Mental "Freakin'" Grit Baby
Al' right – the much hinted at – highly anticipated –
post for Mental Grit. With the focus of Tough Mudder so much on the obstacles,
the camaraderie, and, of course, the mud baby, mental grit doesn’t always get the
air time that I think it deserves. But let me reassure you – mental right is
one of the biggest obstacles to ace on any Tough Mudder course. I’m sure you
educators will agree with me that grit, and especially mental grit, is a big factor in preparing for the
classroom each day as well.
So what do I mean by mental grit? Being a well-conditioned athlete, ready in every physical component of the game, certainly is big plus on the Tough Mudder course but at
the same time it doesn't really help you when it comes to the single, determining factor in a mudder - COMMITTING. I’m not talking about committing to signing
up for the event. Not committing to revving up with all the Whooooo Rahhhhhs and all
the other prerace banter. I am talking about committing yourself to jumping in
a freezing as* industrial trash can of icy water (boulder size ice as Patrick can
attest).
You have to commit yourself to the act of crawling through mud while
electrical wires zap your head (you can actually recreate this one yourself – go put on
a bucket over your hit and hit it with a hammer). You have to commit, in all honesty,
to things that hurt, exhaust you physically, and ultimately, well, frankly hurt – did I mention that. To me this is what mental grit is all about. One must have the fortitude
to commit with all this in mind because by simply signing up for the race and skipping an
obstacle – well there is no one to kid but yourself.

But I keep coming back and having at it. It is actually
funny that at about 3 days from every race I fall into the obstacle mind trap, “Why am I doing this again?” I’ve even developed an irrational
fear of the Dong Dangler obstacle today – craziness? Maybe since it doesn't show up on the Tough Mudder website as an obstacle any longer)
I hope my fellow educators out there can relate a little to
what I am saying. I know everyday there are students, teachers, administrators
that you don’t want to see. There are students who have so much stacked up
against them at home that it is simply exhausting thinking about managing them
in the classroom. But you come back and you try again. Yes, of course, we all
have mortgages and other bills we need to pay. I guess I’m not really speaking
to those educators who have gotten into teaching for the monetary benefits. But
there is something that keeps us coming back. And dealing with all the crap
that we face takes a great deal of mental grit. This is why I think we always
have to keep one central question out in front of us –
What mudder are you
preparing for?
Of course, I am not speaking in the literal sense of a Tough
Mudder race (even though we would love to see you at one). I am speaking about
those things you want to do in life that are going to take a great deal of
mental grit to deal with – either because there are difficult choices that need
to be made, people we don’t want to work with that need to be consulted, or
just looking ahead at all of the ways you are unprepared. This is where the
concept of mental grit is just so important.
And I think I have a good way to get started. I will
absolutely do nothing if I sat around and thought of all the reasons I am
unprepared for Miami. I’m not speaking about injuries here. Nothing I can do
about that madness and if anything happens there that is more pain than mental
grit. I am talking about the anxiety of being hit on the head with an
electrical wire. The anxiety of failing on an obstacle in front of my Bruddas.
Or the rings – screw those – my shoulder is already rejecting you and I say
that is OK for Miami.
I have decided to prepare for something completely different
and it has helped me completely redefine success. I never got into doing Tough
Mudder races to frame my experience in a blog or so that I can mystify others
about all the things one has to go through to finish a race. Now I mean having others think you are a bad ass is cool and all don’t get me wrong. But I was never into this thing to
discover some transcendent experience of who I am. No higher calling for me
here. I mean come on – I became a Baha’i back in 1995. That is about as transcendent
as I think I’m going to get for one lifetime. If that doesn't give me a higher sense of self - this little Tough Mudder race isn't going to help.
I got into Tough Mudder for one thing only – to get up off
my couch. That was my goal. Get off this cholesterol medicine. Lose 20 pounds
or so – this morning I was 193.5 and I started this adventure at 209. And with
injuries comes redirection and regrouping.
But I’ve discovered something about myself. There are
smaller victories to be had along the way. One victory I have is I’ve
become pretty damn good at Yoga. I can hold the Crane pose now for almost 20
seconds with no toes on the ground. The first time I did that I yelled so loud my wife thought I hurt myself - again! Just pumped up though. My flexibility has increased dramatically.
There are moves that I can do now that I wasn’t able to do 5 weeks ago. And I
can see the changes in me! That is exciting stuff.
All of this to me revolves around the question – What are
your preparing for? And what type of mental grit is it going to take to keep
you motivated to keep at it each and everyday – especially those days when it
completely freakin' sucks! Along the way you find your victories and learn to do things
that you thought impossible. I can’t tell you how far I’ve come with this Yoga
thing. I mean – Yoga is ridiculously hard – especially for someone who hates
exercises that are ridiculously hard.

I do feel a little under dressed without an arm full of tattoos but that is for another post. (That I think takes a little more grit than I have honestly.) What they forget is
my goal is not Miami. My goal is not even a a single obstacle. Hell if I just touch
the rings and fall in the water that counts as an attempt. OK so I will actually hold on right-handed for a second. My goal is something
much bigger. My goal is the WTM and it is going to take a whole lot of mental
grit to get me there.
Just a thought, but why don't we plan on going through Electroshock Therapy with our arms wide this time? We've done through fast...we've gone through slow...we've gone through as a group...we've gone through individually. The one thing we haven't done is the arms outstretched method...what do you think? Is there enough Mental Grit here to do that?
ReplyDeleteMy mental grit o' meter is pretty taxed out on Miami - I mean one can have only so much grit before you become a bit scratchy. The last thing I want to be is scratchy. Oh yeah - and electrocuted. I think I'll be satisfied with a Saturday and Sunday Mudder but I can still take some great video.
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