BY MATTHEW TOREN
Success
in life is what you do with your ideas and vision. While action is important,
the first step of success deals with training your mind.
While your brain can be a
powerful tool for any entrepreneur, it can cause someone to stray from his
focus. So many times entrepreneurs find themselves off in the weeds thanks to
some thinking that got them into trouble.
If you find yourself
struggling with a calm mind under pressure, too much anxiety or plagued by
worst-case scenario thoughts, here are three simple skills that with just a
little bit of practice and a few minutes a day, will help every entrepreneur
master the mind.
Get a meditation practice. Meditation is not just for
monks, yogis or hippies.
Even if you never achieve
nirvana, the practice of meditation itself will give you significant health
benefits.
Studies show that meditation is associated with all sorts of
improvement, including reducing stress and anxiety, lessening depression and
even improving cognitive function in the brain. Research also suggests that a
meditation practice can reduce blood pressure, pain response and increase
cellular repair and regeneration.
"Mindfulness meditation
has been reported to enhance numerous mental abilities, including rapid memory
recall,” Catherine Kerr of the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging and the
Osher Research Center told PsychCentral. “Our
discovery that mindfulness meditators more quickly adjusted the brain wave that
screens out distraction could explain their superior ability to rapidly
remember and incorporate new facts.”
To get started, researchers
and advocates of meditation suggest anywhere from three to five minutes of
devoted daily meditation time when a person first wakes up.
Spend a minute decompressing. You probably think becoming a
mental ninja takes a lot of time and energy, but the reality is you can get
your brain back on track within a minute.
Kathryn Tristan, researcher
at Washington University’s School of Medicine and author of Why Worry? Stop Coping and Start Living, explains some of
the problems that can accompany worrying too much.
“I believe that worry is part
of a psychological immune system that tries to alert, warn and protect us from
possible dangers,” Tristan said in an interview with PyschCentral.com. This sort of reaction can
wreck havoc on our health.
She suggests that instead of
focusing on the worst outcome, people should think of positive alternatives.
Being an entrepreneur means
calculated risks and sometimes long days that can cause you to overemphasize
the negative. When you feel yourself spiraling too far down the rabbit hole of
worst-case scenarios, recognize that you have the power to exercise your mental
muscles and pivot into better thoughts.
Set your watch for 60 seconds
and in that time try to think through all the best-cases scenarios that could
happen. For example, if you need an expensive piece of equipment for your
business, instead of talking about how you can’t afford it, spend one minute
thinking up ideas of how you could find a way to make that purchase happen. I
Practice daily idea generation. If your brain is a muscle,
then it too can get tired out with exercise. How do you exercise it? Thinking.
In his book Choose Yourself, James Altucher, suggests
using brain exercises to overcome doubt, anxiety and to change your life.
One exercise he suggests
involves writing down 10 ideas pertaining to anything (and it doesn’t need to
be focused strictly on business). The point is to not only brainstorm but also
use the “idea muscle and turn it into a machine.”
It makes sense. After a good
workout your body has all these great endorphins and you feel happy, relaxed
and calm. Working your brain out with some strenuous exercise could produce
similar effects on the mind.
This sort of activity can
also help when you are feeling restless. Instead of staying up with sleepless
nights of worry, anxiety or even anger, get up and find a notepad and start
writing down a list of 10 ideas. Make your brain work and tire that mental
muscle out with lots of positive reps.
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