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Steve Magness
@stevemagness
We think that positive self-talk is the key to high performance.

Just tell yourself "I can do this" and you will succeed.

A fascinating new study suggests we are missing a crucial ingredient.

It turns out, your body has to believe your mind.

They need to be in sync for self-talk to have an impact.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Researchers recruited athletes from various sports, including soccer and CrossFit.

They manipulated two variables: what the athletes said to themselves and their physical posture.

Some used positive self-talk while standing tall.

Others used the same positive words while slumped over. The results were stark.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Positive self-talk only improved performance when combined with an upright posture.

When athletes slumped, the encouraging words had zero effect.

The body’s position literally gated the mind’s ability to influence action.

You can't think your way to excellence while your body signals defeat.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
The mechanism at play is called "Self-Validation Theory."

Our brain is interpreting all the signals coming in. If they're all aligned (positive self talk, upright posture, focused eyes, etc) we get the green light. Take charge, go!

It validates the brains prediction.

If they're conflicting, doubt rises. The conflicting messages invalidates the positive one.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Think of it as a congruency test for your nervous system.

When you say "I am capable" but your shoulders are rounded and head is down, you create a conflict.

Your brain detects the mismatch between the verbal message and the physical signal.

Consequently, it discards the positive thought as false noise.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
The study went deeper, finding that the meaning we attach to posture drives the bus.

When the body signals certainty, it boosts self-efficacy.

This creates a powerful loop: you say it, your body validates it, and your belief in your ability rises.

This concrete belief is what actually drives the physical output.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
This changes how we should approach mental skills training and pre-game routines.

You cannot just recite affirmations in a vacuum to fix a bad mindset.

You have to embody the mindset you are trying to create.

Before you engage in strategic self-talk, check your physiology.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
This works both ways.

If you are spiral of negative self-talk, standing tall might actually make it worse by "validating" those negative thoughts.

In those moments, softening the body or changing the posture can signal the brain to doubt the negativity. The body creates the context for the thought.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
We tend to view the mind and body as separate entities to be trained in isolation.

The reality? We need to stack the signals in the same direction.

If you want your mind to lead, your body must back it up.

To perform at your best, align your internal monologue with your external stance.
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