{"id":53,"date":"2015-04-09T15:01:25","date_gmt":"2015-04-09T13:01:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.swimmo.com\/blog\/?p=53"},"modified":"2015-04-25T14:14:46","modified_gmt":"2015-04-25T12:14:46","slug":"become-luke-skywalker-and-fulfill-your-destiny-think-or-swim","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.swimmo.com\/secure\/wordpress\/inspiration\/become-luke-skywalker-and-fulfill-your-destiny-think-or-swim\/","title":{"rendered":"Become Luke Skywalker & Fulfill Your Destiny. Think Or Swim"},"content":{"rendered":"
What Mr. Ford was saying with that quote is, the way we think about ourselves will ultimately impact our results in our lives, especially in the realm of swimming competitively.<\/p>\n
The mind is a fascinating aspect of the human body. For centuries, philosophers and psychologist have been debating about the mind, thoughts, and emotions. Though they have not figured it out, there seems to be rules that hold to be self-evident such as, what we think affects our actions<\/a>.<\/p>\n There are two major ways our thoughts come to impact our actions: through our self-esteem and through our self-actualization.<\/p>\n Self-esteem is how we currently value ourselves in relation to the rest of the world. It impacts the type of value that we believe we are creating on a swim team or in the water.<\/p>\n If we believe ourselves to be less valuable, then we are likely to become less valuable because we will swim to fit our beliefs. This is an informal definition of what psychologist call self-fulfilling prophecy.<\/p>\n The self-fulfilling prophecy is a belief that at first is false, but we act in a way that eventually make the once false belief become true.<\/p>\n An example is, if you think you are going to break a record this year in swimming, then your mind will act and perform in a way that is consistent with your belief of breaking a record. It means you will practice your best, workout your best, and swim the best races you could.<\/p>\n Though we have spoken mostly about low self-esteem, too high of self-esteem can affect your swimming too. It will cause you to overestimate your abilities and take risks that you are going to lose. It is important to find a proper balance of self-esteem.<\/p>\n So what if your self-esteem is balanced and is aligned with the truth? Does that mean you cannot become a better swimmer with your thoughts?<\/p>\n According to psychologist, self-actualization is the desire to become more and fulfill what we believe to be our potential. If self-esteem is the way we currently value ourselves, then self-actualization is the value we think we can become.<\/p>\nSelf-Esteem<\/h2>\n
Self-Actualization<\/h2>\n