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Introduction
to We Are All Athletes I am an athlete.
I competed in my first swimming meet at age six;
played backyard baseball with big brother Pete
until Little League said "no girls";
lettered in five sports (lacrosse, field hockey,
tennis, volleyball, and the best sport --
basketball) in two high schools; starred as the
leading scorer and rebounder on the Stanford
basketball team all four years; then played in
France and also in the first US women's pro
basketball league, which I now think of as the
L.N.E.H. -- the League Nobody's Ever Heard of.
Later I played water polo in an
all-men-except-Mariah league and rowed on the
Potomac River. Now I play golf every chance I
get, ride my bike around town, lift weights, and
swim two miles most mornings, waking at 5:20 to
immerse myself in that watery world where I first
learned to love my long, strong body, and where I
first learned to appreciate the unparalleled
ecstasy of physical exertion.
Even if I awaken some day and find myself too
sick or disabled to move, I'll still be an
athlete. It's part of my identity, as essential
and cherished as "woman" and
"writer." It's an attitude that affects
everything I do: how I walk, how I eat, how I
rest, how I respond to invitations to try new
things, how I discipline myself to sit at my desk
and write, how I kid around with colleagues and
friends, how I encourage any and all
"teammates," how I ask for advice from
"coaches," how I pursue my writing,
speaking, and business goals, and how I celebrate
success. It's a way of life that lifts me and
carries me through each day, even those days
filled with disappointments and defeats. There's
something about swimming faster today than
yesterday, something about summoning the nerve to
do a flip off the diving board, something about
rowing in perfect harmony with seven other
people, that leads one to believe she is capable
of anything. Everything I know about goals,
discipline, teamwork, leadership, and
competition, I first learned on the basketball
courts, on the tennis courts, in pools and rivers
and oceans.
These lessons are available to all of us.
The dictionary defines "athlete" as
"one who is trained or skilled in exercises,
sports, or games requiring physical strength,
agility or stamina." People generally use
the word to refer to those who compete in sports,
and who are fairly successful at it.
I want to broaden the definition. I want us to
think of "athletes" as people who make
a lifelong commitment to implementing athletic
essentials in everyday life. What matters in this
context is not so much physical strength,
agility, or stamina, but an athletic mentality:
emotional strength, agility, and stamina. The
"exercises, sports, and games" might be
traditional ones: badminton, triathlon, hockey,
scuba diving, surfing, volleyball. Or they might
be the kinds of exercises, sports, and games that
take place on a construction site, in a realtor's
office, in a nursing home, in a law firm, or on
Wall Street. By my definition, regardless of how
physically fit you are, and regardless of what
kinds of sports or games you play or don't play,
you're an athlete if you apply athletic
essentials to your life.
Really? Doesn't an "athlete" need to
actually play sports? Can you be an
athlete and also a couch potato?
Here's the beauty of this proposition: If you
think of yourself as an athlete, you begin to
have experiences that reinforce that identity.
"We are who we are because of the stories we
tell ourselves about ourselves," wrote Tom
Spanbauer in The Man Who Fell in Love with the
Moon. If you tell yourself an "I am a
klutz" story, for instance, you'll keep
bumping into things. No surprise there.
If, on the other hand, you're willing to
declare "I am an athlete," even for a
little while, you'll notice a change in how you
see the world and how you move through it. You'll
start feeling excited, rather than scared, when
someone challenges you to a contest. You'll
understand that no one wins all the time, and
that being "good" isn't half as
important as being there, eager to learn and
enjoy.
Your relationship with your body will change.
Perhaps your posture will be the first
transformation. Then your expectations. When you
think of yourself as an athlete, it might begin
to seem perfectly normal -- imperative, even --
to devote time each day to physical fitness.
After all, that's what athletes do. You'll begin
to make more conscious choices about nutrition,
stretching, strengthening, resting. You'll begin
to feel competent to join a yoga class or bowling
league or neighborhood Ping-Pong game -- even if
you don't win, even if you weigh more than you
should, even if you're too embarrassed to say
"I am an athlete" out loud. Over time,
you might even become someone who is
"trained or skilled in exercises, sports, or
games requiring physical strength, agility or
stamina." (See "K is for
Knowledge" and "S is for
Strength.")
But this is not really a book about joining a
gym or starting a walking program. This is a book
about how to approach life with an athletic sense
of purpose, power, and possibility. It's about
bringing athletic discipline, humility, and
integrity into your everyday life. It's about
claiming -- or, for starters, simply trying on --
an athletic identity, the way one might start to
think of oneself as a singer, artist, healer, or
smart, good, or loving person.
