What Is Motivation? - MJ Fitness

What Is Motivation?

Going to the gym, staying on top of a meal plan and saving money can feel at times too easy when you’re highly motivated to stay on track. Hitting your first few PB’s and seeing weight change on the scale can be the thing that makes you show up the next day, but what happens when you don’t see the scale move? Or your warm-up weight feels heavier than usual? Maybe discipline is the ultimate way of unlocking your potential.

So... What is Motivation?

Motivation as a term can be broken down into two different categories that shift and influence human behaviour;

  1. Extrinsic Motivation Motivation that comes from outside of the individual and often involves external rewards, in a health based example that could be praise from a peer, winning a 10-week challenge or a trophy for a bodybuilding show.
  2. Intrinsic Motivation Motivation that arises internally from within the individual, such as reaching a new personal best, finishing that gruelly block of your plan or noticing yourself in the mirror after chest.

Motivation is a reward system for your body and soul, the dopamine your body releases when you are positively reinforced whether it be intrinsically or extrinsically can become addicting. It’s why it’s also so difficult to be forced to be motivated when you don’t see the bigger picture of why you do the things you do to accomplish your goals. But why does it seem so easy for others? In times of weakness we may look to comparisons of others around us that seem to be infinitely more motivated by some unstoppable force. In reality, the secret to winning may not be based on constantly motivating yourself and reaping temporary rewards, but accepting the challenges as stepping stones in a much longer, more tedious journey.


Discipline: You Reap What You Sow

What’s the secret then, if you can’t rely on motivation to push you each day, if plateau’s and sick days are inevitable, then what else could you possibly do? Become disciplined. Mirroring the motivation sources covered previously, specifically intrinsic motivation, being disciplined is by far one of the best skills you can learn to succeed at. When you know you’re disciplined, hitting a new personal best after pushing through a tough plateau reinforces your ability and mental fortitude to ignore temporary releases of negative emotions. Being disciplined reworks your mind to not expect or assume a feeling of positivity after completing a task, but assists you in looking to the future when you remind yourself why you started training, or eating well in the first place.


Very simply, the pay off you get from eventually meeting your goal, pushing yourself through moments you find are tough and looking at tomorrow as another step into a lifetime of motivating reinforcement because you believed in yourself and stayed on track, is immeasurable.


Where Do I Even Start? The River Analogy

Motivation and discipline are more allies than adversaries, they can effectively work with each other and achieve more together than they ever can alone. The River Analogy is a digestible way of looking at your goals and journey in a palatable way;


  • The Current: What is your overall goal? Is it weight loss, muscle gain or a mentality shift? That’s your Current. Something that continues to push and move forward, something with a start and an end, and with discipline you can learn to ride and control the current.
  • The Debris: The Debris is an analogy for obstacles, seemingly immovable objects that can knock you off your rhythm. They can set you back if you can’t learn to adjust, and recalculate your direction. Sometimes the obstacles feel too big and they do temporarily knock you off.
  • The Lily Pads: When you feel like you're sinking, when you’ve gone off track and lost sight of your current, you need a start point. You aim for the Lily Pads. This is your motivation, with its temporary boost you can set smaller more achievable goals that put you back on track and back in focus with your overall goal.

  • Wrapping Up

    Motivation is good for the mind and a great tool if you can master it, discipline is essential for growth and overall well being. To put yourself in uncomfortable positions, doing things that challenge you mentally and consistently be open to learning, will change your life. The catch is that you are the only person that can start your journey.

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