Mood Control
Bad moods damage your motivation to succeed in training or competition.
They make you more prone to negative thinking, and cause distraction,
often as you trigger bad moods in other people. Bad moods emerge as bad
temper, unhappiness, lethargy and sluggishness.
If you are in a good mood, then even dull training can be enjoyable.
Your mood is completely under your control - bad moods are an indulgence
you cannot afford. You can improve your mood in the following ways:
- Through positive thinking and suggestion - say to yourself 'I feel
good' or 'I am going to move faster' or 'I can feel energy pouring into
my limbs'. This really does help.
- By treating each element of a performance individually - when you
make a mistake, refocus and concentrate on the next separate element
of the performance. Treating a performance in this way ensures that
a bad move or a missed shot does not effect following moves or shots.
- By using imagery - imagine a beautiful scene or a time when you were
performing very well and feeling good. Alternatively, imagine feeling
good directly.
- By reviewing your goals to remotivate yourself.
- By smiling! - Forcing a smile onto your face for more than just a
few seconds always seems to lift a bad mood. Try it - it really does
work!
Links
References