Time
for me to dive into my psyche 101 textbooks and talk on the subject of “psyching
up”.
Before I go any further, admit it, you tried to do this once
To
get into it, there is no one universal way to get psyched up for a lift. This is one of those things that a lot of
folks don’t seem to grasp, and it’s mainly because human nature is inherently
egocentric. We presume that the rest of
the world shares our experience and in turn experiences the world from the same
frame of reference that we do, reaching the same conclusions from the same
premises each time. To realize this isn’t
correct, spend any amount of time reading the internet.
That about sums it up
Having
said this, I only have the authority to speak to my own experiences, but will
still give both sides a shot based on what I know. Keep in mind, this is an incredibly general
summary. Volumes of books could be
written on the subject.
The
Extrovert
Psyching up for the
extrovert is a very external ritual, and benefits from having people
around. These folks need to be yelled
at, sworn at, insulted, slapped, what have you.
They respond well to the pep talk, cheering fans, etc.
The
Introvert
These folks are on the
opposite side of the spectrum, and need to be left alone. Their psyche up is very internal, with an
internal dialogue that puts them where they want to be, music on earbuds that
only they can hear, and no human interaction to distract them.
It is imperative to
understand these basic ideas because trying to use the wrong type of motivation
is going to have the opposite effect. If
you get in the face of an introvert and scream, at best they’re going to wonder
what your problem is and it’ll distract them, and at worst, they could just
completely shut down. If you put an
extrovert into isolation before a lift, he is not going to get the level of
excitement he needs to crush a lift.
This means that you
need to know who YOU are before you try to psyche yourself up. Don’t try to use someone else’s method
because you saw it on youtube or heard from a buddy, do what you need. Additionally, don’t try to force your method
on someone else right before a major lift, because you could honestly be
robbing them of poundage.
It seems what we have here is a failure to communicate
To talk on a personal
level, I definitely vector more toward the introvert side of the spectrum. I have been through military training before,
and getting yelled at just got me in trouble for having smart ass answers. That environment was simply not a performance
motivator. I’ve also traveled and been
in Buddhist monasteries in Asia, filled with either serene silence or strong
monotone chants, and the energy from the room was electrifying to me. Knowing this about myself, I have my own psyching
up ritual.
For me, music is pretty
key. I don’t like metal because it’s too
loud to me and doesn’t have enough focus (and I realize with the 4.7 trillion
sub-genres of metal out there I have most likely offended someone, but you’ll
get over it). I like music with a very
strong, intense driving beat, focused like a laser. I just recently pulled a 620lb deadlift for 2
reps listening to “Tempest” by the Deftones, and it worked out perfectly.
I don’t have much of an
internal dialogue when I am psyching up.
Instead, I go to a “dark place” in my mind. It’s a nebulous concept honestly, but instead
of focusing on things that make me angry, I just focus on getting angry. I let it build up inside of me, and much like
the music, I make it concentrated and focused.
The intent is to not be some screaming berserker unleashing anger in a
spray in all directions, but to have white hot anger concentrated on the lift
at hand.
What is important to
understand is that you have to be able to turn it on and off as needed. Getting to this level of energy is honestly
exhausting, and if you try to do it all day at a competition, you’re going to
be fried before the final lift. You want
to be able to tap into this for each lift so that you can give it your all, and
then spend the rest of your time recovering.
Also, you don’t want to be this psyched up all day because, honestly,
you’re probably an asshole and unpleasant to be around. I once got a phone call from work right after
I had gotten ready for my second attempt deadlift in a meet, and I don’t think
the guy on the other end of the phone was prepared for what I had to say to
him. I had to seek him out the next day
and apologize, but at least I got the lift.
I thought I was being nice
A final point to
realize is that you should NOT be doing this for training lifts. This is purely a competition thing only. Keep in mind, when you psyche yourself up,
the intent is that you can lift more than when you are not psyched up. You are essentially tapping into the deepest
regions of your physical limits. Well,
doing that is incredibly taxing. When I
do this for a meet and hit PRs for all 3 lifts, I need to spend a month doing
light training before I can resume my normal weights. If you’re doing this in training that means
you’re just setting your own recovery back and limiting your ability to grow
stronger. Think about it, if you are
able to make yourself stronger without a psyche up, that just means you’ll be
even stronger once you do psyche up, whereas if you have to psyche up to hit a
PR in training, all this means is that you got better at reaching deeper,
rather than actually made yourself stronger.
DIRECTOR’S
CUT BONUS COMMENTARY
Now let’s talk about
the fun stuff: smelling salts and nose tork.
Whenever I hear someone
talking about some gimmicky pre-workout powder, I throw them my bottle of nose
tork and tell them that THIS is what you need to get motivated to train. Amazingly, they always turn it down. This stuff is no joke.
(Note: Start with
smelling salts. This is not a
suggestion. Do not skip straight to nose
tork. I will explain why in a bit.)
The best way I could describe
smelling salts is that they are chemical anger and pain. They essentially will trip your fight or
flight response, and should you choose the former, you will be incredibly
pissed off after the experience. There
is no way to not be mad after taking a wiff of this, it just gets to you. For me, this is the last step in psyching
up. After I have used all my
psychological tricks to get me as angry and focused as possible, I use external
sources to push me beyond my own limitations.
Nose tork is like if
smelling salts used smelling salts. The
first time I used it, I literally ran away from the bottle and spent 30 minutes
relearning how to breathe. It is a religious
experience. I have used it on long road
trips to stay awake, and it is way better than coffee. I keep a bottle at my desk for a joke, and
had a co-worker try it who had never used a smelling salt before, and his exact
words were “my brain is on fire”. It
definitely does the job, but I would ease in with smelling salts first.
"If smelling salts used smelling salts" - woah. Had no idea there was such a difference. That sounds great.
ReplyDeleteYeah, it is amazing how much more potent they can be. You think you're billy badass after using enough smelling salts and then this comes along and floors you, haha.
DeleteI just ordered some ammonia caps, so that'll be fun to try before deadlifting next week. Do you only use the nose tork at meets?
ReplyDeleteI mean, do you mainly use nose tork at meets? My reading comprehension is great
DeleteI only psyche up at meets, period. I don't ever do it in training. So on that note, I'll only use nose tork or ammonia at meets. I do have videos of me using ammonia in training, but it was mainly to get a feel for it before a meet. Once I learned what it was like, I only ever used it for meets.
DeleteFirst time I used nose tork, my immediate reaction was to try and run the opposite direction but collapse on the floor into somewhat of a lunge position, scream profanities, and then cry for 5 minutes.
ReplyDeleteLike a real man.