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08-07-2006, 04:23 PM
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#1 (permalink)
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Link-Zilla
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Alabama
Posts: 5,373
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Staley's The Seven Behaviors of Highly Successful Athletes
Charles Staley had an excellent article in his last newsletter. I wanted to share it with you guys and he gave me permission to reprint it here.
Quote:
The Seven Behaviors of Highly Successful Athletes
By Charles Staley
There are many behaviors that lend themselves to successful training outcomes. For the purposes of this newsletter however, I'll focus on seven behaviors which I believe are tantamount for unprecedented levels of success:
1) Delayed Gratification. It has been said that the pain of self-discipline weighs ounces; while the pain of neglect weighs tons. Maturity is defined by the willingness to sacrifice now in order to experience a greater outcome in the future. This applies especially to nutrition and supplementation, since the positive outcomes of a sound nutritional program take weeks, if not months, to experience.
2) Consistency. Training is a form of motor learning, and learning requires repetition. Training consistency can be dramatically enhanced through a variety of techniques, but one of the most powerful methods is also the simplest: scheduling.
There is a VAST difference between thinking “Tomorrow I’m going to work out.” and “My workout is between 7-8am tomorrow morning.” In the first case, you might have a vague time-frame in mind, say 8:00am. However, by 7:30, you’re behind schedule, so you reason to yourself that you’ll train after work. Then, by the time you leave work, you realize that you didn’t bring your gym clothes with you, so you think “I’ll just train after dinner.” And of course, after dinner, you’re tired and distracted by the television, and guess what? You missed your workout! Now, you might rationalize that you’ll just do the workout tomorrow instead. This leads you to the incorrect assumption that you simply rescheduled your workout rather than skipping it, which is exactly what you did.
On the other hand, knowing that you have a workout (or a meal) scheduled at an exact time, you’ll be much more likely to prepare for and keep your appointment. If you DO fail to keep to the schedule, you’ll be much more likely to feel a sense of consequence for your decision.
3) Goal-Directedness. The failure to develop goal-directed behavior accounts for more failure than all other causes combined. Most people understand that goals much be specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-referenced (S.M.A.R.T.), however, many people fail to carefully weigh the benefits of achieving the goal versus what must be sacrificed. If, upon careful inspection, you are deeply convinced that the benefits justify the sacrifices, you'll create the psychic and emotional fuel necessary to sustain your motivation when the going gets rough (as it inevitably does!).
4) The Autotellic Mindset. Autotellic people do things primarily for their own intrinsic value, whereas exotellic people do things primarily for the secondary, external reward. In my experience, autotellic athletes are far better able to sustain their motivation. The take home lesson is this: people who just LOVE to train go much further than those who just want to look better.
5) Open-Mindedness. Closed-mindedness is, in my opinion, a genetically-ingrained survival trait. Thousands of years ago, a Neanderthal man looked under a rock and found some grubs to eat. The technique obviously had value, and it made more sense to look under more rocks than it did to look up in the trees. But for this Neanderthal to go beyond mere survival, he should in fact look up in the trees, for if he did, he might find better food choices. In many ways, athletes are the same way. At some point in their athletic careers, they are convinced to train in a certain way, and because this way leads to a certain degree of success, they now pronounce this “way” as the “only way.” So remain receptive to new ideas, because usually, the thing you’re looking for is where you aren’t looking!
6) Fatigue Management. We LOVE to feel fragged after a workout, so much so that subconsciously, we tend to actually modify the workout to produce more post-workout fatigue, rather than to permit a better training performance. When you’re trying to do gradually more and more work from session to session, fatigue-management skills are essential. I’ll address several unique Q2 fatigue management strategies for an upcoming column.
7) Lifestyle. Many athletes spend untold hours examining and re-examining their training, nutrition, and supplement schedule, while at the same time completely ignoring the fact that their life is antagonistic to their training efforts, rather than supportive of them. Late night partying, exhausting job schedules (I know what you’re thinking here, but jobs CAN be changed if you have a good-enough reason), and general inefficiency can wreak havoc on the best-laid plans.
