Carrie Jackson Cheadle is a nationally acclaimed mental skills coach, consultant, author, podcast co-host, and so much more. We discuss how to find your identity as an athlete once you've experienced setbacks such as injury. She sheds some light on tools athletes can use to control their response to injury, and how that can set the tone for how you process setbacks. There are so many great takeaways for anyone who has ever experienced the highs and lows that accompany the pursuit of big goals.
- To receive 30% off of Carrie's book Rebound: Train Your Mind to Bounce Back Stronger from Sports Injuries visit https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/rebound-9781472961433/
- Reach out to Carrie directly at www.carriecheadle.com and mention Endurance Minded to receive 15% off of your first mental training package.
- For more resources on her work with injured athletes visit www.injuredathletesclub.com. Also, check out her podcast The Injured Athletes Club.
- Visit www.thomasendurancecoaching.com for more information on our all-inclusive training camp in April, as well as lots of great resources from all of our expert coaches.
How Much Are You Willing To Invest?
Creating A "Main Hustle" Mentality
A Thought Is Just A Thought w/ Lydia Black
We Get To Do This w/ Jacob Oak
Do The Hard To Get The Good
Fueled For Life w/ Brooke Schohl
Endurance to Entrepreneur: Taylor's Story
Addicted to Comfort w/ Christine Hernandez
Busy as a Mindset In the New Year
Exploration Into Mental Toughness w/ Kate Allgood
Making Enjoyment Your Primary Metric
Playing The Long Game w/ Braden Bott
The Power of Being Solution-Focused w/ Christine Hernandez
Balancing Routine and Expectations
Doing Less Really Well
Developing a Good Bullshit Meter
DO Something Different to BE Someone Different!
Loneliness in Sport and Leadership w/ Nick Jonsson
Take Charge of Your Orbit
Removing the Clutter with Stacy Conte
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Relaxback UK Show
Your Sleep Guru Podcast
Good Nurse Bad Nurse
Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep
Huberman Lab