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[Music]
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so if I ask you to think about a
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successful athlete or performer who or
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what comes to mind a Hall of Fame
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athlete perhaps a champion a business
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mogul or an award-winning teacher it's
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easy to think of success and imagine
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lifting a trophy getting a medal around
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your neck getting a plaque on the wall
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We're actually wired to think that way
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because those things are exciting
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They're flashy and they often make the
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headlines As a society this is often the
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perspective that we use We think of a
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performance like an Olympic final a job
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interview a business proposal as just
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that a performance An opportunity to do
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something great to achieve peak
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performance to hit the shot you're
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supposed to be able to hit to run the
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race at the speed you're supposed to be
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able to reach But what if I told you
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that those big moments are actually due
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to small seemingly insignificant factors
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not the flashy that we automatically
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think about What if I told you that
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those are the true key pieces to
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success because the truth is if you talk
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to any elite level performer whether
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it's an athlete or a non-athlete they'll
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probably tell you that any big
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performance is nothing more than an
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event made up of hundreds thousands of
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tiny little pieces meticulously placed
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together to create something bold and
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beautiful It's that it's the end result
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of everything that's come before it the
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good the bad and everything in between
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So that's what we're here to do today
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We're we're here to talk a little bit
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about success how we define it and
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possibly even challenge that traditional
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view of what it is Because before we can
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help performers achieve peak performance
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and succeed it's important for us to
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help them define what success means to
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them I have the pleasure of working as a
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performance psychology specialist My job
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focuses on helping elite performers
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athletes and non-athletes achieve peak
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performance by helping them um harness
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those that mental acuity surgeons
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athletes musicians corporate leaders and
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even performance artists So if I were to
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ask everyone in the room here to think
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about a moment or think about an event
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that you commonly participate in Now
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this could obviously be a sport but it
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could also be parenting teaching giving
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a recorded lecture on a well-known
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platform to potentially thousands of
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people And think about that event and
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consider what does success mean for you
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because when we talk about helping those
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performers we sometimes help them build
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mental skills and that a lot goes into
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that That is a very big spectrum a wide
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spectrum But in addition to those things
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we can also help people unearth and
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overcome various mental blocks So to you
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think about what su success means in the
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uh activities that you normally engage
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in And so the teacher in me is really
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trying to resist the urge to ask all of
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you to share your ideas to see if we can
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come up with some form of cohesive
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definition of what it means to be
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successful And so time permitting we
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would obviously do that But I suspect if
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we were to do this we would probably
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have some similarities amongst our
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responses with maybe some subtle
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differences Chances are if we opened it
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up to the group we would find that most
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of us would define success as winning
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right outcomes We call these outcomes
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And I recognize that not everybody in
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the room is an elite level athlete
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That's fine because if we think about
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performance as a more all-inclusive
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concept it starts to make a little bit
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more sense Humans whatever context that
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they're in perform right we give
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lectures We take exams We interview for
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jobs We audition for roles We network We
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compete for clients in business We
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perform So in the context of outcomes
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what this means is landing that job
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getting cast in the play finishing at
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the top of your class in that exam Now
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obviously this is important but in my
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opinion it's
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incomplete It's narrow right
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because overall all this does is it
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illustrates when you are performing
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better than a competitor So not a true
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measure of your ability at all Just how
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you did in that moment compared to that
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person this one time And so this matters
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obviously in society and in sport We all
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want those trophies We all desire to
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finish first because it's meaningful And
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there's nothing wrong with that Never in
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my career have I ever encouraged
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somebody to stop wanting or trying to
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win But I have cautioned them about
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overemphasizing this idea of success
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because when we overemphasize that we
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can get into some slippery trouble And
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we're going to talk about some of those
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things
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The truth of the matter is is that some
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of the earliest research in social
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psychology was actually interested in
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finding out what happens when we behave
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or in other words perform with other
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people They coined terms like social
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facilitation and social inhibition Does
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the presence of others actually lift us
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up and make us perform better or does it
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help us recoil a little bit and perform
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more poorly and so what this left us
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with is this idea of maybe this is
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incomplete Should we expand this
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framework and I'm by no means the first
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person to ever do this By the way some
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of the great leaders and thinkers of
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generations before me have challenged
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this traditional view of success and
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saying that it's not just winning It's
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not just finishing at the top of the
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podium Should it involve something a
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little bit more personal should it
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involve something that has to do with
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our skill set and our abilities as
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opposed to constantly looking across the
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aisle and figuring out am I
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outperforming another person so this
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leads us to this second kind of layer
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that we have which is
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performance And so performance
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illustrates how an individual is doing
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based on their skill set based on their
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growth based on their development based