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__________________
Lisa Holladay, CSCS
Exercise and nutrition play equal roles, and the motivation and discipline to stay consistent are really the glue that holds a program together.
--Alan Aragon
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08-07-2006, 04:51 PM
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#2 (permalink)
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Not a Doper
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Boulder, CO
Posts: 3,208
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That's a great list. I think so much of it applies, and people just think that if they just eat decent and mindlessly go through workouts, they'll change. It helps exemplify that there are more stressors out there than just training!
E
__________________
"It's what you've got inside that matters. The details and technological things will take you only so far. You still have to pedal the bike. Some people are always looking for the magic secret. There's no secret. Just bust your ass." -Dave Zabriskie
Don't let your meatloaf.
26.2
2008 Half Ironman Training Log
2008 Training Blog
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08-07-2006, 05:24 PM
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#3 (permalink)
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Long Island, NY
Posts: 127
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Where did you sign up for the Staley newsletter?
__________________
"Don't give up. Don't ever give up." -Jim Valvano
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08-07-2006, 05:33 PM
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#4 (permalink)
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Link-Zilla
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Alabama
Posts: 5,373
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Oman, I don't remember!
I'll try to figure it out and get back to you if nobody else lets you know!
__________________
Lisa Holladay, CSCS
Exercise and nutrition play equal roles, and the motivation and discipline to stay consistent are really the glue that holds a program together.
--Alan Aragon
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08-07-2006, 07:38 PM
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#5 (permalink)
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Chandler,Az
Posts: 111
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go over to www.staleytraining.com
this will put you on our newsletter as well as give you "The UNNatural Athlete" ebook for free for joining up-Julianne
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08-07-2006, 10:28 PM
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#6 (permalink)
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Link-Zilla
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Alabama
Posts: 5,373
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Julianne, Do you realize that if you put "Charles Staley" in a google search that your website doesn't even come up? It's way too hard to find!
__________________
Lisa Holladay, CSCS
Exercise and nutrition play equal roles, and the motivation and discipline to stay consistent are really the glue that holds a program together.
--Alan Aragon
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08-08-2006, 04:35 PM
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#7 (permalink)
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Chandler,Az
Posts: 111
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Lisa-
Actually it does, it is the very first thing. Charles Staley,and right underneath his name is www. staleytraining.com and it says Come visit acclaimed fitness guru Charles Staley's website.
You can also do a search for Escalating Density Training that will lead you to our site. We also come up under myodynamics and Integrated Sport Solutions ( our corporate name)-Julianne
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08-08-2006, 05:09 PM
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#8 (permalink)
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Payload Specialist
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Rancho Santa Margarita, California
Posts: 16,555
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by julianne
Lisa-
Actually it does, it is the very first thing. Charles Staley,and right underneath his name is www. staleytraining.com and it says Come visit acclaimed fitness guru Charles Staley's website.
You can also do a search for Escalating Density Training that will lead you to our site. We also come up under myodynamics and Integrated Sport Solutions ( our corporate name)-Julianne
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True, but it's in the Ads by Google or Sponsored Links section, not in the lower part that people consider, for some reason, to be more relavent...
__________________
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Lost Dog's Blog & Workout Log
Superman never made any money
saving the world from Solomon Grundy
and sometimes I despair the world will never see
another man like him
-Crash Test Dummies. "Superman's Song"
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08-09-2006, 11:31 AM
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#9 (permalink)
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Link-Zilla
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Alabama
Posts: 5,373
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Lost_Dog
True, but it's in the Ads by Google or Sponsored Links section, not in the lower part that people consider, for some reason, to be more relavent...
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I see it now! I have trained my eyes to not see the ad section and I totally missed it before.
__________________
Lisa Holladay, CSCS
Exercise and nutrition play equal roles, and the motivation and discipline to stay consistent are really the glue that holds a program together.
--Alan Aragon
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08-09-2006, 09:54 PM
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#10 (permalink)
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I think, therefore I post
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Little Rock, AR
Posts: 14,473
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I'm the same way, Lisa.
__________________
Jean-Paul Francoeur
www.jpfitness.com
http://forums.jpfitness.com
"Twenty years from now, you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbour. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover."
-Mark Twain
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