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March 9th, 2008: Thoughts for the Day (2)

Cultivating Burning Desire

(Steve Pavlina)
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When asked during an interview how he managed to reach the top as a professional bodybuilder and Hollywood actor, Arnold Schwarzenegger replied with a single word, "Drive!" All great success ultimately begins with an idea, but what makes ideas become reality is the fuel of human desire. An idea by itself can give you a temporary feeling of inspiration, but burning desire is what gets you through all the perspiration necessary to overcome the inevitable obstacles along the way.

Take a moment to think about the goals you've set for yourself. (You have set goals, haven't you? If not, go read the article on setting clear goals.) How committed are you to achieving these goals? Under what conditions would you give up? What if you could significantly increase your desire to achieve these goals? What if you wanted them so badly that you knew with absolute certainty that you would absolutely, positively never ever give up? When you are truly 100% committed to reaching your goals, you move from hoping to knowing. If you want something badly enough, then quitting is simply not an option. You either find a way or make one. You pay the price, whatever it takes.

Those with an intense, burning desire to achieve their goals are often referred to as being "driven." But is this special quality reserved only for a privileged few? Certainly not. With the right approach, anyone can cultivate a deep, burning desire within themselves and move to a state of total commitment, knowing with certainty that success is as inevitable as the sunrise.

So how do you cultivate burning desire? You begin with an outside-in approach, altering your environment in ways that will strengthen your resolve while eliminating doubt. If you take the time to do it right, you'll establish a positive feedback cycle, such that your desire will continue to increase on a daily basis.

Here are eight steps you can take to cultivate burning desire to achieve any goal you set for yourself:



1. Burn the ships.

I'm not going to pull any punches with this one. If your goals are really important enough to you, then you can start by burning the proverbial ships, such that you have no choice but to press on. For instance, if you want to launch your own business, you can begin by making the commitment to quitting your job. Write a letter of resignation, put it in a stamped envelope addressed to your boss, and give it to a trusted friend with firm instructions to mail the letter if you haven't quit your job by a certain date.

One Las Vegas casino manager made the decision to quit smoking. He didn't feel he had the personal willpower to do it alone, so he took out a billboard on the Las Vegas Strip with his photo on it along with the words, "If you catch me smoking, I'll pay you $100,000!" Was he able to quit smoking? You bet! (Ok, bad pun.) This is called willpower leveraging. You use a small bit of willpower to establish a consequence that will virtually compel you to keep your commitment. As Andrew Carnegie once said, "Put all your eggs in one basket, and then watch that basket!"

In the classic book The Art of War, Sun Tzu notes that soldiers fight the most ferociously when they believe they're fighting to the death. A good general knows that when attacking an opposing force, it's important to create the illusion of a potential escape route for the enemy, so they won't fight as hard. What escape routes are you keeping open that are causing you not to fight as hard?

If you don't burn those ships, you are sending the message to your subconscious mind that it's ok to quit. And when the going gets tough, as it inevitably does for any worthwhile goal, you will quit. If you really want to achieve your goals, then you've got to burn those ships to the ground, and scatter the ashes. If you're thinking that the average person won't do this, you're right -- that's why they're average.



2. Fill your environment with desire boosters.

Let's say one of your important goals is to lose weight. Get some poster board, and make your own posters that say, "I weigh X pounds," where X is your goal weight, and put them up around your house. Change your screensaver to a text message that says the same thing (or to some equally motivational imagery). Get some magazines, cut out pictures of people who have bodies similar to what you'd like to have, and put them up around your house. Cut out pictures of healthy food that looks good to you, and post those around your kitchen. If you work in an office, then alter your office in the same manner. Don't worry about what your coworkers will think, and just do it! They may poke a little fun at you at first, but they'll also begin to see how committed you are.



3. Surround yourself with positive people.

Make friends with people who will encourage you on the path to your goals, and find ways to spend more time with them. Share your goals only with people who will support you, not those who will respond with cynicism or indifference. If you want to lose weight, for instance, get yourself into a gym, and start befriending those who are already in great shape. You'll find that their attitudes become infectious, and you'll start believing that you can do it too. Meeting people who've lost one hundred pounds or more can be extremely motivating. If you want to start a new business, join the local chamber of commerce or a trade association. Do whatever it takes to make new friends who will help you keep your commitment.

Although this can be difficult for some people, you also need to fire the negative people from your life. I once read that you can see your future just by looking at the six people with whom you spend the most time. If you don't like what you see, then change those people. There's no honor in remaining loyal to people who expect you to fail. One of the reasons people fail to start their own businesses, for instance, is that they spend most of their time associating with other employees. The way out of this trap is to start spending a lot more time associating with business owners, such as by joining a trade association. Mindsets are contagious. So spend your time with people whose mindsets are worth catching.



4. Feed your mind with empowering information on a daily basis.

Inspirational books and audio programs are one of the best fuel sources for cultivating desire. If you want to quit smoking, read a dozen books written by ex-smokers on how to quit the habit. If you want to start a business, then start devouring business books. Go to seminars on occasion. I advise that you feed your mind with some form of motivational material (books, articles, audio programs) for at least fifteen minutes a day. This will continually recharge your batteries and keep your desire impenetrably strong.

