Doubt and fear, among many other negative beliefs, are just that. Beliefs. Not facts. We choose what to believe. Sadly, many are born into “traditional” beliefs and/or believe in what society suggests to be what they should believe. I sure did. Then through a few life or death situations, an exploration to figure out who I was and what I wanted out of life, and pursuing what I love, I created my own beliefs from the data I’ve collected over my short 29 years on this planet as who they call “Josh Perry”. I encourage you all to do what you love and push through the fear and doubt that arises, no matter what it’s origin is. It’s up to you in which you believe. Fear, or love. Choose love. It’s much more enjoyable. 💚✌️
-Josh P.
Tag: Goals
Success Is Rented
People think success is easy for some or “over-night” for others. FALSE! Success is a constant work in progress or practice, if you will.
It’s day in and day out choices we make to better our lives. It’s a constant effort. It may looks “easy” to some, but that’s because they enjoy what they do.
When you lead a path of little to no resistance, have gratitude for your life, work hard to be the best you can be, visualize the life you want and take action towards it, success is inevitable.
Set a goal, have a WHY or purpose for that goal, visualize and take action, and believe in yourself. That’s all it takes. 💯💚✌️
-Josh P.
WHY
WHY we do anything is a million times more important than what we do.
WHY is the driving force behind what anyone does, whether they are conscious of it or not. Whether they like what they do or not.
There is a reason WHY they set out for that path and the more conscious we become of our decisions, the more we can navigate to the lives we want.
Find what you want to do in life and be conscious to your WHY. It will help navigate your path to success and keep you motivated in times of doubt. 💚✌️
-Josh P.
Stop Complaining
Whether you believe you can or can’t, you’re 100% correct. You determine the possibilities for your life. No one or thing can do that but you. No excuses. Stop with the excuses that keep you from taking action and putting the work in.
I’m sick of people complaining when they don’t have it bad. They just look around at “what is” rather than what they want. They focus on what they don’t have rather than ways to obtain what they want. STOP IT!
Your life could always be worse. You’re alive if you can’t think of how it could be worse. Maybe travel to a new country to gain perspective. Maybe do something risky to gain perspective. MAYBE, get the hell off social media and comparing your life to others?
Just because someone suggests you can or can’t doesn’t mean it’s fact. Your beliefs and actions determine the outcome. The power of suggestion is powerful but only if you allow it to be so. Good or bad. You choose your outcome. F all the noise. Do YOU!
-Josh P.
Go All In On Plan A
You can always get a “job” if things don’t work out. F a “plan b”. Go all in on plan A. You can never turn back time to a younger age and opportunity to go all in on a dream. I dropped out of high school, moved 14 hours away from my family, and pursued my dream of becoming a BMX athlete.
I suffered injuries, depression, anxiety, fear, brain tumors, concussions, being broke, living on a couch, living out of my car, and many other challenges to make my dream happen. I had those who supported me and those who doubted me. The most important things I did was believe in myself and take action while never giving up! If I can do it, a kid from Cape Cod with all the odds against him, so can you. Just believe in yourself and know fear is just a thought that can be changed. 💚✌️
Josh P.
Mindsets
I have been indirectly conditioned to deal with my feelings at a level most can’t comprehend. Health issues, relationships, accidents in life, etc. come and go, but to do what I do, I have to be focused 100% of the time. BMX riders face the fact that we may get seriously injured on a daily basis doing what we do or even die. It’s an accepted fact in our sport that you may fall from 10 to 20 feet in the air to the ground and is almost inevitable if you have been riding long enough. This sounds crazy but it does happen, and we bounce right back up (most of the time). I love what I do and the feeling it provides. I’d rather feel pain from time to time doing what I love than be numb with something I don’t love. I am an all or nothing type of person when it comes to what I do in my life.
