In crises, focus only on what's inside an imaginary "hula hoop" around you: your attitude and your actions. Surrender the outcome to external forces. This mental model, used by endurance athlete Dean Otto when paralyzed, prevents overwhelm and allows for clear-headed decision-making when stakes are highest.
A mental performance coach taught diver Molly Carlson to visualize fear as a piece of paper in front of her eyes. Instead of trying to destroy the paper, she gently shifts it to the side, allowing it to exist without consuming her focus, freeing her to perform.
When facing the immense pressure of doing Oprah's eyebrows on live TV, Anastasia Soare’s calm came from having performed the task thousands of times. This deep, repetitive mastery creates an autopilot mode that overrides fear and ensures quality performance when the stakes are highest.
When frustrated by something you can't control (traffic, a colleague's behavior), the phrase 'let them' serves as a practical tool. It's not about condoning behavior but about accepting reality to conserve your mental energy. This allows you to focus on what you *can* control: your own response.
Tying your identity to professional achievements makes you vulnerable and risk-averse. By treating business as a "game" you are passionate about, but not as the core of your self-worth, you can navigate high-stakes challenges and failures with greater objectivity and emotional resilience.
The brain's emotional center is five times stronger than its rational part. When triggered by stress, it shuts down executive function. A deliberate 90-second pause is a powerful antidote that allows the physiological wave of emotion to pass, enabling clearer, more considered decision-making.
To perform a dangerous, world-first dive, Carlson consciously uses overwhelming positivity to override her brain's fear signals. She calls this "gaslighting" herself into believing she's capable, a technique for extreme mental preparation under pressure.
When facing an existential business threat, the most effective response is to suppress emotional panic and adopt a calm, methodical mindset, like a pilot running through an emergency checklist. This allows for clear, logical decision-making when stakes are highest and prevents paralysis from fear.
Marcus Aurelius's "view from above" is a concrete technique, similar to cognitive behavioral therapy, for managing anxiety. It involves visualizing yourself zooming out from your immediate situation to a cosmic scale. This mental drill provides perspective, shrinking overwhelming problems to a more manageable size.
When you are anxious about an outcome and try to force it, you energetically delay its arrival. The counter-intuitive strategy is to surrender and trust the process. Loosening your grip allows the desired result to manifest more quickly and easily.
In volatile times, the instinct is to act decisively and quickly. Brené Brown argues the more effective approach is to pause, assess the situation holistically (like a soccer player controlling the ball), and then make a strategic move. This prevents reactive, scarcity-driven decisions that often backfire.