PODCAST · health
Set your Mind
by Dr. Stephen Ginsberg
Set Your Mind is a sport and performance psychology podcast about training the mind with the same intention we train the body. Hosted by Dr. Stephen Ginsberg, each episode explores mindset, courage, resilience, and the mental processes that help performers show up on the playing field and in life with courage, clarity, and commitment.
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Episode 18: Own It.
In this episode, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg uses the remarkable comeback story of tennis world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka to explore one of the most powerful — and most avoided — principles in performance psychology: accountability. From serving yips and public breakdowns to four Grand Slam titles, Sabalenka's journey is a masterclass in what happens when an elite competitor stops deflecting and starts owning. Drawing on the frameworks of Navy SEAL commander Jocko Willink and high-performance psychologist Dr. Michael Gervais, Dr. Ginsberg breaks down why accountability is hard, why ego gets in the way, and how humility is the key that unlocks real growth.Key Topics CoveredAryna Sabalenka's 2022 serving crisis — 400+ double faults, the serving yips, and performing at the highest level while publicly falling apartHow Sabalenka responded when her coach offered to resign — and why that moment became the turning pointJocko Willink's principle of Extreme Ownership and what it means to take full responsibility for outcomesWhy ego protection is the primary reason athletes avoid accountability — and what it costs themThe psychology of humility as an accurate self-assessment, not self-diminishmentDr. Michael Gervais on the only thing you can control 100% of the timeA practical reflection exercise for listeners to apply accountability in their own performanceReflection QuestionsWhat is a current struggle you've been externalizing — blaming conditions, other people, or circumstances?What would it look like to take full ownership of that situation?Where is ego protection showing up in your performance right now?What is one honest, humble action you could take this week?Key ConceptsExtreme Ownership — Jocko Willink's principle that leaders and performers must take total responsibility for everything within their world, including failuresLocus of Control — The psychological concept describing whether individuals attribute outcomes to internal effort or external forcesFOPO (Fear of Other People's Opinions) — Dr. Michael Gervais's framework for how concern about external judgment constricts human potentialHumility — An accurate, clear-eyed assessment of oneself — not self-diminishment, but honest self-awareness that enables growth*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 17: Check Your Punctuation—The Question Mark Advantage
What if one of the most powerful performance tools you have isn’t physical, tactical, or technical — but grammatical?In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg explores how the way we punctuate our inner dialogue shapes learning, growth, and performance. Using a simple (and surprisingly powerful) grammar metaphor, he breaks down how periods, exclamation marks, and question marks influence how we respond to failure — and why curiosity may be the ultimate performance enhancer.What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhy self-talk punctuation matters more than the words themselvesHow periods and exclamation marks can shut down learningWhy question marks signal safety to the brainHow curiosity turns mistakes into usable informationA simple, practical way to practice curiosity on the driving range or the courseHow becoming an observer — not a judge — accelerates growthKey TakeawaysPeriods are finite. They signal certainty and finality.Exclamation marks are reactive. They amplify emotion and judgment.Question marks open doors. They invite curiosity, flexibility, and learning.Curiosity reduces threat, increases adaptability, and generates better feedback.Growth doesn’t come from harsh judgment — it comes from asking better questions.A Simple Practice to TryThe next time you’re on the driving range or out on the course:After each shot, pause.Notice how you talk to yourself.Check your punctuation.If you hear periods or exclamation marks, replace them with a question.Try asking:What did I learn?What did this tell me?What might I try next?Same swing. Different punctuation. Better chance to grow.Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 16: Surrendering is Not Waving the White Flag
