Earning a Online College Degree - second wind! ..
Did you ever engage in any exhausting physical work for a long period of time? If so, you probably remember that as you proceeded, you became more and more fatigued, finally reaching a point when it seemed that you could not endure the strain another minute.You had just decided to give up, when suddenly the fatigue seemed to diminish and new energy seemed to come from some source. This curious thing, which happens frequently in athletic activities, is known as second-wind, and is described, by those who have experienced it, as a time of increased power, when the work is done with greater ease and effectiveness and with a freshness and vigor in great contrast to the staleness that preceded it.
It is as though one "tapped a level of new energy," revealing hidden stores of unexpected power. And it is commonly reported that with persistence in pushing one's self farther and farther, a third and fourth wind may be uncovered, each one leading to greater heights of achievement.
This phenomenon occurs not alone on the physical plane; it is
discernible in mental exertion as well. True, we seldom
experience it because we are mentally lazy and have the habit of
stopping our work at the first signs of fatigue.
Did we persist,
however, disregarding fatigue and ennui, we should find
ourselves tapping vast reserves of mental power and
accomplishing mental feats of astonishing brilliancy.
The occasional occurrence of the phenomenon of second-wind gives
ground for the statement that we possess more energy than we
ordinarily use. There are several lines of evidence for this
statement. One is to be found in the energizing effects of
emotional excitement.
Under the impetus of anger, a man shows
far greater strength than he ordinarily uses. Similarly, a
mother manifests the strength of a tigress when her young is
endangered. A second line of evidence is furnished by the effect
of stimulants. Alcohol brings to the fore surprising reserves of
physical and psychic energy.
Lastly, we have innumerable
instances of accession of strength under the stimulus of an
idea. Under the domination of an all-absorbing idea, one
performs feats of extraordinary strength, utilizing stores of
energy otherwise out of reach. We have only to read of the
heroic achievements of little Joan of Arc for an example of such
manifestation of reserve power.
When we examine this accession of energy we find it to be
describable in several ways—physiologically, neurologically and
psychologically. The physiological effects consist in a
heightening of the bodily functions in general. The muscles
become more ready to act, the circulation is accelerated, the
breathing more rapid.
Curious things take place in various
glands throughout the body. One, the adrenal gland, has been the
object of special study and has been shown, upon the arousal of
these reserves of energy, to produce a secretion of the utmost
importance in providing for sudden emergencies.
This little
gland is located above the kidney, and is aroused to intense
activity at times, pouring out into the blood a fluid that goes
all over the body. Some of its effects are to furnish the blood
with chemicals that act as fuel to the muscles, assisting them
to contract more vigorously, to make the lungs more active in
introducing oxygen into the system, to make the heart more
active in distributing the blood throughout the body.
Such
glandular activity is an important physiological condition of
these higher levels of energy. In neurological terms, the
increase in energy consists in the flow of more nervous energy
into the brain, particularly into those areas where it is needed
for certain kinds of controlled thought and action.
An abundance
of nervous energy is very advantageous, for, as has been
intimated in a former chapter, nervous energy is diffused and
spread over all the pathways that are easily permeable to its
distribution. This results in the use of considerable areas of
brain surface, and knits up many associations, so that one idea
calls up many other ideas.
This leads us to recognize the
psychological conditions of increased energy, which are, first,
the presence of more ideas, second, the more facile flow of
ideas; the whole accompanied by a state of marked
pleasurableness. Pleasure is a notable effect of increased
energy.
When work progresses rapidly and satisfactorily, it is
accomplished with great zest and a feeling almost akin to
exaltation. These conditions describe to some degree the
conditions when we are doing efficient work.
Since we are endowed with the energy requisite for such
efficient work, the obvious question is, why do we not more
frequently use it?
The answer is to be found in the fact that we
have formed the habit of giving up before we create conditions
of high efficiency. You will note that the conditions require
long-continued exertion and resolute persistence. This is
difficult, and we indulgently succumb to the first symptoms of
fatigue, before we have more than scratched the surface of our
real potentialities.
Because of the prominent place occupied by fatigue in thus being
responsible for our diminished output, we shall briefly consider
its place in study. Everyone who has studied will agree that
fatigue is an almost invariable attendant of continuous mental
exertion.
