Focus on wins to wire the brain for success

Why what you focus on matters

How the Brain Filters Your Reality

The Power of the Reticular Activating System (RAS)

 

Have you ever noticed that when you’re thinking about buying a new car, you suddenly see that same model everywhere? Or that once you start focusing on your goals, new ideas and opportunities seem to appear out of nowhere?

That’s not magic. It’s your Reticular Activating System (RAS) at work—one of the most powerful (yet underrated) parts of your brain when it comes to mindset and performance.

Let’s break down what the RAS is, how it works, and how you can train it to work for you, not against you.

🧠 What Is the Reticular Activating System?

The Reticular Activating System is a bundle of nerves at the base of your brainstem. Its job? To act as a filter for all the sensory input around you—sights, sounds, smells, ideas, opportunities—so your conscious mind doesn’t get completely overwhelmed.

In other words, the RAS decides what gets through to your awareness based on what it believes is important.

But here’s the key:

What your RAS believes is important is based on what you focus on the most.

🎯 Why This Matters for Mindset & Performance

Let’s say you’re someone who tends to dwell on mistakes. Your RAS will start filtering your world to notice more of them—reinforcing the belief that “I’m not good enough” or “I always mess up.”

On the other hand, if you start focusing on your wins, your progress, and your strengths—even the small ones—your RAS will filter in more evidence to support that reality.

That’s how belief is built—not through positive thinking alone, but by training your brain to spot real, lived proof that you’re growing, improving, and capable.

🧩 How Focusing on Wins Rewires the Brain

Here’s what happens when you intentionally focus on your wins:

  1. You teach your brain what to notice
    → Your RAS learns that success and progress matter to you.

  2. You reinforce empowering beliefs
    → The more you see success, the more you believe in your ability to achieve it.

  3. You shift from threat mode to opportunity mode
    → Instead of spotting dangers and flaws, your brain starts seeking solutions and possibilities.

  4. You create a positive feedback loop
    → Small wins boost belief → belief fuels action → action creates more wins.

This isn’t just about motivation. It’s neuroscience. You’re literally rewiring the way your brain interprets your environment and your potential.

🔑 Key Takeaway

What you focus on, your brain finds more of.

Your RAS doesn’t care whether you’re feeding it fear or confidence, doubt or determination. It just responds to repetition and emotional intensity.

So if you want to perform at your best—whether that’s in sport, business, or life—start by training your brain to look for wins. Celebrate small successes. Acknowledge progress. Capture the moments that prove you’re moving forward.

Your brain is listening. The more wins you feed it, the more it will find.

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Why we fear losing more than we love winning

The Power of Loss Aversion

Why we fear losing more than we love winning

Imagine you’re offered a bet:
Heads, you win £100.
Tails, you lose £100.
Would you take it?

If you’re like most people, you’d probably say no. Even though the odds are even, the idea of losing hurts way more than the joy of winning feels good. That’s not just a personal quirk — it’s a powerful mental shortcut called loss aversion, and it’s affecting your decisions more than you realise.

What Is Loss Aversion?

Loss aversion is a cognitive bias where the pain of losing something is psychologically twice as powerful as the pleasure of gaining something of equal value.
In other words:

Losing £100 feels worse than

Winning £100 feels good.

This idea comes from the field of behavioural economics, popularised by psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. Their research showed that we’re wired to avoid losses — even when it might make more sense to take a risk or let go.

How It Shows Up In Everyday Life

Loss aversion doesn’t just show up when money is on the table. It’s everywhere:

  • Staying in a bad relationship or job because you’ve already invested so much time.

  • Not selling a pair of expensive shoes you never wear because “you paid good money for them.”

  • Avoiding new challenges because the fear of failure outweighs the potential success.

Even in performance settings — sports, business, the arts — people often play it safe rather than risk losing what they already have, even if taking a leap could lead to big gains.

The Brain Science Behind It

Loss aversion isn’t just emotional — it’s neurological. Brain imaging studies have shown that when people anticipate a loss, the amygdala, a part of the brain associated with fear and threat detection, lights up. Our nervous system gets more activated by potential loss than potential gain.

This is rooted in evolution: avoiding threats (like predators or starvation) was more urgent for survival than seeking rewards. But in today’s world, this ancient wiring can keep us stuck, anxious, or overly cautious.

How To Work With (Not Against) Loss Aversion

Awareness is the first step — when you know your brain is naturally loss-averse, you can start to make more balanced decisions.

Here are a few mindset shifts to help:

1. Reframe Failure as Learning

If you see a “loss” as wasted effort, you’ll avoid taking action. But if you view setbacks as part of growth, you reclaim power. Ask: What did I learn? What will I do differently next time?

2. Focus on What You’ll Miss Out on By NOT Acting

Flip the script. Instead of fearing what you might lose if you try something new, consider what you might miss out on if you don’t. This leverages loss aversion in your favour.

3. Make the Gains Feel Real

The brain responds more strongly to what feels immediate and certain. So make your desired outcome vivid and emotionally charged. Visualisation, journaling, or even small wins can help your brain see the gain as “worth it.”

4. Use Commitment Devices

Make it harder to back out. Tell a friend, set a deadline, or put some money on the line. Once you have skin in the game, your fear of losing face or letting someone down can push you forward.

Final Thought

Loss aversion is part of being human — it’s not something to “get rid of.” But when we understand it, we can stop letting it control our choices.

So the next time you hesitate to take a leap, ask yourself:
Am I making this decision because it’s the right one — or because I’m afraid of losing?