When you absorb material created by an extremely passionate person, you'll often find yourself feeling more passionate as well. A great book I read was Pour Your Heart Into It by Howard Schultz, the CEO of Starbucks. As I read the book, I was absolutely amazed at how someone could be so fanatically enthusiastic about coffee. Other enthusiasm-building authors/speakers I highly recommend are Harvey Mackay and Zig Ziglar.



5. Replace sources of negative energy with positive energy.

Take an inventory of all the sensory inputs into your life that affect your attitude -- what you read, what you watch on TV, the cleanliness of your home, etc. Note which inputs influence you negatively, and strive to replace them with positive inputs. I'll give you some good places to start. First, avoid watching TV news -- it's overwhelmingly negative. Do you really need to hear about the woman who was mauled to death by her neighbor's dog? Fill that time with positive inputs instead, like motivational and educational audio programs. If you like to watch movies, then watch movies that are full of positive energy, such as light-hearted comedies and stories of triumph over adversity. Avoid dark, tragic movies that leave you feeling empty afterwards. Dump the horror books, and replace them with humor books. Spend more time laughing and less time worrying. If you have a messy desk, clean it up! If you have young kids or grandkids, spend some time playing with them. Some of this may sound a bit corny, but it will really help increase your overall motivation. If you have a hard time motivating yourself, chances are that your life is overflowing with too many sources of negativity. It's far better to happily achieve than it is to feel you must achieve in order to be happy.



6. Dress for success.

Whenever you pass by a mirror, which is probably several times a day, you get an instant dose of image reinforcement. So what image are you currently reinforcing? Would you dress any differently if your goals were already achieved? Would you sport a different hairstyle? Would you shower a bit more often?

Although for years I enjoyed the ripped jeans and T-shirt look, I noted that when I visualized myself in the future, having achieved certain goals, I was dressed a lot more nicely. With some experimentation I found a style of clothing that looks professional and is also comfortable. So I gradually donated my old clothes to charity and replaced my wardrobe with clothes that fit the new identity I was growing into. (Consequently, there's a Salvation Army store with quite a stock of gaming industry T-shirts.) I learned this idea from an ex-Navy Seal, who stressed to me the importance of taking pride in your appearance, and I can say with certainty that it makes a noticeable difference. So make sure the clothes you wear each day are consistent with your new self-image.



7. Use mental programming.

This is a Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) technique that will help you associate strong positive emotions to whatever goal you're working to achieve. Find some music that really energizes and inspires you. Put on your headphones and listen to it for fifteen to twenty minutes, and as you do this, form a clear mental picture of yourself having already achieved the results you want. Make your imagery big, bright, vivid, colorful, three-dimensional, panoramic, and animated. Picture the scene as if looking through your own eyes (this is very important). This will help you form a neuro-association between the positive emotions elicited by the music and the goal you want to achieve, thus strengthening your desire. This is a great way to begin each day, and you can even do it while lying in bed when you first awaken if you set things up the night before. You should cycle the music periodically, since the emotional charge you get will tend to diminish if you listen to the same songs each time.

Keep in mind that this form of mental programming is already being used on you by advertisers. Watch a fast-food TV commercial, and you'll note that the food is big, bright, and animated -- spinning burgers, lettuce flying through a splash of water, ripe tomatoes being sliced -- and don't forget the catchy tune. So instead of letting others program your desires for you, take charge and mentally reprogram yourself.



8. Take immediate action.

Once you set a goal for yourself, act immediately. As you begin working on a fresh new goal, don't worry so much about making detailed long-term plans. Too often people get stuck in the state of analysis paralysis and never reach the action stage. You can develop your plan later, but get moving first. Just identify the very first physical action you need to take, and then do it. For instance, if you've decided to lose weight, go straight to your refrigerator, and throw out all the junk food. Don't think about it. Don't ponder the consequences. Just do it immediately.

One of the secrets to success is recognizing that motivation follows action. The momentum of continuous action fuels motivation, while procrastination kills motivation. So act boldly, as if it's impossible to fail. If you keep adding fuel to your desire, you will reach the point of knowing that you'll never quit, and ultimate success will be nothing more than a matter of time.

If you apply these eight strategies, you'll add so much fuel to your desire that the fire will never burn out. You'll move towards your goals like a guided missile to its target, and you'll enjoy the process because you'll be so focused on the positive rewards instead of the difficulty of the tasks. If you get enough positive energy flowing into you, you'll soon have positive results flowing out of you. And you'll quickly become the kind of person that others refer to as "driven."

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The future belongs to those who prepare for it today.

(Unknown)

Who tries to put together a puzzle without seeing a picture of the finished product? If you can clearly state and see what your vision is, you’re well on your way to seeing it come to life. The clearer your vision, the more targeted your plan will be. What do you see?

(Chillen)


Best regards,


Chillen
 
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Wrangell,

With the swimming....I just don't kick at all with my left leg....I just let it drag along behind me. There is a special float-thingy that some swimmers use between their legs to entirely isolate their upper-body and not allow the legs to contribute anything to the swimming effort. In effect, that is what I'm doing. My swimming = ZERO motion or impact to the knee. As for my self-prescribed hydro-therapy, it feels good and gives me an opportunity to get some range of motion.

Interesting...sounds like that sort of swim must make for a pretty good upper body workout.