We usually think of surrender as giving up—throwing in the towel, waving the white flag. But what if letting go isn’t defeat at all? In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg explores how surrender can be one of your most powerful performance tools.Surrender isn’t quitting—it’s acceptance, focus, and trust. By releasing what’s outside of your control, you free mental and physical energy to perform at your best. Drawing on insights from Dr. Sarah Lewis and applied performance psychology, this episode teaches how to stop expending effort on the uncontrollable and start committing fully to what you can influence.Key Concepts CoveredRedefining surrender: letting go isn’t quitting; it’s a strategic toolCounterfeit control: expending energy on things you can’t influence burns focus and performanceThe difference between controllables and uncontrollables in sport, work, and lifeHow accepting what’s outside your control enhances clarity, focus, and performanceUsing surrender as a path to action, not inactionPractical ExerciseWrite down everything currently occupying your attention.Draw two columns: Controllables and Uncontrollables.Sort your list into the two columns.Commit fully to the items in Controllables.Accept or surrender the items in Uncontrollables.This simple exercise clarifies where your energy is going—and where it should go—so you can maximize performance.Reflective QuestionsWhat areas of my life or performance am I trying to control that I really can’t?What would happen if I surrendered these distractions and focused only on what I can influence?How could my energy, clarity, and results improve by letting go?Mindset TakeawaySurrender isn’t defeat—it’s strategy. Letting go of what you cannot control allows you to commit fully to what you can, unlocking clarity, focus, and peak performance.Quote to Remember"Think of it like a finger trap—the harder you pull, the tighter it gets. Let go, and the way forward opens."*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 15: Golf’s Dirtiest Words
We’ve all said them. “I should make this.” “I must get up-and-down.” “I don’t want to miss.”They sound harmless—even motivating. But in this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg breaks down why these sneaky words may be doing more harm than good.Drawing on insights from Dr. Raymond Prior’s Golf Beneath the Surface, we explore how rigid language activates the brain’s threat system, tightens the body, and quietly sabotages performance—especially on the greens. The fix isn’t trying harder. It’s choosing different words.Small language shifts can create big changes in feel, focus, and flow.Key Concepts CoveredWhy words like should, must, need, and don’t trigger the brain’s threat responseHow threat activation leads to tension, shallow breathing, and disrupted motor controlThe connection between rigid language and tight, jabby putting strokesWhy allowing performance works better than forcing outcomesHow subtle language changes can improve rhythm, focus, and enjoymentOn-Course Language SwapsTry replacing:“I should make this putt” → “I want to make this putt”“I must get up-and-down” → “I’d like to get up-and-down”“I need to birdie” → “I prefer to birdie”“Don’t hit it in the water” → “Commit to the target”Same intention. Less threat. Better execution.Practice Drill: The Language ExperimentOn the practice green:Hit five short putts thinking: “I should make this.”Notice your breath, tension, and stroke quality.Hit five more thinking: “I want to make this.”Compare the difference in feel, rhythm, and focus.Awareness precedes change.TakeawayPerformance improves when pressure decreases—not when it’s cranked up. Your language shapes your physiology. Change the words, change the response.Quote to RememberSmall words. Huge impact.*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 14: Wilt Chamberlain’s Catastrophic Case of FOPO
In the 1961–62 NBA season, Wilt Chamberlain scored 100 points in a single game—an achievement that still feels unreal. But the most unbelievable part of that season isn’t the scoring record.It’s what he did after fixing the biggest weakness of his game… and then walking away from the solution.This episode explores how Wilt overcame his free-throw struggles by shooting underhand—only to abandon it because he didn’t like how it looked. Not because it stopped working. But because of FOPO: the Fear of Other People’s Opinions.If FOPO could derail one of the most dominant athletes of all time, what might it be doing to the rest of us?What You’ll LearnWhy Wilt Chamberlain’s best free-throw season came from a solution he later rejectedWhat FOPO (Fear of Other People’s Opinions) is and why it’s so powerfulHow evolution wired us to care about others’ opinions—and why that instinct often backfires todayA simple but effective “table exercise” to identify whose opinions actually deserve your energyHow to stop letting unearned opinions influence your performance, confidence, and decisionsKey TakeawayCaring what others think isn’t the problem. Caring about the wrong people’s opinions is.Reflection QuestionWhose opinions are currently shaping your decisions—and have they earned the right to be at your table?Practical ExerciseDraw a small table with 3–5 seatsWrite down the names of the people whose feedback truly mattersUse that list as a filter when doubt, criticism, or self-consciousness shows upIdeal ForAthletes, coaches, executives, creatives, and anyone who wants to perform more freely without being hijacked by external judgment.*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 13: Get Lost
