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MESSAGE #368 THE ONLY THING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PEAK PERFORMANCE…

Today’s message is especially dedicated to the great Rob Gilbert, Ph.D.

Rob Gilbert is one of top motivational speakers and sports psychologists in the world. Yesterday on his Success Hotline (973 743-4690) he talked about Bruce Springsteen.

Wednesday on WFAN, New York’s sports radio station, the topic was “The Boss” and his concert Monday night. They talked about his song list and other details on the concert. Then, someone called in and said that they went to see Springsteen last year. His friend knew Bruce so after the concert they were hanging out backstage. “How do you do it?! Day in and day out giving great concerts?” someone asked.

Bruce said two things…

#1 – Before each concert, I tell myself that tonight is the most important concert of my life.

#2 – I tell myself it’s only rock and roll.

So even if you’re not a rock star, you can still give the best concert of your life – every day. And don’t forget…it’s only rock and roll.

It’s only tennis.

It’s only sales.

It’s only 8th grade.

Dr. Gilbert said…

Your effort should be all out and your attitude should be a little relaxed.

Thank you Dr. Gilbert.

Thanks for reading.

MESSAGE #367 THIS IS GETTING OUT OF HAND…

John Farrell is Rider University’s College of Business Administration’s Interim Assistant Dean of Graduate and Professional Programs and the Director of the Center for the Development of Leadership Skills. Today’s message is dedicated to him.

Let’s face it, communication is changing. We talk to people via text messaging. People are getting emails on their phones. Children go into convulsions if you take their cell phone away. They are even texting during practices and competitions!

Everybody has a Blackberry, or should I say Crackberry, since they seem so addicting.
UNPLUG, people! Focus on doing BETTER instead of doing MORE. Stay in the present.

The article below from Yahoo Headlines shows how things are getting out of hand…

CHICAGO – The warning came too late for Barack Obama’s adviser: Don’t walk and text at the same time.

Obama aide Valerie Jarrett fell off a Chicago curb several weeks ago while her thumbs were flying on her Blackberry.

“I didn’t see the sidewalk and I twisted my ankle,” Jarrett said. “It was a nice wake-up call for me to be a lot more careful in the future, because I clearly wasn’t paying attention and I should have.”

Jarrett got off easy and didn’t need medical attention.

But in an alert issued this week, the American College of Emergency Physicians warns of the danger of more serious accidents involving oblivious texters. The ER doctors cite rising reports from doctors around the country of injuries involving text-messaging pedestrians, bicyclists, Rollerbladers, even motorists.

Most involve scrapes, cuts and sprains from texters who walked into lampposts or walls or tripped over curbs.

Still, ER doctors who responded to a recent informal query from the organization reported two deaths, both in California. A San Francisco woman was killed by a pickup truck earlier this year when she stepped off a curb while texting, and a Bakersfield man was killed last year by a car while crossing the street and texting.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission has no national estimate on how common texting-related injuries are. But among the reports it has received: A 15-year-old girl fell off her horse while texting, suffering head and back injuries, and a 13-year-old girl suffered belly, leg and arm burns after texting her boyfriend while cooking noodles.

Giancarlo Yerkes texted his way across a busy Chicago street Tuesday and escaped unscathed. But the 30-year-old advertising employee admitted he once walked straight into a stop sign while texting and bumped his head.

Yerkes said that he texts while walking to maximize his time, and that the emergency doctors’ warning probably won’t stop him.

“There’s a lot of things you shouldn’t do — this is another one on my list,” Yerkes said.
Dr. James Adams, chairman of emergency medicine at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, said he has treated minor injuries in several texters.
“Common sense isn’t always common,” Adams said.

Sometimes even among doctors.

“I have to admit that I started a text while I was driving and then I said, `This is so stupid,’ so I stopped,” Adams said.

Dr. Patrick Walsh, an emergency physician in Bakersfield, Calif., said he is a texter, too, but tries to remind himself to do it intelligently.

“We think we’re multitasking, but we’re not,” he said. “You’re focusing on one task for a split second, then focusing on another one, and with something moving 40 miles an hour like a car, it just takes a couple of seconds to be hit.”

