Peak Performance: Elevate Your Game, Avoid Burnout, and Thrive with the New Science of Success
Rate it:
Open Preview
4%
Flag icon
Both runner and consultant shined extremely bright, only to see their performance plateau, their health suffer, and their satisfaction wane.
4%
Flag icon
We, the authors of this book, are the runner (Steve) and the consultant (Brad).
4%
Flag icon
Is healthy, sustainable peak performance possible? If so, how? What’s the secret? What, if any, are the principles underlying great performance? How can people like us—which is to say, just about anyone—adopt them?
4%
Flag icon
Genetics play an unfortunately undeniable role
11%
Flag icon
The key to strengthening your biceps—and, as we’ll learn, any muscle, be it physical, cognitive, or emotional—is balancing the right amount of stress with the right amount of rest. Stress + rest = growth.
11%
Flag icon
periods of physical and psychological restoration.
11%
Flag icon
continual ebb and flow between stress and rest.
12%
Flag icon
“The leaps and bounds I’ve made over the last several years have come from outside the training environment and how I choose to recover,”
12%
Flag icon
it’s all the things she does when she isn’t training that allows her to do what she does when she is.
12%
Flag icon
the best summer athletes in the world and the best winter athletes in the world appeared to be training quite similarly.
13%
Flag icon
The best athletes in the world weren’t adhering to a “no pain, no gain” model, nor were they doing fitness-magazine popularized high-intensity interval training (HIIT) or random “workouts of the day.”
13%
Flag icon
they were systematically alternating between bouts of very intense work and periods of easy training and recovery, even if that meant walking up hills.
13%
Flag icon
the brightest minds spend their time either pursuing an activity with ferocious intensity, or engaging in complete restoration and recovery.
13%
Flag icon
it also fosters breakthrough ideas and discoveries
13%
Flag icon
1.Immersion: total engagement in their work with deep, unremitting focus
13%
Flag icon
2.Incubation: a period of rest and recovery when they are not at all thinking about their work
13%
Flag icon
3.Insight: the occurrence of “aha” or “eureka” moments—the emergence of new ideas and growth in their thinking
13%
Flag icon
The manner in which great intellectual and creative performers continually grow their minds mirrors the manner in which great physical performers continually grow their bodies.
13%
Flag icon
•Determine when your work regularly starts to suffer. When you find that point, insert a recovery break just prior to it.
14%
Flag icon
the radish-eaters had depleted their mental muscle by resisting the cookies, whereas the cookie-eaters had a full tank of psychological gas and thus exerted far more effort in trying to solve the problem.
14%
Flag icon
Participants who were forced to flex their mental muscle—be it to resist temptation, solve a hard puzzle, or make tough decisions—performed worse on a subsequent task that also required mental energy
14%
Flag icon
we have a single reservoir of brainpower for all acts of cognition and self-control, even those that are unrelated.
14%
Flag icon
they subsequently struggle on a wide range of unrelated tasks,
14%
Flag icon
Even physical challenges (e.g., performing a wall sit) can be impaired by exerting your mental muscle beforehand.
14%
Flag icon
the physical performance of people who are mentally fatigued suffers.
14%
Flag icon
those who were forced to resist the tempting food were more likely to give their phone number to, and even accept a coffee date
14%
Flag icon
You may want to think twice before encouraging your significant other to go on a diet.
14%
Flag icon
fMRI
14%
Flag icon
the brain of a tired person acts in a peculiar way.
15%
Flag icon
Other experiments show that after someone is forced to exert self-control, activity in the prefrontal cortex diminishes altogether.
15%
Flag icon
The good news is that just like the body, by stressing and allowing the mind to recover it also becomes stronger.
15%
Flag icon
the more we resist temptation, think deeply, or focus intensely, the better we become at doing so.
15%
Flag icon
by successfully completing smaller productive changes we can build the strength to complete larger ones in the future.
15%
Flag icon
we cannot continuously use our mind (at least not effectively) without at some point experiencing fatigue.
15%
Flag icon
All of this takes us back to where we started: stress + rest = growth.
15%
Flag icon
fatigue on one task spills over into the next, even if the two are completely unrelated.
15%
Flag icon
•Only take on a few challenges at once. Otherwise you’ll literally run out of energy.
15%
Flag icon
•Tweak your environment to support your goals.
16%
Flag icon
Waitzkin
16%
Flag icon
The Art of Learning, it’s how he cultivated that
16%
Flag icon
There was more than one occasion that I got up from the board four or five hours into a hugely tense chess game, walked outside the playing hall and sprinted fifty yards or up six flights of stairs. Then I’d walk back, wash my face, and be completely renewed. To this day, virtually every element of my physical training also revolves around one form or another of stress and recovery . . . If you are interested in really improving as a performer, I would suggest incorporating the rhythm of stress and recovery into all aspects of your life.
17%
Flag icon
He unknowingly stumbled upon a concept that would become one of the foremost concerns in modern society: stress.
17%
Flag icon
an innate stress response that we now know is shared by just about every living organism.
17%
Flag icon
humans and rats alike seemed to adapt to each unique stressor, building up increased resistance.
17%
Flag icon
They learned that stress isn’t just harmful; it can also serve as a stimulus for growth and adaptation.
17%
Flag icon
the body marshals an army of biochemical building blocks and directs them to the area under stress, making the body stronger and more resilient.
17%
Flag icon
once we cease lifting weights, the body transitions into something called an anabolic state, in which the muscle is built up so it can withstand more stress in the future.
17%
Flag icon
If the amount of stress is too large or lasts too long, however, the body fails to adapt.
17%
Flag icon
Today, many refer to the exhaustion stage as being under “chronic stress.”
17%
Flag icon
The body rebels and enters something called a catabolic process, or a state of persistent breakdown.
« Prev 1 3 11