Stress isn’t the enemy. It’s information. Elite athletes,...

@stevemagness
Steve Magness@stevemagness
57 views Sep 16, 2025
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Stress isn’t the enemy. It’s information.

Elite athletes, meditators, and performers feel the same kinds of stress as the rest of us.

The difference is they’ve trained their brains not to be hijacked by it.
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When stress hits, two things can happen.

Your amygdala takes over and spirals you into panic. Or your executive functioning part of the brain steps in and steadies the ship.

Which one wins isn’t random. It’s trained.
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Researchers at the University of Wisconsin tested this by burning participants’ legs with a scalding-hot wire.

Both novice and expert meditators reported the same initial intensity of pain.

But while novices stayed stuck in stress mode, experts quickly calmed down.

They flipped the internal switch to “off.”
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fMRI scans showed why.

Novices’ amygdalas lit up, where the emotional brain floods the body with stress.

Experts’ brains told another story: their prefrontal cortex stayed engaged, keeping them steady.

They still felt pain, but they weren’t consumed by it.
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This same pattern shows up in sport.

Everyday runners often panic when discomfort hits: “This hurts already, and I’ve got so far to go.”

Their heart rate spikes, muscles tighten, and performance collapses.

Elite runners? They react differently.
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They have what I call a “calm conversation” with themselves: “Yes, this hurts. It should. I’m running hard. But I am separate from this pain. It’s temporary. I’ll be okay.”

They don’t deny stress, they guide it.
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Meditators train this ability on the cushion. Athletes train it on the track.

Both are strengthening the prefrontal cortex—the brain’s control center—through repeated practice.

They don’t erase discomfort. They change their relationship with it.
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Stress is unavoidable.

The real question is: will you be hijacked by it, or will you harness it?

The answer comes down to practice. Small, repeated moments of noticing stress, pausing, and choosing your response.

Over time, the brain rewires.
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Stress will always be there.

The difference between breaking down or breaking through isn’t talent—it’s training your brain to respond, not react.

That’s how the best turn stress into fuel.
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