Thought
Awareness, Rational Thinking
& Positive Thinking (1)
Introduction:
In preparing for a performance, you may
have a whole range of fears, anxieties and
negative thoughts associated with the upcoming
event. While this is completely normal and
is something that everyone experiences,
it is important that you deal with these;
otherwise, they can undermine your self-confidence.
Negative thinking and negative emotion
is something we look at in much more detail
in our section on Reducing
Stress With Rational Thinking. What
we look at here are techniques explicitly
focused on managing performance stress.
Firstly we look at “Thought Awareness,”
a technique you can use to understand your
fears and negative thoughts. We then look
at rational thinking and positive thinking
as ways of countering the negative thoughts
you have identified.
Using the Tool:
Thought Awareness
You are thinking negatively when you fear
the future, put yourself down, criticize
yourself for errors, doubt your abilities
or expect failure. Negative thinking can
damage confidence, harm performance and
paralyse mental skills.
Unfortunately, negative thoughts have a
tendency to flit into our consciousness,
do their damage and then flit back out again,
with their significance having barely been
noticed. Since we barely notice these negative
thoughts, we do not challenge properly,
which means they can be completely incorrect
and wrong. This does not stop them doing
damage.
Thought awareness is the process by which
you observe your thoughts and become aware
of what is going through your head.
To use the technique, observe your “stream
of consciousness” as you think about
the upcoming event. Do not suppress any
thoughts. Instead, just let them run their
course while you make note of them.
As you notice negative thoughts, write
them down and then let them go.
Examples of common
negative thoughts might be:
- Fear about the quality of your performance
or of problems that may interfere with
it;
- Worry about how the audience or the
press may react to you;
- Worries about how you appear to others,
for example, important people;
- A preoccupation with the symptoms of
stress;
- Dwelling on the negative consequences
of a poor performance;
- Self-criticism over less than perfect
rehearsal and practice, or
- Feelings of inadequacy.
Thought awareness is the first step in
the process of eliminating negative thoughts:
You cannot counter thoughts that you do
not know you think.
Rational Thinking
The next step in dealing with negative thinking
is to challenge the negative thoughts that
you wrote down using the Thought Awareness
technique.
Look at every thought you wrote down and
rationally challenge it. Ask yourself whether
the thought is reasonable. Does it stand
up to fair scrutiny? What evidence is there
for and against the thought? Would your
friends or mentors agree with the thought
or disagree with it?
Looking at some of the examples
above, the following challenges could
be made to some of these common negative
thoughts:
- Quality of performance:
Have you trained yourself as well as you
reasonably should have? Have you gathered
the information you need and prepared
properly for the event? Have you conducted
a reasonable number of rehearsals? If
so, you've done as much as you can to
give a good performance.
- Problems of distraction and
issues outside your control: Have
you conducted appropriate contingency
planning and created a Performance
Plan? Have you thought about how you
will manage all likely contingencies and
prepared a solution? If so, you will be
well prepared to handle potential problems.
- Worry about other people’s
reaction: If you perform the
best you can, then you should be completely
satisfied. If you give a good performance,
fair people are likely to respond well.
If people are not fair, then this is something
outside your control, and the best thing
to do is to ignore and rise above any
unfair comments.
- Problems during practice:
If some of your practice was less than
perfect, then remind yourself that the
purpose of practice is to identify problems
so that they will not be repeated during
the performance. Similarly, ask yourself
whether it is reasonable to expect perfect
performance at all times. All that is
important is that you perform well when
you need to.
Tip:
If you find it difficult to look at
your negative thoughts objectively,
imagine that you are your best friend
or a respected coach or mentor. Look
at the list of negative thoughts and
imagine the negative thoughts were
written by someone you were giving
objective advice to, and think how
you would challenge these thoughts.
These are some examples of how you
can challenge negative thinking. You
should be able to quickly see whether
the thoughts are wrong, or whether
they have some substance to them.
Where there is substance to the negative
thoughts, take appropriate action.
In these cases, negative thinking
has been an early warning system for
you, showing where you need to direct
your attention.
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Positive Thinking
Where you have used Rational Thinking to
identify incorrect negative thinking, it
is useful to prepare rational, positive
thoughts and affirmations to counter these
negative thoughts.
Positive affirmations help you to build
self-confidence and change negative behavior
patterns into positive ones. By basing your
affirmations on the clear, rational assessments
of fact that you made using Rational Thinking,
you can use them to undo the damage that
negative thinking may have done to your
self-confidence.
Continuing the example above, positive affirmations
could be:
- Quality of performance:
“I have trained hard for this event.
I have prepared well and have rehearsed
thoroughly. I am well prepared to give
an excellent performance.”
- Problems of distraction and
issues outside your control: “I
have thought through everything that might
reasonably happen and have planned how
I can handle all likely contingencies.
I am well placed to react flexibly to
events.”
- Worry about other people’s
reaction: “Fair people
will react well to a good performance.
I will rise above any unfair criticism
in a mature and professional way.”
- Problems during practice:
“I have experimented with and learned
from my practice. This has put me in a
position where I can deliver a great performance.”
Tip 1:
Supporting this, you can
also use confidence boosting affirmation
scripts, like "Thinking
Positive" from Meditainment.
Tip 2:
Traditionally, people have advocated
positive thinking almost recklessly,
as if it is a solution to everything.
Positive thinking should be used with
common sense: No amount of positive
thinking can make everyone who applies
it an Olympic champion marathon runner
(though an Olympic marathon runner
is unlikely to have reached this level
without being pretty good at positive
thinking!)
First, decide rationally
what goals you can realistically attain
with hard work, and then use positive
thinking to reinforce these. |
Summary:
This set of tools helps you to manage and
counter the negative thinking that can undermine
a good performance.
Thought Awareness helps you to understand
the fear and negative thinking that may
damage your self-confidence in the time
leading up to an event.
Rational Thinking is a technique that helps
you to challenge your negative thoughts
and either learn from them, or refute them
as incorrect.
Positive Thinking is a technique you use
to create positive affirmations that you
can use to counter negative thoughts, neutralizing
them and building your self-confidence.
Note: Here we are focusing on countering
performance-related negative thinking. We
will expand on dealing with more serious
cases of negative thinking in the next
section.
Click here
to find out how to reduce stress with performance
planning...
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