Why the process—not the outcome—is where performance livesIn this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg explores a counterintuitive idea in performance psychology: getting lost might be exactly what you need.He begins with a vivid childhood memory—being six years old, locked out of his grandparents’ house, completely alone, and panicked. That feeling of being lost is miserable, and most of us spend our lives trying to avoid it at all costs.But when it comes to performance, avoiding “being lost” may be the very thing holding us back.There is another kind of getting lost—one that elite performers know well. It’s the state of being fully present, completely absorbed, where the score, the outcome, and even self-conscious thoughts fade away.That state isn’t panic. It’s flow.And flow doesn’t come from chasing results. It comes from getting lost in the process.In this episode, Dr. Ginsberg breaks down what the process actually is—something that’s often talked about but rarely defined—and explains why focusing on what you can control creates freedom, consistency, and better performance under pressure.In this episode, you’ll learn:How getting lost in the right things at the right times is a powerful psychological state: flow—those moments when attention narrows, self-talk quiets, time disappears, and performance feels effortless, not forced.The difference between panic and flow—and why they’re often confusedWhat “the process” really means in practical, usable termsHow focusing on controllables reduces anxiety and sharpens executionWhy results tend to show up when you stop chasing themKey TakeawayGetting lost isn’t something to fear— as long as it is in the right place.Get lost in the present moment. Get lost in your breath. Get lost in your routine.Because when you stop chasing results, they often have a funny way of finding you.So go ahead—get lost.*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 12: Being "On Time"
This episode explores a simple but powerful concept: being “on time.” Not in the sense of punctuality, but in the sense of mental presence and timing.The episode begins with a personal story about walking directly into a stop sign in front of a large crowd. That moment becomes a metaphor for what happens when attention becomes anchored in the past while trying to function in the present.From there, a core performance principle is broken down: athletes don’t just need awareness of the present moment—they need the ability to move intentionally between the past, present, and future.The past is where learning and reflection occur. The future is where planning and visualization take place. The present is where execution happens. Challenges arise when too much time is spent in any one of these timeframes at the wrong moment.Topics covered include:Why being present is often misunderstood in performance contextsThe benefits of looking to the past (learning, feedback, growth)The role of the future in goal setting and visualizationThe risks of staying too long in either the past or futureWhy performance ultimately happens in the present momentHow athletes can develop awareness of where attention is directedSimple strategies to return to the present during practice and competitionA practical framework is introduced to help athletes regularly check in with their mental state by asking:Where is attention right now—past, future, or present?What is required to return to the moment of execution?The goal is not to eliminate thoughts of the past or future, but to develop the skill of navigating between them intentionally—and returning to the present when it is time to perform.
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Episode 11: Flexibility is Sturdiness
This episode explores a powerful paradox:True strength isn’t rigidity — it’s flexibility.In the early 1990s, scientists built Biosphere 2, a sealed glass ecosystem designed to create a perfectly controlled environment. Ideal sunlight. Ideal temperature. Ideal water. The trees inside grew quickly and tall — but then something unexpected happened: they began to topple.Why?They had never experienced wind.Without mechanical stress, they failed to develop the structural strength necessary to support their rapid growth. Scientists identified the process as thigmomorphogenesis — the biological adaptation that occurs when trees are exposed to stress like wind, causing them to grow thicker trunks, stronger roots, and more flexible branches.The takeaway:Humans are not much different from windblown trees.🌬️ What This Episode CoversWhy avoiding discomfort weakens long-term resilienceThe science of stress adaptation (thigmomorphogenesis)Why stubbornness is not strength — adaptability isHow athletes and performers can use adversity as dataWhy modern skyscrapers are engineered to sway rather than stand rigidHow to reframe setbacks and disappointments as growth opportunities💡 Key IdeasWind strengthens trees. Stress strengthens people — when it is approached with the right mindset.True sturdiness is adaptability. Rigid performers crack. Flexible performers grow.Adversity is information. If a game plan isn’t working, strength is not doubling down — it’s adjusting.There is strength in the sway.It’s not the wins that shape development. It’s the winds.🔎 ReflectionLook back at the last week.Identify one “windy” moment.Study it instead of resenting it.Ask: What did it teach? How did it build strength?Flexibility isn’t weakness. It’s engineering.*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 10: The Marble Jar
