Monday, August 30, 2010

Mindset Monday 8/30/10- Optimal Point

For many people, including myself, the new school year begins today. Many people, myself included, have big goals for this coming year- academically, athletically, socially, spiritually, mentally, and/or emotionally. Whatever your goals may be, the time is now to start firing on all cylinders.
Start doing things right early in the year. Set up a schedule. Make sure you have a plan for how and when you will train and study. Make a commitment to proper eating and sleeping patterns. Having an idea in your head is okay, but putting it down on paper is even better. When you write something down, it becomes a commitment. You become accountable to that piece of paper; that’s a good thing.
First we form habits, then they form us. Make sure you begin good habits, and the rest of the year will be easier. Make sure your plan is challenging. A challenging plan will help you bring out your best and achieve a high level. You want your plan to be attainable. You must make time for fun, recreation, rest, and recovery. You have hear the importance of Balance in your life. Even more important is a concept I call Optimal Point.
Balance would be making sure your work and play have equal amounts of time. Optimal Point is a realistic concept for how your time can be managed. Sometimes you need to work extremely hard, so at these points you do not want balance; you want to empty your tank. Other times it is important to take some time off, and it is not always on the weekend. You need to know what you need to do individually and live your life by that, not by norms. This is Optimal Point.
Many times my schedule would allow a free Tuesday to go to the beach and other times I would be in studying and training all Friday and Saturday night. You need to know your goals and shift your weight accordingly. Give an honest listen to your body, not the crowd and know when you need to turn it on and off. While studying, study 100%; when working out, work out 100%. I have always found a solid 30 minutes on doing anything (mind and body fully committed to the present action and nothing else) gives a greater pay back than 3 hours of doing that same thing half hearted. Save yourself time and be present 100% to whatever you’re doing. Utilize the natural breaks the days give you. This is Optimal Point.

Gene Zannetti
Peak Performance Specialist
One-on-One Consultation and Motivational Speaking
(908) 337-6143
genezannetti@gmail.com
Visit My Blog- http://genezannetti.blogspot.com/

Monday, August 23, 2010

Mindset Monday 8/23/10- Preparation quotes and thoughts

“Failing to plan, is planning to fail.”
*Studies show that the magic number is 10,000. To be a master at something you need to put around 10,000 hours into it or do it 10,000 times, so get started immediately.
“The will to win is great, the will to prepare to win is even more important.”
“If you don’t practice, you don’t deserve to dream.”
“Hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard.”
“When you’re not practicing, someone else is, and when you meet that person he is going to beat you.”
“Luck is what happens when Preparation meets opportunity.”
“You can’t practice a move once and expect to get it, you need to do it thousands and thousands of times.”
“The best wrestlers wrestle more than anyone else. The best singers sing more than anyone else. The best painters paint more than anyone else. Etc. etc.”
“Good things happen to those who get to work.”
“There’s a difference in being in practice and being into practice. There’s a difference between being in class and being into class. etc. etc. Get into it!”
“Success is simple, it’s not easy though- out work your opponent.”
“Prepare for 90% of all possible circumstances, and the 10% you cannot prepare for, you will be ready for.”



Gene Zannetti
Peak Performance Specialist
One-on-One Consultation and Motivational Speaking
(908) 337-6143
genezannetti@gmail.com
Visit My Blog- http://genezannetti.blogspot.com/

Monday, August 16, 2010

Mindset Monday 8/16/10 - Goal Setting

Goal Setting
Most people think of goal setting in terms of what they want to have- an end result. While this end result is important, this is only one part of what comprises goal setting, much like the transmission is only one part of a car. It is important, but not everything.

The main tip I always give in goal setting is BEHAVE. If you can correctly spell this word you understand goal setting. BE must come before the word HAVE. Focus on the type of person you need to BE, not on what you want to HAVE. You must first BE the kind of person who will HAVE what you want to HAVE. Focus on Being disciplined, motivated, resilient, and tough. Once you BE this way, you will HAVE the things you want to HAVE.

There are two types of goals- Outcome goals and Process goals. Outcome goals consist of Long-Term Goals (ie. State championship), and Short Term goals (win the next competition). Outcome goals are only indirectly under your control. You cannot control an outcome because there are far too many variables. So you control the outcome the best you can by controlling the things that are within your control. This is where Process goals come in.

Process goals include Practice goals (things you wish to learn and master in this practice) and an Action Plan which is a specific and comprehensive plan you commit to carry out which covers all areas of your sport- ie. technique/skills, strength, conditioning, mindset, nutrition, rest/recovery.

You should set a big Long-term goal if you are committed to your sport. Your primary focus however, should be on your Process Goals and who you have to BE. This is thorough goal setting.

Gene Zannetti
Peak Performance Specialist
One-on-One Consultation and Motivational Speaking
(908) 337-6143
genezannetti@gmail.com
Visit My Blog- http://genezannetti.blogspot.com/

Monday, August 9, 2010

Mindset Monday 8/9/10 - Mental Quiet

Pop Quiz: If you took three athletes of similar skill level and lined them up in a row: one athlete has all positive thoughts, the other athlete has all negative thoughts, and the last athlete has no thoughts (in essence, lights are on, no one’s home), who would win? If you are like most people, you would assume the positive thinker would win. You fail the pop quiz! Don’t worry, everybody fails the first pop quiz, all the time. We know the negative thinker wouldn’t win. But the positive thinker would lose to the non thinker.