As for that " thingy that some swimmers use between their legs " - no comment !! ;):)


Today is Saturday, it's been 5 days since my accident....already I can walk without the crutch but it's uncomfortable and I have to be careful. I'm not walking on it per se, just saying I could and that gives some indication as to how bad this injury may be...hopefully not too bad.

When you say " uncomfortable " - are your referring to sharp / dull pain ?

Reason I ask, is that with my PCL, the issue was always more of feeling of incredible instability, and a feeling of a constant hyper extension....as though there was nothing holding my shin to my upper leg....wobbling 24 / 7 I couldn't even walk properly.

Never really had a pain issue per se ( although having a love affair with Jack Daniels after I got hurt may have contributed to my being oblivious to any pain ;) )

My previous accident was insane....the knee was so swollen they had to drain some 240cc's of blood from it, I could walk on it for weeks.

Boy, can I relate !

I smashed my patella playing rep soccer as a freshman in high school....and like you.... my knee ' ballooned ' full of blood.....they drained it with the biggest syringe I've ever seen in my life !

The night of that injury, I could feel something like muscle-spasm's in the knee and the pain was intolerable. I'm sure I did major damage, but back then they didn't have anthroscopic surgery....they'd instead take a scalpal and slice open the entire knee from top to bottom: the surgery scared the crap out of me and I opted for "therapy"...over time it got pretty much entirely better. Ever now and then it would hurt a bit and there'd be a "clicking" inside the knee when I went form a bent knee to a fully straight knee (I imagined some cartlidge or meniscus flap jamming).

You know something...you're right. Knee procedures are ' light years ' ahead of from where they were years ago. It might very well be you did the smart thing by not having anything ' major ' done back then. Like i said before, maybe this is a chance to set things right on your knee once and for all.

( btw - i have that same damn clicking sound ! )

Anyways, it was pretty much fine until recent....every now and then it almost seemed (during exercise with the trainer, she loves to hit quads) that my knee was almost going to slip out of joint of something horrible...well,that horrible happened last monday night. So even though I've had a bad knee for the last 23 years, only recently has it been giving me a sense of threatening to faulter...interesting, eh?

I must say, that feeling you described, feeling like - " my knee was almost going to slip out of joint of something horrible " - can be very annoying and really mess with your mind. Nothing like doing really heavy squats or lunges and wondering if your knee will hold up. No can never really train 100% as a result IMO.



My hunch is that I could just let it all heal again and it'll pretty much be weak or gimpy. I'm just guessing it's a 80% chance they'll want to perfrom some routine meniscus shaving/trimming just to smooth things out in there. Once that's done, along with some therapy, I'm optimistic that perhaps my knee will be better then it was for the last 20 years.

Frankly, if i was you, and with the benefit of hindsight living with my gimpy knee has given me...I'd have whatever done that you can to get that knee back to 100%.
 
March 9th, 2008: Thoughts for the day (3)

" The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken. "

(Samuel Johnson)

People YOU choose your path in diet and fitness--Chillen

Victor E. Frankl:

This the last of human freedoms--to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way.

We who lived in the concentration camps can remember the men who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a man but one thing: The last of his freedoms - to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way.

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Dag Hammarskjold:

The longest journey is the journey inward.

Never look down to test the ground before taking your next step; only he who keeps his eye fixed on the far horizon will find the right road.

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John Hancock:

A chip on the shoulder is too heavy a piece of baggage to carry through life.

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Mark Victor Hansen:

Big goals get big results. No goals get no results or somebody else's results.

Goals are new, forward-moving objectives. They magnetize you towards them.

By recording your dreams and goals on paper, you set in motion the process of becoming the person you most want to be.

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Rick Hansen:

The goal you set must be challenging. At the same time, it should be realistic and attainable, not impossible to reach. It should be challenging enough to make you stretch, but not so far that you break.

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Michael Hanson:

To will is to select a goal, determine a course of action that will bring one to that goal, and then hold to that action until the goal is reached. The key is action.

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F. A. Hayek:

We shall not grow wiser before we learn that much that we have done was very foolish.

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William Hazlitt:

You know more of a road by having traveled it than by all the conjectures and descriptions in the world.

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Anatole France:

An education isn’t how much you have committed memory, or even how much you know. It’s being able to differentiate between what you know and what you don’t.

To accomplish great things, we must not only act, but also dream; not only plan, but also believe.

"It is by acts and not by ideas that people live."​

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No plan survives without first understanding and knowing the enemy. You must know the strengths and weaknesses of your enemy before you can learn how to battle it.

(Chillen)


It is my hope your day went well today. I wish no one any sadness but only joy, peace, and much happiness. Smile and spread this around to others in life.

Make your spirit LIVE! Bring it out and set it on FIRE!..................Set it ablaze, BABY! :)

Build the fire of self-discipline and burn yourself UP CRISP!..........>;)

Be the CRISPY CRITTER from honest self-discpline! THIS ROCKS!
:)


ROLL with life......BRING IT! Step up and bring the appropriate batter to the plate!


Off to do my cardio session (s)......then off to work.......Be at your best today!



Best regards,


Chillen
 
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Interesting...sounds like that sort of swim must make for a pretty good upper body workout. As for that " thingy that some swimmers use between their legs " - no comment !! ;):).

