7 Habits of People With Remarkable Mental Toughness
You don't have to be born mentally
tough. Here's how you can develop the vital trait.
"The ability to work hard and respond resiliently to failure and
adversity; the inner quality that enables individuals to work hard and stick to
their long-term passions and goals."
- Always act as if you are in total control.
- Put aside things you have no ability to impact.
- See the past as valuable training and nothing more.
- Celebrate the success of others.
- Never allow yourself to whine. (Or complain. Or criticize.)
- Focus only on impressing yourself.
- Count your blessings.
Here are ways you can become mentally stronger--and as a result more
successful:
1. Always act as if you are in total
control.
There's a quote often credited to Ignatius: "Pray as if God will
take care of all; act as if all is up to you." (Cool quote.)
The same premise applies to luck. Many people feel luck has a lot to do
with success or failure. If they succeed, luck favored them, and if they fail,
luck was against them.
Most successful people do feel good
luck played some role in their success. But they don't wait for good luck or
worry about bad luck. They act as if success or failure is totally within their
control. If they succeed, they caused it. If they fail, they caused it.
By not wasting mental energy worrying
about what might happen to you, you can put all your effort into making things happen. (And then,
if you get lucky, hey, you're even better off.)
You can't control luck, but you can definitely control you.
2. Put aside things you have no
ability to impact.
Mental strength is like muscle strength--no one has an unlimited supply.
So why waste your power on things you can't control?
For some people, it's politics. For
others, it's family. For others, it's global warming. Whatever it is, you care, and you want others to care.
Fine. Do what you can do: Vote. Lend a listening ear. Recycle, and reduce your carbon
footprint. Do what you can do. Be your own change--but don't try to make everyone else change.
(They won't.)
3. See the past as valuable training
and nothing more.
The past is valuable. Learn from your mistakes. Learn from the mistakes
of others.
Then let it go.
Easier said than done? It depends on your perspective. When something
bad happens to you, see it as an opportunity to learn something you didn't know.
When another person makes a mistake, don't just learn from it--see it as an
opportunity to be kind, forgiving, and understanding.
The past is just training; it doesn't define you. Think about what went
wrong but only in terms of how you will make sure that next time, you and the
people around you will know how to make sure it goes right.
4. Celebrate the success of others.
Many people--I guarantee you know at
least a few--see success as a zero-sum game: There's only so much to go around.
When someone else shines, they think that diminishes the light from their stars.
Resentment sucks up a massive amount of mental energy--energy better
applied elsewhere.
When a friend does something awesome, that doesn't preclude you from
doing something awesome. In fact, where success is concerned, birds of a
feather tend to flock together--so draw your successful friends even closer.
Don't resent awesomeness. Create and celebrate awesomeness, wherever you
find it, and in time you'll find even more of it in yourself.
5. Never allow yourself to whine. (Or
complain. Or criticize.)
Your words have power, especially over you. Whining about your problems
always makes you feel worse, not better.
So if something is wrong, don't waste time complaining. Put that mental
energy into making the situation better. (Unless you want to whine about it
forever, eventually you'll have to make it better.)
So why waste time? Fix it now. Don't talk about what's wrong. Talk about
how you'll make things better, even if that conversation is only with yourself.
And do the same with your friends or colleagues. Don't just serve as a
shoulder they can cry on. Friends don't let friends whine; friends help friends
make their lives better.
6. Focus only on impressing yourself.
No one likes you for your clothes,
your car, your possessions, your title, or your accomplishments. Those are all
things. People may like your things--but that doesn't mean they like you.
(Sure, superficially they might seem to like you, but what's superficial
is also insubstantial, and a relationship not based on substance is not a real
relationship.)
Genuine relationships make you happier, and you'll only form genuine
relationships when you stop trying to impress and start trying to just be
yourself.
And you'll have a lot more mental energy to spend on the people who
really do matter in your life.
7. Count your blessings.
Take a second every night before you
turn out the light and, in that moment, quit worrying about what you don't have. Quit worrying about what others have that you don't.
Think about what you do have. You have a lot to be thankful for. Feels pretty good, doesn't it?
Feeling better about yourself is the best way of all to recharge your
mental batteries.
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