May, the 1st month of your 2013/2014 year.

My May message to the athletes who are preparing for the 2014 Olympic Games was brief. Many of them were just finishing a brief holiday that followed their 2012/2013 competitive season and were getting back into training. Training for an Olympic season starts earlier and is more intense than any other year. In this year, selection, olympic qualifications and the Olympics themselves present unique consequences and with them unique pressure and stress. Their health, readiness and motivation will be relentlessly tested from now through the end of February. The goal of the May message was to remind the athletes that they are up to the challenge – and more importantly that they choose this stressful unique and wonderful life. mm

 

I saw this tweet recently and I realized that it’s the perfect place to start this month’s message;

Next season just became this season. My training for the 2014 Olympic Games commences in 20minutes and doesn’t end until February.  ‪@Denny_Morrison‬

Like some of you – this won’t be Denny’s first time “at the (Olympic) rodeo” and he knows that this will be a long, hard year. My favourite part of the tweet is the implicit choice that Denny is making to boldly go into that long hard year— ‘now’.

Seems that it’s a pretty good place to end this message too; short and sweet! Have a great May; the first month of the year.

I look forward to seeing many of you at the Olympic Excellence Series meetings.

Marnie

——-

Mai, le premier mois de l’année 2013-2014

J’ai lu ce tweet dernièment, et j’ai trouvé que c’était l’intro parfaite pour mon message de ce mois-ci :

La saison prochaine est devenue la saison actuelle. Mon entraînement pour Sotchi commence dans 20 min. et se terminera en février. @Denny_Morrison‬

Comme pour certains d’entre vous, Denny n’en sera pas à sa première expérience au « rodéo (olympique) », et il sait très bien que l’année sera longue et difficile. Ce que j’aime particulièrement de son tweet, c’est le choix implicite qu’il fait en se lançant avec audace dans cette année longue et ardue – « maintenant ».

Je m’en tiendrai donc à cela en partageant cette réflexion avec vous. Je vous souhaite un très beau mois de mai; le premier mois de l’année.

Je me réjouis à l’idée de vous voir en grand nombre aux rencontres de la Série de l’excellence olympique.

Marnie

You can hope you’ll be ‘thrown a bone’ but don’t expect the one you want.

Recently, after a presentation to the Ontario Real Estate Association I was asked to discuss a few of the points that I’d spoken about for their pod cast.

Our conversation covered turning our dreams into goals, curiosity, learning, and the stress that accompanies all of these things. As we progressed, a short discussion evolved on how too often we let our experience actually block our advancement instead of supporting it. Finally we finish on one of my favourite topics… how I – an obvious extrovert – figured out that my introverted rowing partner, Kathleen Heddle, didn’t need to be vocal – like me –  to be extraordinarily talented – ( she was). I could hope that she would ‘throw me a bone’ but I had to learn not to expect ‘the bone’ that I wanted. When I did, and we learned to accept each other for who we were and what we had to offer, we became great athletes – world and olympic champions.

“In her interview with the OREA Centre for Leadership Development, Marnie explains some of the things she learned about achieving her dreams. “First all you have to do is put one little pinhole, one little waypoint, between who you are today and who you want to be tomorrow. As soon as you have one waypoint, you have a path. And as you start going along that path you will probably put in sometimes hundreds of waypoints between you and the goal you want to achieve.”

Never stop learning – the secret

What makes you great as a start-up rarely keeps you great for your career.

<La version française suit>

In the next year – Olympic selection, qualification and ultimately the competition won’t be easy, but you are on the right track. Last year Canadian athletes collectively won 26 World Championship medals, 7 of which were gold. This should feel good.  With only 4 events left to be contested Canada is ‘on the podium’, just 1 medal behind Germany and 8 behind Norway. ( M & W Ice Hockey, M Curling and Mixed Team Figure Skating remain.) When I watch athletes who dominate their event it seems as if they know a secret to winning that allows them to put their hands firmly on the wheel. It is as if these athletes can control and steer towards more and more success. You may have felt this: When you know the secret – it feels great.

When I tried out for my first Olympic rowing team I was young but boldly confident. I had a bronze medal from the Jr. Worlds, an erg (rowing machine) score that ranked me with the women who were on the Sr. Team, and…I thought I was great. It turned out, in hindsight that I wasn’t.

When I was cut from that Olympic team the coach told me that he was “glad” that I didn’t make it (as you can imagine, I’ve never forgotten that part). He went on to tell me that the Olympic Team was not the place to learn how to be good, but the place to learn how to win. At the time I didn’t understand what he meant – but it was the best kick in the ass I ever got. He told me to go home and focus on the basics.

Pissed off – I went home intent on proving him wrong. Continue reading

Suggested by Indigo!!

 Okay.. So this is kind of a dream! I have to admit – every time I go into Chapters/Indigo I look at the “Heather’s Picks” and dream… wouldn’t it be awesome to see The Power of More there. Every time I walk through the airport I look at the books that are on sale and wonder, ‘How do I get there?’

So recently – after returning from a vacation – and going through the pile of emails that collected while away – I’m left wondering – Is this one a joke?! For sure I always hoped that one of these emails that I receive from Indigo would one day mention The Power of More … on-line only – but it finally happened!

This hit my inbox on March 22, 2013 and it’s so awesome! These other books are huge!

 

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