by rugbyjockca » August 30th, 2015, 9:53 am
It depends on my challenge on that day, so I have a few different tools I use.
I have a trainer who I like and trust, and sometimes I imagine him beside me urging me on for that last rep, or how proud he'd be if I get more than he asked for.
Sometimes I imagine a competitor next to me, doing the same exercise, matching me rep for rep, and knowing that if I quit before he does, he's one step closer to beating me in a competition.
When I'm doing sprints on a treadmill, I imagine a rugby game and I'm stepping it up for a critical tackle, or I just got a break with the ball in my hands and I need to use everything I have to get a try or save the day.
Sometimes it is just about focus: it isn't the number I do, it is HOW I do the rep, so I zoom in on parts of my form, making sure I'm cueing myself correctly, tuning out everything that is around me.
Sometimes I just grit my teeth and decide I will not let the bar beat me.
Sometimes (esp. with squats) I just don't want to get stuck at the bottom and look ridiculous, so I make sure I get that bar UP!
To be honest, I am usually more focused on my lift than I am in how I am motivating myself, so most of these tricks I have to pause at the start of the set and consciously decide what I am doing for each rep, so that if I AM going close to failure, I don't have to think about my actions...so it will be like "I know I can do 6 squats for sure. I will go for 8 and if that feels okay then I will do 2 more." I imagine myself in the middle of my set, how it will feel, what signals from my body I will use to decide if I can get those last 2 reps or not, and whether or not I will pause between reps, how I will breathe, when I will tighten my core, etc, etc. I do all this BEFORE I start, so that when the moment comes I'm not thinking, I'm just following the plan./