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The big picture vs. isolated situations
Using your mind as a tool to win can be tough! It takes
determination, self-discipline, control of emotions, and understanding
of the big picture vs. isolated situations. A good example of using the
mind to understand the big picture vs. isolated situations can be found
in an Olympic runner named Marla Runyan.
Marla Runyan ran in the 1500 meter event in the 2000 Olympics
and came in eighth. She was the first American woman in history to place
that high in the 1500 meter race. And it was only the 4th or 5th time
she had ever run the 1500 meter event. What caught my attention in her
book, "No Finish Line" was how she constantly used her mind to learn the
different ranges of mental and emotional challenges that any athlete must
endure. As a top runner in the world she had experienced the whole range
of self-doubt, confidence, frustration, exhilaration, aggression, complacency,
disappointment, and jubilation. Sometimes in the same event!
Yes, the top athletes experience the same mental and emotional
challenges you do. It's how the top athletes deal with these challenges
that separates them from the pack. In one race Marla experienced the whole
range of mental and emotional fluctuations from confidence to self-doubt
but kept running successfully. After the race she realized that as a top
athlete you still experience a wide range of changing attitudes. She changed
her perspective and accepted these fluctuating attitudes as part of the
never ending journey toward excellence. In her book she said she wished
someone had prepared her for these emotional and mental swings, then she
would not have been so frustrated when facing failures and setbacks. She
finally saw the big picture and how to handle the fluctuation by being
patient and not focusing on isolated situations.
These valuable lessons applied not only in the races themselves
but when she was injured or had other problems in practice. Now if she
doesn't do well in practice instead of ending her practice in frustration,
she is relaxed and waits for another day. No longer does she isolate a
situation blowing it out of proportion; she now thinks in terms of the
big picture and makes the bad experiences as well as the good experiences
part of the package of being a seasoned athlete striving toward excellence.
You must learn to do the same.
There is one other thing you should know about Marla Runyan.
Although she never liked to make it an issue in her running, Marla Runyan
was legally blind. She was the first legally blind runner to make the
Olympics. She had some partial vision and could see some colors, but could
not see a persons face five feet in front of her. She could not see the
finish line and was not sure who was who when she was running. The title
of her book, "No Finish Line," literally meant she could not see the finish
line!
More important to her was that she could run and run with
the best in the world. She was a top notch runner with extraordinary abilities.
Her mind exemplifies the ultimate warrior mentality. She said she wished
that someone had told her that these mental and emotional fluctuations
were part of the process. She had to learn through hard knocks that success
and failure are not on the opposite ends of the spectrum - instead, they
ride together in tandem toward her goals.
Do not separate success and failure. Like the pros, whether
you're training or playing you will experience the whole range of self-doubt,
confidence, frustration, exhilaration, aggression, complacency, disappointment,
and jubilation. Accept them as part of the process of learning, playing,
and striving toward excellence.
I am not telling you to like these fluctuations. But the
fact is, learning and playing tennis can be like an emotional roller coaster
ride. One minute you're up, the next minute you're down. Many of you fight
the roller coaster ride by holding on too tight, becoming anxious, and
losing mental control. By the time you are through with your match you
are mentally beat up and emotionally exhausted.
Stop isolating these fluctuating attitudes as if self-doubt
or frustrating situations are unique only to you. Mentally step outside
yourself and realize these fluctuations happen to everyone including the
pros. Mentally push the self-doubt or frustration aside and keep moving.
Like Marla, learn to focus more on the big picture; and you will save
yourself a lot of anguish, frustration, and you will be light years ahead
of your competition.
Tom Veneziano
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Copyright © 2001 Tom Veneziano. All rights reserved
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