"Athlete" is a useful, empowering
identity. I know that not only because of my own
experience, but because of feedback I receive
from thousands of audience members who have heard
me share this message. Exactly how that athletic
mentality changes individuals -- our perspective,
our behavior, and perhaps also our bodies -- is
up to each of us.
The essentials
En route to lacrosse, field hockey, and
basketball games while attending Shady Grove
Junior High in Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, my
teammates and I would sing on the bus. In this
way, we amused ourselves on long rides all over
eastern Pennsylvania, psyched ourselves up for
games, and simply enjoyed being together. One of
our standards was a chant:
"S-U-C-C-E-S-S.
That's the way you spell success!"
As a young writer, I took that more literally
than most. Okay, so that's how you spell
it, I thought, taking mental notes on those two
"c's" and two final "s's."
Having chanted it for hours, I felt confident I'd
never spell it wrong. But I also asked myself,
even then, sitting on that yellow school bus, how
do you "spell" success?
I now believe that, just as a writer needs
twenty-six letters of the alphabet, we need
twenty-six athletic essentials to excel in
everyday life. "Essential" means
"so important as to be indispensable."
These A to Z essentials are time-tested athletic
methods for achieving peak performance.
Here's my promise: athletic essentials can
help any person achieve success in any field:
sports, media, politics, law, science, service,
sales, entertainment, government, medicine,
religion, teaching, trades, training, and more.
Once you master them, you can spell success any
way you wish.
Ten questions
Like athletes, all of us are playing a game
with a clock. One day, our game will be over. The
clock will stop. The lights will be turned off.
Everyone will go home.
Exactly how much time do we have left in the
game of our lives? We don't have control over
that. We do have control over how we will play
that game: how much joy and enthusiasm we will
bring to the experience, what rules we will play
by, and how we will treat our teammates,
opponents, and fans.
Like athletes, all of us have bodies that need
care and attention. We all have physical,
intellectual, emotional, or spiritual dreams and
goals. We all face situations in which we are
tested. And we are all role models and leaders,
whether we know it or not.
Here are ten questions to ask yourself about
your game of life:
- What is the point of this game? (Is it to accomplish
things? To survive? To have fun? To
create or procreate? To improve life for
your loved ones or others? Or is it, as
some pro athletes say, "just a
job"?)
- What's your goal?
- What's your game plan?
- Who are your teammates, and how will you
relate to them?
- Who are your opponents, and how will you
relate to them?
- Who are your fans (the people who look to
you for leadership), and how will you
relate to them?
- How will you strengthen, stretch, feed,
and care for your body?
- What rules will
you play by?
- How will you keep score?
- How will you celebrate success?
How to use this book
Throughout this book, you will be asked to
think of yourself as an athlete, and to decide
for yourself how to spend these precious moments
that are still left in your game of life. You
will be asked to define for yourself what your
goals are, who your teammates are, who your
opponents are, how you want to relate to your
body, what rules you're choosing to play by, and
how you will keep score and measure success.
At the end of each chapter, you'll find a
"Time Out for Reflection" section,
where you'll be asked questions that will help
you create a game plan for success. All of the
questions, stories, and quotes in the book are
designed to help you maximize your performance --
and maximize your enjoyment of the game of life.
This book can be read by individuals, of
course. It can also be used in a structured
setting, as part of a leadership development
program for professionals, athletes, students, or
others who want to enhance their leadership
skills. Each of the 26 chapters focuses on one
quality essential not only to athletic success,
but to success as a responsible mentor, teacher,
manager, executive, or student leader. Learning
to think like and act like an athlete is one way
to think like and act like a leader.
Few of us think of ourselves as athletes. Even
those who claim that identity often fail to bring
those essentials into classrooms, emergency
rooms, board rooms, boiler rooms, or rooms full
of dinner guests.
If you already think of yourself as an
athlete, this book will remind you what you have
learned on the playing fields, and will show you
how to apply these skills and concepts to
anything you do.
If you do not think of yourself as an athlete,
it's not too late to start. But if
"athlete" still seems too wildly
divergent from your self-perception, that's okay,
too. Read on. Even if you were picked last for
teams, even if you feel uncoordinated or out of
shape, even if you're not particularly interested
in your own physical potential, try integrating
these 26 athletic essentials into your life on a
daily basis. Before long, you'll be experiencing
life as an athlete, behaving as an athlete -- and
having that much fun
***.
What happens next in We Are All
Athletes? 26 short, inspirational chapters,
including:
A is for Athlete
B is for B-Game
C is for Competitive Spirit
D is for Discipline
E is for Endurance...
and much more!
Description of We Are All
Athletes
To
contact Mariah about her presentations, call
703/276-8323 or write to her at Mariah@MariahBurtonNelson.com
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