We are so excited to bring you the Amazing Brains Podcast– full of information and interviews about how to live your best life and the science behind our work.
On our podcast, you can learn:
How to Find a Meditation Style for your Brain
How to Optimize Performance
How to Incorporate Naturopathic Work into your Routine
In this episode, Micah sits down with Joe Howdyshell, coach of Summit Endurance Academy. In the show, they talk about human peak performance, and creating habits and processes around values.
Show Notes
Habits
Time is a crutch
Most people waste a lot of time
The average facebook user is on there for 2 hours a day
Get the phone out of your bedroom, it should not be the first thing you waste time on in the morning
Start habits that are less daunting
Instead of starting with an hour run a day, start with 15 minutes a day
We have 50,000 conscious choices to make a day
“If we want to make the hard choice, we have to use willpower. Habits are choices we don’t have to make anymore. We have to pick the kale over the donut so many times, that it no longer requires will power.” -Joe
It’s a lot easier to build on a habit than to create a new one
Exercise
Exercise is damage, it’s the breakdown of tissue and depletion of energy stores
The body says “I don’t want that to damage me” and so it gets stronger, that’s how exercise works
Joe says his job with athletes is helping them to be very mindful of their self talk, not being super hard on themselves when they did something wrong, and recognizing the things done right
An athlete that doesn’t know how to take a day break from exercise, is going to have a really hard time becoming ‘faster’ because speed requires heavy on some days and full ‘down’ days
“The amount of training has more to do with where you are right now than where you want to be” – Joe
1 out of 100 people will make money being an athlete, so the question is, why do we do it?
Is it about dominance? Health? Joe thinks it should be about bettering ourselves
It’s all about creating the correct self awareness
You have to do it for the right reasons
Values
Joe says he likes to take athlete’s 20 values, and narrow it down to 10, then to 5, then to 3
It’s hard to put one value over another because they are all values, they are all good
Sometimes we don’t see our own faults like other people can see
It’s all about being extremely clear with our reflection and perception of ourselves
Micah says he asks himself, “am I being consumptive or productive?”
Screen Time
It can be really bad for some people and really great for others
For some, it’s a distraction, for grandma, whose family lives all over the country, may use facebook as her only means to keep in touch with her family
For a lot of people, it ends up being a distraction
Final Thoughts
“Try it” – Joe
He sees more people not meeting their goals because they didn’t even start
Joe Howdyshell grew up in the Rocky Mountains of Wyoming competing in cross country running, cross country skiing, and track. College found him at the United States Military Academy at West Point, where he represented the Army Black Knights in cross country running, indoor track, and nordic skiing. It was here that he found his love for coaching. After leaving West Point to pursue athletic opportunities, he attended the University of Wyoming and graduated with an MS in Exercise Physiology in 2009. A professional coach since 2006, Joe founded the Summit Endurance Academy in 2013 to facilitate athletic achievement in the Colorado High Country. Joe currently lives in Breckenridge, CO, coaches full time, and enjoys crushing mountain races in jorts.