We shall lay down the proposition at the start,
however, that the awareness of fatigue is not the same as the
objective fatigue in the organs of the body. Fatigue should be
regarded as a twofold thing—a state of mind, designated its
subjective aspect, and a condition of various parts of the body,
designated its objective aspect.
The former is observable by
introspection, the latter by analysis of bodily secretions and
by measurement of the diminution of work, entirely without
reference to the way the mind regards the work. Fatigue
subjectively, or fatigue as we feel it, is not at all the
same as fatigue as manifested in the body.
If we were to make
two curves, the one showing the advancement of the feeling
of fatigue, and the other showing the advancement of impotence
on the part of the bodily processes, the two curves would not at
all coincide.
Stated another way, fatigue is a complex thing, a
product of ideas, feelings and sensations, and sometimes the
ideas overbalance the sensations and we think we are more tired
then we are objectively. It is this fact that accounts for our
too rapid giving up when we are engaged in hard work.
A
psychological analysis of the subjective side of fatigue will
make its true nature more apparent. Probably the first thing we
find in the mind when fatigued is a large mass of sensations.
They are referred to various parts of the body, mostly the part
where muscular activity has been most violent and prolonged. Not
all of the sensations, however, are intense enough to be
localizable, some being so vague that we merely say we are
"tired all over." These vague sensations are often overlooked;
nevertheless, as will be shown later, they may be exceedingly
important.
But sensations are not the only contents of the mind at time of
fatigue. Feelings are present also, usually of a very unpleasant
kind.
They are related partly to the sensations mentioned above,
which are essentially painful, and they are feelings of boredom
and ennui. We have yet to examine the ideas in mind and their
behavior at time of fatigue.
They come sluggishly, associations
being made slowly and inaccurately, and we make many mistakes.
But constriction of ideas is not the sole effect of fatigue. At
such a time there are usually other ideas in the mind not
relevant to the fatiguing task of the moment, and exceedingly
distracting.
Often they are so insistent in forcing themselves
upon our attention that we throw up the work without further
effort. It is practically certain that much of our fatigue is
due, not to real weariness and inability to work, but to the
presence of ideas that appear so attractive in contrast with the
work in hand that we say we are tired of the latter. What we
really mean is that we would rather do something else.
These
obtruding ideas are often introduced into our minds by other
people who tell us that we have worked long enough and ought to
come and play, and though we may not have felt tired up to this
point, still the suggestion is so strong that we immediately
begin to feel tired. Various social situations can arouse the
same suggestion. For example, as the clock nears quitting time,
we feel that we ought to be tired, so we allow ourselves to
think we are.
Let us now examine the bodily conditions to see what fatigue is
objectively. "Physiologically it has been demonstrated that
fatigue is accompanied by three sorts of changes. First, poisons
accumulate in the blood and affect the action of the nervous
system, as has been shown by direct analysis. Mosso ... selected
two dogs as nearly alike as possible.
One he kept tied all day;
the other, he exercised until by night it was thoroughly tired.
Then he transfused the blood of the tired animal into the veins
of the rested one and produced in him all the signs of fatigue
that were shown by the other. There can be no doubt that the
waste products of the body accumulate in the blood and interfere
with the action of the nerve cells and muscles. It is probable
that these accumulations come as a result of mental as well as
of physical work.
"A second change in fatigue has been found in the cell body of
the neurone. Hodge showed that the size of the nucleus of the
cell in the spinal cord of a bee diminished nearly 75 per cent,
as a result of the day's activity, and that the nucleus became
much less solid.
A third change that has been demonstrated as a
result of muscular work is the accumulation of waste products in
the muscle tissue. Fatigued muscles contain considerable
percentages of these products. That they are important factors
in the fatigue process has been shown by washing them from a
fatigued muscle.
As a result the muscle gains new capacity for
work. The experiments are performed on the muscles of a frog
that have been cut from the body and fatigued by electrical
stimulation. When they will no longer respond, their sensitivity
may be renewed by washing them in dilute alcohol or in a weak
salt solution that will dissolve the products of fatigue.
It is
probable that these products stimulate the sense-organs in the
muscles and thus give some of the sensations of fatigue. Of
these physical effects of fatigue, the accumulation of waste
products in the blood and the effects upon the nerve cells are
probably common both to mental and physical fatigue. The effect
upon the muscles plays a part in mental fatigue only so far as
all mental work involves some muscular activity."
