcohol but actually contained no booze. By the end of the experiment/keg party, researchers couldn???t tell the difference between the two groups. Those that received the fake booze even failed reaction and coordination tests!

In other words, they knew how they were supposed to act and feel when intoxicated, so they got "drunk" even though there was no alcohol in their systems. This isn???t merely a case of faking it. If not told about the "near beer," many would report hangovers the next morning! I have a feeling that so-called "roid rage" can often be explained, in part, by this same phenomenon.

In a more recent study, psychologist Guy Sapirstein at the University of Connecticut analyzed 39 studies of depressed patients. What he found was that the effects of anti-depressants were both pharmacological and nonpharmacological. Apparently, only about 27% of the response to the drugs is due to the medication alone. A whopping 50% is due to the psychological impact, i.e. the placebo effect. Patients believe the happy pills will cure them and so they do.

In short, how the people taking the meds think is more powerful than the chemical substance itself.


Conversion Disorder

A conversion disorder is a physical impairment without an underlying organic cause. People have been known to lose their sight (hysterical blindness) or lose the ability to use their legs after a traumatic event. And although the lower body paralysis is "all in their heads," doctors have poked needles into the legs of those suffering conversion disorders without any reaction from the patients. This proves that although the impairment doesn???t stem from a physical problem, they truly are paralyzed and not just faking it.

Conversion disorders have often been found in soldiers. In fact, some believe that while there may be a legitimate disease associated with "Gulf War Syndrome," many of these cases are probably psychosomatic in nature.


Practicing Basketball on the Couch

Despite all these negative examples, the mind can also play a positive role. In one study, a number of basketball players were assigned to different groups. One group practiced shooting free throws, one group only visualized shooting free throws, and another group did neither.

At the end of the study, the group that didn???t practice mentally or physically showed no improvement in the ability to shoot free throws. But the visualization group showed drastic improvement, only slightly less improvement shown by those athletes who actually practiced! Just imagine the improvements that could be made if athletes practiced both physically and mentally. (And the best ones do.)


The Impossible Becomes Possible

The power of belief is displayed often in the athletic community. You???ve no doubt heard the story about how it was once believed that breaking the four minute mile was impossible. For years, no one could break it. The human body simply wasn???t capable of it, experts at the time said. Finally, in 1954, Roger Bannister broke the mythic sub-four barrier with a time of 3:59.4. Not long after, others joined the club and beat the new record. Today, even some high school athletes have achieved the "impossible."

In a similar story, it was "impossible" for many years to clean and jerk 500 pounds. In fact, the record stood at 499.75 pounds. Then Vasily Alexeev of the former Soviet

Union lifted 501 pounds at the 1970 World Weightlifting Championships. You guessed it, soon all the top guys were lifting over 500. The mental barrier was toppled and once everyone realized it wasn???t impossible, they began to perform better. All they needed was to be able to believe it could be done. It wasn???t that half a pound standing in their way; it was their own mental roadblocks holding them back.

Yep, no question about it: the mind can overpower the body any day of the week. Next week in part II, we???ll get out of psychology class and into the gym to figure how we can use this info to grow bigger, stronger and leaner!

© 1998 ??? 2003 Testosterone, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
 
The Psychology of Big ??? Part II
Freud Pumps Up
by Chris Shugart
Last week Chris wrote about how the mind can control the body. This week, he???ll provide some practical advice on how you can use that info to help you reach your physique goals.


Anabolic Thinking for Anabolic Gains

The examples in Part I perfectly illustrate the power of the mind. So here???s the question: If mental energy can be that powerful, powerful enough to stop pain, cause the legs to go numb, and even make you thump over dead, then can we at least use it to help us put on some muscle and lose some fat? You bet we can. And the techniques to do it are surprisingly easy to use.

To tell you the truth, I don???t really like all those books about visualization and positive self talk. They come off cheesy and hackneyed. Also, experts in the fields of sports psychology and "mental toughness training" are often oblivious to the needs of weight trainers. Still, there???s something to be learned from them.

Let???s take a look at a few of the most helpful mind games you can play, plus a few observations I???ve made about the mind-over-muscle phenomenon.


Imagine Hugeness

There was a study presented a year or two ago at the Society for Neuroscience???s annual meeting in San Diego. The gist of the study was this: people can strengthen their muscles or at least maintain muscle strength just by imagining they???re exercising.

