*Diet and Exercise are Useless Without Mind Power*

*By Tom Venuto
**Author of Burn the Fat, Feed the
Muscle<http://tz0527ho.burnthefat.hop.clickbank.net/>
**
*

Motivational speaker Jim Rohn once said, "I find it fascinating that most
people plan their vacations with better care than they plan their lives.
Perhaps it's because escape is easier than change."

Success psychologists say that 95% - 97% of the people in the world do NOT
have written goals and fail, while 3-5% have written goals and succeed.

If these statistics are correct, then Mr Rohn's observation really IS quite
fascinating isn't it?

Unfortunately for most people, the odds for success are actually even lower,
because out of the few people who do set goals, most don't take goal setting
seriously, they don't do it scientifically and they only do it once a year.

Goal setting is so important, that I always teach goal setting and mind
dynamics first, and only THEN, do I teach nutrition and training second.

*It doesn't matter how much you know about nutrition or exercise. Until
specialized fitness knowledge is linked with goals and directions, the
knowledge is useless and you won't accomplish very much or keep the changes
long term.*

In fact, I devoted the entire first chapter of my book, Burn the Fat, Feed
the Muscle <http://tz0527ho.burnthefat.hop.clickbank.net/> to the subject of
goals and constructive "mind programming" for successful, permanent behavior
change.

I've also studied neuro linguistic programming (NLP) for many years and more
recently spent many months researching the latest information about
neuroscience to see just how much of the traditional self help and goal
setting wisdom is actually backed by brain research.

As you start thinking about your goals for 2007 right now, I'd like to help
you start the year off right by sharing two very valuable, science based
tips on acheiving your goals:

*TIP #1: Repetition is an effective way to "plant" a goal in the
non-conscious mind*

Why don't most resolutions stick? Psychology and neuroscience today are
giving us the answers.

Thanks to new technologies in brain imaging, such as PET scans, SPECT scans
and functional MRI's, we can now actually see your thoughts as
electrochemical impulses and we can see the formation of new neural
connections in real time right before our eyes.

We can also see where, geographically, in your brain, a particular type of
thought is occuring. Most importantly, we can see how long it takes to form
strong neural patterns and what types of stimuli cause the patterns to form
more quickly

Here's what we've discovered:

Setting a goal once is a conscious activity. Willpower is also a conscious
activity. But research has shown that at least 5/6 of your brain power is in
the non conscious mind and that the information and instructions that reach
the non conscious mind are responsible for your automatic behavior.

Some pyschologists believe that 95% of our behaviors are unconscious and
automatic... more commonly known as habits.

Long term behavior changes don't take place when you set goals one time as
with most new years resolutions. There's an old saying in "self help"
circles that it takes at least 21-30 days to form a habit. This has now been
proven to be fairly accurate on a neurological basis.

New neural patterns begin to form only after they've been repeated enough
times. They continue to strengthen with further repetition. If you make
resolutions on January 1st and you don't continue to repeat and reinforce
your desire for those "goals," no new neural connection is formed, no new
habits are formed, no new behaviors are formed...

Your resolutions wither away and die and any results obtained through
willpower (trying to force the new behaviors through conscious effort), are
quickly lost when you slip back to your old ways.

What you repeat over and over again is programmed into the subconscious mind
and begins to take root. On a practical level, this means RE-writing your
goals everyday and thinking about them in positive terms and in mental
pictures, every day, repeatedly until the habit is formed and turned over to
"auto-piliot."

In 1956, when Earl Nightingale wrote "The Strangest Secret" is that we
become what we think about most of the time," we didnt know what we know now
about the brain.

Nevertheless, Earl was right.

You don't change your body by trying to change your body. You change your
body by creating new habitual patterns of thinking and visualizing.

Trying to force new behaviors with willpower while continuing with your old
ways of thinking will always fail because your automatic behavior is mostly
under non-conscious control.

Its not the resolution you set once... its the goals (mental thoughts and
images) you focus on all day long that create the long term (and automatic)
behavioral change... when you change your behaviors, you change your body
and your life...

*TIP #2: Emotion is a goal-turbocharger*

Is there any way around this tedious process of "mental programming" through
repetition? Not really. The fields of NLP and hypnosis have given us some
tools for creating more rapid changes, but ultimately you have to begin to
"run your own brain" and change your habitual way of thinking. No one else
can do it for you and there's no way around it.

There is however, a scientifically proven way to to speed up the process and
that is with the use of strong emotion.

Since modern imaging technology can see activity in the brain and scientists
have located the seat of emotions in the brain, we know that the strength
and number of neural connections associated with a thought or behavior are
increased when you're in a highly emotional state.

The neuron connections are also stronger, longer lasting and it takes longer
to lose a neural connection when it was formed with great emotion.

With this knowledge, we see another reason why new years resolutions fail:
They are set casually with no emotion and no strong emotional "reason why"
that gives you the leverage to you need to make a change permanent.

On January 1st, you may think you're setting "real" goals, but if you're
like most people, you're not only doing it a mere once a year and then
losing focus, you're also likely to be making flimsy, wishy-washy,
emotion-less "resolutions."

Zig Ziglar once said that, "A goal casually set and lightly taken will be
freely abandoned at the first obstacle."

You might want to back up and read that quote again, maybe even write it
down or print it out, because this one hits the bull's-eye!

This truly explains why New Year's resolutions almost never work, and why so
few people can keep off the pounds after they get rid of them.

Goal setting should not be casual or lightly taken. Goal setting is an
important and serious matter. This is not a game - this is your life, and
you only have one life to live.

Goal setting is also not a one time event - it is an ongoing process of
literally "re-wiring your brain." With the discovery of brain plasticity, we
now know that this is science fact, not self-help fiction.

Make the time to set REAL goals, today! Take it seriously, do it
scientifically, re-write your goals every day, think about them constantly,
and then take massive action.

Do it and this will be the most successful goal-achieving year of your life.

Train hard and expect success.

*Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
Author, Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle*


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