The amount of emotions that run through our bodies at once in a short split 2-second period in the air is insane. Now that I think about it, my ADHD/ADD, or whatever you want to call it, is what allows my brain to focus on multiple things happening on top of a 25-pound bike, 12-18 feet in the air while flipping, spinning and jumping off the bike. There are times you start to think of a trick to try for the first time or even attempt to learn in the foam pit when fear starts to kicks in. Then you go back and forth between what could happen, what you want to happen, and the consequences of what happens if the trick goes wrong. Then adrenaline and anxiety build up, and, if you’re not careful, doubt washes over you. Then you have these intense nerves that kick in at a contest from the combination of judging yourself too hard and comparing your riding to others, as you struggle not to psych yourself out.
As a BMX athlete, we learn to assess whether or not these feelings are real. Are they coming from the “unknown” of the trick and experience, from someone else’s experience, or are they made up from our past experiences? A top pro rider, no matter what their style of riding may be, is good at blocking these feelings and thoughts. Maybe not blocking them out as much as acknowledging them, and deciding whether or not they serve a purpose in our current life and if we will allow them to take over our success. I can look back on a lot of instances where I fell, and it was because I was thinking, “what if this goes wrong and I do this” or “what will happen if I fall”? More than likely if your thinking of the negatives rather than thinking about what you need to do, and how it will feel and look, you’re going to fall or attract the unwanted negativity.
There is a quote I saw once that read “worrying is like praying for something negative that hasn’t happened yet.” I have learned to apply this mentality to my life and not live in fear. I believe this so much that I even got a tattoo that reads, “fear is just a thought, thoughts can be changed.” I have had relationships go south because one or both of us were living in fear of what the other may think, do, or feel. It’s possible that we were so fearful of a potentially negative experience that we lived in a manner that eventually manifested negativity into our relationship.
I do my best to share with others that anyone can do anything they feel they are capable of deep down inside of them, and that they can absolutely accomplish their dreams that even they doubt are possible. You just have to believe, visualize, and take action. You also have to completely embrace your dream into your life and not listen to others if they spread negative energy towards you or your goals. I have done this very well when it comes to BMX riding, but I’ve never been 100% good at it, and never will be because I am always learning how to improve myself and I am only human. I have learned to adopt this into my riding and my personal life even further since my diagnosis and surgery for three separate brain tumor diagnosis while living with four tumors in my skull today. I have learned to listen to my gut feeling, which all of us should learn to do more. We have complex brains that take intuition, analyze it and discredit it, resulting in changing our thoughts to disagree with our gut.
I feel that many people are afraid of their goals and dreams because they are afraid to accept that they can have positivity in their life while achieving success. I feel a lot of American’s are conditioned to believe they cannot have a happy life, a healthy life, success, their dream job or life partner, etc. They live in fear to take a risk and go for it. What I do as a BMX athlete involves taking calculated risks every single day. There is a part of our brain we have learned to manipulate, allowing us to hold onto the feeling of exhilaration you get from landing a trick while suppressing the fear and danger of trying the trick. An excellent quote by Dave Mirra that I love is, “I’d risk the fall to know how it feels to fly,” and Jim Carrey “You can fail at what you don’t want, so you might as well take a chance on what you love.” Both are so true and hold so much meaning to my life and me. If more people were willing to risk the fall, they would understand the true happiness of accomplishing something that no one else thought was possible.
I am a firm believer that our thoughts manifest into our reality, whether they’re “good” or “bad.” Energy and the universe don’t interpret the difference; they just provide us with what we focus our energy on. I grew up constantly thinking, dreaming, daydreaming and talking about BMX. Wanting to become a pro rider one day consumed me. I put everything I had behind this thought into action because it was what I wanted most in life. I took risks on tricks, traveling around the country as an amateur rider, and then moving from MA to NC at the age of 17 to pursue this dream of mine. Luckily for me, my parents were behind me completely and without hesitation, which makes it much easier to move 13 hours away from your home and family and take a risk that doesn’t conform to what society says is a “normal” American life. Between the mental and physical acts of working towards a goal, I achieved success as a top BMX pro athlete and became friends with my idols I grew up watching on TV.
