Motivation and emotion/Book/2013/Visualisation and motivation

< Motivation and emotion < Book < 2013

Visualisation & Emotion' Success is something that we all want. Regardless. If we could not succeed at anything we would fail to feed our selves, breath, support our selves, and never attain happiness. The term success is being used broadly in that sense, as often it is attributed to higher forms of achievement such as wealth, health, personal goals, etc. There has often been questions of how extremely successful people got to where they did. But It comes down to something very simple. Visualisation. There are different forms of visualisation to name a few of them, creative visualisation, altered-memory visualisation, treasure mapping. The main focus is on that of Creative Visualisation.

It has been often reported that positive thinking has given many people who stand out, their reasons for success. This positive thinking can be found in a form of visualisation. For example athletes who have been very successful often visualise themselves winning, performing or appearing in some manner. One prime example is the famous body builder,Actor and politician 'Arnold Schwarzenegger'. He admitted to visualising him self being and having what he wanted, and went on to win 'Mr Olympia' an international body building competition, seven times in a row. he then visualised him self as an actor and he became just that. </"Biography for Arnold Schwarzenegger". IMDb. Archived from the original on March 08 2008. Retrieved November 6, 2013>

This method of visualising for a goal is called "creative visualisation".

Creative visualisation

What Is Creative Visualisation? It is essentially a technique employing the use of ones own imagination to visualize behaviours, feelings and events in ones life to promote proactive behaviour towards success, </Ronald A. Finke, Creative Imagery: Discoveries and Inventions in Visualization, published by Routledge, 1990, > and underlies positive thinking.</Carl L. Wesckcke, Keith Randolph, The Truth about Creative Visualization, 1984,>

Techniques for using Creative Visualisation'

To properly employ creative visualisation, one creates a schema (an organized pattern of thought or behaviour.)</The Referential Process,http://www.thereferentialprocess.org/theory/emotion-schemas, Retrieved November 6> of what one desires, or aims to achieve, then through repetitious visualisation employing all the senses of the human body (touch, taste, smell, hearing, sight) and even feelings. In the example of an athlete, they may envision scenarios such as say, stepping past the finish line, the feeling of success, the roar of the crowd. That scenario employed visual(images and pictures), kinaesthetic(how the body feels) and auditory senses(sounds).

Athletes use this technique to intend an outcome, relax and calm themselves in a feeling of 'well being'.(a state of being in which one is comfortable, happy and healthy.)

The method it self typically follows the following format: Relax''

take a few deep breaths, release and tension in the body, close your eyes, make sure you are in a quiet environment or just an environment that does not disturb you.

'begin to imagine the environment' Imagine the place you are working in, the things you are doing and what you are doing them with.

third person viewImagine it from a third person view, focus in on your self and what you are doing, try to add more detail to it.

'First person view' move on to viewing it in first person(like you are doing it your self). The feelings both kinaesthetic, Auditory and Visual, imagine these things as you are doing things in the environment.

'wrapping it up' slowly come back to reality, allowing the image to fade, you will have completed your mental rehearsal and can open your eyes when you are ready too.This is one example of how mental rehearsal is carried out, it takes time and practice but it has been shown to work.<04/04/2012,Does Visualisation really work? Here's the evidence that it does,/http://expertenough.com/1898/visualization-works>

Is creative Visualisation truly Affective?

In a well known study done by Russians, they tested three groups of Olympic athletes by comparing their mental training(the visualisation ) and physical training(exercise). The first group of athletes were purely trained physically, the second group trained 75% physically and 25% mentally, and the third group was trained equally at 50% physical and 50% mental.The results speak for them selves as the third group out performed groups one and two. William Cummings, one of the few psychologists who conducted the study noted "mental images appear to be precursor to muscular impulses" </Robert Scaglione, William Cummins, Karate of Okinawa: Building Warrior Spirit, Tuttle Publishing, 1993>

It shows that with a more balanced work load and supplemented mental training gives better results for success.

Visualisation can be seen as a key component to success, as shown above. If we look into it on a more lateral basis we can see that Visualisation is actually quiet normal in positive thinking and every day living, we want something we picture it, we feel a greater desire for it and thus we go out and get it. It is however not to be mixed up with the logic "I think, therefore I am" as it is a tool to be used to promote more positive thought process's to allow the individual to perform without hindrance of negative thoughts. There are studies that show this Method to be very helpful in the process of attaining your goal (three groups of Olympic athletes) just like the study showed however, mental in combination with physical training was needed. One cant simply Imagine the idea and have it happen one must act as well.

References

-"Biography for Arnold Schwarzenegger". IMDb. Archived from the original on March 08 2008. Retrieved November 6, 2013

-Ronald A. Finke, Creative Imagery: Discoveries and Inventions in Visualization, published by Routledge, 1990, >

-</Carl L. Wesckcke, Keith Randolph, The Truth about Creative Visualization, 1984

-an organized pattern of thought or behaviour.)</The Referential Process,http://www.thereferentialprocess.org/theory/emotion-schemas, Retrieved November 6

-04/04/2012,Does Visualisation really work? Here's the evidence that it does,/http://expertenough.com/1898/visualization-works

-Robert Scaglione, William Cummins, Karate of Okinawa: Building Warrior Spirit, Tuttle Publishing, 1993

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