How I Teach High Performers to Overcome Mental Roadblocks — Lessons for Your GMAT Journey

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Hey everyone,

I’m Vasilis Mazarakis — also known as The Metamorphosis Coach. As a former Olympic athlete and a PhD in Performance Psychology, I’ve spent my life immersed in the world of high pressure, discipline, and mental mastery. These days, I help individuals from all walks of life unlock the version of themselves they didn’t know was possible.

I wanted to share something I often see in clients preparing for big milestones — like the GMAT or business school admissions:

Mental fatigue and internal resistance aren’t about your intelligence — they’re about your mindset architecture.

When I trained for the Olympics, I learned a key principle I now coach professionals on: your performance ceiling is directly tied to how you respond to stress, not just how much you know.

For those grinding away at GMAT prep, here’s a quick mental training exercise I use with my clients:

Visualize your “ideal GMAT performance state” – relaxed, focused, and steady.

Each day, before study time, spend 2–3 minutes anchoring into that state. Think of it like setting the right “mental environment” before walking into the room.

Observe your resistance – do you avoid studying? Procrastinate? That’s not laziness, it’s unprocessed stress. Awareness is the first step toward rewiring.

I’m not here to give you test tips — plenty of smart people here already do that brilliantly. But if you ever feel like your biggest challenge isn’t what to study but how to stay mentally sharp and calm, know this:

You’re not broken — you’re just stuck in a mental pattern that can be rewired.

I’d love to hear:
- What’s been your biggest mental challenge during GMAT prep?
- Have you noticed any patterns in your motivation or confidence?

Happy to offer insights if helpful.
— Vasilis Mazarakis
The Metamorphosis Coach