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Tag: Fitness

David Goggins – toughest man alive

David Goggins – toughest man alive
 I love to read, listen and find out about people who overcome great struggle and defy the odds.  They are no different to you or me, so how do they build that inner strength and where do they get that drive to keep going when things get tough.  What makes them superhuman?
                                                                
David Goggins is the toughest man alive.

There’s no doubt about it. Goggins is the only member of the US Armed Forces to complete SEAL training, US Army Ranger School, and Air Force Tactical Air Controller training.

 

Any of those accomplishments alone would have been impressive, but that’s not all.

He’s also the current Guinness record holder for the most number of pull-ups done in 24 hours. Alongside that record are multiple first-place finishes at the most brutal ultra-endurance events, which attracts the toughest competitors from around the world.

How does someone consistently push himself to his physical and mental limits all the time?

Let’s find out.

Lesson 1: Purpose Trumps Motivation

David Goggins doesn’t believe in motivation. In his own words, “Motivation is crap. Motivation comes and goes.”

Purpose, on the other hand, is something that Goggins can get behind.

After some of his fellow SEALs were killed in a military operation, Goggins signed up for the San Diego One Day, which was a 24-hour race where competitors would run as many miles as they could. His intention was to use this race as a qualifier for future ultramarathons, which would allow him to raise money for the Special Operations Warrior Foundation. For this race to count, he would have to run at least 100 miles in 24 hours.

The problem?

Goggins was not a runner at all. Weighing anywhere from 240 – 270 lbs, Goggins was a big man who was into powerlifting more than anything else. That bulk had served him well in the SEALs, but it was unheard of for anyone at that size to participate in long distance runs. Heck, he hadn’t put on running shoes at all in the past year.

And yet, he somehow made it to the 70-mile mark within the first 12-13 hours. But the process had been brutal; Goggins got this far only through sheer force of will.

Goggins was in a bad place. All the metatarsal bones in his feet were broken. There were stress fractures, shin splints, and muscles tearing. He was peeing blood down his leg because he couldn’t make it to a toilet 20 feet from him.

He was on the brink of death, but he didn’t quit. He went on slowly to finish the race, finishing the 100 miles well within the allocated 24 hours.

How did he do it? Was it the mental strength that came from his cause? It would seem that way, but that’s not what really happened:

“Everyone asks me, were you thinking about the guys that died at that time? I’m not gonna lie; I wasn’t. This became a personal thing, this became me against this race; me against the kids that called me nigger; me against me. It just became something I took so violently personal.”

Even after finishing Navy SEAL and Ranger school training, the 100-mile race was the toughest challenge Goggins had faced yet.

Pain obliterates our ability to think and function. But David Goggins was fuelled by a purpose greater than himself, something more compelling than that pain.

It turns out that you can still keep going if you have such a purpose.

Lesson 2: Deconstruct Things

So how exactly did Goggins power through the remaining 30 miles?

“I broke this thing down into small pieces. I said I got to get nutrition; I got to be able to stand up before I can go through the 30 miles […] I taped up my ankles, and then my feet, and that’s how I got through that race”

It’s an experience the SEAL would likely never forget.

This lesson of mental deconstruction has its roots in a process that all Navy SEALs must go through — hell week. It’s the toughest period of SEAL training; trainees are put through 125 hours of continuous training, and typically get only two hours of sleep during that period. They’re constantly cold, wet, and miserable.

The idea is to drain the trainees physically and mentally, and then see what sort of decisions they make. Instructors do their best to make trainees ring the bell, which is used to announce that they’re quitting. Nobody holds back here.

David Goggins went through 3 hell weeks — all in a span of a year.

Rolled over from his previous two classes first due to illness and then to injury, he was given one last chance to complete SEAL training. Goggins did just that, focusing on one challenge at a time. He would eventually graduate in this final attempt.

Broken down into small pieces, there’s no obstacle that is insurmountable. We find that there’s always step that’s actionable. Add up the small bits, and we would’ve accomplished something we never thought possible.

One step at a time is how 100-mile marathons get completed.

Just like in life, we get overwhelmed with things when we look to far ahead, the end goal seems so far away that we just give up.  Instead look only at today and what ACTION you can take today to get nearer to your goals.

Lesson 3: Remember The 40% Rule

Unbeknownst to Goggins, Jesse Itzler was participating in the same San Diego One Day race as well. The only difference was that he had participated with a six-man relay team.