At the beginning of every college season, our coach filled a Gatorade bottle with marbles — one for every practice day the team had left together.At the end of each practice, one marble was removed.Slowly, the jar emptied.What began as a simple ritual became a powerful reminder: time is limited. Seasons end. Chapters close.In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Ginsberg explores how embracing the finite nature of time can sharpen focus, clarify priorities, and help athletes perform with greater intention. Drawing from Stoic philosophy, sport psychology, and the wisdom of performance psychologist Mike Gervais, this episode examines why recognizing that life — and sport — have a shot clock may be the key to thriving both on and off the field.In This EpisodeThe “marble jar” ritual and the powerful lesson behind itWhy acknowledging that time is limited can actually enhance performanceHow Stoic philosophy frames mortality as a tool for clarity and gratitudeWhy athletes perform better when they focus on what they can controlThe simple question every performer should ask at the end of the day: Did I spend that marble wisely?Key TakeawaysSeasons, rounds, and careers are all finite — and that awareness can sharpen our focus.Gratitude and intention grow when we remember that time is limited.Performance improves when we focus our energy on what is within our control.The most successful athletes treat each day — each “marble” — as something that matters.Quote from the Episode“Life — and sport — both have a shot clock. And the performers who grow are the ones who treat every marble like it matters.”*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 9: We (are) Talking About Practice
“We talkin’ ’bout practice?” Yes. We are.In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg reframes one of the most misunderstood—and misused—parts of performance: practice. Drawing from Allen Iverson’s infamous rant, Ted Lasso’s brilliant reversal, and decades of performance psychology, this episode challenges the idea that more reps automatically mean better results.Practice isn’t just preparation for performance. Practice is the performance.You’ll learn why mindless “turn-and-rake” reps can actually make you worse, why discomfort is the sound of learning, and how to structure practice sessions that build trust, automaticity, and a reliable mental game under pressure.If you’ve ever walked off the range feeling busy but unchanged, this episode is for you.What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhy quantity of practice matters far less than qualityThe hidden dangers of mindless reps and comfort-based trainingHow the driving range should function as an exposure lab, not an ego-protection zoneThe Four Stages of Competence and why most golfers quit too earlyA simple, repeatable practice structure that actually transfers to the courseHow to deliberately train your mental game, not just your swingWhy trust is built through intentional reps, not perfect onesKey TakeawaysPractice is an act of care—for yourself, your teammates, and your craftDiscomfort isn’t failure; it’s feedbackIf you leave practice feeling impressive but unchanged, you didn’t practice—you performedAutomaticity is built before you need it, not during pressure momentsPurpose creates progressEpisode Quotes“Practice isn’t just preparation for the work — it is the work.”“The driving range isn’t a place to validate your game; it’s an exposure lab.”“Discomfort is the pathway to growth.”“Trust isn’t built in perfect reps, but in intentional ones.”Listener ReflectionAsk yourself:Are you practicing with purpose?What specific parts of your game deserve more deliberate attention?
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Episode 8: The Power of Breath — What I Learned From Waking Up in the Middle of Surgery
What if the most powerful tool for peak performance is already in your body—your breath? In this episode, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg shares the story of waking up during surgery, completely immobilized, and discovering how breath can control your state when everything else feels out of reach.He breaks down:How your breath signals your nervous system: safe vs. danger.Finding your optimal performance zone on the Yerkes-Dodson Curve.The difference between up-regulation and down-regulation.Swing Breathing—a simple, rhythmic technique to bring calm, focus, and clarity under pressure.Key Takeaways:Breath isn’t just for relaxation—it’s a performance tool you can use anytime, anywhere.When under-aroused: movement, quicker breaths, or brief breath holds can wake up your system.When over-aroused: slow, diaphragmatic breaths bring you back to center.Rhythm matters: think of breathing like a playground swing—back and forth, smooth and controlled.Quote to Remember: "Breath isn’t simply a relaxation tool. It’s a regulation tool. A performance tool. And when everything else feels out of reach, it’s the one thing you always have access to."Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 7: Do Less, Better.
