Most
who don’t go to the gym may see it as a sweaty bunch of muscle-heads grunting
and boosting their egos. What they miss are the life lessons we learn there. We
do not talk about or share the philosophical workings of these lessons. These
messages become imprinted upon us.
I
take the time to point the out to my sons as we train together and learn from
each other. These lessons are transferrable. That is, they are as effective
outside the gym as they do inside it.
Goal
Setting
Michigan
State University sees goal setting as a life skill. a skill that for navigating
those waters of life. Knowing how to set and achieve goals is not an innate
skill. This skill is either taught or learned the hard way. It can also get
learned under the watchful eye of a parent, a teacher or some other mentor in
the gym.
Goal
setting begins with the end in mind. It is seeing an idea and figuring out how
to get there. You learn how to do research and apply the information you found.
You learn to break your tasks into steps that are both attainable and
measurable. You learn about eating well and resting as part of this process.
Iron plates may not instruct you directly. An internet search will find you this mnemonic, SMART-goals. Your goals will
have to be Specific, Measurable, Attainable/Achievable, Relevant, and Time-Bound. How this applies to lifting is the person be it you, me, the lug next to us will decide to squat a certain weight. Let’s say I want to get my squat back up to 405 pounds by the end of July and I will start May 2nd. I am coming back from a back injury and will start my squat at 275 for 4 sets of 8 repetitions.
This
gives me 3 months to grow enough strength and flexibility to gain 130 pounds in
strength. Is this Specific? Yes! How about Measurable? It very much is
measureable. Time bound? Without a doubt it is time-bound. How about realistic?
This may not be realistic. Getting my working load to 360 or 375 pounds from
275 in three months is more realistic and safer than 405 pounds.
How
does this translate into life outside the gym? Lifting weights teaches
understanding that gains, progress, gets done in small steps. These steps get
seen through increasing repetitions over workouts. It also teaches to accept
disappointment. These lessons are painstakingly logged and tracked in a
lifter’s logbook. One small step at a time, John Bytheway is the source of this
quote.
“Inch by inch, life’s a cinch. Yard by yard, life’s hard.”
Take
a look in our logs. You will see numbers increasing by twos and threes over
workouts, sometimes leaping up by six or so at a time. You will see the weights
used increase occasionally and the repetitions drop again. Then, the reps will
start to climb again. This is the embodiment of inch by inch. You will also see
something else.
The
numbers do not climb consistently. Some days the numbers drop for no obvious
reason. We can eat and rest to fuel our recovery to the highest degree and
sometimes still not get the expected results. There are times the workout will
show lower numbers than what we expected, lower than what “should” be. This
brings to mind the TV series Star Trek the Next Generation. Captain Picard
explained to Wesley Crusher something exceedingly important for life. The exact
quote is;
“It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness,
that is life.”
Not
hitting expectations is also disappointment. It is also part of life. A large
part of life that hurts. How do we deal with it? Pitch a fit? Throw weights
around the gym? Kick dumbbells? No. You will also see someone writing down
their numbers and resolving to try hard and do better the next time.
Most
lifters shake it off, go on to their next exercise, and keep going. If you see
this person at that exercise on their next workout you will see them overcome
their setback. You will note the broad smile, the taller stance. You will see
their peace in their accomplishment. If it is you, then you will know best what
this is all about. You will have grown inside and out in more ways than one.
Daily
life, work projects, and studying use goal setting as a skill. Lifting a new
weight, hitting a new bodyweight, entering a physique competition or a lifting
competition are all admirable goald. As are bringing in a project on time and
within budget, finishing a school project, and earning a new position in a
company. Setting goals and tracking progress are skills learned in the gym that
transfers to all areas of life. Recognize that inside all us there is hope. We
need strength to achieve this hope. Strength comes not from adversity, rather
from the quiet moments of peace after the adversity. Recovery between workouts,
between study session, and after those killer session is where we build our
strength.
Perseverance
Motivation
can get you started. Motivation can light a fire in your belly. Motivation damn
sure feels good. Here’s the kicker, it is short lived.
Motivation
will not get you through when things get tough and disappointing. Things will hit low levels during your
workouts as in life. Dedication to your goal will get you there.
Determination to achiever your goal will see you through your low points and
moments of pain. Motivation does not do these things..
Motivation
gets defined as the reason or reasons one has for acting or behaving in a
particular way. Understand it as the general desire or willingness to do
something. Dedication is being committed to a purpose, to a goal. Determination
is firmness, resoluteness of purpose.
Don’t
get me wrong, I use a plethora of motivational tools. My playlist is hours of
heavy metal and classic rock that is nothing but heart pounding music. Even
this list will lose its drive if I listen to it all the time.