Study participants imagined training either their elbow flexors (biceps) or pinky-finger muscles for fifteen minutes a day, five days a week, for twelve weeks. At the end of the study, those who visualized training their biceps improved 13.4% and those that imagined doing an intense pinky workout improved strength by 35%. The findings suggest that just thinking about exercise can improve the brain???s ability to signal muscle. (And no, I have no idea how they imagine training their pinkies!)

Now, don???t give up your gym membership just yet. At most, this type of "training" may only help those with spinal cord injuries, the elderly, and those who???ve suffered a stroke. You aren???t gonna get huge just by thinking about it. But what this does tell us is that you can???t just go to the gym and go through the motions. You need to get your mind on what you???re doing and off the perky tush of the babe at the front desk. If just thinking about strengthening the muscle leads to some results without any training, then surely concentrating while you actually train would be beneficial.

Let???s extend this theory. If you???re not satisfied with your progress, try a couple of months of unilateral training???train one limb at a time where appropriate. By focusing intensely on only one muscle group, the connection between the mind and the working muscle is that much stronger. You???re, in effect, giving that one arm or one leg a double dose of mental energy.

Try one-legged leg presses, one-legged squats, and single arm curls, shrugs, and rows. If you want, use Arnold???s technique: imagine the muscle getting bigger, really picture it in your head. Focus on the working muscle and fill it with mental fertilizer and "get big" thoughts. Yeah, it sounds a bit corny, but don???t be embarrassed by what you???re doing. No one can see what you???re thinking and the technique doesn???t cost you anything to use.

Top athletes will also visualize an entire game before it even occurs. Those who don???t do it instinctively will often consult sports psychologists to learn how to do it. If it works for them, it can work for us. If you drive to the gym, you have time to visualize your workout. Just imagine yourself using good form and driving up big weights. Rehearse the lifts in your mind. By doing this, you???ll perform better once you get on the bench and in the squat rack. Consistently better workouts lead to better gains.

I think it???s also important to visualize yourself in the shape you want to be in. If you want to drop fat, picture yourself that way???your waist smaller, your abs more defined, your face leaner, the muscles in your arms easily seen. If you want to get bigger, do the same thing. See your shoulders wider. Imagine that large shirt being stretched by your chest and biceps. Picture your butt like two bowling balls under Saran Wrap??? okay, maybe that???s going a little too far, but you get the idea.

I believe consistently doing this will, in a sense, give your body permission to reach that level. Perhaps this mental process is another component of what???s known as "muscle memory," where you rapidly rebuild muscle you???ve lost after a long layoff. Many experts claim you can build back ten pounds of lost muscle in half the time it took you to build it in the first place. Biological explanations abound, but what role does the mind play?

I think the mind does play an important role in muscle memory. After all, you don???t really have to work hard visualizing how you???d look with ten pounds of extra muscle because you???ve already seen that. You know you???ve been in great shape before so there aren???t any mental barriers in the way. You won???t be telling yourself how hard the process is or how impossible it is for you to gain lean muscle, because you know for a fact you can do it.

After reading Part I of this article, do you now agree that your body will often do what you tell it to do? Then why not tell it to grow?


Internal Dialog

Internal dialog just means talking to yourself. We all do it and it???s quite normal as long as you???re not telling yourself you???re Napoleon. Internal self talk can be your best friend or your worst enemy. I believe it can either accelerate or eliminate your gains. Let???s look at both sides.

Negative internal dialog usually comes in the form of negative thoughts about your genetics. Yes, genetics play a role in bodybuilding success, but the last thing you want to do is program your body for failure by using genetics as an excuse. Thoughts of "I???m a hardgainer" and "I have a slow metabolism" can really throw a monkey wrench into your progress. Saying these things aloud is even worse and has an even more profound negative effect. Also, stop saying things like "I hate leg day!" In fact, don???t even think it.

I???ve been guilty of this myself. For years I complained about poor genetics. Then, after making significant gains and actually meeting a few people with truly piss poor genetics (picture actor DJ Qualls from the movie Road Trip), I realized this wasn???t true. No, I???m not gifted like Arnold, but I???m certainly not cursed either. After this realization I vowed to stop making negative comments, to myself or out loud, about genetics.