Intrigued by how Goggins had manically completed the race despite his brutal injuries, Itzler invited the SEAL to live with him for a month. He wanted to learn more about the man that had finished a race despite being so ill-prepared. Goggins agreed with one condition: Itzler would do anything he said, no matter what.

On the first day, Itzler was made to do a hundred pull-ups.

Itzler did eight on his first set, then six, and then fewer still. His arms were aching, but Goggins wouldn’t relent. He stood and watched as Itzler struggled, doing one pull-up at a time.

Itzler would finish his repetitions. As he recalls in Living with a Seal:

“He [Goggins] showed me, proved to me right there that there was so much more, we’re all capable of so much more than we think we are. […] He would say that when your mind is telling you you’re done, you’re really only 40 percent done”

Research suggests that statement – the 40% rule – has some truth. We are often physically more capable than we perceive ourselves to be. For instance, researchers found that subjects who were given a placebo but told it was caffeine were able to lift significantly more weight than those who were really given caffeine.

There’s a reserve tank within us that we never really tap on. Only by pushing ourselves to our limits — and then breaking them — can we reach our full potential.

I personally find this with Kundalini Yoga, when it gets so hard its very easy and to give up but we do not want to programme our neural pathways into believing that we are weaker than we are.  So breathe through the pain and know you can go further than the monkey mind tells you.

Lesson 4: Mental Visualisation

David Goggins believes that he’s the toughest man on the planet. He thinks that he can complete virtually any task set before him.

He probably can. But the point is that you have to see yourself accomplishing something before it really happens. The mind has to conceive it before the body can achieve it.

The question he asks himself in times of struggle contains only two simple words: “what if?”

When he first walked into the Navy SEAL recruiter’s office, Goggins was told that there were only 35 African-Americans in the past 70 years who had made it through. Goggins asked himself — “what if I could be the 36th?”

These days, he asks himself the same question whenever he’s struggling through a run. It’s this question that helps him get through when his body and mind are broken and begging for him to stop.

Seeing himself succeed and do the impossible gives him the shivers. That drives him to attack every day and challenge with a vengeance.

                                                       

Lesson 5: Use Your Cookie Jar

Goggins has a secret weapon that he calls upon when he’s about to break.

Like many others, he has a cookie jar that he reaches into for the occasional treat. But this jar doesn’t contain any of the things you might typically find; there are no Oreos or Chips Ahoy cookies in there.

Instead, it contains every setback he has overcome. He’ll remember that he’s a Navy SEAL, who’s completed hell week three times. He’ll remind himself that he’s been through this pain before – and survived. The obstacle in front of him is nothing compared to what he has faced.

“Even the toughest man, in times of suffering, we forget how tough we really are”

Goggins never dwells on his accomplishments. The only time he revisits them is when he needs extra fuel for a push he’s making. He allows himself to reach into his cookie jar only when there’s a need. It’s never a treat.

This is a fab one, we simply remember and visualise the times when we achieved greatness, when we

Lesson 6: Be Willing To Suffer

You wouldn’t know it, but Goggins hates running.

He hates it with a passion. Growing up, Goggins has always been on the larger side. He loved powerlifting and had the physique to show for it. But in the world of Ultra, such a large frame is virtually unheard of. It was just inefficient to move that much weight over such long distances.

Goggins knew he was going to suffer — that was precisely his plan. That was the only way he was going to raise enough funds for the Special Operations Warrior Foundation.

“People respond to pain. If I go out and wash cars for $10, who gives a damn? People want to see you throw up, cry and go through tremendous suffering.”

But for David Goggins, suffering is not just about raising funds. As he says: “suffering is the true test of life”.

Goggins isn’t training just for a race. He’s training for the tragedies that inevitably strike each and every one of us. He does this so he doesn’t fall apart if he gets the 2 A.M. call from the hospital informing him that his mother has passed away.

In other words, David Goggins is the modern day stoic. But unlike the ancient philosophers who advised that we should periodically embrace suffering, Goggins has actually made suffering a habit.

Strengthen your mind and your resolve by voluntarily putting yourself through situations in which you struggle. Callus your mind the same way you do your hands. Take the path of most resistance every day of your life.

That’s how David Goggins has become the toughest man alive. And according to him, the happiest as well:

“Having lived the life I’ve lived, and having seen the other side, not being afraid to attack what was in front of me, has made me happy.”

