The great Buddha had said, "Rule your mind or it will rule you" Discipline comes with understanding your mind. Read on to find out how.
We all know that knowledge of something alone does not make us disciplined enough to follow it regularly. Even motivation helps us get a good start, but with time even motivation dries up and the same habit which was driven by motivation in the beginning, after few days becomes a daunting task. In our last blog we discussed "hacks" we can use to exercise regularly. Let us take the same example forward to understand discipline as without discipline, we can forget about persisting anything for a long time.
Watch my video on this topic by going to the link below-
How the mind plays us?
Let us first see what is common in all
individuals. We all get loud inner mind chatter when we are about to begin our
workouts. Let me give an example of myself. As a club level player and a coach,
I always strive to improve my squash. I design my workouts to keep myself court
fit. One of them is court sprints. For squash players who play competitive
tournaments, doing court sprints is very common. They have to run inside the
squash court from one end to the other for 1 minute. This workout involves
change of direction which makes it more challenging than running straight. 20
rounds is the minimum accepted, but we try for maximum. It truly is a
challenging workout for any athlete if giving his best speed burst. After
1minute, we break for 1minute and then go again. We can do 5, 7, 10 sets of
court sprints. The night before the court sprints, I used to get signals from
my mind. Thoughts like, "I better run less tomorrow as I have a hectic
day" or "if my friend comes, I will run less so that I have energy to
play with him" or "let me run day after instead of
tomorrow" The next morning, the chatter becomes even louder. Getting
out of the bed is difficult and once I reach the squash courts, even warm ups
become a task. I also have to visit the bathroom more often. Sometimes I feel
little pain in my ankles or knees or soul. I tend to untie and tie my shoe
laces very often. Basically I am trying to delay the sprints as much as I can.
My mind is continuously playing games on me to avoid doing the sprints. After
going through this mental ordeal, I go to the glass end of the court, set my
stopwatch and finally take my first step to run. That’s it!!! The chatter
stops. Everything else is easy as I have done it many times before. From the
night before to the first step of the sprint, I was continuously distracted and
lured with excuses for not doing my workout.
This above mind chatter is common for
everyone. All players go through this chatter at some point of their training,
at various levels. Even the best players of the world go through it. Sometimes
it’s very strong, sometimes the noise is something we can ignore. The
difference between the disciplined and the non-disciplined athlete is that the
disciplined athlete catches his mind playing games with him and knows how to go
beyond. He knows these are all tricks his mind is playing. He has gone through
this feeling many times before and knows not to give in. He also knows how
satisfying completing the task is, despite the mental blocks created by the
mind.
How to catch the mind?
Recognizing the mind games, is 90%
battle won. But most of the times we are so driven by the smart mind that we do
not even realize that it’s trying to play games on us. So the main question, ‘How
do we catch our mind playing these games?’ Being mindful plays a huge role in
this. Whenever there is an excuse coming up, ask yourself as if you are asking
a third person, “Is this really a reason for YOU not doing today’s
workout?” You can close your eyes, halt for a few seconds and ask this question
in your mind. Little focus on the breath before asking this question would help
in quietening the noise in the mind. Many disciplined athletes know their mind
and body so well (probably after years of training), they do it unconsciously. After
many sessions of training, the mind now knows that it’s not easy to fool you.
It will try less often and less hard with its tricks. Also trained athletes
always listen to their body and not their minds, whenever they feel pain in
their body, they know they have to skip their work out and take rest.
If we are just ‘present’ to the games
our mind plays with us, we can deal with it better. We just need to understand
our mind better. Try it next time and let me know if it worked!!
Nice one sir.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much. I'm glad you found it useful.
DeleteVery nicely written Amit... to the point... really liked it...
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the encouragement.
DeleteVery well written and explained.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much. I'm glad you liked it.
DeleteThis is very useful and I agree most difficult step is to start, explained very well.
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