Showing posts with label enhancing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label enhancing. Show all posts

PERFORMANCE ENHANCING ATTITUDES: Lessons from Elite Athletes

If you?re a sports enthusiast, you may have noticed commentators occasionally describe a player who, in their opinion, is less physically gifted than others but is nevertheless a vital part of a team?s success.  This raises an intriguing question.  Given the stratospheric level of competition in elite sports, what can possibly be as highly valued as talent?  What do these athletes possess that secures a place in these upper echelons?

Daniel Goleman?s work on emotional intelligence gives us some clues.  He tells us that the skill of effective self-management under stress can strongly influence the level of success we achieve.   So whatever the natural physical endowment of these athletes, they can leverage their value to their team by means of the attitudes they maintain in the heat of competition.  Some clich?s that circulate in the sports media provide insights into these attitudes.  Each one has provocative implications for us in the business world.

?Mental Toughness?

Mental toughness is about focus and having an absolute lock-hold on the present moment.  In sports-talk, ?He?s got a short memory? is a high compliment.  A top-ranked NFL cornerback has just missed a defensive stop, allowing a touchdown.  The fans are booing.   But in the TV close-up of his face, there is no scowl of self-attack, no muttering to himself or pumping himself up for the next play; in fact, there is no change of expression.  The eyes are steady and intensely focused.   His teammates know to leave him alone.  He is utterly absorbed in the present moment, and the mistake is gone from his mind. 

The mistake is gone, but the learning isn?t.  You watch his coverage on the next play and see him make that slight adjustment, instinctively recalculating when his receiver is going to break off his route to try for a catch.  Mistakes, failure, stardom all dissipate in the singular focus of the moment.  He can let his talent flow unhindered. 

Question:  Where could you benefit from mental toughness?  How will you cultivate it?  Suggestion: Think of mental toughness as a muscle to develop.  Very few people are born with it, or get it without exercise.

?He/She is a role player?

There are some players who may not ?have game? or be the best all-around athletes but  have a particular skill or value to a team ? a sharp-shooting hand, or come-from-behind leadership.  Even with all the egotism that accompanies being an elite athlete, these role players have clearly perceived their ?right size? and have perfected the necessary skills or qualities.  Far from being content with being ?just? a role player, the good ones continue to develop their excellence with harder conditioning, sharper skills, and constant alertness to enhancing their impact.
These players have to be exquisitely objective about themselves, able to see their abilities and their limitations as well as how they fit within the gestalt of the team.  They don?t succumb to a  ?less than? attitude or envy the marquee player.  They seem to live in the paradox of accepting their place and maintaining relentless ambition to play their role even better.

Question:  What is your role at work?  How can you increase the positive impact of your contributions?

Suggestion:  Ask for feedback.  Like the athlete, the skills involved are carefully honed, but playing your role may be largely instinctive.  Others may be able to describe positive contributions of your role that are invisible to you.

?He/She makes other players better?

This mind-set has an almost mystical quality.  An athlete, let?s say a WNBA point guard, seems absorbed in her own game, and yet the level of play of her teammates elevates No one can precisely explain why.  If a teammate is asked about it, she might say the point guard has confidence in her, and she simply rises to meet the level of expectation. Or she might say the player?s certainty about winning is contagious.  But it remains mysterious.  One observation from this couch potato is that when those players are interviewed, whether it?s Tim Duncan or Donovan McNabb or Kate Starbird, there are many more ?we? pronouns used than ?I?. 

As mysterious as this quality is, it?s worth musing on.  In business terms, it leverages the performance level of everyone involved.

Question:  Whom do you know who raises others? level of ?play??  How does it happen?

Suggestion:  This quality probably draws on intrinsic, intuitive abilities rather than on a technique.

Whether we manage a team or are sole proprietors of our business, there is a broader dimension of teamwork about everything we do, at work and personally.  These lessons from athletes can inspire us to be as rigorously intentional about our impact as they are.

About the Author
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Nina Ham is a certified women?s success coach and a licensed psychotherapist.  Her company, Success from the Inside Out, offers programs for developing the skills, attitudes and habits for sustainable success.  Visit her website at www.SuccessfromtheInsideOut.com or subscribe to her E-Letter at Nina@womenssuccesscoach.com


Nina Ham is an internationally certified womens business coach and a licensed psychotherapist. Her company Success from the Inside Out provides programs and services essential for anyone making the salaried-to-solo transition including niche identification marketing fundamentals and self management for solo professionals. Go to her site http://www.successfromtheinsideout.com/ and take her free quiz Is Going Solo for You 

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Four steps to a new approach of enhancing self-esteem.

Four steps to a new approach of enhancing self-esteem.

You have the power to run your own thoughts and to decide to increase the level of your self-esteem. Here is a new approach on self-esteem using the kind of states and emotions you experience every day: acceptation, appreciation and esteem. You will use these feelings or states of mind to increase your level of self- esteem whenever you want.

Practicing these four steps to enhance your self esteem will change the way you see yourself and the way you feel about yourself.

1. A state of acceptation. First, access an experience of acceptation of an outside event, for example a traffic jam or the weather. It is something you may not necessary like but you can accept it. Feel the emotion and notice your posture, your sensations and how you look. What are you thinking and how are you thinking it? Notice the tension in your muscles. Are you relaxed?

You will now amplify this state and emotion inside of you until it reaches 8 or 9 on a scale from 1 to 10. Let the feeling of acceptance build and make an anchor by touching your left wrist, or whatever part of your body that seems ok for you.

2. A state of appreciation. Secondly, access an experience of appreciation for something outside of you, for example your baby, a sunset or your health. In the same way, notice your posture and your sensations in your hands head and body? Let this feeling of appreciation build as well and make an anchor by touching the same part of your body as in step 1.

3. A state of esteem. Third, access an experience of esteem of something marvel about, someone you admire, something you honour and esteem highly. Notice your posture and the sensations in your body. What do you look like when you are standing in awe? How is your breathing? Let this feeling of esteem/awe build as well and make an anchor by touching the same part of your body as in step 1.

4. Apply to Self and Your Life. Now, you're going to think about yourself and touch the part of the body you selected in step 1. And as the process of "esteeming yourself" continues, notice how your thoughts and emotions change about yourself because you can now easily feel appreciation for your skills and abilities; you can feel acceptance about those things in your life that you may not like; you can feel esteem for yourself as a human being.

Finally, every time you are tempted to feel critical of yourself, you can do this! It's up to you!

The fact is that you're important and it's like the world tries to pull you down by saying "you're not enough good?thin enough?smart enough?" The fact is that you are somebody and you have value. Your contribution to the world is important. This exercise helps you so you know it emotionally and not just intellectually.

Learn proven techniques to master your life and go for your dreams. Stop living in your dreams and feel depressed or angry but discover now the top 5 secrets that EVERY highly successful person will teach you on how to turn your dreams into reality and create the life you want. Check out at http://www.vision-to-action.com/5secrets
Emmanuel Segui is a NLP meta-master practitioner and a master hypnotist. His vision is to create a world of possibilities where people can develop their full potential and live a more successful life. He's the author and creator of "Moving From Vision To Action" 

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