Imagine this: You're at the gym trying to hit a new PR on the treadmill . You've been training for several months and you think you're ready. But then you don't hit your goal — what do you do? Get frustrated, let your emotions take over, and stop running? Or do you pause, reset, and keep going? If you skew towards the former, you may benefit from mindset coaching.

There are a LOT of feelings that come up while working out, from joy and excitement to pain and frustration. However, just as you're training your body to jump higher, run faster , lift heavier, and hold a plank longer , it's equally beneficial to train your mind . .

. especially if there's a particular goal you're trying to meet. That's why some of the biggest names in professional sports swear by mindset coaching (AKA mental conditioning) which tackles not only the physical, grueling practice of training for a sport, but also the way your mind functions while you're working on those physical goals.

"You want your movement and your thoughts to both be on autopilot," explains Akin Akman, the well-known co-founder and CEO of AARMY , a studio that trains clients in the same way pro athletes train, with mental conditioning embedded in the physical practice. It's where I first discovered the concept, after recovering from a devastating knee surgery that required almost a year of physical therapy. I was left with only 85 percent strength in my left quad and was convinced I'd never get back to 100.

According to Akman, t.