Energy cannot be created nor destroyed. Or rather, it transforms from one form to another. Everything in life is energy. If you can learn to shift your energy from negative to positive, then you will see significant benefits in your life. This practice along with a holistic diet has helped me grow in ways I never saw coming. I believe a clean, macro balanced, high-fat, healthy diet allows your body to do its job without added stress and toxins slowing it down. You begin to feel, think, act, and live clearer and with positive energy full of love. Love for yourself, your life, your passions, your goals, your family and friends, strangers, animals, etc. Learning all of this and making these changes has helped me become the best version of myself as a human being and a pro-BMX athlete while accepting positive energy into my life.
It’s not always easy, though. Brain surgery and Gamma Knife radiosurgery were not the only obstacles I have had to overcome. Two and a half months after my first brain surgery, a fall during a contest in the UK resulted in my arm being operated on to remove bone chips and fragments in my elbow. Then another year or so later I fell while competing in Ocean City, MD at the Dew Action Sports Tour resulting in the worst concussion I have ever had. My heart stopped beating for 30 seconds, I had a black eye, and I woke up in the ambulance throwing up. Then in November of 2015, I went in for ACL/meniscus reconstructive surgery to repair an injury from 2013. Despite all of this, I still ride today, and I ride harder than ever.
When you set a goal, and you love something as much as I love BMX, you do whatever it takes to make it happen. Failure is a part of life, and when you can accept that fact, you can learn not to dwell on past failures and instead strive for greatness. “Be not afraid of greatness: some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them.”
-Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night.”
You cannot have success without failure just as you cannot have up without down, hot without cold, or good without bad. It’s just how life is. We define what “good” is, so we indirectly and directly define what is bad. Otherwise good wouldn’t be a real thing. Just as I have had to accept death is a part of a human experience in life, we must accept failure is a part of the road to success. It’s our perspective on “failures” that can either turn into a learning experience or put us into a “victim” perceptive and thus set our reality as just that.
My point with all of this is that if you truly believe in something and a dream to be someone or do something special one day, don’t let anything stop you. When life gets tough, shift that energy into fuel and stay positive. Don’t stop pushing because when times feel as if it’ll never get better and you want to give up, that’s when you’re closest to reaching your goal. Live and eat as healthy as you can so you can form positive thoughts and have the mental and physical strength to push forward. Don’t be afraid of failure or to take a risk doing something you love, and put that positive energy out into the universe and accept it in return.
-Josh P.
Athletic Lab Member of the Month: Josh Perry
I am honored to have been picked for the member of the month for the sports performance gym I train at in Cary, NC, Atheltic Lab. I have been attending for the last 9 months in order to strengthen my mind, body, and my riding.
Training isn’t a very common practice for the sport of BMX freestyle and is fairly new to me in the last 2 years after suffering an ACL tear. It’s becoming more well-known of its importance and benefits, though, and I think we will start to see new levels of athleticism in the sport of BMX.
Here is an interview I responded to for the athletic website:
“For the month of June, we’ve selected Josh Perry as our member of the month. Josh has been an inspirational member of our community for the past year. Josh is one of our many professional athletes but his story goes beyond high-level sport. Check out his story and read about our previous members of the month here.”
- Name: Josh Perry
- Age: 28
- What city were you born in? Cape Cod, Massachusetts
- What do you do when you’re not working out at Athletic Lab (occupation, hobbies, etc)? I ride BMX bikes professionally, enjoy hiking and playing golf. I am starting a non-profit geared towards financially supporting brain tumor, brain injury, and other brain disorder patients through BMX, entertainment, and education, in the process of writing a book sharing my story of overcoming brain tumors, BMX, etc., and am working on a longer-term goal of creating an online webinar based nutrition coaching program.
