How to Stay stress free in the cage …from the best fighters on the planet.
Paul Lyons
Mental Toughness Expert | Helping athletes, coaches, leaders and their teams effectively measure, and develop #mentaltoughness for a stronger, consistent performance
We all face stressful situations everyday but how do we stay calm enough to objectively analyse situations and make logical decisions. Mentally tough people are able to do this routinely.
I have never been trapped in a cage facing an angry person who wants to hurt me . But professional mixed martial arts fighters do so every time they fight and experience some of the highest levels of stress imaginable. So how do they manage this to perform at their best .
Courtesy of Alex Lauer at Insidehook.com three leading UFC fighters share their secrets on staying calm.
Jorge Masvidal
Put Yourself in Uncomfortable Situations
“I’ve been doing this 16 years pro. How many training camps I’ve had per year — that’s where you get a lot of your mental toughness,” Masvidal says “That’s why I could run 30 miles right now if I wanted to. It wouldn’t be a problem. I could do a marathon without training, just because my mind has been there so many fucking times.” Instead of reading that as typical UFC bravado, what Masvidal is getting at is that while you don’t have the ability to lessen external forces, by putting yourself in strenuous, stressful circumstances over and over, the repetition and mental awareness you develop will help you through similarly trying ordeals in the future.
Include Stress in Your Preparations
Before giving a speech, you practice saying the words. Before meeting a client, you practice the pitch. But do you ever practice stress-relief techniques? You should start. When asked about Donald Cerrone, who recently lost to Conor McGregor in 40 seconds and detailed his battle with nerves before the fight , Masvidal said, “Him being nervous for every fight is probably what allowed him to not compete at his greatest. He was able to go to the gym every day, all day … but that was the one hurdle that maybe he didn’t master.” In essence, stress is an essential component of any challenge, and by not preparing for it — whether through breathing, meditation, etc. — you’re not preparing fully. “You can’t let the moment be bigger than you, you’ve got to control that moment.”
Sodiq Yusuff
Use the Nervous Energy to Your Advantage
If the physical manifestation of stress feels like adrenaline — faster breath, racing pulse, dripping sweat — that’s because it is. Instead of trying to ignore it, Yusuff uses it to his advantage. “By the time it’s fight day, I’m looking to channel my excitement into energy so it’s more of me looking to not be too calm,” he says. If you find yourself unable to focus when stressed, it may be because you’re focused on suppressing your natural state. Next time, try harnessing it.
Visualize … in a Different Way
Forget picturing the audience naked, but the visualization strategy could work another way. “The best advice I could give to someone to give their best performance would be to gain confidence from your preparation and visualize the stage as another day at practice,” Yusuff says. You may not be able to control the variables in your intended audience — whether it’s a high-powered client or a rowdy crowd — but you can rehearse for your big day in a similar environment so that when the time comes, you bring that spatial, bodily comfort with you.
Chase Hooper
Go Through the Exact Motions Right Before
“When it comes to the warmup, I try to have a whole fight before I even go out, meaning that I have one of my corners throw on some MMA gloves and we fight situationally, so I’m able to get my bearings on what I’m actually going to try and do when I go out and work out all of the kinks on another person, rather than hitting pads or doing calisthenics,” says Hooper. By going through all the motions at the eleventh hour, you’ll feel more relaxed when showtime finally arrives, because your body and mind are retreading familiar ground. “I feel when I have done a good hard warmup, I feel more confident and I am able to be in more of a mental flow state.”
Don’t Count Down the Time. Try to Fill It.
“I try to think about the fact that I will be fighting for, at most, 15 minutes, which is such a short amount of time,” says Hooper. That’s a familiar tactic, but instead of treating it like a countdown — which could lower performance because your mind is focused on the time — he says to treat it like a space to fill. “I always try to think about how I want to make the most of that short time, and that I won’t regret what happens as long as I put my all into it … I tell myself that once I start the walk out, there’s no turning back, and the inevitability of that brings me a weird calmness.”
Click here to access the whole article :
https://www.insidehook.com/article/advice/stress-management-advice-ufc-fighters
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?? Real Estate Sales Associate ??
4 年“You can’t let the moment be bigger than you, you’ve got to control that moment.” that's a great quote. Thanks for sharing Paul Lyons
Trauma Specialist, Trainer in Loss, Grief and Trauma, Interfaith Chaplain
4 年Good advice!
nice one Paul! hands up chin down.
● LinkedIn Profile Writer ● Independent LinkedIn Trainer ● LinkedIn Profile Workshops ● 165+ recommendations ?? Australia based and don't work or connect globally as family complains my voice travels through walls ??
4 年Great to hear that harnessing my naturally excitable state is great - I certainly harness mine, more so since a health practioner told me that if you don't use up your adrenaline (or cortisol - one or the other) it can be detrimental to your health...
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4 年Meditation was a game changer for me! And totally agree with the power of visualisation to rehearse and create success in advance!