Transcript of @maya.mental.fitness's reel
DVGl8LViKqR
A very big sign that someone is mentally strong and mentally fit is that they can experience doubt, but they act anyway.
Want the power words behind this hook?
Sign up free to see the exact words doing the heavy lifting + 50+ similar viral hooks from your niche.
A very big sign that someone is mentally strong and mentally fit is that they can experience doubt, but they act anyway. They can experience fear, but they act anyway. They can experience worry or anxious feelings, but they show up anyway. There's this misconception that you're only mentally fit if you never experience doubt, fear, worries, but that's not true. Even the best athletes, the best leaders in the world, they still experience doubt, fear, anxious thoughts, but the difference is, they still show up with courage anyway. They do the thing. They don't let it stop them acting or performing. So now these thoughts aren't in control. These emotions aren't in control. You have power over them. It's in those tiny things, right? Even though you feel nervous, yes, go on the date. Even though you might be fearful you're going to lose, still take part in the competition. It's in those tiny moments we get to choose every day that we're going to feel the fear and do it anyway. Feel the doubt, do it anyway. Feel the worry, do it anyway. The doubts, worries, fears, they are not the enemy. If anything, they are based on things we are imagining or thinking that's likely not going to happen. The thing we can control is how we are going to respond to those thoughts or feelings that come up, and that is true mental strength.
Turn this into your own script
Remix this hook with AI in your voice — ready to record in minutes.
"A very big sign that someone is mentally strong and mentally fit is that they can experience doubt, but they act anyway." "They can experience fear, but they act anyway." "They can experience worry or anxious feelings, but they show up anyway." "There's this misconception that you're only mentally fit if you never experience doubt, fear, worries, but that's not true." "Even the best athletes, the best leaders in the world, they still experience doubt, fear, anxious thoughts, but the difference is, they still show up with courage anyway." "They do the thing." "They don't let it stop them acting or performing." "So now these thoughts aren't in control." "These emotions aren't in control." "You have power over them." "It's in those tiny things, right? Even though you feel nervous, yes, go on the date." "Even though you might be fearful you're going to lose, still take part in the competition." "It's in those tiny moments we get to choose every day that we're going to feel the fear and do it anyway." "Feel the doubt, do it anyway." "Feel the worry, do it anyway." "The doubts, worries, fears, they are not the enemy." "If anything, they are based on things we are imagining or thinking that's likely not going to happen." "The thing we can control is how we are going to respond to those thoughts or feelings that come up, and that is true mental strength."
The video starts with a strong statement about mental strength, grabbing attention and setting the tone for the advice.
“A very big sign that someone is mentally strong and mentally fit is that they can experience doubt, but they act anyway.”
The speaker elaborates on different negative emotions (fear, worry) and emphasizes the core message of acting despite them.
“They can experience fear, but they act anyway. They can experience worry or anxious feelings, but they show up anyway.”
The speaker challenges a common misconception about mental fitness, creating a relatable point of view.
“There's this misconception that you're only mentally fit if you never experience doubt, fear, worries, but that's not true.”
Using examples of successful people (athletes, leaders), the speaker reinforces that even the best experience these feelings.
“Even the best athletes, the best leaders in the world, they still experience doubt, fear, anxious thoughts, but the difference is, they still show up with courage anyway.”
The speaker clarifies that negative thoughts and emotions are not in control, shifting the focus to individual agency.
“So now these thoughts aren't in control. These emotions aren't in control. You have power over them.”
The speaker provides actionable, small steps and repeats the core message to solidify the advice for the viewer.
“It's in those tiny things, right? Even though you feel nervous, yes, go on the date. Even though you might be fearful you're going to lose, still take part in the competition. It's in those tiny moments we get to choose every day that we're going to feel the fear and do it anyway. Feel the doubt, do it anyway. Feel the worry, do it anyway.”
The video concludes by reframing negative emotions as not the enemy, but often imagined, empowering the viewer.
“The doubts, worries, fears, they are not the enemy. If anything, they are based on things we are imagining or thinking that's likely not going to happen. The thing we can control is how we are going to respond to those thoughts or feelings that come up, and that is true mental strength.”
- Type
- original_audio
Spoken words only, no background music.
Find more reels like this in your niche
Track competitors and see what's actually working — updated daily.
CreatorHouse transcribes, analyzes and remixes content from your competitors and your own library — all in one workspace.