By this time you must be convinced that the subject of fatigue
is exceedingly complicated; that its effects are manifested
differently in mind and body. In relieving fatigue the first
step to be taken is to rest properly.
Man cannot work
incessantly; he must rest sometimes, and it is just as important
to know how to rest efficiently as to know how to work
efficiently. By this is not meant that one should rest as soon
as fatigue begins to be felt. Quite the reverse. Keep on working
all the harder if you wish the second-wind to appear. Perhaps
two hours will exhaust your first supply of energy and will
leave you greatly fatigued.
Do not give up at this time,
however. Push yourself farther in order to uncover the second
layer of energy. Before entering upon this, however, it will be
possible to secure some advantage by resting for about fifteen
minutes. Do not rest longer than this, or you may lose the
momentum already secured and your two hours will have gone for
naught.
If one indulges in too long a rest, the energy seems to
run down and more effort is required to work it up again than
was originally expended. It is also important to observe the
proper mental conditions during rest. Do not spend the fifteen
minutes in getting interested in some other object; for that
will leave distracting ideas in the mind which will persist when
you resume work.
Make the rest a time of physical and mental
relief. Move cramped muscles, rest your eyes and let your
thoughts idly wander; then come back to work in ten or fifteen
minutes and you will be amazed at the refreshed feeling with
which you do your work and at the accession of new energy that
will come to you. Keep on at this new plane and your work will
take on all the attributes of the second-wind level of
efficiency.
Besides planning intelligent rests, you may also adjust yourself
to fatigue by arranging your daily program so as to do your
hardest work when you are fresh, and your easiest when your
efficiency is low.
In other words, you are a human dynamo, and
should adjust yourself to the different loads you carry. When
carrying a heavy load, employ your best energies, but when
carrying only a light load, exert a proportionate amount of
energy. Every student has tasks of a routine nature which do not
require a high degree of energy, such as copying material. Plan
to perform such work when your stock of energy is lowest.
One of the best ways to insure the attainment of a higher plane of mental efficiency is to assume an attitude of interestedness. This is an emotional state and we have seen that emotion calls forth great energy.
A
final aid in promoting increase of energy is that gained through
stimulating ideas. Other things being equal, the student who is
animated by a stimulating idea works more diligently and
effectively than one without. The idea may be a lofty
professional ideal; it may be a desire to please one's family, a
sense of duty, or a wish to excel
. Whatever it is, an idea may
stimulate to extraordinary achievements. Adopt some compelling
aim if you have none. A vocational aim often serves as a
powerful incentive throughout one's student life. An idea may
operate for even more transient purposes; it may make one
oblivious to present discomfort to a remarkable degree. This is
accomplished through the aid of suggestion. When feelings of
fatigue approach, you may ward them off by resolutely suggesting
to yourself that you are feeling fresh.
Above all, the will is effective in lifting one to higher levels
of efficiency. It is notorious that a single effort of the will,
"such as saying 'no' to some habitual temptation or performing
some courageous act, will launch a man on a higher level of
energy for days and weeks, will give him a new range of power.
'In the act of uncorking the whiskey bottle which I had brought
home to get drunk upon,' said a man to me, 'I suddenly found
myself running out into the garden, where I smashed it on the
ground. I felt so happy and uplifted after this act, that for
two months I wasn't tempted to touch a drop.'" But the results
of exertions of the will are not usually so immediate, and you
may accept it as a fact that in raising yourself to a higher
level of energy you cannot do it by a single effort.
Continuous
effort is required until the higher levels of energy have
formed the habit of responding when work is to be done. In
laying the burden upon Nature's mechanism of habit, you see you
are again face to face with the proposition laid down at the
beginning of the book—that education consists in the process of
forming habits of mind.
The particular habit most important to
cultivate in connection with the production of second-wind is
the habit of resisting fatigue. Form the habit of persisting in
spite of apparent obstacles and limitations. Though they seem
almost unsurmountable, they are really only superficial. Buried
deep within you are stores of energy that you yourself are
unaware of.
They will assist you in accomplishing feats far
greater than you think yourself capable of. Draw upon these
resources and you will find yourself gradually living and
working upon a higher plane of efficiency, improving the quality
of your work, increasing the quantity of your work and enhancing
your enjoyment in work.
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