Badassery Magazine Issue 6 | Page 21

T here’s some weird shit circulating around the word “mindset” and I’d really like to blow that stuff out of the water for you today. “Mindset” is not a new thing. It is not woo-woo. It is not weird, or cultural, or religious. It simply exists. Your mindset is how you feel about things, how you perceive them, and how you process them. Today, I’d like to address the common epidemic of just letting your mindset be. First of all, in order to effectively get things done and accomplish our goals, we have to have a killer mindset. “But why can’t we just have a to-do list, Allie?” Well, you can. If you want. In fact, I encourage it since I’m super into lists too. However, without an epic mindset that says “I can do anything I freaking set my mind to”, you won’t get very far. You might knock out a day or two of things here and there and feel accomplished, but your life’s path demands the ultimate shift: the mindset shift. Mindset: The Basics Shifting your mindset is all about thought replacement. We highly recommend training tools, such as a rubber band around your wrist, to assist in shifting your thoughts from one direction to another. In the Shield Sisters Initiative Coaching Club, we’re all about mindset. We teach that mindset is the key to every kind of success you desire, and that, unlike the popular “if you build it, they will come” concept, mindset heavily relies on action. a house twice as big as that one.” Shifting Toward Success In order to achieve true success, it’s important that you know what success looks like to you. It is different for every person. When I sat down to write out my own definition, it looked a lot less like “lots of money” than I thought it would, and more “notoriety” and “community.” Interesting, right? Training tools can assist in the department of action. When I was shifting my mindset about money, each time I had a “poor me” moment (ex: “I’ll never achieve enough to be able to buy a house like that”), I would lightly snap the rubber band on my wrist. This is not a self-deprecating motion. Like I said: for every person, “success” means something different. Before you can really move onto the next step, take a few hours out of your day to sit down with a piece of paper and jot out all the thoughts that come to your head when someone says the word “success” to you. This is a retraining of the mind. After I’d snapped my wrist with the rubber band, I’d replace the thought I’d just had with a verbal affirmation, such as, “I will be so successful that I will be able to buy After you’ve defined what you want and what your future will consist of, you can start moving forward into progress. 20