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Training Your Grit to Never Give Up (In Sports and In Life)

  • 4 minute read

Talent gets you started, but it’s grit, a mix of passion and perseverance, that allows you to cross the finish line.

  • Success, in sports and in life, doesn’t depend only on talent but on a quality called “grit.”
  • Grit is the combination of two fundamental ingredients: passion and perseverance toward long-term goals.
  • Unlike talent, grit isn’t innate: it’s a mental attitude that can and must be trained.
  • To train it, you need four strategies: finding an authentic passion, practicing deliberate practice, cultivating a “growth mindset,” and surrounding yourself with resilient people.
  • Deliberate practice means constantly stepping outside your comfort zone in a targeted and conscious way.
  • The lessons in resilience learned from running become an incredibly powerful tool for facing every challenge in life.

Talent Isn’t Enough. Grit Is What Gets You to the Finish Line.

It happens to everyone. The alarm goes off and it’s still dark. It’s so cold even penguins would complain. Your one, visceral, most powerful desire is to switch it off and crawl back under the duvet. In those moments, talent is useless. Nobody cares if you have a gazelle’s stride or a textbook VO2 max. Right there, in that split second when you decide whether to get up or tell the whole thing to go to hell, something else kicks in. Something more powerful, more stubborn.

Some call it tenacity, some perseverance, some just plain stubbornness. Psychologists, who love to give precise names to things, have christened it “grit.” And it is, quite simply, the difference between those who start and those who finish.

What “Grit” Is and Why You Can Train It

We owe this insight to Angela Duckworth, a psychologist who has dedicated her career to studying successful people in every field, from West Point cadets to Olympic athletes. Her discovery was almost obvious in its brilliance: with equal talent, what separated those who made it from those who gave up wasn’t innate ability, but grit.

“Grit” is a powerful cocktail made up of two ingredients: passion and perseverance. Not a fleeting passion—the kind that makes you buy the most expensive gear after watching an inspiring documentary. We’re talking about a deep, lasting interest in a goal. And not a blind perseverance, but the resilience to keep working hard, day after day, especially when things don’t go your way, when results don’t come, and the urge to quit is strong.

Talent is a gift, sure. But grit is a choice. It is the decision, repeated every single day, not to give up. And, unlike talent, you can train it.

How to Train Your Grit: 4 Practical Strategies.

The theory is fine, but practically speaking, how do you become more “gritty”? It’s not like you go to the gym and ask for “two sets of perseverance, thanks.” It’s a more subtle kind of work, built one step at a time.

1. Find Your Passion, Not Just Your Goal.

A goal is an endpoint: “run a marathon.” A passion is the engine that drives you there: “I love the feeling of freedom that running gives me.” Ask yourself why you do what you do. If the answer is superficial (“because I want to lose weight”), it will hardly withstand the shocks. If, however, you find a deeper reason, a meaning that goes beyond the final result, you’ll have an almost inexhaustible fuel source.

2. Deliberate Practice: Learn to Love the Struggle.

There’s a huge difference between experiencing effort and practicing effort. The first is merely enduring. The second is choosing to push yourself a millimeter beyond your limit, but with a purpose. It is the deliberate practice (deliberate practice). This doesn’t mean destroying yourself at every workout, but incorporating targeted challenge elements. Today, I’ll try to do that last hill repeat even if my legs are screaming. Tomorrow, I’ll run those extra 5 minutes at a challenging pace. It means stepping outside the comfort zone scientifically, not randomly. That’s where resilience is built.

3. Cultivate Hope (and a “Growth Mindset”).

Be careful, we’re not talking about naive optimism. We’re talking about what psychologist Carol Dweck calls a “growth mindset” (growth mindset). It’s the belief that your abilities can improve with effort. A bad workout doesn’t mean “I’m a terrible runner” (fixed mindset), but “I was tired today, what can I learn from this experience to improve tomorrow?” (growth mindset). Failure stops being a judgment on your character and becomes valuable information.

4. Surround Yourself With “Gritty” People.

Grit is contagious. Training with people who embody perseverance, who don’t complain at the first hurdle but look for solutions, holds enormous power. Creating or joining an environment where resilience is the norm pushes you to raise your standards. It’s the partner who waits for you at the top of the climb, the group that cheers you on during the final sprint. They lend you a bit of their grit when yours is running on empty.

The Grit You Learn Running Is the Grit You Need In Life.

Ultimately, all this mental training you do on the road or the trails doesn’t stay confined there. The ability to endure when you’re at the fortieth kilometer and every muscle is begging you to stop is the same ability you’ll need to close a complicated project at work or to get through a difficult time in your private life.

You learn that effort is temporary, that limits can be moved, and that the greatest satisfaction isn’t arriving effortlessly, but arriving despite everything. Running becomes a metaphor for life and an exceptional training ground. You train your muscles, sure. But most of all, you train your grit. And once you have that, no one can ever take it away from you.

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