Walsh, a native of Ireland, said that on a recent visit there he noticed an effective government TV ad campaign against texting and walking, aimed at teenagers.
The message echoes the new advice from U.S. emergency doctors.

“We don’t want to sound like some stern schoolmistress, telling people don’t text on your cell phone,” Walsh said. “But when you’re texting, look around,” he said.
The ER group also says people should never text while driving, and should avoid talking on a cell phone or texting while doing other physical activities, including walking, biking, boating and Rollerblading
.

Well, there you have it.

Do yourself a favor and turn your cell phone off, take a walk in nature or do some meditation…

It’ll be okay. Everything will still be there when you get back.

Oh, and don’t forget to look both ways when you text.

Thanks for reading.

MESSAGE #366 THE BEST TIME TO RELAX

Are you busy all the time?

Are there not enough hours in the day?

Don’t have time to take a vacation or start that new hobby?

No time to read?

Well, guess what?

The best time to relax and take a break is when you don’t have time to.


Thanks for reading.

MESSAGE #365 NEW PRINCIPLE…

Today’s message is especially dedicated to the great Marc Vecchiolla.

Here’s a new principle I thought of recently…

Focus on “The Way” not “The Win.”

See, too many people focus on winning and I think that’s not a good thing. And when I talk about winning, it’s not just about winning in sports; it’s winning in business, relationships, school – everything.

We all know the fable of the goose that laid golden eggs, right? Stephen Covey uses this metaphor in “7 Habits of Highly Effective People.” Day after day the goose laid solid gold eggs and the farmer became more and more rich. But then he became more and more greedy and finally cut the goose open to get all the eggs at once. When this happened, there were no eggs to be found and the goose was dead.

If you just focus on winning a tennis match, your form (foundation) will suffer and pretty soon you will develop bad habits. Eventually you will either plateau and not get any better or you will get injured. Winning is the golden egg and your tennis game is the goose.

In business, especially if you are customer service-oriented, if you focus solely on making money (the golden egg), then eventually the goose will die (your customer base).

So instead of focusing on The Win, focus on The Way

It will get you there.


Thanks for reading.

Tonight: Round 2 of the Cryan Tennis Tournament @ Mercer County Park – Come out and support Ed Tseng and Dan Horowitz at 7:30pm!

MESSAGE #364 A FABLE

I love this story…

Androcles

A slave named Androcles once escaped from his master and fled to the forest. As he was wandering about there he came upon a Lion lying down moaning and groaning. At first he turned to flee, but finding that the Lion did not pursue him, he turned back and went up to him. As he came near, the Lion put out his paw, which was all swollen and bleeding, and Androcles found that a huge thorn had got into it, and was causing all the pain. He pulled out the thorn and bound up the paw of the Lion, who was soon able to rise and lick the hand of Androcles like a dog. Then the Lion took Androcles to his cave, and every day used to bring him meat from which to live. But shortly afterwards both Androcles and the Lion were captured, and the slave was sentenced to be thrown to the Lion, after the latter had been kept without food for several days.

The Emperor and all his Court came to see the spectacle, and Androcles was led out into the middle of the arena. Soon the Lion was let loose from his den, and rushed bounding and roaring towards his victim. But as soon as he came near to Androcles he recognized his friend, and fawned upon him, and licked his hands like a friendly dog. The Emperor, surprised at this, summoned Androcles to him, who told him the whole story. Whereupon the slave was pardoned and freed, and the Lion let loose to his native forest.

Moral: Gratitude is the sign of noble souls.

Thanks for reading.

Come out to Mercer County Park tonight at 8pm to cheer Dan Horowitz and myself in our first round doubles match in the Cryan Tournament.

MESSAGE #363 THE TAO

If I had just a little bit of wisdom
I should walk the Great Path and fear only straying from
it.
Tough the Way is quite broad
People love shortcuts.

The court is immaculate,
While the fields are overgrown with weeds,
And the granaries are empty.
They wear silk finery,
Carry sharp swords,
Sate themselves on food and drink
Having wealth in excess.
They are called thieving braggarts.

This is definitely not the Way.

-Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu

MESSAGE #362

Today’s message is especially dedicated to the late great Randy Pausch.

