You hear the term mental toughness used all the time. So and so is labeled mentally tough, what does that mean? What is mental toughness? Can you teach it? Can you learn it? I don't believe in mental toughness, never have. I think mental toughness is a term without much meaning; it is a convenient label that is often used as an excuse.
I do believe in willpower, determination and perseverance. Athletes who are mentally strong achieve that because they work to strengthen their willpower muscles with consistent steady effort. They use failures as stepping-stones to success. They will take risks, but above they are consistent and steady in their approach. All the best athletes that I have been around have those qualities. I don't believe you can teach mental toughness by doing mindless workouts that make the athletes tired. The willpower and determination that builds mental strength comes from consistent mindfull effort day in and day out, exercise-to-exercise, set-to-set throughout the workout each day. There are no magic workouts to develop this. It is a mindset; it is a willingness to put yourself in positions that test your concentration, your determination and your ability to execute in stressful situations. You are what you train to be, if you go through the motions and just do the work you are not building the mental strength necessary to excel in the competitive cauldron. Bring your mind to the workout, be fully engaged and build mental strength to parallel the physical strength, speed and endurance necessary to give yourself a chance to succeed.
Paul A. Davis
I like to define mental toughness as “the ability to concentrate (focus) on the right thing, at the right time, for the right amount of time”.
Mr. K
Nice post Vern. There is a movie called “Man on Fire”, starring Denzel Washington. There is a scene in the movie where he is helping this young girl prepare for her swimming competition. After doing well in her swimming, she tells her coach (Denzel), “I’m pretty tough, huh?” Denzel replies:
“There is no such thing as ‘tough’. There is either TRAINED or UNTRAINED…now which one are you?”
I think this quote summarizes your post perfectly.