2019-09-01_Shape

(Marty) #1

SEPTEMBER 2019 50 SHAPE.COM


bestrong+well | de-stress


winning

EDGE


Your competitive instinct is a force
that compels you to be better, faster, stronger.
Here’s the strategic way to tap into its
performance-boosting power. By Mirel Zaman

N


othing motivates like competition, new
studies show. It drives you to push your-
self harder in the moment, and it also fuels
you to consistently put in the work that
will make you healthier and happier in
the long term, says Brynne DiMenichi, Ph.D., a cogni-
tive neuroscientist who has researched competition at
Rutgers University in New Jersey. “If I’m training for the
same half-marathon as my friend, I won’t skip as many
runs, and I’ll train harder,” DiMenichi says. “I’ll have that
extra motivation to stay on track so I can beat him.”
“Competitors are important because they give you
a reference point,” says Ashley Merryman, a coauthor of

Top Dog: The Science of Winning and Losing. “I could run
on my own, but I don’t know how well I’m doing unless
I see a person in front of or behind me.”
That same instinct takes hold at work. Regardless of
whether you’re preparing for an interview, gunning for
a promotion, or scrambling to meet a sales quota, your
enthusiasm to get the job done goes to the next level if
you’re competing against someone.
But being competitive in a good way requires some
finesse. If it gets out of control, it can be superstress-
ful and actually work you, experts say. Follow these
science-backed guidelines to stay on the winning side.
(Continued on page 52)

IT’S WIN-WIN


Even if you
place second,
you’ll gain
benefits from
competing.

Sa
m^ K

ap
lan

/Tr

unk

Ar
chi

ve

well lab
Free download pdf