Last September, Dr. Randy Pausch delivered one of the best lectures I have ever seen. By now most of you have seen the lecture but for those of you that haven’t seen Dr. Pausch’s amazing “Last Lecture,” watch it (Message #255). If you haven’t read his book, read it. I’ll never forget when Dr. Pausch bought a new car and then proceeded to pour a can of Coke into the back seat to show his children that a car is just a material object.

Below is the AP article on the great professor’s passing…

Prof whose ‘last lecture’ became a sensation dies

By RAMIT PLUSHNICK-MASTI, Associated Press Writer Fri Jul 25, 12:03 PM ET

PITTSBURGH – Randy Pausch, the Carnegie Mellon University computer scientist whose “last lecture” about facing terminal cancer became an Internet sensation and a best-selling book, died Friday. He was 47.

Pausch died at his home in Chesapeake, Va., said Jeffrey Zaslow, a Wall Street Journal writer who co-wrote Pausch’s book. Pausch and his family had moved there last fall to be closer to his wife’s relatives.

Pausch was diagnosed with incurable pancreatic cancer in September 2006. His popular last lecture at Carnegie Mellon in September 2007 garnered international attention and was viewed by millions on the Internet.

In it, Pausch celebrated living the life he had always dreamed of instead of concentrating on impending death.

“The lecture was for my kids, but if others are finding value in it, that is wonderful,” Pausch wrote on his Web site. “But rest assured; I’m hardly unique.”

The book “The Last Lecture” leaped to the top of the nonfiction best-seller lists after its publication in April and remains there this week. The book deal was reported to be worth more than $6 million.

Pausch said he dictated the book to Zaslow by cell phone, and Zaslow recalled Friday that he was “strong and funny” during their collaboration.

“It was the most fun 53 days of my life because it was like a performance,” Zaslow told The Associated Press. “It was like getting 53 extra lectures.” He recalled that Pausch became emotional when they worked on the last chapter, though, because that to him was the “end of the lecture, the book, his life.”

At Carnegie Mellon, Pausch was a professor of computer science, human-computer interaction and design, and was recognized as a pioneer of virtual reality research. On campus, he became known for his flamboyance and showmanship as a teacher and mentor.

The speech last fall was part of a series Carnegie Mellon called “The Last Lecture,” where professors were asked to think about what matters to them most and give a hypothetical final talk. The name of the lecture series was changed to “Journeys” before Pausch spoke, something he joked about in his lecture.

“I thought, damn, I finally nailed the venue and they renamed it,” he said.
He told the packed auditorium he fulfilled almost all his childhood dreams — being in zero gravity, writing an article in the World Book Encyclopedia and working with the Walt Disney Co.
The one that eluded him? Playing in the National Football League.

“If I don’t seem as depressed or morose as I should be, sorry to disappoint you,” Pausch said.
He then joked about his quirky hobby of winning stuffed animals at amusement parks — another of his childhood dreams — and how his mother introduced him to people to keep him humble: “This is my son. He’s a doctor, but not the kind that helps people.”

Pausch said he was embarrassed and flattered by the popularity of his message. Millions viewed the complete or abridged version of the lecture, titled “Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams,” online.

“I don’t know how to not have fun,” he said in the lecture. “I’m dying and I’m having fun. And I’m going to keep having fun every day I have left. Because there’s no other way to play it.”
Pausch lobbied Congress for more federal funding for pancreatic cancer research and appeared on “Oprah” and other TV shows. In what he called “a truly magical experience,” he was even invited to appear as an extra in the upcoming “Star Trek” movie.

He had one line of dialogue, got to keep his costume and donated his $217.06 paycheck to charity.

Pausch blogged regularly about his medical treatment. On Feb. 15, exactly six months after he was told he had three to six months of healthy living left, Pausch posted a photo of himself to show he was “still alive & healthy.”

In May, Pausch spoke at Carnegie Mellon’s commencement ceremonies, telling graduates that what mattered was he could look back and say, “pretty much any time I got a chance to do something cool, I tried to grab for it, and that’s where my solace comes from.”

