Wednesday 23 November 2016

Combatting apathy and keeping on that training regime

“there is nothing outside of yourself that can ever enable you to get better, stronger, richer, quicker, or smarter. Everything is within. Everything exists. Seek nothing outside of yourself.”
― Miyamoto Musashi, The Book of Five Rings



I have many fine character traits that have served me well over the years and, gods willing, that will help me for a good few years to come. I'm pretty clever, good natured and calm. I flatter myself that I am a good father to my daughter and I try to be a good husband to my wife.

However, I do have a major, recurring fault. Laziness. When that monkey mind of mine starts its mischief and tries to convince me to sit my arse on the sofa all night, I rarely put up much of a fight. That makes improving my martial arts really difficult. Daily training is hampered when reclining with a hot drink and some snacks in front of the telly feels just so damnably good.

I've tried reading a few sites for inspiration. Some are quite good, such as How-to-stay-motivated-in-your-martial-arts-and-fitness-training"



I’ve been training since 1976. The martial arts have been my profession and way of life since the early 1990s. During that time, I’ve often been asked how a person can stay motivated. How does a student get up every morning and jump into his or her training routine? How does a practitioner avoid becoming part of the majority, the people who give up before reaching their goal?

“Difficulties should act as a tonic. They should spur us to greater exertion.” — B.C. Forbes

If someone asks me what a martial artist ought to devote the most time to, I always say training. Train more than you sleep. I attribute my ability to keep on training, decade after decade, to Mister Mo.

Mister Mo is motivation. Mister Mo means no retreat, no surrender — no retreat from hard work, no surrender to laziness or sloppy form.

Mister Mo should be the most important person in your life, even more so than your teacher or your classmates. It’s good to have an end to journey toward, but it’s the journey that matters in the end.

Mister Mo is the one who urges you to attend class when you’d rather stay home and watch television. He’s inside you when you do the extra kick, punch or takedown. He wipes the sweat from your eyes so you can crank out a dozen more reps of that technique that’s been so difficult. He keeps you training month after month, year after year. He drives you to face your physical and mental limitations. He forces you to confront laziness, failures and the fear of success. He makes you walk the endless path of the martial arts. He encourages you to push yourself to your limit and beyond. He helps you tune out the pain as you drive yourself to victory over yourself.

“A desire can overcome all objections and obstacles.” — Gunderson

Teachers can open the door, but you must enter by yourself. Avoiding pain might be the biggest motivational factor there is. Doing a proper technique to avoid a broken nose is an example of external motivation. Most people who train in the martial arts do so, at least initially, because they want to learn self-defense. They don’t want to get hurt if they’re attacked. For those who enjoy the sport aspects of the arts, external motivation may be the next tournament trophy. For some, it’s the next belt. A student will sometimes quit after reaching a particular rank. The belt was the goal. Once it’s earned, the student no longer has motivation. Mister Mo leaves the building.

Unlike external motivation, internal motivation is a more difficult concept to understand. Internal motivation is the desire to excel for the sake of pursuing excellence. Internal motivation means you’re competing against yourself, not others. It means you want to do as well as you can, regardless of how others do. Internally motivated students tend to persist in their training. While they’re satisfied with each promotion, they’re driven to succeed beyond rank or trophies. They train because they want to improve, not because they want to impress others. If you cannot find the truth right where you are, where else do you expect to find it?

***

How can you stay motivated day in and day out?

• Search for that drive to succeed.

• Become mentally motivated. Mister Mo is in all of us. You can call on him at any time when things get tough.

• Don’t worry what others are doing. If you’re trying to surpass someone else, you’re limited to what that person has done. You must have no limits. Always strive for excellence.

• Set more challenging goals and record them in a journal or diary. Pick a time to review your goals and evaluate your progress. Then set new goals.

• Focus on your growth and development as a martial artist and as a person. Learn joyfully, then share joyfully. Daily improvement in every aspect of your life is the overall aim. Don’t just think positive; act positive.

• Be yourself, but be the best of yourself. And when you feel discouraged, don’t be afraid to call on Mister Mo.





Other, similarly titled pages are often considerably less so. None of them offer any real solutions.

I guess, really, there is no substitute for simply forcing yourself to do what you can - however begrudgingly and however little. Once results begin to show themselves, then the motivation should, I hope, become easier.

Tuesday 22 November 2016

Jin & Tonic

Excellent class. A return after a long haitus for me. I was nursing a shoulder injury but thankfully managed to avoid aggravating it further.

Topic for the class was 'threading the needle' and its role in the creation of jin. Quite a high level class to come back to after such a long time away, but I managed to take it all in. Did all the exercises on just my left side to protect my injured right shoulder. I also stepped out when the two man drills started. I could have tried them just on my good arm, but didn't want to risk lengthening my recovery time unnecessarily.

Looking forward to next Monday's class.