Oh come on now...surely you've seen that peanut-shaped styrofoam float that's about the size of a football. Swimmer clamp it between their legs just above the knee and swim laps...it's to isolate the upper-body. I don't need it, I just avoid kicking with the left leg, if it gets a bit of motion, I'm figuring that's good for it.

The other thing I often do is wear those webbed swimming gloves, it's exactly like peddling in a higher gear on the bike; you get more action per stroke, but each stroke requires more energy.....really helps build muscle.

The only thing that concerns me with my swimming is that spending 1.5+ hours in the chlorinated pool can't be good. The skin, our largest organ of our bodies, absorbs what it contacts and I'm somewhat convinced some recent acceleration in my receeding hairline may be linked to the chlorine. I use a really good chlorine-removal shampoo/conditioner, but that's just to help the hair...the skin still gets the chlorine! :(

When I start PT, I'm sure the people will tell me walking in the pool is outstanding and to keep it up.

I'd like to run that by you. Seems the old-school recovery was "stay entirely off the injury" and only after weeks gently & gradually get back on it. Today they seem to try to get you back on your feet asap.

Same thing with heart-attack victims....they used to prescribe rest, but now they toss 'em on treadmills and immediately try to get the heart to start building "laterals" (?). Is that the protocol now? I should, within reason, start using the knee again? I know you're not a physical therapist, but you've got to be exposed to many of these situations with your background....

When you say " uncomfortable " - are your referring to sharp / dull pain ?.

Yeah, kinda. Some steps are comfortable, but others I can feel the soreness and there's some discomfort. Not sure I'd call it sharp/dull...just sore.


Boy, can I relate !

I smashed my patella playing rep soccer as a freshman in high school....and like you.... my knee ' ballooned ' full of blood.....they drained it with the biggest syringe I've ever seen in my life ! .

Oh yeah. I recall the doctor telling the nurse "I'm gonna need a bigger syringe" and they brought something huge. They emptied the blood into a tray (the kind you throw-up into) and filled it with blood. Back then I lived in the fraternity house and I was gaining weight and eating terrible. On the surface of the blood you could actually see globules of fat/oil, just like you do when you look at a bottle of Italian dressing....the doctor told me mom that my blood was very fatty and it was a bad sign. But yeah, they had to make several draws of blood from my knee....it was horribly painful and as I twitched the needle wouldn't be perfectly straight and I could feel the unparallel direction of the needle working against my skin...reminds me of the HellRaiser horror-movie series.

You know something...you're right. Knee procedures are ' light years ' ahead of from where they were years ago. It might very well be you did the smart thing by not having anything ' major ' done back then. Like i said before, maybe this is a chance to set things right on your knee once and for all.

( btw - i have that same damn clicking sound ! )

I must say, that feeling you described, feeling like - " my knee was almost going to slip out of joint of something horrible " - can be very annoying and really mess with your mind. Nothing like doing really heavy squats or lunges and wondering if your knee will hold up. No can never really train 100% as a result IMO..

Surgery has massively evolved, it's great!!! Just imagine what other things lay ahead of us. Wouldn't it be great if we apologized to the whole world, told them to take care of their own problems, recalled all our military and stopped with foreign aid....then took all that money and invested in medicine, schools and hockey rinks with large subsidies for coaches?? ;)


Frankly, if i was you, and with the benefit of hindsight living with my gimpy knee has given me...I'd have whatever done that you can to get that knee back to 100%.

That is exactly my plan. I've got many friends who've had their knee "scoped" and they all say it's no biggy. I'm pretty sure the ACL was partially torn and it'll form scar-tissue and eventually recoop just fine...as for the meniscus, I'm 95% sure the doc will wanna go in anthroscopically and clean-up the surfaces....maybe that clicking will go away?

I know you think I'll give it up, but unless I'm certain my knee is stronger then before, I plan to wear that knee-brace (they'll set me up with) at all times playing racquetball. In the words of my orthopedic surgeon friend, "racaquetball is an accident waiting to happen"....and it's true, the sport requires all sorts of pivoting, fast movements, change of directions and lots of verbal profanity. The only way to make it more dangerous would be to play it on ice! :D
 
BSL...just so you feel better about this issue...
The Claim: Chlorine in Pools Can Cause Hair Loss

By ANAHAD O’CONNOR
Published: October 9, 2007


Leif Parsons
A long, vigorous swim may be good for your heart, but scientists have long questioned whether the high levels of chlorine in many swimming pools can have some less desirable effects on your hair and skin.

Studies have found certain effects, but hair loss may not be one of them.

One of several studies on the topic was published in 2000 in the journal Dermatology.

In that study, a team of researchers examined 67 professional swimmers and 54 nonswimmers. The researchers found that 61 percent of the swimmers showed signs of hair discoloration, compared with none of the nonswimmers.

The scientists also found that the hair discoloration coincided with surface damage of the swimmers’ nail plates, apparently due to chlorine.

But although the swimmers’ hair appeared coarse and damaged, they did not have higher rates of hair loss.

The researchers speculated that the differences might also have been due to what they described as “cuticle damage by friction with water.”

Any damage caused by chlorine can partly be averted by using chlorine-removing shampoos and conditioners.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Chlorine in swimming pools can damage hair, but not necessarily make it fall out.
 