“We don’t beat the reaper by living longer, we beat the reaper by living well and living fully,” he said.

Born in 1960, Pausch received his bachelor’s degree in computer science from Brown University and his Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon.

He co-founded Carnegie Mellon’s Entertainment Technology Center, a master’s program for bringing artists and engineers together. The university named a footbridge in his honor. He also created an animation-based teaching program for high school and college students to have fun while learning computer programming.

In February, the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences in California announced the creation of the Dr. Randy Pausch Scholarship Fund for university students who pursue careers in game design, development and production.

He is survived by his wife, Jai, and their three children, Dylan, Logan and Chloe; his mother, Virginia Pausch of Columbia, Md.; and a sister, Tamara Mason of Lynchburg, Va.

In a statement Friday, his wife thanked those who sent messages of support and said her husband was proud that his lecture and book “inspired parents to revisit their priorities, particularly their relationships with their children.”
___
Associated Press writer Ramesh Santanam contributed to this report.

Thanks for reading.

MESSAGE #361

Today’s message is especially dedicated to Melanie Guntner in Baltimore.

I recently saw a charm in a catalog and thought it was very clever, as well as inspiring…

Front: “Live the life you love.”

Back: “Love the life you live.”

What are YOU going to do today?


Thanks for reading.

MESSAGE #360 GET A LIFE…

You can’t do much about the length of your life, but you can do a lot about its depth and width.

“Treat the light things in life very seriously, and the serious things very lightly.”
-Elsa Maxwell




*VOLUNTEERS NEEDED!*

First Day – New York and myself are looking for people to sponsor children in shelters in NYC. Sponsors will supply a new backpack, outfit for the first day of school and a book. This is a great charity and a great chance to make a difference. Whoopi Goldberg is helping us out this year. Please email me if interested.

Thanks for reading.

MESSAGE #359 WHAT DISABILITY?

Today’s message is especially dedicated to the great Hannah McFadden and Colbie Bratli from Baltimore, Maryland.

I will never complain again in my life.

Yesterday I went to Rutgers University to support some athletes. Some amazing athletes. The sports I watched were table tennis and swimming. As I walked up to the table tennis area, I saw a girl walking with a prosthetic leg. And then as I entered the area, I saw the other athletes, most of whom were in wheelchairs.

It was the 2008 International Wheelchair and Amputee Sports Federation Junior World Games and the National Junior Disability Championships.

Many of the athletes have spinal injuries, cerebral palsy, visual impairments, amputations, limb deficiencies, or other congenital anomalies. They came from 20 countries, including Kuwait, Brazil, Iran, and New Zealand.

I spoke with the head official, Debbie Armento and she informed me that the athletes were competing in track & field, archery, table tennis, 3-on-3 basketball, power lifting and swimming. And many of the athletes were competing in multiple events!

I spoke with two lovely young athletes, Hannah McFadden (12) and Colbie Bratli (14) from Baltimore, MD after one of their table tennis doubles matches. I couldn’t get over how much fun they were having and cheering on other athletes at the same time. I found out that Hannah and Colbie are not only competing in table tennis but archery, swimming and field! They agreed that the games were exciting, yet they were a bit nervous. This great event allows athletes to reunite with other athletes that they haven’t seen in a while as well as making new ones.

I asked Hannah and Colbie what it took to become a successful athlete and here’s what they had to say:

1. Practice
2. Have fun
3. Concentration

It was amazing what great attitudes all the athletes had and how they are no different than anyone else.

After table tennis, I watched a bit of the swimming.

When I sat down I saw a boy from Mexico was warming up in the pool. He had one and a half arms and half a leg. I was amazed at how well he was swimming. And then he swam up to the side of the pool and did a flip turn! Unbelievable. I will never forget seeing an athlete go up to the side of the pool, get set, and jump in the water and swim – with no legs! I am certain that most of the swimmers could out swim me.

When I watch amazing athletes like that I am obviously inspired and impressed, but it also makes me ask myself the question, “If they can do THIS with a disability, what am I capable of?”

I can still see and hear all the athletes having fun, giving their all and cheering each other on…

We can all learn from them.

Thank you Hannah and Colbie.


Thanks for reading.