Positive internal dialog, on the other hand, can help you break through any perceived plateaus. Tell yourself you love leg day, even if you don???t (an old trick of Arnold???s). Say it out loud. Also tell yourself that you have great genetics. Say aloud to your training partner or anyone who???ll listen that there isn???t really such a thing as a genetic ceiling. Tell yourself you have another 30 pounds of muscle in you just waiting to pop out. Tell yourself this even if you???ve been training for 20 years.

I know what you???re thinking. You???re thinking this is silly because there really is such a thing as a genetic cap and that gains really do slow down after years of training. My answer is yes, you???re right, but who cares? This isn???t about scientific fact; this is about tapping the powers of your mind to make better progress. It doesn???t matter what???s true and what???s not. Is it really God taking the pain away from a cancer patient who prays? Or is it the power of the patient???s mind? Who cares as long the suffering is relieved!

So are you lying to yourself? Yeah, a little. But if you know you???re lying then it can???t really work, can it? Yes, it can! Loehr and Mclaughhlin, the sports psychologists behind Mental Toughness Training, have proven this over and over again with top athletes and some of the best tennis players in the world. Say it and display it, they write.

If they???re working with a tennis pro who???s having trouble in a certain area of his game, they???ll tell the athlete to love whatever it is he???s having trouble with. For example, if the athlete chokes under pressure or "tanks," they???ll tell the athlete to repeat to himself, "I love tiebreakers." The tennis player always resists and tells them how stupid he feels saying this??? until he starts winning the tiebreakers, that is. And it happens every time.

So if motivation is a problem for you, say "I can???t wait to get to the gym! And it???s leg day too! I love the challenge of leg day!" Soon, you???ll display what you???re saying and finally start putting some rubber on those tires.

If a new personal record in a lift has been dodging you for months, examine your internal dialog. Don???t say, "I???ll never bench 300!" If you do, then you won???t. Simple as that. Tell yourself the weight feels light. Follow the lead of Bill Kazmaier and think of your arms as hydraulic benching machines. Convince yourself that no weight has been added to the bar.

What you???re essentially doing is faking it. The best lifters in the world have a remarkable ability to fake themselves out in this manner. It???s a skill that can be developed by the rest of us as well. I don???t really like the term "faking it," though. Instead I like to use the literary and theatrical term, willing suspension of disbelief. That means you know what you???re reading or watching up on the movie screen isn???t real, but you willingly suspend that disbelief and go along with it to heighten the sense of entertainment.

Need a real world example? A few weeks ago my training partner and I were benching heavy. Just for the shock effect, we decided to start at ten reps and keep adding weight until we slowly reached a heavy single rep. We didn???t pay attention to the actual weight, we just kept slapping on dimes, nickels and 2 1/2???s. After several sets, my partner informed me that I???d done a triple with my previous max two sets ago.

Very cool, but what would???ve happened if he???d leaned over the bar and said to me, "Now, Chris, this is more weight than you???ve ever benched before. This will be a new PR if you get it." Well, I may not have gotten it! He faked me out in a way many champion powerlifters do to themselves. They willingly turn off reality and convince themselves the weight isn???t heavy or that they???ve lifted that load before.

I also think round numbers can often impede strength gains. Remember those stories of how a four-minute mile and a 500-pound clean and jerk were thought to be impossible? The same thing can happen to you on a smaller scale. How often have you made consistent gains in strength, only to hit a wall when confronted with a fat number like a 300-pound bench press or a 500-pound deadlift?

Is it that 300 pounds is that much different than 295, or is that intimidating 300 number staring you in the face? Mentally, it may be better to set your goal at 303 or 305 and avoid that 300-pound barrier. I call this big number phobia and like all phobias it stems from irrational and often illogical fears.

Again, positive internal dialog can make a difference. "300 is no heavier than 295. Heck, my shoes weigh five lousy pounds. That???s nothing! Forget 300, I???m going for at least 305."

One key to making internal dialog work for you is to leave out all negative words. Think of them as a virus that can worm into your computer and cause trouble without you knowing it. For example, don???t say, "I won???t forget to keep my elbows under the bar when I bench." "Won???t forget" is the virus. Those words are too negative. Instead say, "I will remember." The body will listen.


