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Visualization
Fitness:The
New Visualization Breakthrough: Mental Training Tactics for Health and Success
Part
2 Continued
from Part 1 So
much for visualization being a "cheesy" self-help technique. Although
visualization is widely used today, even people who are familiar with it often
don't realize its many applications. Arguably the most common use of visualization
is by athletes, musicians and other performers as a form of mental rehearsal.
Research shows that "practicing in your mind" is almost as effective
as practicing physically, and that doing both is more effective than either one
alone. A
common use of visualization in the fitness context is goal visualization.
In your minds eye, you can see yourself having already achieved your physique
goal or your ideal goal weight. You can also visualize a specific performance
goal such as completing a difficult workout or a heavy lift like a squat or bench
press. One
creative way you can use mental imagery is called process visualization.
Once you've set your goals, it's easy to come up with a list of the daily habits,
behaviors and action steps necessary to reach your goal. So write down the action
steps and visualize them - the entire process, not just the end result. See yourself
food shopping and grabbing fruits, vegetables and lean proteins, ordering healthy
foods from restaurant menus, saying no to sodas and drinking water instead, and
going to the gym consistently and having killer workouts. Some people visualize
their entire perfect day as they would want it to unfold. When you
do this as vividly, emotionally and in as much detail as you can, you will be
neurologically priming your brain to carry out those behaviors. The
least known of all mental imagery techniques is called physiology visualization.
An example would be picturing the fat burning process in your body or seeing the
muscle fibers growing larger and larger. Using this technique, could it be possible
that you might be giving subconscious instructions to your body's cells, organs
and tissues? Well,
consider the work of Dr. Carl Simonton, a physician and cancer researcher who
taught his patients (as one part of a comprehensive program), how to visualize
powerful immune cells devouring the cancer cells. Im not suggesting that
you can cure cancer or materialize a lean and muscular body just by visualizing,
(there's a step in between thought and manifestation - it's called action - a
step that many self help experts forget to mention). However, thoughts
and mental images are the precursors to action and the fact that a mind-body connection
definitely exists makes this an exciting prospect. Scientists
have established the mind-body link in many contexts, and not just by the existence
of a placebo effect. Theres also direct evidence as in the way emotional
stress can contribute to physical disease. The mind does influence the body! The
mere fact that a branch of science has been devoted to this area is proof that
it deserves critical investigation and is not just the domain of infomercial self
help gurus. The science is called psychoneuroimmunology. Using
physiology visualization, you could, even in the middle of a workout,
imagine the fat burning process taking place, and visualize fat being released
from adipose tissue storage in your abdominal region or elsewhere. You could see
the free fatty acids entering your bloodstream, being carried to the working muscles
and being burned for energy in the muscle cells. You could also visualize the
physiology of muscle growth. To
make your imagery as accurate and detailed as possible, my best suggestion is
to refer to an anatomy & physiology textbook that shows pictures of fat cells,
blood vessels, myofibrils, motor units, sarcomeres, and cell organelles like the
mitochondria, so you know what the structures look like. You could also get more
details about the processes by looking up lipolysis, hypertrophy or beta oxidation. Even
if you had no idea what the internal structure and workings of the body were like,
you could still use this method. Your body responds to mental imagery even if
it isn't anatomically correct. We know from the field of hypnosis that the subconscious
mind responds well to metaphor maybe even better than literal suggestions.
Facts and logic are the domain of the conscious mind, while emotion and metaphor
can slip right past the conscious and into the subconscious. Dr. Simonton often
wrote about his young patients who created (metaphorical) mental images of immune
system cells as "knights in shining armor", slaying "the dragon"
of cancer cells. One
of your greatest mental powers is imagination. You can visualize anything you
want and you can embellish and exaggerate your imagery as much as you want. For
example, you could imagine the free fatty acids being burned for energy in the
"cellular powerhouse" - the mitochondria - and you could imagine the
mitochondria as a fiery furnace... "incinerating" the fat! I think its
a pretty cool idea to "see" your fat cells shrinking and visualize your
body as a "fat burning furnace. Should
you not believe that there's anything to the physiology visualization technique,
that's ok, because we know that the subconscious is deductive. Just give it a
goal, tell it what you want and it will get you there automatically by altering
your attention and behavior. Therefore, we can be confident that physiology visualization
will be effective even if only as a subconscious directive about your desired
goal. If science someday provides us with conclusive evidence that visualization
actually does cause cellular - physiological changes in the body, well, that's
just all the better.
About
The Author Tom Venuto is a bodybuilder, gym owner, freelance writer, success
coach and author of "Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle" (BFFM): Fat
Burning Secrets of the World's Best Bodybuilders and Fitness Models. Tom
has written over 150 articles and has been featured in IRONMAN magazine, Natural
Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Muscle-Zine, Exercise for Men and Mens
Exercise. Tom's inspiring and informative articles on bodybuilding, weight loss
and motivation are featured regularly on dozens of websites worldwide. For information
on Tom's Burn
The Fat e-book, click
here. |