- What’s your favorite exercise? Least favorite? Honestly, I love everything I am doing in The Lab as it’s all so new to me. If I had to pick one exercise that is my favorite, I would say either the K-Box or any ring workout due to the difficulty of strength you put into the workouts and have to counterbalance back. Least favorite would have to be the assault bikes. Haha, they always kick my butt, but it’s so worth it.
- What do you feel has been your greatest accomplishment since you started training at Athletic Lab? My greatest accomplishment would have to be getting my arms to bend more on power cleans. Sounds funny but when I started, it was such a mission to get them to bend enough to raise my elbows up in the air. I love getting into the Olympic weightlifting exercises because it’s so new and a skill I can practice.
- What motivates you? My goal to protect my health and prevent injuries in my sport is what motivates me. I want to perform the best I can on my bike while also being as healthy and fit as possible. I also want to be a positive role model to the kids in my sport, as well and children and adults elsewhere. I believe in leading by example and do my best to walk my talk.
- How long have you been riding? How long have you been a professional? I have been on a bike since I was about 3 or 4 years old. I started riding BMX freestyle at the age of 13 where I wandered into a park with it. I have been fortunate enough to make a living off riding my bike for about 11 years now.
- What started you on learning more about health, nutrition, and fitness? I fell one day in 2010, from about 10 feet, attempting a new trick for the first time. I over rotated the spin and hit my head off the ground, which led to an MRI to make sure there was so no TBI (traumatic brain injury). I never imaged the news they would give me resulting in a brain tumor 8cm long by 2 cm wide and 2 cm deep, taking up a good portion of the left side of my brain. This was a turning point in my life to seek out what I could be doing differently with my lifestyle choices to prevent it from coming back and becoming resilient as possible to other health issues.
- What are your goals? (fitness related or otherwise?) My goals within the fitness world are to protect my knee after having ACL surgery in November of 2015, stay as strong as possible so tricks become easier, I don’t get fatigued as easy, and to prevent injuries as best as I can, and I also want to lower my heart rate while still riding as hard as I do in order to recover quicker in between tricks and runs.
-Josh P.
Don’t Regret Where You Started
My past Friday night consisted of me busting my ass at the BMX park. What did yours look like? My past Friday’s used to consist of aimlessly going out drinking with friends with no goal in sight other than to have fun.
That was then and this is now. Now I’m goal orientated, driven, passionate, and persistent towards making my dreams come true. I’m healthier than ever, more fit than ever, more dialed on my bike than ever, and the most confident on and off my bike that I’ve ever been. I contribute part of that to having a goal in mind with the focus to choose things that will supplement my efforts, not take away.
I don’t regret any of the past times and choices I’ve made because it is what led me to where I am now. In the moment, it was fun followed by feeling like absolute shit and pushing myself to ride through it because I was sort of committed to making my dreams come true. Little did I know it would be a life changing experience that reiterates everything I’ve learned about #holistic #health and #nutrition.
One morning riding with Dave Mirra hung over and feeling like I was about to throw up all over the ramps, I fell because I wasn’t 100% focused on what I was doing. Luckily I didn’t get hurt but it didn’t help the pain I was already in.
I’m not saying drinking is bad or that you shouldn’t go out with your friends. I’m simply saying making those choices for me, my goals, and my life was indeed toxic and bad. Alcohol on those levels and frequencies destroys our brain and body. Definitely not what I’m about now. This doesn’t mean I never drink. Although it’s been months since I’ve had a drink, when I do drink I choose to have the best quality drink available to me (usually high-quality wine), consume activated charcoal before and after, as well as get some MCT oil in my system. Some quick Bulletproof Biohacking tips
The point of my sharing this is to point out the growth in which I’ve achieved from past experiences and help inspire you all to assess your choices. The most important change is my perspective on my goals and which lifestyle choices helps or takes away from reaching those goals. 💚✌️