When
I get to the core lifts at the squat rack, on the benchpress, or at the
deadlift grinding out rep after rep and my muscles are screaming in pain it is
not the music I hear. No. I dig in for the next rep because of
dedication and determination. The need to achieve the goal kicks in. So long as
I can use good form and move the weight through the full range of motion I will
do so. Muscular pain and discomfort notwithstanding, it is achievement of the
next rep that matters. It is the end goal that is all important.
How
does this single-mindedness fit real life? How does it not? Studying all night
for tests, working through the hardest parts of a relationship when quitting
would be easier, getting a project at work done on time and to standard are
areas in which dedication and determination come in. Raising children is
nothing short of dedication and determination.
Dedication,
it is commitment to a purpose or to a goal. Envision the end result you crave.
Commitment means that you are willing to do whatever is necessary to get there.
Whatever
is necessary may be digging deep into your inner self to find that oomph you
need to finish. Finishing your mile faster than the day before of two more
reps. It may mean doing that all-nighter for the test or class project. It may
mean extra hours at work for that project. You have that capacity in you
already, but have not yet tapped into it. That last rep may be what you need to
tap into your reservoir.
In
whatever way it manifests, you dig deep and find what is needed to hit that
mark. It shows in your logbook for your training. It shows in your grades as
you get invited to join the Honors Society. It shows as your team at work leads
the way and you get raise after raise.
You Are Tougher than You Think You Are
In
the military, Special Forces get taught the 20x factor. This is the fact that
we are all capable of 20 times more than we think we are. It’s one of the
defining features between Special Forces and conventional forces. They have
learned to operate on a regular basis beyond that 20x barrier.
Just
an elite few will ever know what it feels like to come to to operate in their
20x factor. I assure you that you can and will find it lying on a bench with
one hundred pounds and more at arms-length over your chest. You will find it
when you shoulder the weight at the squat rack. Something will click deep
inside your mind the instant you grab hold of that bar to begin your deadlifts.
The lights will go on in that storeroom where you keep your 20x. You will need
to look around for it, but it is in there and you will find it.
I’ve
spent night after night struggling to make gains against those weights. As have
countless other lifters. Like those countless others, one might lay down on
that bench and heft the weight and crank out the reps. Sooner or later it will
go as if there were nothing on the bar. You will find yourself asking your
spotter if they shorted the weight.
Acceptance
of the 20x is an epiphany. Finding where your limits actually are is broadening
and enlightening. It frees you to operate at higher levels, much higher levels
than you conceived of before. Figuring out how to carry this factor into other
areas of your life might be the kicker. Though, it may flow naturally.
This
awareness cannot exist within a vacuum. It oozes into other aspects of your
life. This awareness permeates your person and personality. It changes who you
are and how you project yourself. It changes how others perceive you. You walk
differently, taller than you did before. Your unconscious, your subconscious,
knows you differently now. It has seen you in a new light and it cannot unsee
you. You will begin to see you in a new light. The dynamic you are seeing is the
Cognitive Triangle.
The
Cognitive Triangle encompasses your thoughts, behaviors, and feelings. These
are in an intertwined and inseparable Mobius strip. Your thoughts tell you how
to feel. This is how your conscious and unconscious mind feels, how you feel
comes out in your behavior whether you want it to or not. Unless you are
acutely aware of your behavior and have developed strong self-control how you
feel about yourself comes out in your actions and words. Your behavior
reinforces your thoughts. This is, in a nutshell, the Cognitive Triangle. It is
self-supporting and can be either self-defeating to you or self-empowering.
This is your mind and it will tell you what you want it to.
Your
unconscious drives 95% of your conscious thoughts. Your unconscious mind now
knows that you are stronger than you thought you were. Now, you have to live up
to that and you will. You will become stronger still. That 20x factor is
beginning to take hold. You are seeing that you are, in fact, stronger than you
gave yourself credit for. In the mirrors lining the gym you see yourself
lifting weights that consciously confounded you earlier. Hey! Your mind and
brain See your physical success. This means that your subconscious sees it,
also.
This strength will carry over into all other aspects of your life. With or
without your permission, this strength will
enter
into and improve how you stand, how you carry yourself, how you move through
life, work, and other relationships. You know what you can handle in the gym. You
know that you can get through the pain. Your mind is prepared to push through
the hard spots and still function. Your subconscious just needs an opportunity
to apply this strength elsewhere. Your subconscious is hungry for that
opportunity. Grab that opportunity as if you were about to lift it off the rack
and give it all you have.
Go lift. Go run. Go swim. Go move your body and become a better person for the experience.