© SinoAmerican Books 2008. All rights reserved.
What is Toughness?
Mental/emotional toughness means the ability to resist distortions of thought caused by failures, conflicts, tragedies, and even good fortune.
Behavioral toughness means the ability both to control one’s actions and to break through limitations to behavior, such as shyness and fear.
Physical toughness means possessing the fitness that among other things helps us withstand the stresses of everyday life, resist illness, and enjoy the huge variety of leisure pursuits modern life has to offer.
How Does One Become Tough?
Your first step to becoming tough is to go for a long walk and count every single fall of your right or left foot.
There is of course more to becoming tough than that simple exercise—but not much more. The basic pattern of the exercise, a mental activity performed in synchrony with a physical activity, is common to many body-calming, mind-toughening, and even enlightening techniques.
The true profession of man is to find his way to himself.
[Herman Hesse]
What Is Toughness?
Who Is Tough?
How Does One Become Tough?
Why Walk?
Foundation Of The Toughening Program
Part One: Preparing To Be Tough
1 Tough Goals
2 Subjects To Make You Tough
3 Controlling The Mind And Responses
4 Physical And Emotional Preparations
Part Two: Toughening Techniques
5 Focused Walking
6 Insight Walking
7 Breath Walking
8 Focused Sitting
9 Insight Sitting
10 Breath Sitting
11 Insight Reclining And Body Scanning
12 Extra Methods For The Mindful And The Athlete
Part Three: Toughening Program
13 An Overview And Schedule of Focusing Exercises
14 Sample Program: Dispelling Hate And Nurturing Friendliness
Notes And References
Personal Notes
Who is Tough?
We have all seen people who possess a natural toughness that we commonly call “iron will;” and we may have met people who live tough lives through spiritual inspiration or who have been toughened through the exercise of authority or the experience of adversity. The less common, though perhaps more frequently wholesome, route is through exercising the mind into obedience. I believe that whatever kind of toughness we seek, it is best achieved in the same way as any skill, through practice and study, that is, through training.
Becoming Tough
(Third Edition)
...there is no interference with the user’s personal beliefs that he or she does not wish to change, since the proposed set of exercises is a methodology, not a mystical, religious, or philosophical system of any kind.