In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg explores a counterintuitive truth at the heart of elite performance: progress doesn’t come from adding more—it comes from refining less.Using a spilled-coffee mishap as a simple (and humbling) metaphor, Stephen breaks down how performers often confuse effort with effectiveness. In the relentless pursuit of improvement, we pile on drills, cues, fixes, and strategies—only to dilute focus and stall real growth.The world’s best performers don’t do more. They do the basics—obsessively well.From Scottie Scheffler’s commitment to his grip, to Steph Curry warming up just feet from the basket, to Katie Ledecky rehearsing her flip turn, elite performance is built on foundational skills practiced with uncommon discipline.Stephen shares a powerful story from a USA Swimming practice—where what looked “boring” from the outside revealed a defining trait of excellence: the willingness to embrace simplicity, repetition, and boredom in service of mastery.The takeaway is clear and actionable: Identify one thing. Commit to it fully. Do less—better.Because lasting progress doesn’t come from motion or effort alone. It comes from focus, clarity, and intention.Key Takeaways:More work isn’t always better workElite performers obsess over fundamentalsSimplicity creates clarity under pressureOne clear intention beats ten competing onesReal progress comes from depth, not breadthIf you’re an athlete, coach, leader, or high performer feeling stuck, overwhelmed, or scattered—this episode offers a reset.Do less. Do it better. And let that be enough.Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 6: Vulnerability — The Ultimate Strength
We’ve been taught that mental toughness means hiding fear, suppressing emotion, and never letting others see us struggle. But what if that definition is backwards?In this episode, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg challenges one of sport’s most deeply held myths: that vulnerability is weakness. Drawing on the work of sport psychologist Graham Betchart and groundbreaking research from Brené Brown, this episode reframes vulnerability as the foundation of courage, resilience, and sustainable performance.If you want to grow, compete, lead, and win in ways that actually last—this conversation will change how you think about strength.What You’ll LearnWhy elite performers often resist vulnerability—even while chasing greatnessHow “mental toughness” became confused with emotional suppression and protectionWhat Brené Brown’s research reveals about vulnerability, courage, and shameWhy we admire vulnerability in others but avoid it in ourselvesHow uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposure are unavoidable in high performanceThe difference between choosing comfort and choosing growthWhy true confidence isn’t built by control—but by surviving exposureHow vulnerability strengthens resilience, leadership, trust, and long-term successKey Concepts & TakeawaysVulnerability is not weakness—it is courage in actionMental toughness is not fearlessness, stoicism, or emotional armorProtection may feel strong short-term, but it creates fear and disconnection long-termGrowth requires uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposureConfidence is built by learning you can survive mistakes, exposure, and discomfortYou cannot choose both comfort and growth—every leap forward requires vulnerabilityMemorable Lines“If you are not willing to be vulnerable, you cannot talk to me about winning.”“Mental toughness became emotional suppression. That’s not strength—it’s protection.”“Same behavior. Different perspective. We call it courage in others and weakness in ourselves.”“The goal isn’t to eliminate fear. The goal is to function with it.”“Vulnerability doesn’t undermine confidence—it builds it.Reflection QuestionWhere in your sport—or your life—are you choosing comfort over courage? Where are you protecting instead of growing?Closing ThoughtVulnerability isn’t about being emotional or soft. It’s about showing up when the outcome isn’t guaranteed. And that’s where real strength, belief, and freedom live.Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 5: Improvisation—Preparation Plus Permission
What does jazz have to do with elite performance under pressure?In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg explores why the best performers—musicians, athletes, speakers, and leaders—are able to improvise when it matters most. Through a personal story about his grandfather, a professional jazz musician, and iconic Masters moments from Bubba Watson and Rory McIlroy, Stephen breaks down a simple but powerful truth:Improvisation isn’t chaos. It isn’t luck. It’s preparation plus permission.This episode examines how fear shuts down creativity, why fundamental training creates freedom, and how trusting your preparation allows you to choose courage over comfort when the pressure is on.What You’ll LearnWhy improvisation is a skill, not a gambleHow preparation builds confidence and frees creativityThe role fear plays in keeping performers “safe” and stuckWhy elite performers trust their training under pressureHow discipline and play work together, not against each otherKey ThemesImprovisation vs. chaosPreparation and muscle memoryFear of failure, embarrassment, and judgmentCourage over comfortTrusting your training when it matters mostStories & ExamplesA jazz musician’s approach to mastery and practiceBubba Watson’s iconic 2012 Masters playoff shotRory McIlroy’s creative shot-making en route to a career grand slamLessons from jazz legend Charlie ParkerNotable Quotes“Improvisation is preparation plus permission.”“Playing only the notes on the page; nothing else.”Stephen Pressfield: “Improvisation is the payoff of scrupulous preparation and drill.”Charlie Parker: “Learn your instrument. Practice, practice, practice. Then forget all that and just wail.”Who This Episode Is ForAthletes performing under pressureGolfers navigating high-stakes momentsMusicians, speakers, and creativesExecutives and leaders who need to adapt in real timeAnyone trying to move from safety to courageTakeawayClassical, fundamental training isn’t the antithesis of improvisation—it’s the foundation of it.Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 4: Oatmeal, Newton, and Nike—The Science of Starting
