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Make Every Day Your Olympics

By HERWriter
 
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let every day be your Olympics Hemera/Thinkstock

As the athletes head to the Olympic Games in London in a short few weeks, most of them realize they have one shot at success. Some Olympians have a few hours to pull off the feat of bringing home an Olympic medal.

Some have a few minutes. And a lucky few — myself included — have a few seconds. For this reason, ALL the athletes need to plan ahead.

Preparing for the 1998 Olympic Games, I decided to ready myself by making every day the Olympics, regardless of whether it was a training day, a World Cup competition or the real deal.

Whether I was feeling sick, the site wasn’t up to par, I didn’t have enough sleep or there was poor weather, I still had to imagine it was the day of the big event. I had to prepare for the unexpected.

That way, I would be ready for any eventuality the Olympics actually presented. Believe it or not, I secretly hoped for bad weather at the Olympics to give myself an advantage over the athletes who didn’t plan ahead for it.

And it was a good thing I did, because those eventualities were all thrown at me when the big day came.

It’s a lesson I’ve taken with me into my personal and professional life now and it has continually served me well. We need to redirect our failures so they work for us.

My neighbor is a pilot and he told me that a flight overseas is off-course the majority of the time. The reason it gets to its destination is because the pilot is constantly readjusting to put the plane back on course.

Be a pilot who keeps making corrections to get the job done. Today, pick a project or activity you are working on and come up with three alternate plans in case something goes wrong.

As with fire drills in grade school, it helps to plan several escape routes in case of an emergency. Expect the unexpected, and you will never be thrown too far off-course.

So when you are watching the Olympics this summer and you happen to see Michael Phelps’s swim goggle strap break, a raincloud settle in over Abby Wambach’s soccer game or an official postponing the start of Usain Bolt’s 100 meter final, it may not really be as tragic as it appears.

These legendary Olympians have likely already gone through an Olympic dress rehearsal anticipating just such an incident. Make every day YOUR “Olympics” and be prepared for anything. It’s always the days you don’t think of bringing your umbrella that it pours rain.

********** Motivational Weight Management Tip **********

I’ve had the great honor of working with some of the Biggest Loser contestants and it has inspired me to leave motivational diet, health, and wellness tips at the end of all of my blogs. These tools have been driven from actual advice I’ve shared.

This week's tip:

Have a plan in place to deal with temptations and setbacks. What are you going to do if you get to a party and they have your favorite craving?

What is your backup plan if you have to work late and can’t get to the gym? And what are you going to do if you have a day where you fall off the “dietary wagon”?

If you have a coping strategy in place it will help prevent you from falling apart if and when adversities hit.

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At the Olympic Winter Games in Nagano, Japan, Nikki Stone became America’s first-ever Olympic Champion in the sport of aerial skiing.

What made this performance so unbelievable, was the fact that less than two years earlier, a chronic spinal injury prevented her from standing, much less walking or skiing off an aerial jump.

Nikki’s achievements have carried far beyond the slopes as she now works as an accomplished motivational speaker for national and international corporations and was a motivational coach for a national Biggest Loser program.

Nikki has also recently released the inspirational bestseller When Turtles Fly: Secrets of Successful People Who Know How to Stick Their Necks Out (with contributors Lindsey Vonn, Shaun White, Tommy Hilfiger, and more).

For more information, please visit www.WhenTurtlesFly.com/ and www.NikkiStone.com/

Edited by Jody Smith

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We value and respect our HERWriters' experiences, but everyone is different. Many of our writers are speaking from personal experience, and what's worked for them may not work for you. Their articles are not a substitute for medical advice, although we hope you can gain knowledge from their insight.

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