–

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Author Inner Work Can SuckPosted on May 21, 2018May 21, 2018Categories Inspiring people, mind hackingTags anxiety, david goggins, depression, exercise, Fitness, happiness, mentalhealth, mindfulness, mindhacking1 Comment on David Goggins – toughest man alive

Steve Maxwell – Daily Routines

Steve Maxwell – Daily Routines

I was doing my usual scroll through youtube channels watching Joe rogan and others interview this guy called Steve Maxwell. He is a physical educator. He conducts seminars all over the world on mobility, balance, strength and conditioning, and Jiu Jitsu. He is known for being one of the first people to introduce America to the kettle bell. He’s also known for having a unique perspective on fitness that focuses more on functional movements over aesthetics and well-being over performance.

He is also a Minimalist and nomad. He travels with a rucksack around the wold and has no home at all.

I needed to find out more about this guy.. I found a great video with him and he goes through his daily routine.  I believe I have tried each one (apart from the penis and ball massage of course..u need to watch the vid to find out wtf)… but I hsve never been persistant so have not experience long lasting benefits.

His daily routine is incredible but he seems tI have it mastered. I believe he was in the military so his discipline for bed making and organisation is a lot to do with his time there.

Daily Routine of Steve Maxwell

1. Positive Affirmations

Today I will see only the good. Only good comes to me. Only good comes from me.”

“I will endeavour to be the best person I can be.”

“I will try to see the best in everyone else.”

Those are only a few, but they give you a good idea of what I do.

If you project love, energy, and goodness, then you will attract the same. It’s the universal principle of law of attraction. If you are manifesting unpleasant situations in your life, then you’re projecting negative energy. You are spending too much time concentrating on negative things.

Thoughts are things. Thoughts are energy. If you put the thought into words and speak them, you give them power. You energize the thought. And that thought will go out into the Universe and bring back the exact same energy. So if you are cursing someone or you are coming up with negative statements, you are only going to bring that same type of negative energy back to yourself. So I try to avoid that.

2.

Physical Exercises

Head

I do a vigorous head massage. I massage pressure points on my forehead, my face, and my sinuses.

Eye Yoga

I also do a particular Chinese eye exercise. I place my thumbs on my temples. I rub my eyebrows under my eyes. I massage my eyes, and then palm them. Then I do blinking and eye yoga. Basically it’s just moving the eyes in all different positions. Sometimes I resist the movement of the eye ball with the finger in a certain direction.

Ears

Then I will massage the ears vigorously. My ears are damaged from years of college wrestling and Jiu Jitsu. They are referred to as cauliflower ears. They have a lot of scar tissue. I was told that because of the damage of the ear, my pressure points are somewhat messed up, but I massage them anyway.

Drums of Heaven

Then I do a Taoist Yoga exercise called Drums of Heaven. I palm my ears, and then I used my index fingers to strike the back of my cranium. It makes the hollow drumming, booming sound in your inner ear. It’s very good for your ear nerve.

Juice of Jade

Then I roll my tongue sixteen times. I like to lick the front of the teeth, all around the gums circle it sixteen times clockwise and then counter-clockwise. Then I do the same in the inside of the teeth right where the teeth meets the gums. This produces a lot of saliva. You swish the saliva around 34 times from side to side. This is especially good for gum and teeth health. Then you swallow it three times with the tongue pressed up on the roof of the mouth.

That’s called Juice of Jade.

Jaw and Fingers

Then I do some jaw exercises.

Then I usually massage my fingers, each knuckle, and bend the finger back. I’m not cracking per say. It’s just to bend and twist the fingers, to work those pressure points.

 

Back and Neck

Then I’ll throw the pillows on the floor and do some neck exercises, side to side.

And then I’ll sit up and arch my back.

I do some baby rolls. I’m rolling over like a little baby. I’m only using my head and neck to do it.

There’s another movement I do. It’s similar to a Jiu Jitsu move where you move your head out of the way like I’m going to do the bump and roll escape when a person is mounted on you. In Jiu Jitsu, this is called the upa. I don’t actually bend my legs, but I kind of do a similar motion with just arching my back and activating the posterior spot.

Then I sit up and do head nods and turn my head back and forth. My feet are on the floor at this point.

Sometimes I’ll do some tapping and massage.

Mouth and Teeth Care

Then I swish with this special mouthwash that I buy from this company called Uncle Harry’s Natural Products. It’s unbelievable. This guy makes the best stuff.

I also do tongue scraping.

I then brush my teeth using a special natural clay toothpaste from Uncle Harry’s. I rinse my mouth with Uncle Harry’s special alkalizing mouth wash. I do more gum massage with a gum massager.

Scalp

Then I massage my head with a little round thing that has little points on it. Then I put a couple of drops of Uncle Harry’s hair tonic on my head and massage it into the scalp. It’s very invigorating. The smell is like eucalyptus-peppermint.

