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Train Your Mind Like You Train Your Body with Ashley Eckermann

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Manage episode 522665661 series 3532657
Content provided by Athletica. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Athletica or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode, the Athletes Compass team talks with Ashley Eckermann, a seasoned sports psychologist and Ironman athlete, about how athletes can shift from chasing motivation to building mental skills that actually work under pressure. Ashley debunks common myths about mindset, explains how to reframe fear and discomfort, and shares science-backed strategies to push through pain, race-day anxiety, and performance blocks. Drawing on her personal experiences and her work with athletes from youth to age 70+, Ashley shows how mental training can close the gap between practice and performance—and why “ready” is always a decision, not a feeling.

Key Takeaways

  • Mental performance is a skillset, not a personality trait or a feeling like motivation.
  • “Ready” is a decision—you don’t have to feel ready to be ready.
  • Athletes often underperform not due to fitness but because of emotional overload and mental unpreparedness.
  • Motivation is unreliable—it fades when things get hard. Discipline is a decision.
  • Physical discomfort is normal; learning to push through it (safely) is trainable.
  • Performance blocks (like freezing or anxiety) are neurological disruptions, not signs of weakness.
  • Language matters: Shift “I have to” to “I want to” to create a sense of choice and control.
  • Fear of failure in youth athletes is often rooted in fear of looking like a beginner, not true failure.
  • Emotions last 90 seconds—what prolongs them is rumination.
  • Reframing isn’t toxic positivity—it’s productive thinking.


  continue reading

105 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 522665661 series 3532657
Content provided by Athletica. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Athletica or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode, the Athletes Compass team talks with Ashley Eckermann, a seasoned sports psychologist and Ironman athlete, about how athletes can shift from chasing motivation to building mental skills that actually work under pressure. Ashley debunks common myths about mindset, explains how to reframe fear and discomfort, and shares science-backed strategies to push through pain, race-day anxiety, and performance blocks. Drawing on her personal experiences and her work with athletes from youth to age 70+, Ashley shows how mental training can close the gap between practice and performance—and why “ready” is always a decision, not a feeling.

Key Takeaways

  • Mental performance is a skillset, not a personality trait or a feeling like motivation.
  • “Ready” is a decision—you don’t have to feel ready to be ready.
  • Athletes often underperform not due to fitness but because of emotional overload and mental unpreparedness.
  • Motivation is unreliable—it fades when things get hard. Discipline is a decision.
  • Physical discomfort is normal; learning to push through it (safely) is trainable.
  • Performance blocks (like freezing or anxiety) are neurological disruptions, not signs of weakness.
  • Language matters: Shift “I have to” to “I want to” to create a sense of choice and control.
  • Fear of failure in youth athletes is often rooted in fear of looking like a beginner, not true failure.
  • Emotions last 90 seconds—what prolongs them is rumination.
  • Reframing isn’t toxic positivity—it’s productive thinking.


  continue reading

105 episodes

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