Fit for Life: Are You Crazy?
Matt Espeut, Health & Lifestyle Contributor
Fit for Life: Are You Crazy?

We live in uncertain times. We always have, and always will.
The only way to deal with it is through patience and resiliency
GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLASTMy first tip is to lose the mind trash, and focus on the things that matter most.
What’s in your head gets in your way, so keep telling yourself that things will be ok, and do what it takes to remove the negative thought process that constantly haunts us on a daily basis.
When you are faced with dilemmas and uncertainty, do you talk to yourself? I do, and I think it’s ok to talk to yourself.
It’s not that you’re going crazy. We need to not only talk ourselves into doing the right things, but to talk ourselves out of doing the wrong things like quitting or looking for the easy way out.
Self-talk is essential when you are trying to improve on any level.
I call it thinking out loud, or searching for internal motivation when it’s needed, and there isn’t anyone around to motivate or push you to a higher lever.
During an enduring event I participated in last month, the words “one more” were said to myself over and over again when I was tired and wanted to quit. I even wrote it on my arm with a sharpie to remind myself.
When you have a coach or mentor coaching you and pushing you through a tough task, you get external motivation to do the things you normally wouldn’t do on your own. However, where do we get this motivation when we are alone?
It needs to come from within, and this is where the self-talk is necessary.
I find myself replaying words that were spoken to me, or the words I have spoken to others when internal motivation is needed.
Things like, “Be a beast, and stop being a little bitch”, or “Too bad things are tough, it’s tough for everyone.” Or “Nobody’s entitled to an easy life, so what makes you special.” Are some of the conversations I have with myself when I need a push to keep moving forward.
Have you ever negotiated with yourself to get out of a tough task?
Maybe I’ll only do one more rep, maybe I won’t push myself any further today.
When I start sliding down this slope, this is the time the self-talk is essential, otherwise, you give yourself justification for operating at a lower level.
When you justify negotiating yourself out of a tough task, you will always regret it later, but when you complete the tough task, you get this amazing feeling of gratification.
Things like, “It was raining out I needed to sleep. Or, It’s OK to sleep in once in a while”, are justifications why you didn’t get up early and be productive that day.
These are the words we tell ourselves, and we are all guilty of it, and it really does more harm than good, because you get a sense of regret over gratitude later on.
Don’t make deals with yourself.
There wasn’t a day last week when the alarm went off, I felt like getting up, but I never hit snooze.
There wasn’t a day that I wanted to go to work over the beach, but I worked every day.
There wasn’t a day that I felt like working out last week, but I got six days in.
My self-talk was, “Do what you NEED to do, NOT what you WANT to do.” And “Weak and mediocre people give up, complain, you need to overcome ALL the adversity in your way”
The solution is to be harder on yourself than anyone else will be.
I always say, “tell me what I’m doing wrong so I can get better,” rather than tell me what I am doing right because I might get complacent and stop pushing myself.
Change your thought process constantly and you will change your course of action.
Think and talk to yourself about the things you can control, and don’t bring to light the things that frustrate you, or you can’t control.
Instead of focusing on what the problem is or could be, think “let me check on the solution.”
When you start thinking and reassessing your thoughts, you start to think more positively, and self-talk is an essential help in changing your thought process.
I also use self-talk to reprimand myself.
An example is when someone was telling me a story the other day, I had to tell myself to shut up and listen.
I try to be a better leader, and good leaders listen before speaking, so I need to be telling myself constantly to listen, let someone talk, then give your opinion or advice.
Another example we can all implement is when eating something.
Stop and ask yourself, will this improve my health and get me closer to my goal, or will it move me farther away.
You already know the answer, so don’t justify that “it’s just one bite,” “it’s my friend's birthday,” or “it’s Saturday.”
You may justify it to yourself, but fat doesn’t care and will accumulate around your midsection anyway.
I’ll say it again, things are tough, but don’t make them tougher by justifying bad behavior and negotiating yourself out of doing the things that are tough, or make you uncomfortable.
You won’t fail if you don’t quit, and when you quit being tough on yourself, you go from nosedive to tailspin.
Translation: nosedives can be corrected and put back on course, but a tailspin will result in a crash and burn every-time.
We all experience fatigue and possibly find ourselves doing a nosedive, however, it is going to require ongoing consistency and staying strong even when you feel too burnt out to make it through to the other side.
When you give up, you go into an uncontrollable tailspin, and that needs to be avoided at all cost.
Tough times build character, strength and resiliency.
I heard a quote from my coach and mentor that goes like this:
Tough times create strong people.
Strong people create good times.
Good times create weak people, and
Weak people bring on hard times.
Step out of the cycle and never get soft.
Don’t let good times prevent you from getting better, and don’t let the tough times break you down.
We got this!!
Committed to your success,
Matt