Physiology: Walk This Way

In case you can???t tell, I spent a few years as a psychology/sociology teacher. One of the hurdles you have to jump to become a teacher is to go through a period of student teaching. The lady I taught under to get my psychology certification was one of those Dale Carnegie readin???, smiley-face shirt wearin???, overly positive people. She liked telling her class that if you fake a smile when you feel down, you???ll actually start to feel better. Your mood can change based on your physiology.

The smiling lesson was really cheeseball, but because of a complex series of chemical and electrical reactions within the body and brain, it really does work to an extent. You can apply this to bodybuilding as well.

According to Edward O'Keefe, a mental toughness consultant to many top athletes, physiology is the fastest way to manage your emotional state. Do you walk into the gym or onto the field like a loser with your shoulders slumped and your head down? Do you look at a heavily loaded bar and shake your head as if to say, "No way am I gonna lift that."

Just like internal dialog, body posture and breathing can affect performance. Even "faking" confidence in the gym can produce better results, much like telling yourself you love leg day when you really don???t. This doesn???t mean you should strut your 150-pound body through the gym spreading your nonexistent lats and making "war faces" while lifting, just like your favorite fake-sweat-spritzed bodybuilder in Flex.

Instead, walk with confidence???shoulders back, head up. Approach the bar like you own it, not like it???s going to bite you. Even if you have to "suspend your disbelief," the feeling will become a reality with practice. (By the way, the same technique works with women too, but that???s a whole ???nother article.)


Shrink Stress, Grow Huge

There???s abundant evidence from the fields of medicine and psychology that psychological stress can lead to disease and death. But it can also lead to really scary stuff like poor muscle gains and the inability to lose fat! Seriously, we know the role stress plays in heart disease and other illnesses; that???s nothing new. But stress can seriously impair your gains in the gym, and yes, it could even make fat loss more difficult.

If we really break it down to its simplest form, stress comes from how we perceive life events. And how we think about certain happenings in our lives is entirely up to us. Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius summed it up well. He wrote: "If you are pained by external things, it is not they that disturb you, but your own judgement of them. And it???s in your power to wipe out that judgement now."

Compare these two real world examples: A few weeks ago someone I know got his car dinged in a parking lot. Although you could hardly see the damage, the guy flipped out. He ranted and raved and vowed to track down whomever had done this to his car. He was quite literally frothing. The anger went from the ding to the state of the human race in general and by the time he was finished with his little catabolic tantrum he was shaking like a leaf and couldn???t even eat the rest of the day. He didn???t control his stress; stress controlled him.

Compare that to what happened to me a few months ago. I took my SUV in to get it detailed. Apparently one of the people working there didn???t have his coffee that morning because when he backed my truck out of the garage he forgot to shut one of the back doors. Ke-rash! Three thousand dollars' worth of damage in about two seconds. I had a couple of choices. I could rant and rave and let stress get the best of me, or I could choose to blow it off.

I blew it off. Hey, insurance will cover it and I???ll get a sporty little loaner to dash around in while the truck is being fixed. See, no catabolic hormone release, no digestion problems, no sleep troubles, and no messing with my concentration levels during workouts. I simply chose not to stress out and my body listened. To enhance the stress-free effect, I laughed. It wasn???t exactly funny, but verbalizing (or laughing) accentuates the mood I???m shooting for. It???s the old "say it and display it" thing again.

So the message here is that stress is entirely under your control. As T-man types, I think most of the stress we feel is self-imposed. We have such a powerful desire to separate ourselves from the sheep, we often don???t find the time to relax and recharge. Just as with training, continued forward progress in life needs to be periodized. Don???t feel guilty for relaxing (as most Type A personalities do); instead understand that a little "off" time will make your "on" time that much more efficient. Take time to sharpen the saw. Almost as a side effect, you???ll have an easier time building muscle and losing fat.

Consciously controlling stress will also keep you well and help you avoid or at least lessen the effects of illness. Did you know you probably have the cold virus sitting right there in front of you? Yep, it???s probably camped there on your shift key waiting for the right time to pounce. When???s the right time? The moment your immune system and recovery mechanisms are weakened by stress.

This is what???s known as the biopsychosocial model of illness. Basically, illness is caused not only by biological factors, but psychological and sociocultural factors as well. In other words, you have some choice in whether you get sick or not. And I don???t have to tell you how damaging illness can be to your physique goals. Using our internal dialog model, say to yourself and to others, "I don???t get sick."

So choose not to stress out and choose not to get sick and you???ll also be choosing to get big and lean.


