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Cultivating a Calm and Joyful Mind by Lucy Smith
After twenty years in
sport, I have a pretty good understanding of what physiological markers
I need to reach in training in order to achieve certain goals in
competition. I have never yet tired of the relentless pursuit of the
perfect race, nor the simple act of putting on my shoes and going for a
run in the woods. My life has changed immensely in the last seven years
through the birth of my two children, and parenting has rewarded me
with personal challenges outside sport beyond what I ever could have
imagined.
What I love to work on now is the rewarding process of
becoming an astute and balanced person while continually entering the
high stress playing fields of competition. I practice cultivating a
continuous calm and joyful mindset, a psychological state that is like
happiness and contentment with the current moment, but is also manifest
in a mental clarity that creates a stillness whether things are going
really well, or very poorly. I've been through all the intense ups and
downs of sport so many times I find solace in being able to remain
confident and centred through everything that comes along. When things
go wrong, I feel disappointment and then I move on. When I experience a
win (or a 4th, as in my most recent World Duathlon Championships Result
in Virginia), I smiled and laughed with the locals, then came home to
my family in Victoria and resumed taking Maia to soccer, and watching
planes with son Ross, equally important events in my life.
So, a
good portion of my training energy is devoted to cultivating the kind
of mindset that makes me feel good. How do I cultivate this feeling,
this confidence? I use my time well. When I am training, I make a
commitment to myself to put my best effort into each day, no matter how
tired I am, or what has happened in my personal life. I contemplate how
I feel when things are going well and the positive thoughts and
attitude I have about myself, the world and my training. I work on
eliminating negative self-talk, self- defeating behaviour and actions
that sabotage success.
I like the discipline of training my body
and my mind, of practicing how I am going to be confident and joyful on
race day. The more I practice being confident in training sessions, the
more easily that mind-ease surfaces on race day. I like getting to
races ready to perform. I expect to be nervous before major
competitions as this means that deep down, I care about what I do, but
with my well of calm at my centre, the nervousness never becomes
debilitating. I work to be free of worry and anxiety, to be able to
focus on the process of running well. This practice serves me well, as
when I arrive at a big event where the athletic stakes are higher, like
a world championships, I have the comfort of knowing that all the
strength and courage I need are right there in my soul.
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