THE BOTTOM LINE

Chlorine in swimming pools can damage hair, but not necessarily make it fall out.


Super Sweet!!!!!! :D :D :D

I use a chlroine-removal shampoo and chlorine-removal conditioner, they leave the hair feeling quite fine....so I suppose I'll just swim away and not worry too much about it.

Thanks JW!!!!!!!!

But swimming in chlorine does cause a certain part of your body to experience major shrinkage, because......nevermind ;):rolleyes:
 
Hey Chillen, been a long time since i've posted in your Journal.

I've been feeling pretty down the last several days. Motivation has gone down, haven't trained in several days, diet wasn't good on the weekend. Just been feeling depressed. been feeling so down, didn't even go to school today. Just layed in my bed thinking about my life.
Just needed to tell someone, and you were the best person that comes to mind.
Thanks for listening.
 
Its rocken and a rollen! Had a very busy evening yesterday at work and will have another busy evening tonight, and then I am off on Monday. Slowly getting things caught up, contructed, and developed, like the boss man wants.


How are you young man? How is training coming along?


Best wishes

Chillen

great to hear that your doing well and keeping busy! i should make like you and get busy doing my homework lol. i just have some reading to do in history but the chillog is so much more interesting hahaha

hey just wanted to thank you for enforcing a good outlook on life..it tought me a lesson. You helping others all the time instead of trying to just make yourself feel good...its a key to happiness. Helping others and making others happy is more fulfilling than self fulfillment.
iv been doing that lately and its my testimony that i am happier when i put others before myself...thanks for being a good role model man...
see, you teach me without even telling me!
 
Hey Chillen, been a long time since i've posted in your Journal.

I've been feeling pretty down the last several days. Motivation has gone down, haven't trained in several days, diet wasn't good on the weekend. Just been feeling depressed. been feeling so down, didn't even go to school today. Just layed in my bed thinking about my life.
Just needed to tell someone, and you were the best person that comes to mind.
Thanks for listening.

What "exactly" is happening in your life that is effecting you so harshly and deliberately?

I will do my absolute best to give you the best advice I can based on what you are willing to share with me about your personal circumstances. It breaks my heart, that you are in this frame of mind; however, I must know some of the circumstances in order to tailor specific advice. Our living environment and how we filter this environment within ourselves has a powerful influence on attitude, perception, desire, motivation, and many other personal attributes. But in the end it is still how it is managed that "can" make a difference.

Please take the time to be more specific in what it is within your life that is bothering you.


(Note: About 3 days ago, I did make a post to your journal in the event you didnt see it)


From my heart to yours,



Chillen
 
Ditto PB, We can always count on the Chillster to keep us focused and positive. Even if I'm just lurking while going through a short "bad spell" I can check in here and see the positiveness that surrounds him and it makes me feel better too.
 
What "exactly" is happening in your life that is effecting you so harshly and deliberately?

I will do my absolute best to give you the best advice I can based on what you are willing to share with me about your personal circumstances. It breaks my heart, that you are in this frame of mind; however, I must know some of the circumstances in order to tailor specific advice. Our living environment and how we filter this environment within ourselves has a powerful influence on attitude, perception, desire, motivation, and many other personal attributes. But in the end it is still how it is managed that "can" make a difference.

Please take the time to be more specific in what it is within your life that is bothering you.


(Note: About 3 days ago, I did make a post to your journal in the event you didnt see it)


From my heart to yours,



Chillen

It started when i didn't have the dicipline to stick to my diet on the weekend, and how i ate more crap than I should have. Then it went on to me skipping workouts and after that it just worse and i've felt pissed at myself for doing that, but at the same time i feel really low on motivation. Just need to find a way to jump start my mind and get back on my fitness goals. I don't want to "force" myself to train, i want myself to actually want to. And it was like that, but for the past week i've had no motivation at all. Not sure if this makes sense to you. I do want to wake up in the morning and be like " YES workout day" like i used to be, but i just dont know how to get my mind back in that mindset.
 
Hey Phate, I just went through that. My kiddo got chicken pox and it threw me off my game. One thing led to another and I missed out on a few weeks of training and dieting. I can't explain it but the desire came back today. I bet Chillen can hook you up with an explanation. I'll be looking forward to it to. Take care all, Greg
 
It started when i didn't have the dicipline to stick to my diet on the weekend, and how i ate more crap than I should have.

When faced with the choice of eating ' more ' crap and not sticking to your diet 100% or not - any insight into why you felt you made the pre-meditated choice to eat more crap and compromise your diet - i.e it was O.K. the time ?

What was going through your mind when you weighed the ' pros ' and ' cons ' of whether to eat more crap and compromise your diet or not ?

What tilted things in the ' pro's ' favor do you think ?

Beyond all that, what is wrong with ' occasionally ' eating crap and compromising your diet once in awhile ?

Then it went on to me skipping workouts and after that it just worse and i've felt pissed at myself for doing that, but at the same time i feel really low on motivation.

How many workouts did you skip in the past 2 - 3 weeks ?

And what were the reasons - or thoughts / feelings - that compelled you to miss them ?


Just need to find a way to jump start my mind and get back on my fitness goals.

How many goals to do you have exactly ?

Are they tangible ( i.e measurable ) & realistic ( i.e time frames etc. ) goals in your view ?