Force the Change

Think about this for a minute. What happens when a self-diagnosed "hardgainer" suddenly packs on ten pounds of real muscle in two weeks? Can he honestly still bitch about his genetics? Can he really call himself a hardgainer? No, not really. In fact, that mental barrier he???s helped to build will begin to erode and fall away. He won???t have to work to convince himself that muscle and strength gains are possible; that???s become obvious.

Steroids obviously work in this capacity, but in the long run I believe steroids can have more of a negative psychological effect than a positive one. Of course, much depends on the psychological maturity of the user. (And let???s not forget the legal issues.) All that said, I do think that drugs or equipotent supplements can aide in breaking down these mental boundaries. This isn???t the placebo effect, although a person may indeed train harder or pay more attention to his diet while "on."

As the saying goes, knowledge isn???t power, applied knowledge is power. I???m confident the unselfconscious application of the ideas presented in this article can lead to staggering changes in your physique over time. But if you need a kickstart to get your thinking on target, then consider a few cycles of something like the new encapsulated MAG-10. Trust me, you???ll forget you ever heard the term "hardgainer" and future progress will be that much easier once this mental wall has been knocked down.


Think Like Arnold, Look Like Arnold?

As the Oak himself said, "???unless you understand the power of the mind in developing your muscles, you will not succeed. The secret is to make your mind work for you???not against you."

Great athletes tend to do all of these things instinctively. Hey, Arnold never needed to read a book on goal setting. He never had to work to pump up his confidence level and he never doubted his ultimate success. Like the Hindu fakirs who can raise and lower their body temperatures through meditation, Arnold was able to use his mind to get what he wanted out of his body. I???m not saying Arnold???s size came solely from his mental processes, but that ability and his unwavering confidence certainly helped.

And you don???t have to look to athletes and successful bodybuilders to see the reality of mind power. Throughout history this has been a common observation among the great thinkers. As Buddha put it, "We are what we think."

So think big.

© 1998 ??? 2003 Testosterone, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
 
gr81 --

That was a fantastic read! Thank you very much for posting it.

I had a chest workout planned for this evening,... and of course I was 30 minutes late getting started because while getting prepared, I logged onto the IronMag Board and saw there was a new post to this thread.

After reading the above, I had the best chest workout I have ever had in my entire life! I blasted for an hour and a half, and had to keep packing iron on the bars to keep my reps below 10. At the end, I even threw in 3 sets of super-sets... I didn't over-train though! Afterwards, I slammed a whey shake, which I haven't done whey in about 3-1/2 years... I purchased a jug during lunch today. Then I took a luke-warm shower, and now I'll top it all off with a meal consisting of salmon, steamed brown rice, and steam brocolli.

Thanks, gr, for helping me to reach the next level..! And this new level (and frame of mind) will undoubtably take me to the following level. :thumb:
 
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Muscle Gelz Transdermals
IronMag Labs Prohormones
yeah I really enjoyed that article when I read it. Glad I could help bro. do your thing maYn and think big playa.. peace :thumb:
 
bump! great post! :thumb:
 
Lynnwood. wow, that's funny. I'm in Ballard. hehehe.
This post made me pull my Arnold Schwarzenegger book off the shelf and dust it off for a good and much needed review while I am on this break.
 
You guys are in WA...? I'm living in Tulsa, OK. right now, but I was born on an Army base in Tacoma, WA. Can't remember how long I stayed in WA, but I do remember the area was green and beautiful... plus a lot of rain!
 
Yep. lots of trees. I had to wash my car again this week 'cause of the dang birds.
We have two radios stations here, too, both of which suck.
But there is the Robin and Maynard show,
brought to you by Smells of the Northwest; like Fremont Hippie Bike Seat and Tacoma Tide Flats. mmmmmmm-mmmmm-mmmm, hoo yeah. that smells good! hehehe.
 
The human brain is capable of amazing things.

For example, I can always lift more when I'm with a group of people than I can when I'm all alone. I can add about ten or fifteen extra pounds to my bench when I have an audience, but if I were to try and do it when I was by myself... I'd fail.

I know because I've tried many times.
 
The Tom Leykis Show gentlemen, thats what its about. Ballard huh, thats tight. I went to high school right near Ballard pretty much, its a much nicer area than Lynnhood! ha ha
 
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