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cover of episode David Goggins – PUSH YOURSELF EVERYDAY | Morning Motivation

David Goggins – PUSH YOURSELF EVERYDAY | Morning Motivation

2025/3/13
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David Goggins
一位从童年困难中崛起的退役海军陆战队员、极限超马拉松运动员和畅销书作者,通过自我反省和坚韧不拔的精神成就了非凡的成就。
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David Goggins: 自我对话和视觉化是我成功的关键。在我最艰难的时刻,我通过自我对话和视觉化让自己相信我是不可战胜的。即使身体处于极度痛苦的状态,我依然能够坚持下去。我利用这些负面经历作为动力,而不是让它们拖累我。我不断问自己,世界上还有谁能在这种情况下继续前进?答案是我自己。这种信念让我在比赛中坚持到了最后,也让我在今天的挑战中依然能够保持强大的心理韧性。

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David Goggins talks about using negative experiences and adversity as motivation to push forward and achieve personal goals.
  • Self-talk and visualization are crucial for motivation.
  • Adversity can be used as a powerful motivator.
  • Reframing negative experiences can fuel personal growth.

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Self-talk and visualization are two keys to my success. I believed for that last time 19 miles I was indestructible because I took myself in that chair Crapping up my back peeing blood on my leg shin splints stress fractures. I use all that for motivation versus negativity I use it for motivation. I said to myself who on this earth would still be going right now? You are you are

You got to be the hardest motherfucker on the planet. Is it true? I don't give a fuck. At that time, it got me to the finish line of that race. I believed it. I believe it today. I believed it enough to where my body said, he's not going to stop. And that's, I took all the negative things. I need to go to the hospital, this and that. And I used all, who the hell could even get on that chair? You did. Who the hell would even think about taping stretch fractures up there?

All those things I use for motivation. When you really sit back at your life and you're in that dark room and you're looking at where you started from and you tell yourself, God, dog, man, my mom is this way. My stepdad got murdered. My dad beat the shit out of me. I can't read and write to save my fucking soul. I've lied about it to everybody. I've cheated on all these tests. My God, man. And then you put a goal in your mind. How are you going to feel, man, when you accomplish this goal coming from that goal?

Coming from the f***ing hell you came from. A lot of people start from a good starting point. They have a good foundation. What if you can surpass all of these motherf***ers? What if everybody who was f***ing way up here started up here? And you had, you started with no legs. You had to grow f***ing legs to even start walking. And then crawling and then running. And then you start passing people and all that's given to them. I had to use all this negative s*** that was making me weak and horrible as a person.

I had to use this as the power that now fueled me. I had to flip it on its head and say, hold up, this might be exactly what I need. The darkness is exactly what I need. It's how you look at your situation. And I was looking at it all fucked up. These are the facts and they are undisputed. Your problems in your past aren't on anybody else's agenda. Not really. You may have a few people in your inner circle who care about what you're going through.

but for the most part no one gives a because they're dealing with their own issues and focused on their own lives i learned that the hard way on our drive from buffalo to 117 south mcguire street in brazil indiana when i was eight years old i assumed i was going to walk into the biggest pity party of all time i expected balloons cake ice cream and big warm hugs instead

It was as if all the pain and terror never happened. Sergeant Jack didn't deal in pity. He was out to harden my shell, and that's exactly what he did. Pity is a soothing balm that turns toxic. At first, when your family and friends commiserate with you and validate the reasons you have for grumbling about your circumstances, it lands like sympathy. But the more comfort pity brings you, the more external validation you'll crave, and the less independent you will become.

which will make it that much more difficult for you to gain any traction in life. That's the vicious cycle of pity. It saps self-esteem and inner strength, which makes it harder to succeed. And with each subsequent failure, you will be more tempted to pity yourself. Look, I get it. Life isn't fair or easy. A lot of us are doing a job that we don't want to do. We feel we are above the tasks coming our way

and that the world or God or the fates have sentenced us to live in a box we do not belong in. When I was a night shift security guard at a local hospital, I felt that work was beneath me. So I showed up every night with a voice in my head screaming, I don't want to be here. And that infected everything about my life. I ate my feelings, blew up, and slipped into a deep depression. I wanted a different life, but my shitty attitude made it impossible to create one.

Every minute you spend feeling sorry for yourself is another minute not getting better. Another morning you miss at the gym. Another evening wasted without studying.

Another day burned when you didn't make any progress towards your dreams, ambitions, and deepest desires. The ones you've had in your head and heart your entire life, every minute you spend feeling sorry for yourself is another minute spent in the dungeon thinking about what you lost or the opportunities that have been snatched away or squandered, which inevitably leads to the Great Depression.

When you are depressed, you are likely to believe that nobody understands you or your plight. I used to think that way, but when Sergeant Jack banged that trash can lid inches from my ear in the morning, he was telling me I wasn't the only little boy who got whipped or suffered from toxic stress. Sometimes, the emotions we feel are a product of a f***ed up past. Sometimes, we just don't want to get up at 5 a.m. and do hours of chores before school because it sucks.

