Get more reps from your workout!
Powerful Mental Strategies For Getting More Reps Out Of Every Single Set You Do
Want to learn how to
take your body further than you ever thought possible?
Your mind is the real key to achieving unbelievable
results.
Peak performance is a state of mind. No matter how prepared your
body is, if your mind is not functioning at the top of its game,
your performance will suffer. This is true of any sport and
extremely true in weight training. Your muscles may do the actual
work, but what is sending the message to do that work? Your
mind!
There are many techniques you can use to help your mind push your body far beyond what you may believe you're capable of. These mental tricks can help you get more results out of every single set you do.
1. Rewards
Say you're finishing the last few reps of a set. It's starting to
hurt and you're ready to quit. Imagine someone just offered you a
million dollars to get one more rep. You would find a way to get
that rep. Use other offers that would motivate you to keep going,
e.g. pizza if you're on a diet.
2. Ghost Spotters and Lighter
Weight
Imagine someone spotting you. Imagine this ghost spotter helping
you finish that rep. You can always try imagining the weight is
less than it actually is, too.
Here is a trick you can use to get the most out of high rep sets.
When the going gets tough, start doing consecutive small sets of five reps. When you can't get five reps, do sets of three reps. When three reps seems impossible, convince yourself to do just two more reps. When you can't do sets of two, tell yourself just one more rep. Keep trying to get just one more rep until you can't move.
Breaking it up like this will allow you to get many more reps than counting straight through one big set. You can do this right from the start as well. If you are doing a set of fifteen reps, do a set of five, another set of five, a set of three, then a set of two.
5. Pain Management
Pain tolerance is a big factor in weight training intensity. The
more pain you can take, the harder and longer you can push. A good
way to fight pain is to tell yourself that it is not your pain; it
is somebody else's. It sounds crazy but it works.
You can also try the Corsican Twin technique. Imagine the pain you are going through is being felt by someone you don't like. The more you put yourself through, the more punishment they take. It also helps if you're a little masochistic. Really hard trainers learn to love the pain (remember, we're not talking injury pain but hard work pain).
6. Self-Reprimand
To push harder, you may want to try self-reprimand, i.e. telling
yourself how lazy you are, how small and weak you are. You should
react by vigorously trying to prove yourself wrong.
7. Self-Praise
Self-praise is also good. Tell yourself how big and strong and
powerful you are and how this weight is child's play.
8. The Little Voice In Your
Head
Reprogram the little voice in your head. Most people have a little
voice in their head that warns them not to do things that may seem
unreasonable or threatening, e.g. you better not do that or you'll
hurt yourself, you can't lift that much, this hurts, let's quit.
This voice can undermine your confidence to lift extremely heavy
weight or get those last few reps.
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Reprogram your little voice to tell you things like: that felt pretty good, let's add more weight or you can do another rep. Don't get too out of control but don't be scared. You can usually do more than you think you can and you never know until you try. Don't automatically assume you'll never accomplish anything or you never will. |
9. Unreasonable Goals
Set almost unreasonable but achievable goals for yourself. Say for
example, you know you can curl 50 pounds for ten reps. Set the goal
of twelve reps and fight madly to get those twelve. It gives you
the incentive to improve.
10. Competitions
Have competitions with a training partner or with yourself. Whoever
gets the most reps with a certain weight or percentage of
bodyweight has to buy dinner. Challenge yourself to break personal
bests and reward yourself when you do. This type of competition can
dramatically increase intensity.
11. Explosive Imagery
Just before a set, put images of explosive power in your head, e.g.
rockets, artillery, a stampede, explosions, etc. This form of
imagery will start up your adrenaline and give you a little extra
kick in the pants to get your set going. Imagine this explosive
power rocketing the weights you are using.
12. Mind In Muscle
Try to put your mind in the muscle you're working. Try to
consciously fire the muscle fibers.
When the going gets tough, imagine your muscles as ratchets; stopping, redoubling the force, pushing a little more, stopping, redoubling, etc.
15. Positive and Negative
Stimuli
When doing exercises where you are pushing something away from you,
e.g. bench, imagine the bar as a negative stimulus (somebody you
don't like, a chainsaw, etc.). When doing exercises where you are
pulling something towards you, imagine the bar as a positive
stimulus (somebody you do like, a chocolate cake, etc.).
16. Donald Duck
If you find your inner voice speaking negatively, change the voice
so it sounds like Daffy or Donald Duck. You won't be inclined to
take it so seriously.
17. Enjoy It
Learn to enjoy the pain. Eat it up.
18. Borrow Energy
Borrow energy from other people. This can be done before a set or
when the going is getting tough. Using a mirror or looking
directly, look at someone squarely in the eyes. Give them a smile
or a nod or a psychotic grin and imagine yourself drawing energy
from them. At that point, two people are focusing their energy on
the set. You may or may not make friends with this one.
By Nick Nilsson