Why is starting so hard?In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg explores the psychology behind procrastination, motivation, and momentum—using an unlikely trio: a bowl of oatmeal, Isaac Newton, and Nike.What begins as a simple household mistake becomes a powerful metaphor for human behavior. When we delay action, tasks don’t stay neutral—they harden. Just like oatmeal left in the sink, the longer we wait, the more resistant things become.Drawing on Newton’s First Law of Motion, this episode reframes motivation entirely. The hardest part of change isn’t effort—it’s initiation. Contrary to popular belief, motivation doesn’t come first. Action does.You’ll learn:Why procrastination is less about laziness and more about emotional avoidanceHow dread, uncertainty, boredom, and discomfort quietly keep us stuckWhy “action precedes motivation” is one of the most important mindset shifts for performanceHow Nike’s Just Do It captures the psychology of hesitation better than any research paperWhy the smallest first step creates momentum that carries you forwardWhether you’re staring at a blank page, avoiding the gym, putting off a difficult conversation, or leaving oatmeal in the sink, this episode offers a simple but powerful reminder:You don’t need to feel ready to begin. You need to begin in order to feel ready.Because once something is in motion, everything changes.Key takeaway: Action is the spark. Motivation is the fire.Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 3: Vague Goals, Vague Results
If you’ve ever felt like you’re “working hard” but not getting where you want to go, this episode is for you.In this episode of Set Your Mind, Dr. Stephen Ginsberg explores why vague goals lead to vague outcomes—and how specificity is one of the most undertrained (and underestimated) skills in performance.Using a simple GPS analogy and a powerful on-course story with an elite college golfer, Dr. Ginsberg breaks down the difference between knowing what you want and knowing exactly how you’re going to get there.What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhy most people set goals the way they give directions to a GPS—vaguelyHow specificity instantly improves focus, commitment, and executionThe difference between outcome goals (the what) and process goals (the how)Why results are delayed feedback—and habits come firstHow vague daily habits quietly sabotage big goalsA simple, actionable framework you can apply this weekKey ConceptsSpecificity as a performance skillOutcome goals vs. process goalsHabits as leading indicatorsClear targets create clearer swings—on and off the course“Outcomes are a lagging measure of the habits that precede them.” — James ClearThis Week’s Mental Training ChallengeChoose one specific goal you want to achieve in the next seven daysNot a season-long goalNot a someday goalThis weekIdentify two specific habits you will commit to every day that move you toward that goalBe:PreciseRealisticConsistentClear goal. Clear habits. Clear week.Why This MattersYou don’t need a new swing. You don’t need more motivation. You need a clearer target.Because vague goals deliver vague results—but specificity gives you a fighting chance.About the HostDr. Stephen Ginsberg is a clinical psychologist and performance consultant who works with golfers, teams, and high performers to train the mind with the same intention they train the body.*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 2: Red, Blue, or Purple Brain?
In this episode of Set Your Mind, we explore the Red Brain–Blue Brain model popularized by Sir Graham Henry of the New Zealand All Blacks—and why it’s not the full story. Learn why the best performers don’t just escape emotion but integrate it with intention, creating what I call Purple Brain: the ability to feel, think, and act with focus under pressure.Discover practical strategies to notice your emotions, breathe, merge thinking and feeling, and stay present when it matters most—whether it’s a four-foot putt, a penalty shot, or a crucial free throw.Mindset isn’t something you have; it’s something you set.*Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
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Episode 1: Mindset is a Verb
Mindset is something we hear about constantly in sport and performance—and it’s often misunderstood. It’s treated as something you either have or you don’t, a fixed quality that defines success.In this opening episode, I introduce Set Your Mind and share a simple but powerful reframe: mindset isn’t something you possess, it’s something you practice. Drawing on research from Stanford psychologist Dr. Alia Crum, I explore mindset as the “settings of the mind”—beliefs shaped over time that influence how we think, feel, and perform under pressure.Set Your Mind is a sport and performance psychology podcast focused on mental training, resilience, courage, and performing when it matters most. Each episode offers insight into how athletes, executives, and high performers can build mental skills that actually hold up under pressure.If you want to improve performance, manage pressure, and train your mind with the same intention as your body, this is where it starts.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Set Your Mind is a sport and performance psychology podcast about training the mind with the same intention we train the body. Hosted by Dr. Stephen Ginsberg, each episode explores mindset, courage, resilience, and the mental processes that help performers show up on the playing field and in life with courage, clarity, and commitment.
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Dr. Stephen Ginsberg
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