Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Mental Toughness

Steve Siebold had a passion for tennis. But, despite having the passion and being convinced he had the talent, he fell short of his goal of being a Top 10 player.

“Deep down, I knew I had the talent to make my dream a reality,
and I knew the missing link was mental.”
Steve Siebold

So he decided to see how others made it to the top. He is now sharing the “Secrets of the World Class” and has written a book “177 Mental Toughness Secrets of the World Class”.


However, he’s still not a Top 10 tennis player! In fact, he’s not Top 10 in anything. He’s one of dozens – more like hundreds – of people who have spent their lives hovering over fields others have plowed to glean nuggets that they, themselves, could have used – if they had but applied them. In his own words, Steve says:

“After 20 years of studying and teaching mental toughness to people throughout the United States, Canada and 10 other countries, I can honestly tell you that many times I still think like a complete amateur, operating out of the same middle-class consciousness that I ridicule in this book. After all these years, my mental toughness growth is still a work in progress.”

Isn’t that pretty much true for all of us?

I have to admit I haven’t read Steve’s book. I’m not really ready for 177 roads to mental toughness – I’m still working on the first 20! But the following have served me well when I’ve judiciously applied them:

·         Stringently Honest Self-Evaluation
·         Restrained Impulsiveness
·         Delayed or Denied Gratification
·         Due Diligence Duly Exercised
·         Rigorous Time Management
·         Zero Tolerance for sloth
·         Zero Tolerance for Failure
·         Zero Tolerance for “Not Good Enough”
·         Zero Tolerance for small dreams in small ponds
·         Zero Tolerance for Tribal/Cultural/Political Short-Sightedness and “Cocooning”
·         Zero Tolerance for Unworkable Hypotheses, Unwarranted Entitlements, Unrealistic Expectations and Unfounded Assumptions
·         Research … Research … Research
·         Plan … Plan … Plan
·         Draft … Draft … Draft
·         Edit … Edit … Edit
·         Execute … Execute … Execute
·         Evaluate … Evaluate … Evaluate
·         Improve … Improve … Improve

When we are tempted at times to say “I could never do THAT!”or “It really doesn’t seem all that necessary!” – we probably should and it probably is ... if for no other purpose than for holding our feet to the fire.

Finally, nota bene ...

HABIT is the consummate, beneficent servant of mental toughness. What we do without exception and without fret, fuss or fulmination defines how far we will go and how well we will fare in the journey. Quartermaster

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