I don't want to "force" myself to train, i want myself to actually want to. And it was like that, but for the past week i've had no motivation at all.

Is there some others issues in your life that may be having an adverse impact on your ability to focus on training / dieting ?

Not sure if this makes sense to you. I do want to wake up in the morning and be like " YES workout day" like i used to be, but i just dont know how to get my mind back in that mindset.

What is your mind telling you when you your typical time to train is at hand ?
 
Hey guys....

Today I renounced Satan & carbs and accepted Chillen as my holy fitness savior....I put down my crutch and walked without it! :D

Seriously, I'm off the crutch...the knee is still sorta sore and I'm not 100%, but the physical therapist said if it doesn't feel uncomfortable, the general rule is that it's okay. He told me to keep it limited, but I'm good. I'm feeling a lot better and the swelling is going down.

Did my first round of physical therapy...as expected, the guy told me my swimming-pool hydro-therapy was an excellent idea! :)

Due to my rapid-like recovery, he's optimistic it's just a nasty-ass sprain and we can likely avoid surgery....BUT if the othro-surgeon I see on Thursday eventually says getting the knee scoped will help things (trim the meniscus tear, smooth it out, etc)...then I'll take full advantage of modern medicine and get my knee scoped.

Beyond that, I swam 2 miles in the pool today and flirted with an amazing hottie swimming next to me. I wish I were her bathing suit! The Lord put her in my lane for a reason?
 
For my friend, Phate: March 11th, 2008

March 11th, 2008 : A chip on the shoulder is too heavy a piece of baggage to carry. Learn to master yourself within your environment and the weight of the baggage lightens-Chillen


For my friend, PHATE:

You were engineered for success, designed for accomplishment, and endowed with the seeds of greatness!


Let's get something straight right from the start.

Whether one is calorie deficiting or in a calorie surplus (keeping things equal) 100% strict diet compliance isn't absolutely required for tissue gain or loss.

In addition, (again keeping things equal) the rate of decline is slower than most people "think" when they lay off training--for a SHORT period of time with an extensive diet and training history behind them.

However, what IS required is being able to apply what is learned within diet and fitness and blend it within one's personal environment to assist ones' personal goal advantage

If you believe in yourself and what you're trying to achieve, act like it.

Pick up the "pieces" in life and manipulate the knowledge of diet and fitness let it work beside you when the "night comes" that you need it; it leaves nothing left to fear.

(Chillen)


Spend time on the things that you value. Give your goals the attention they deserve. Live your life every day trusting the wisdom of your direction. Knowing you can do it is a great first step to getting anything done. The next, often tougher step, is turning the words of your wishes into a solid way to make it happen.

(Chillen)

You have to learn to MASTER yourself, to become the MASTER of Weight Loss or Weight Gain for YOURSELF.


"Your Personal System"


Setting and achieving goals can be very overwhelming if cognitive systems aren’t put in place. This "system" can take many different forms for an individual person. Through trial and error, you will have to find the "Personal System" that will work for you that will achieve your goal.

(Chillen)

"Open up your mind and allow your "Personal System" to come out!"

(Chillen)

Its right there in front of you, open up your eyes young man.

One of THE GREATEST weaknesses can be your mind. Your body doesn’t mind one way or the other what you do with your time, it has no mind. But, you do. Use it.

Seek to Master Yourself. The time investment will be paid back 10 times more than the original time you had invested.


How do you do this? You manipulate what your learn about diet and fitness WITH what you know about yourself (and learn about yourself), and blend it within your changing environment.

I have preached this approach with many posts on this forum about the absolute POWER in:

1. Manipulating DIET within ones personal environment
2. Manipulating TRAINING within ones personal environment

Think of it like putting a jig-saw puzzle together. As the pieces come together it starts to form a picture, with some pieces still missing. However, since you already have some pieces of the puzzle already put together, this will assist you in finishing off your personal product.

A. Calorie manipulations, B. Exercise manipulations, C. Nutrient manipulations, and Finding the correct blend within A, B, and C, and understanding the body's design intention and one that works with personal attributes and personal environment.

You KNOW without a shadow of doubt, that the answer is in deed among these four items.

YOU never have to question it.

YOU never have to lose faith in it. All of these items are natural to the body: We have to eat (calories and nutrients), and the body was designed for activity and appropriate stress, and thus the answer IS indeed within.


3. Manipulating personal knowledge obtained within diet and fitness to ones goal advantage to:

b. Work with changes in personal environment
c. Working with (not against) and "expecting" weaknesses and strengths
d. Working with environmental motivation "busters" and "creators".

Phate if you can "learn" how to properly manipulate your diet and fitness knowledge within your environment and apply it to work with your own "personal attributes" you WILL be successful. There are so many options.

This is WHY I wanted you to be "specific" in outlining your problem, because the knowledge of diet and fitness--->is the answer to your problem of blending it "properly" within your environment.

MAN! The relief that you will obtain.....when you do this. The absolute JOY and HAPPINESS!
OH! You could be like me!...........HEHEHHEHEHEHHE :) Oh.....sorry, got carried away.

Like I have said many times before, you have to see things, when you read diet and fitness information, that others DO NOT SEE, and be able to change and modify certain information in what you read that most would think wouldnt be applicable to them, but with a simple modification it could blend in for a positive effect.