Brushing Body

Then I dry brush massage my body. I use a natural bristle brush. It’s called a Swedish dry brush. It’s fantastic for the skin. This keeps the skin very supple, youthful, and healthy.

And then if I’m going to go train, I’ll usually take a damp cloth and rub it over the body and just air dry.


“You don’t need testosterone supplements.”


Cold Water Treatment

Tapping and Kidney Rub

If I’m not going to go out and train, I’ll take an ice cold shower. While I’m in the shower, I do these particular tapping drills for my arms.

I also rub my kidneys.

Deer Exercise

I do something called a Deer Exercise where you hold the testicles in one hand, and rub the hand counter-clockwise. Then you hold the testicles in your other hand, and rub counter-clockwise. You don’t need testosterone supplements. The deer exercise get your old t-levels up there really good.

Kidneys and Tapping

Then I do kidney tapping on the back. And then another kidney rub in a circular motion for digestion.

Then I do tapping for the legs, and then I massage them.

Of course you pull the fingers and the toes. This all under the ice cold water.

More Brushing

Then I do a special towel treatment that I learnt from a Russian guy. He was a sauna master. They have a particular routine where you really briskly rub yourself down with a coarse towel. The way to make a coarse towel is just by washing it, and leaving it to line dry, so that it becomes really coarse and rough. Great for the skin.

Walk and Morning Workout

Then I’ll usually go out and take a walk using the Russian breathing ladders, which is another form of Chi training. Lately I’ve been going out and doing my morning workout. If I do a workout, I’ll come back and wash the perspiration off. I’ll do the cold shower treatment after that.

Coffee

I must admit I like my coffee. I’ve had a love/hate relationship with coffee. But we travel with a little micro-filter coffee press. We don’t geek out too much. We don’t buy special coffee beans or anything. We just try to get nice, organic beans when we can.

Bowel Movement

I will not eat any food until I’ve had a good bowel movement every morning. Eating before you have a bowel movement is a really filthy habit. You need to eliminate and get rid of the previous day’s waste before you start gorging yourself with food.

It always amazes me to see these giant fat people in America where the first thing they do is rush down to the breakfast buffet in these Hotels, and gorge themselves with pastries and eggs and toast and cereal.

It makes me want to vomit just watching these people stuffing their bodies. Your body is not nearly ready. It has not got rid of the metabolic waste from the day before. And you know most of these people probably don’t shit for three or four days at a time, so you can imagine what their colons look like.

I personally do not eat until I have a bowel movement. People don’t realize just how important that elimination is. You’re basically re-absorbing the waste through the gut membrane into the blood. Eating intefers with elimination. That’s why sometimes I like to have a little workout too.

That routine varies a little bit here and there. But that’s something I do virtually every single day.

Of course, I also wear a fitness tracker. I’m wearing a FitBit Surge right now. I’m pacing as we talk. I’m walking around the room like a caged tiger. I like to walk and talk on the phone with my ear buds in. I’m pretty close to 14,000 steps so far today.

 


Length

“Get your ass in bed an hour early.”


This morning routine takes about 15 to 20 minutes. And then I’ll go out and train. That can take anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour and a half depending on how I feel and what my goals are for that day.

I’ve engineered my life so I don’t have to go work some job that I don’t care for. I’ve engineered my life where I do have this time to spend.

Even when I had my gym, Maxercise, I still had my morning routine. I would just get up an hour early and do it, which meant going to bed early. Even when I had a full day’s work at my gym, and I used to work some pretty extensive hours, I always did a morning routine. Not too different from what I spoke to you about.

Let’s say you rush in the morning, and you take 15 minutes to have coffee and breakfast. If you had to recommend two or three things that you absolutely have to do in the morning, what would they be?

I’d recommend doing something at night. Get your ass in bed an hour early. There’s no reason for people to stay up so late.

People talk about not having enough sleep, but what they’re doing is they’re stimulating themselves, watching nonsense on the television or on the computer.

A lot of guys surf the web on social media, which is okay. Once you get past ten o’clock, that computer screen has a very stimulating effect on your nervous and glandular system. It also produces wakefulness similar to sunlight.

So this is his daily routine and so inspiring.

 

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Author Inner Work Can SuckPosted on May 16, 2018May 16, 2018Categories Inspiring peopleTags energy, Fitness, Jujitsui, Minimalist., Nomad, nutrition, Steve maxwellLeave a comment on Steve Maxwell – Daily Routines

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