Читать книгу Sports Psychology For Dummies - Leif H. Smith - Страница 35
GOAL SETTING AND MOTIVATION: TWO PEAS IN A POD
ОглавлениеMotivation is the fuel that powers your goals toward becoming a reality. If you’re not motivated and inspired by your goals, you won’t achieve them. And if you don’t have goals, you won’t be motivated to improve.
A simple way to measure your level of motivation is to use what we call the get-out-of-bed test. Do your goals make you want to get out of bed and hurry toward their achievement? Do they keep you up at night, excited, unable to go to sleep because you’re too busy pursuing them? If so, your level of motivation is strong. If not, then you need to set better, more inspiring goals. This does not mean you will always feel great about getting out of bed, for we are human, and sometimes our motivation ebbs and flows, but it should be there most of the time if you are seeking important goals and doing the goal-setting process in the correct manner.
Many athletes tell us that at times they lose their motivation to compete in their sports. They complain that it’s no longer fun, that their coaches’ demands annoy them, that their passion for training isn’t what it used to be. When we ask these athletes what their current goals are, they usually say, “I don’t know — I haven’t thought about it.” They’re focused on the misery and pain and complaining. They’ve lost focus on their goals and the reasons they compete, and their motivation has declined because of it.
When you get into a car, you usually know your destination. When you start driving toward your destination, you’re focused on making sure you reach it, which helps you adjust when you encounter obstacles, such as closed roads, traffic jams, and passing trains blocking the intersection. You’re committed to reaching your destination, but you more than likely keep a flexible approach to getting there, depending on the circumstances and time of day. The same is true with goal setting in your sport. You need to know where you’re headed. Then, after you’ve set inspiring goals, you need to stay flexible in your approach to making them come true. Obstacles will come in many forms — injuries, coaching decisions, sickness, and other unforeseen training issues. Your job as an athlete is to keep your mind focused on your goals, which, on occasion, requires that you take alternative routes to success.
Goal setting is both art and science. The key to good goal setting is outlining goals that inspire and motivate you. They should wake you up early and keep you up late at night!