One Example (of MANY): Manipulating Diet Structure:

Having knowledge of different approaches on diet dependent upon one's goal position and how one could maintain goal consistency:

One could apply a 95%-5% rule, or a 90%-10% rule, etc (and other options), within their dietary guidelines to allow some tolerences for a weekend with friends (or other event), and still stay on track with their diet and fitness goal plans.

A personal built in "flex" can tend to keep one sane, remove tension, remove guilt, and stress at the same time, when they have a "personal system" in place to handle these events.



In the type of goals we seek on the forum, the truest form of wisdom is learning to master the various internal and external "stimuli" that can effect the goal you desire:

Seek information on things that inhibit and exhibit good behavior toward your goal and blend them into your life and allow your perception of them to mix in to get the job done.

Seek knowledge in and how to handle:

+ Strength and Weaknesses

+ Emotions (how this effects your eating, and training and how to deal with it)

+ Attitude

+ Perception

Examine what you will and will not accept in the path to your goal. Find out what you will and what you will not tolerate, and within this "scope" do what "it takes" to get the job done.

Take a look at your environment. If, for example, the weekend (and I assume with friends, etc), is a major complication with diet and you have many battles with it, then work with it, and make an allowence within your diet for it, that STILL allows for you to stay on track, and build on your goal that following Monday.

Take your diet and training knowledge and use "pieces" of it TO HELP YOU OUT, and not have it work against you.

Do you understand what I mean?


If you have been a quitter in the past, choose to change that right now. You have the capacity to change.



Apparently your problem with the weekend ISN'T the first time. This isn't something new to you. NOW HANDLE IT!

You have all the knowledge obtained from the last few months of study to assist you.

And here is a quote from you from a thread I located a while ago to show that I know from your own words this isnt the first time:

COME ON DALLEN GET YOUR BUTT BACK INTO GEAR!!!!!!!!!!!

Don't worry, we all have small set backs, i remember one weekend i was feeling really horrible and guilty from eating way above my calorie needs. You just have to get back into the groove of controlling your calories and start remembering why you changed your lifestyle.


If you have a set plan in place where you manipulated your diet according to the knowledge you know about calories and food, no changes are necessary for the weekend, and guilt can be removed: Guilt can be removed through applying knowledge learned within ones environment. BOTTOM LINE.



Recognize your faults and habits you do not like!

Habit is habit and not to be flung out of the window by any person,--->but coaxed downstairs a step at a time--Mark Twain

And you use your diet and fitness knowledge and what you know about yourself, to get it done.

Lets Chill in some interpretation:

Every giant leap forward is in reality a series of baby steps. For every major breakthrough you see in your performance, don’t forget all the hundreds of little things that had to happen, day after day, for that to happen. Habits are the basis of improvement, but they don’t happen overnight. The easiest – and most difficult – way to improve your life is to make or break a habit. It’s easy because habits are built one single action at a time. It’s difficult because you need to be consistent. It’s much more of a mental game than a physical challenge. If you don’t see progress right away, don’t be discouraged. In fact, some of the habits you have right now have been a lifetime in the making and repeating. They can be as stubborn as a mule. It might take some coaxing to get them to move.

======================================================

Two people are in the same room working on the same project, looking out the same window at the same view, wearing the same clothes and thinking about the same dinner plans. But one is miserable and the other pretty darn happy. How can this happen? It’s all about attitude. The fact that a poor child can laugh while a rich man can scowl should be proof enough that we have power over how we see the world. If life is making you miserable, it might be time to think of how much you might be contributing. Sometimes it feels impossible to see the good in something. Start looking inward. That good will be found in your thoughts before it’s found anywhere else. Positive thinking is a habit that can be learned, but like any habit it takes time and effort.

Happiness glows from the inside out, it doesn’t shine from the outside in .

(Unknown; Chillen modified-allot)

TRAIN your BRAIN to handle your goal CAMPAIGN; it can assist in handling the personal RAIN, and ease some PAIN and keep you SANE; it will help you EXPLAIN and MAINTAIN.

(Chillen)

=========================================================

Phate take the basics of diet and fitness you know, and the more advanced methods your learn, and LEARN HOW TO MANIPULATE THEM in your environment to make you stay on track! There are all sorts of methods to use that can fit to ones personal liking and/or acceptance.

You all ready know the basics of weight gain and loss, calories, nutrients, and weight training, correct? Would you like me to list the basic variables (and give examples) that one can work with within an environment, and make adjustments to personal attributes to see how this works? I would be more than willing to.


Manipulation of the traditional basic items can open up the mind! These can be powerful and more than people realize!

Look at them differently: Use them. They are always there waiting.

Manipulating the basics (and some advanced diet and fitness) knowledge can be used as tools to assist one when one is thinking they may have messed up. It will wake you up, and turn you around.



Its between a biological function and your mind.

Who WINS is determined through what you have learned, what you can manipulate in what you have learned, and then applying it. ITS YOUR CHOICE. The body will not care one way or the other, but YOU will. TEACH YOURSELF how to handle it and you will not be disappointed I promise.

