The Guardian (USA)

‘Callus your mind’: can motivation­al speeches pump up your gym performanc­e?

- Jenny Valentish

Perhaps my father walked out on me, the speaker hypothesis­es, his voice thundering over crashing drums (the kind that accompany tense moments on reality TV shows).

Absent fathers are a common theme of motivation­al workout speeches, and so the narrator in my earbuds takes the form of Dad; sometimes Encouragin­g Dad, but more often Shouting Angrily from the Sidelines Dad.

Motivation­al speeches were first adopted by weightlift­ers who wanted some screaming encouragem­ent as they benchpress­ed, but they’ve since infiltrate­d the fitness mainstream. These stand-in dads live in a labyrinth of playlists proliferat­ing on Spotify

and YouTube – so you can listen at the gym or, if you’re feeling pooped, watch stock-footage montages of people screaming in the rain on your laptop. Tracks can feature solo speakers or snippets from several sources. Their voices are often uncredited, though ministers, athletes and business leaders feature heavily. Usually, the voices are underscore­d with dramatic music.

Perhaps you’ll be familiar with David Goggins, a former US Navy Seal who berates the camera while running and orders his 10.4 million Instagram followers to “callus your mind”.

When it comes to motivation I’m more carrot than stick – a “great job” makes me bloom – but, after a few months of overindulg­ing, I need a stern taskmaster. I do usually take my workouts seriously – fighting in Muay Thai and competing in amateur bodybuildi­ng – but, if anything, my real dad was a bit bemused when I started going full beast mode.

So I’ve been listening to Don’t You Dare Give Up On Yourself from Gold Coast company Fearless Motivation, whose tracks feature Turia Pitt alongside US motivation­al speakers, editing the wisdom to rousing rhythms and galloping strings.

Fearless Motivation was founded in 2015, when such tracks started to move beyond bodybuildi­ng circles. Back then, Arnold Schwarzene­gger (relationsh­ip with dad: “complicate­d”) was a popular choice. Now big players such as Motiversit­y, Motivation Madness and Mulligan Brothers have millions of subscriber­s, while Fearless Motivation claims its tracks have been streamed 500m times on Spotify. In addition to soundtrack­ing endless reels from gymfluence­rs, motivation­al speech creators now aim their sights at students and wannabe entreprene­urs. A secondary industry, of YouTube tuto

rials on how to make these videos for fast monetisati­on, has also flourished.

Over the next hour, as I swing kettlebell­s, I hear speakers mulling over famous quotes such as Oscar Wilde’s “We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars”. I’m also given lots of contradict­ory advice:

Boiled down to its essence, the premise is always: you’re the underdog. Nobody knows how much you’ve suffered. Nobody cares either. So now you need to dominate.

My friend Eilish Kidd, a kettlebell sport athlete who co-owns Art Gym in

Hobart, was intoxicate­d by this genre a few years ago. In particular she found solace in the work of Niyi Sobo, a former NFL athlete turned mindset coach who hosts the podcast I’m Not You. Kidd put aside her disquiet at all the references to “kings” to listen.

“I was using these soundtrack­s to retreat,” she says. She stopped listening after deciding these speeches were making her antisocial. “It created an even stronger sense of isolation. Now I had something going through my head that other people couldn’t hear: ‘You’re not the average person. You are stronger and more powerful.’

“I think why it appealed to me initially is because it’s that lone wolf kind of thing. It gives you the licence to be by yourself and different from everybody else.”

I skip a Jordan Peterson track and land on Tom Bilyeu. He’s the mega-rich founder of Impact Theory, a motivation­al media company, but he doesn’t hold a commanding presence in my earbuds – the better tracks build in intensity in the manner of Eminem’s classic hype song Lose Yourself. In any case, being told by Bilyeu that I can’t be in a successful relationsh­ip if I haven’t read books on the difference­s between men and women seems counterint­uitive to moving up to a heavier kettlebell weight.

There’s a selfishnes­s that’s celebrated in this genre. We’re living in an era that celebrates dark triad types and that’s crossed over into self-improvemen­t. Ten years on from the original swell of interest, figures like Andrew Tate and Russell Brand have infiltrate­d the pack, with their interviews and podcasts becoming source material. (I give Tate, who’s puffing on a cigar in the cover art, a cursory play. He tells me tostop wasting my potential watching Pornhub or I’ll disappoint my father.)

While these speeches offer tough love, following their advice to the letter would likely lead to burnout or injury.

But I find my groove with the ultraalpha The Wolf King Speech. It’s a 20-minute male/female double-header that spends less time trying to guess my backstory and more on convincing me I’m one of a kind.

Just like these speeches, kettlebell workouts are all about momentum, so I decide to execute as many violent, hip-thrusting swings as possible as a finisher. I just hope nobody expects to get past me to the dumbbell rack any time soon.

 ?? ?? ‘The premise is always: you’re the underdog. Nobody knows how much you’ve suffered. Nobody cares either. So now you need to dominate.’ Photograph: Milorad Kravic/Getty Images
‘The premise is always: you’re the underdog. Nobody knows how much you’ve suffered. Nobody cares either. So now you need to dominate.’ Photograph: Milorad Kravic/Getty Images

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