Keep Your Ego Out of Physical Training
If you are a martial artist, boxer, wrestler or any other type
of combat athlete you have probably learned this a long time
ago... or should have.
Keep your ego out of physical training!
Now don't get me wrong... combat athletes are some of the
proudest, most competitive and driven people you will ever meet.
Winning and losing is taken very seriously, because after all...
it is personal.
But in order to get good at these sports... the ego must be left
at the training room door.
The same is true for physical training for performance
improvement of any kind.
Why?
Because if you are not willing to work on your weaknesses, and
humble yourself in the process, you will never realize great
improvements.
Let me ask you a question about your neighborhood gym...
Is there a guy there with a huge chest and arms with skinny,
toothpick legs?
Yea, you know the guy.
Well, he got that way because he spends his training time
working on his strengths and ignoring his weaknesses... and this
is no way to improve over-all fitness.
Ok, another question...
Is there a gal there that spends almost all her time doing
aerobic type endurance activities while completely ignoring all
other types of physical training?
Yea, that's her with the spandex body-suit and designer water
bottle.
Well, she trains this way because she is focusing on her
strengths and ignoring her weaknesses... and this is no way to
improve over-all fitness.
If you were to ask either one of these individuals if they were
fit... they would most likely say yes and then explain
themselves by giving examples of their competence in the one
physical ability they are strongest performing.
But I propose that fitness is not the ability to maximize one
physical skill... but rather the ability to optimize all the
physical skills of cardiorespiratory endurance, strength,
flexibility, power, speed, coordination, agility, balance,
accuracy and toughness.
Exhibiting excellence in any one particular skill at the expense
of all others is not fitness.
You must be willing to work on the physical skills that need the
most improvement in order to realize the greatest increase in
over-all fitness.
Let's face it... some people are better than others at certain
aspects of physical training.
But if you only perform the physical training for which you are
naturally gifted... you are limiting your over-all fitness gains.
Leave you ego at the gym door... make it your safe haven from
embarrassment.
After all... it is the place you go to get better, not show off.
Concentrate on your weaknesses even if you feel foolish and
clumsy at first... you might even be surprised at how quickly
those weaknesses become newfound strengths.
Do yourself a favor and learn a lesson from combat athletes...
Leave your ego at the training room door.