Mental Skills Training (MST), a great explanation:


Mental Skills Training (MST) is a structured, evidence based approach used to strengthen psychological abilities that enhance performance, resilience, and well-being.

It’s widely used in sports, military, performing arts, medicine, and executive leadership.


What It Develops

MST focuses on trainable psychological capacities such as:

  • Attention & concentration control
  • Emotional regulation
  • Stress tolerance
  • Confidence & self-efficacy
  • Motivation & goal clarity
  • Imagery & mental rehearsal
  • Self-talk regulation
  • Arousal regulation (activation vs calm)

It’s essentially performance psychology in action.


Core Techniques

Common tools include:

1. Goal Setting

  • Outcome goals (win, achieve X)
  • Performance goals (improve metric)
  • Process goals (specific behaviors)

Often structured using SMART frameworks.

2. Visualization / Imagery

Mental rehearsal activates similar neural pathways as physical execution.
Used extensively in Olympic training.

3. Self-Talk Training

Replacing automatic negative thoughts with task-focused cues.

Example:

  • “Don’t mess up”: “Strong, steady, smooth.”

4. Breath & Arousal Regulation

  • Box breathing
  • Diaphragmatic breathing
  • Pre-performance routines

Regulates sympathetic activation (fight-or-flight).

5. Attentional Control

Training narrow vs broad focus depending on task demands.

6. Resilience Training

Cognitive reframing, stress inoculation, adaptive attribution styles.


Theoretical Foundations

MST draws from:

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
  • Self-regulation theory
  • Psychophysiology of stress
  • Neuroplasticity research
  • Peak performance research (e.g., flow states)

What Makes MST Different From Therapy?

TherapyMental Skills Training
Focus on healing dysfunctionFocus on optimizing performance
Past-orientedFuture-oriented
Symptom reductionCapacity building
Clinical populationHigh-functioning individuals

That said, the two often overlap, especially when performance anxiety, trauma history, or identity instability affect execution.


Clinical & Applied Use

MST can be integrated into:

  • Trauma-informed performance work
  • Nervous system regulation training
  • Executive function strengthening
  • Identity consolidation under stress

It is especially powerful when paired with somatic regulation work, since cognitive skills fail under dysregulated autonomic states.


In Simple Terms

Mental Skills Training:
“Strength training for the mind under pressure.”

Shervan K Shahhian

Leave a Comment