If you think back to your best performance in competition and think what was going on in your mind during the competition…go ahead, think back…If you are like most people, you are probably saying, “I don’t know, I just__” In other words, you probably did not have much going on in your mind. While, you want to be the positive thinker walking around every day, to fill your head with empowering confident thoughts, during a performance you do not want to have any thoughts in your head. You should just be acting and reacting to the present moment.

OK, so how do you compete with a clear head? One of the best things you can do to clear your mind is putting together a specific pre-competition routine. Great performers do this instinctively. Jason Kidd blows a kiss to the basket before taking a free throw, many pitchers do the same thing before each pitch, many golfers do a certain number of practice swings each time before hitting the ball. You can modify this to your sport. Comprise a specific and detailed pre-competition routine, and practice it several times a week on your own (apart from competition). You will find that the more you do this, the more of a home feeling you will get as you perform it. When you concentrate on your pre competition routine, you will phase out all distractions including the crowd, expectations, pressure, and self conscious thoughts.
Gene Zannetti
Peak Performance Specialist
One-on-One Consultation and Motivational Speaking
(908) 337-6143
genezannetti@gmail.com
Visit My Blog- http://genezannetti.blogspot.com/

Monday, August 2, 2010

Mindset Monday 8/2/10- Power of Symbols

The Power of Symbols
Psychologists have long known the importance of the Unconscious Mind in goal directed behavior. The mind contains a Conscious and Unconscious component. The conscious mind are the thoughts we choose to have, or deliberate thoughts we think. It responds to words, phrases, and sentences. The unconscious mind contains thoughts that occur below our awareness. It responded to repeat exposure of a particular stimuli, music, and feelings. For example, when we see a few McDonalds commercials on TV and then later that day we wonder why we are having an unbearable craving for McDonalds. While we thought we were not paying attention to TV, and we could not recall consciously what commercials were going on in between our favorite show, the REPEATED MESSAGE was detected and registered in our Unconscious Mind. Our goal directed behavior (deciding to go to Mickey D’s) was heavily influenced by our unconscious mind, and we didn’t even realize it.

Our Unconscious Mind is responsible for our goal directed behavior because it registers all of our imagination, dreams, fears, and insecurities even if we consciously try to suppress them. This is the reason self-sabotaging occurs- we come close to a goal that we feel we deep down do not deserve to achieve, so we do something to blow it for ourselves at the very last minute. This is not uncommon, it happens to all of us sometimes. It is first necessary to recognize this self-sabotaging which is synonymous with approach-avoidance, that goes on inside ourselves, And step 2 is to take control of our Unconscious Mind.

We take control of our Unconscious Mind by using the Repeat Exposure of Symbols- a person, super hero, animal, symbol, object, or created image. We need to know what task we wish to perform ie. throwing a ball as fast as you can, and then choose some symbol that we can personally relate to (everyone’s will probably be a little different). Perhaps one person would envision the Human Torch throwing a ball of fire right before performing the throw. Maybe a sprinter would picture a Gazelle running fast and smooth immediately before a competition. A wrestler in the bottom position may picture a bull seeing red right before the whistle blows. The symbol would then take control of the mind as opposed to a thought or self-criticism.
You can maximize the use of symbols by repeat exposure- thinking of your symbol EVERY TIME, including practice, before you perform the desired action. Also, be sure to see my previous blog on ANCHORING. Your best bet would be to choose a symbol and then an accompanied ANCHOR or PROCESS CUE. Pairing your Symbol and Process Cue would be a double whammy for your mind and would be extremely helpful in making the mental connection. Your Anchor should go with your symbol. An example of this would be a sprinter, before a race, imagining a Gazelle (Symbol) and then doing a Gazelle like hop in the air (Process Cue). Do this every time before you sprint, and you will see both mental clarity and supreme confidence. If you are not a sprinter, apply this concept to your sport.

Gene Zannetti
Peak Performance Specialist
One-on-One Consultation and Motivational Speaking
(908) 337-6143
genezannetti@gmail.com
Visit My Blog- http://genezannetti.blogspot.com/

Mindset Monday 7/26/10- How to Relax Part 2

How to Relax Part 2

It is easy to train your brain to relax. We use Anchors (aka Cues) to relax, energize, and create almost any mindset we would like to have. Choose one or two words you can say to yourself (ie. Easy, Relaxed, Calm, etc etc.) and have an accompanied body movement or gesture (ie. placing your hands palms down on your upper leg or whatever you choose), this is your Cue. Every time you feel very relaxed simply do your Cue. You could also create a relaxed mindset by doing the deep breathing exercise I described last Monday, then performing your Cue. The more times you pair your Cue with a Relaxed state, the stronger this Mental Muscle will become- Just like the more times you do a bicep curl, the bigger your arms will grow. So make sure to do your Cue every time you feel relaxed. After enough repetitions, you will be able to simply perform your Cue and you will begin to feel more relaxed.

The biggest mistake you can make is deciding on a Cue and never practicing it and then expect it to work right before a competition. This is the equivalent of a bodybuilder not exercising until the day of the competition and expecting results. Pair the Cue and the Relaxed state enough and you will be able to relax at will, including right before the big competitions.


Gene Zannetti

Peak Performance Specialist

One-on-One Consultation and Motivational Speaking

(908) 337-6143 (908) 337-6143

genezannetti@gmail.com

Visit My Blog- http://genezannetti.blogspot.com/