How do you unleash your "A" game?

Howdy y'all!

Simple question, how do you unleash your "A" game?

Do you follow Katt Williams' advice and get some "f*** it" in your system? Or maybe recite Jamie Foxx's, "baddest motherf***** in the valley?"

I'm curious to know what routines y'all have. Basically, how do you prepare when it's a "make-or-break" type of thing?

 

I never really understood the "whole pump up thing" outside of sports and the gym, or maybe on a sales desk.

If I have to make an important presentation to potential LPs, I want to be calm and collected --- zen like, ignoring the large stakes at hand.

Please don't quote Patrick Bateman.
 

If these songs don't get you ready to fuck shit up... you need to check your pulse.

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//www.youtube.com/embed/wmvQcajq9Eo

//www.youtube.com/embed/GoCOg8ZzUfg

[quote=patternfinder]Of course, I would just buy in scales. [/quote] See my WSO Blog | my AMA
 

Different people get pumped up in different ways. When I played college football, the majority of the team would blast music, bark like dogs, punch each other, etc. to get pumped up before games. Others, including myself, would be joking around and looking for hotties in the stands right up until kickoff. Others would be calm and collected almost like they were meditating. Regardless of these difference, all of us were ready to play when we got on the field because we practiced like hell all week.

The same applies to the business world. If you're fully prepared, know your shit and can visualize yourself winning it doesn't really matter what you do to clear your head directly before. Just find what works for you.

 

Okay so I posted before but clearly wasn't serious. The points above about feeling prepared being the biggest thing definitely applies to any sort of business situation. However, being a college athlete, I always try to listen to a song that will get my blood flowing before a game because that's the necessary mood. The Jay-Z song above applies, as well as something like 5am in Toronto by Drake.

For interviews, my routine always went something like this: However long it takes me to get ready, tack on about 30 minutes to that. I would go through everything meticulously, making sure that I didn't rush anything so that I looked my best. This applies to something like shaving, where rushing will obviously cause nicks and cuts on your face. I have a favorite suit and tie combination; I wear that for every single interview. After going through one or two qualitative interview questions in my head right before I got in the cab on the way over to the interview (something particular to the firm, like "Why this bank?" or "Why this group?"), I would shove my headphones in and put on some relaxing music to get in a good spot mentally.

 

Any time you have to actively try to put yourself on higher level of performance through some ritual, you're admitting implicitly that you - that is, the regular you - doesn't have what it takes. Put in the work and show up knowing you have it. You'll never be nervous again.

"Let no one or anything stand between you and the difficult task, let nothing deny you this rich chance to gain strength by adversity, confidence by mastery, success by deserving it. Do it better each time. Do it better than anyone else can do it" - Harlow Curtice

You can't kill the guys you trade with
 

Nothing against this reply, but you can't think that there aren't certain times where people need to elevate their performance beyond what they would consider "normal." Yes, the managing director at XYZ firm will go into any day-to-day meeting feeling confident that he knows his stuff and is able to present what he has in an effective way. I believe the OP was talking about those times, few and far between for most people, where the stakes are high enough that your best performance is needed. To go outside the normal business examples, you can look at professional athletes, people who have been working at their profession their entire lives, and still see that they have routines that allow them to get into a state of mind either mentally or physically that allows them to perform their best.

 
Classica:

I believe the OP was talking about those times, few and far between for most people, where the stakes are high enough that your best performance is needed. To go outside the normal business examples, you can look at professional athletes, people who have been working at their profession their entire lives, and still see that they have routines that allow them to get into a state of mind either mentally or physically that allows them to perform their best.

Yes! Exactly! Thank you!

I'm interested in those rare occasions where the stakes are high. Curious as to how y'all prepare for those. Meditate, watch leopards stalking prey (@BatMasterson), or do a line of cocaine off your dick (@bic).

 

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