=====================================================

Joe-blow says this; Jack-Splat says this; John-Knows-Alot did this: One weeds through the quality information, and with trial and error and some informed "personal tweaking" finds something that works. And you know what? Tom-The-Opinion-Bomb, still gives an opinion seemingly oblivious to the bottom-line :)

Its a never ending cycle. Be aware of this cycle.
One needs to pay attention to what works for them--contrary to "some" opinion.

Because there are always opinions and perceptions; and opinions and perceptions on these opinion and perceptions: When the smoke all clears and its all said and done, what works for the "individual" is what matters the most, and there are some that will always have a contrary opinion on this, LOL.

NEVER become confused on what works for you--despite the naysayers.

Seek advice. Seek Knowledge. Weed through it. Sort through it, and locate what works fo YOU. It IS FINDABLE (HEHEHE, this isnt a word).

Its my opinion, that ALL bodily feed back IS GOOD, whether its positive feed back or negative feedback.

If its negative, than something is AMUCK, change something or you will more than likely get the same feedback.

If its positive, than you know something is right, but be watchful and careful of the degrees.

Same thing is APPLICABLE to the mind and mental attitude.

If its negative, it can damage your goals, and something needs changing.

If its positive, than you know something is right, and be keening aware of its degrees as well.

Being consciously aware of BOTH and having the ability to overcome them in the mind, is an essential successful element!

IF YOU WIN THE HIGHER PERCENTAGES of the battles in the head, you WILL overcome anything humanly possible.

Do what "it takes" for you, and you will ROCK yourself into orbit and leave everyone behind.

=================================================================

EDIT: I have kept up with your journal since you started it, as you know.

It was just a matter of the last few weeks you added in running (jogging) among your weight training. Didnt you also severely reduce carbs just recently? In addition, you just recently switched from bulking to cutting, correct?


I noticed something in your journal when I review it, again. Just after you started your Kilometor runs, and after your rave dance, you complained about your motivation and hating to work legs. Prior to this, I didnt see any major motivation complaints. Just an observation.



BE STRONG, change your style of life!


ROCK ON!


Be all you can be!




Chillen
 
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Your such a pimp! whether its your trainer or whatever you seem to be chatting them up haha. If I was in your lane would you chat me up

Okay....the truth is, I'm pretty much a complete harmless blow-hard. I'll pretty much type & say ANYTHING to make you guys laugh. Whether it's asking gals for naked pics to help assess their nutritional needs (strictly for medical reasons), prescribing guys to bring a 3rd woman into the bedroom for addtional cardio, or just making crude remarks....this forum serves as my humor outlet and all your minds will endure the pain, suffering and agony that is my sense of humor!

As I see it...if I can make just one person spit-up their coffee/gatorade onto their keyboard or monitor each day in laughter...I've done my job! :D My nutritionist insist I should have been a comedian, but I'm not into performing.

As for the gal swimming next to me, she was "All-That" and a bag of protein-enriched, low-carb chips!! Her body was flawlessly perfect and she swam like a shark! I chatted her up, told her about the amazing waterproof ipod for swimming, showed her how the larger goggles don't leave racoon-eyes and are far more comfortable and complimented her on her endurance swimming. She was very friendly, I never impose myself. I suggest checking-out a spin-class to mix up her routine and left it at that.....

Ya know what I get off on....when you give someone a compliment and you can tell it just goes right into their head and makes them feel great...the rest of their day they chew on that mind-gem and it lifts them up and lets them soar in psychological bliss...inspiring them, enabling them and just adding to the goodwill that surrounds all of us as positive energy. It's amazing to have such power to give somone....like a gift. Plus, maybe she'll think of me when she masturbates!:eek::yelrotflmao:

Ya see, I just can't help it.....:D Thanks for the pimp-rep+ :D
 
Ditto PB, We can always count on the Chillster to keep us focused and positive. Even if I'm just lurking while going through a short "bad spell" I can check in here and see the positiveness that surrounds him and it makes me feel better too.

Thank you, GT for your nice words. I appreciate them more than you know.

Thank you!

How is it going young man?


Chillen
 
"Your Personal System"


Setting and achieving goals can be very overwhelming if cognitive systems aren’t put in place.

This "system" can take many different forms for an individual person.

Through trial and error, you will have to find the "Personal System" that will work for you that will achieve your goal.


"Open up your mind and allow your "Personal System" to come out!"

Interesting.

You suggest it's easier to set and achieve goals if " cognitive systems " are in place.

What do you mean by " cognitive systems " - i.e in terms of what they mean to you ?

What are some concrete examples of these " cognitive systems ' you're alluding to ?
 
Thanks for your posts Chillen, and yea your right. It started with me realizing how much i hate squats. Then from there it went to skipping a leg workout, then after that it just went downhill with my diet and training and i felt totally lazy. Diet wise, i tried to restrict carbs and eat completely clean, on the week days i could do this but then on the weekends the cravings for some carbs were so strong that i totally canceled out the progress i made on the weekdays. It was all a chain reaction and one thing led to another, many factors were involved.
 
Wrangell....

Nobody wins all their games. If you lost a hockey game, just suck it up and move along; you win some, you lose some. No need to take it out on Chillen.

HDC (His Divine Chilleness) doesn't have to answer for the exbounds of wisdom he puts before us. It's up to each of us to interpret his words as they apply to us.

Your this close to going in the penalty box!
 
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