Sergeant Jack expected me to perform no matter what I'd been through or what time it was. In response, my feelings got hurt. I stalled getting out of bed until the last possible moment and half-assed my way through my morning as part of a mindless, mopey rebellion. He didn't give a rat's ass. That grass still needed to be cut. The leaves needed to be raked. And the weeds needed to be pulled. No matter how much I belly-ached, this work needed to get done.

and it would get done by me. My feelings were costing me a ton of time because no matter how I felt, there was a task in front of me and that's all that mattered in the present moment. The only thing that ever matters is the present moment. Yet too many people let their depression or regret hijack their day. They let their feelings about the past hijack their lives. Perhaps their fiance left them at the altar or they got fired without cause. Guess what? One day,

They will pan back and realize that nobody cared about any of that but them. I don't care what you've been through. I can feel bad for you. I can have sympathy for you, but my sympathy won't get you anywhere. When I was a young damaged kid, feeling sorry for myself didn't help me. What helped was cleaning those white walls right the first time. We cannot get time back, so we must be minute hoarders. The earlier I get up, the more I do.

The less time I stay in pity party feel sorry for myself land, the stronger I become and the more daylight I see between me and everyone else. When you separate yourself from the pack by cultivating the values and priorities that lead to greatness, mountains of adversity and hardship become speed bumps and that makes it easier to adapt to the road ahead and build a new life or sense of self you crave. When I went to live with Sergeant Jack, I was forced to adapt extremely fast.

Everyone was hard on me my whole life, but I came out of all that with lessons learned that stuck with me. Those who learn to adapt, survive and thrive. Don't feel sorry for yourself. Get strategic. Attack the problem. When you adapt, you will begin to see everything that comes your way as a stepping stone on your progression toward a higher plane.

High paying, esteemed jobs are generally not entry level. You have to start somewhere, but most people see the thankless tasks that must be completed in order to advance as burdens instead of opportunities. That makes it impossible for them to learn. You've got to find the lesson in every shitty task or low wage job.

That requires humility. I wasn't humble enough to appreciate my experience and security, so my attitude was foul as f***. I thought I deserved much better, oblivious to the fact that almost everybody starts at the bottom and from there it's attitude and action that determine the future. Humility is the antidote to self-pity. It keeps you rooted in reality and your emotions in check. I'm not suggesting you should be satisfied with an entry-level job.

I'm never satisfied, but you must appreciate what you have while staying hungry enough to learn everything you can. You need to learn to wash the dishes, flip the burgers, sweat over the deep fryer, sweep up the job site, work in the mailroom, and answer the phones. That's how you build proficiency. It's important to learn every aspect of any business before you move up. You can't rise if you're weighed down by bitterness and entitlement.

Humility hardens your spine and encourages you to stand tall, secure in yourself, no matter what anyone else thinks. And that has tremendous value. I once heard a story about a master sergeant in the army named William Crawford that exemplifies the power of humility.

He retired in 1967 and took a job as a janitor at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. The cadets he cleaned up after paid him little mind, in part because he was reportedly painfully shy, but also because these cadets were elite students on an officer track and Master Sergeant Crawford was just a janitor. Or so they thought. They had no clue that he was also a war hero.

In September 1943, the 36th Infantry Division was getting blitzed by German machine gun fire and mortars during a pivotal World War II battle for a piece of Italian real estate known as Hill 424. The Americans were pinned down with no escape route until Crawford spied three machine gun nests and crawled beneath rivers of bullets to toss a grenade into each of them. His bravery saved lives and allowed his company to advance to safe ground

and after the third direct hit the germans abandoned hill 424 but not before they took crawford prisoner presumed to be killed in action tales of his heroism spread among infantrymen and traveled up the chain of command in 1944 he was awarded the medal of honor the highest decoration in the u.s military because everyone thought he was dead his father accepted the medal on his behalf

Late that same year, he was found in a liberated POW camp, oblivious to the hype surrounding his name. In 1976, an academy cadet and his roommate read about that battle and connected the dots. Their humble janitor had won the Medal of Honor. Can you imagine what went through their heads? The Medal of Honor speaks to everything a military person reveres. Not the medal itself, but the courage and selflessness inside the human being who earned that medal.

Those students wanted to be him, and there he was, mopping their floors and cleaning their bathrooms every day. Master Sergeant Crawford was a walking lesson in self-esteem, courage, character, and especially humility. The way I see it, Master Sergeant William Crawford had figured it the f*** out. The Medal of Honor didn't change him.

He rose to prominence by staying humble and risking his own life to save others and retired into the service of others. It was never about him and that gave him strength. People who feel sorry for themselves are obsessed with their own problems and their own fate.

Is that really much different than the greedy and egotistical people who want to feel better than everybody else? The higher I climb in my life, the more I realize how much I need to mop that floor. Because that's where all the knowledge is. There is no grit at the top, no test of resolve in steak dinners, five-star hotels or spa treatments. Once you make it in this world, you have to free fall back to the bottom in some way to keep learning and growing.

I call this train humility. It's a shedding of your skin that allows you to take on a mission that no one else can see and do whatever needs to be done next. Train humility is service but also strength because when you are humble enough to remember that you'll never know it all, each lesson you learn only makes you hungrier to learn more.

And that will put you on a path that guarantees you will grow all the way to the grave. Continued growth only comes when you are willing to be humble. Eczema isn't always obvious, but it's real. And so is the relief from Evglyss.

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