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on their resources It allows them to
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look inside as opposed to over there So
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it's saying did you perform well not did
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you perform better then and it looks at
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over time are you better today than you
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were yesterday So some common examples
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that we might think about in society
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right did a person getting a grade back
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on an exam for example and feeling
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really happy with their performance even
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though they didn't finish at the top of
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their class in fact even if they
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finished last or walking out of an
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audition feeling very proud of the of
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the performance that you gave despite
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the fact that you didn't get cast in
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that role So it's okay to have pride in
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those moments despite the fact that you
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didn't outperform another person And in
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fact it can be a pretty um lonely and
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maybe an uphill battle It's almost like
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swimming upstream to be purely
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performanceoriented Why because there
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are very few trophies given for the
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hardest worker for the one who tried
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their best And so we want the flashy
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things but we also want that
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self-satisfaction So it's a constant
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battle back and forth And also outcomes
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are really hard to come by They're never
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guaranteed Sometimes the other team or
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the other athlete is just better And
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that sucks but that doesn't take away
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from what you gave
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The final layer the third and final
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layer that we want to talk about here
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today is the process The process
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represents the tiny little boxes that
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you need to check along the way in order
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to achieve the performance From an
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athlete perspective this is their
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strength and conditioning their sleep
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their nutrition their coachability the
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communication that they have with their
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uh with their coach their leadership
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skills the the way they take care of
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their body their tactical and technical
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skills Essentially what we're talking
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about here is the fundamentals right
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when I started graduate school my cohort
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and I during our third year were told
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that we were going to go and sit for our
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comprehensive exams And so anybody here
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listening or watching with a PhD
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probably had a visceral reaction to that
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term So essentially we were tested on
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everything we had learned up until that
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point in our third year And I remember
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sitting down with my mentors when I
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first stepped on campus about a week in
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and they told me that studying begins on
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day one And they didn't mean go home
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crack open the books and start
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memorizing stuff What they were trying
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to illustrate to me and trying to share
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with me is that the students who
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performed best on this exam were the
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ones that valued every discussion every
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class every reading every meeting and
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every piece of research that they
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read I was a competitive athlete my
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entire life I enter non-competitive
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situations wanting to do better than
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other people It was just part of who I
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was And so it was in that moment that I
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really noticed a shift A shift from
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wanting to outperform my peers even if
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it was not a competitive setting to all
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of a sudden wanting to do well on this
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exam because it meant that I understood
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the material By understanding the
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material I would be performing better on
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this exam And by performing better on
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this exam it means that I was better
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prepared to be a qualified professional
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and contributor in our field So what
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this did is it emphasized effort focus
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and consistent execution over time And
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what ended up happening is what we see
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in sport The more we are focusing on the
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process the more the performances
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occur The higher level of our
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performance the increased likelihood
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that the outcome happens And so even
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though we all want that shiny object at
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the end what we really need to do is
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think back down to to figure out what
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are the elements the small little
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intangible things that we need to do to
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eventually get there Now another
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demonstration of this is the story of
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the three little pigs We're all familiar
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with this so I'm not going to spend time
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talking about it But if we think about
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that story and consider if success was
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defined based on which pig finished
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their house first the first pig is the
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obvious winner
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Right for kids this is all about not
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cutting corners and doing things the
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right way But in the context of
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performance and success that we're
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talking about right now we can think
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about this as the value of every brick
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the third pig laid to build a foundation
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that would stand the test of
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time So when we think about success as
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an all-encompassing concept okay I tend
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to view this as a circle our mindset how
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we define success is a circle And given
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that we talked about three different
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concepts it makes sense for us to think
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oh they're evenly divided amongst them
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But I think this is the problem that a
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lot of people get into is when presented
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with this idea they often assume okay I
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need to be completely processoriented I
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need to let go of the outcome not worry
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about winning or losing and just focus
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on doing the little things That's not
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how it works Because the truth is it's
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not a good better or best Even though
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one leads to the other it doesn't mean
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that one is more important than the
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other because we need all three And so
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what we have eventually is let's
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consider this athlete who's going up
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let's say an Olympic final or a final
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four game Their mindset may look a
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little bit like this They want to win so
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badly and their view of whether or not
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they succeeded is going to be dictated
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based on that outcome That's okay right
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that same athlete a couple weeks prior
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may look like this because they're in
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practice They're having individual
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training They're working with their
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colleagues or their teammates and
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coaches and things like that For this
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athlete it's important for them to
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identify what the balance looks like
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Now finally we once we understand this
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this structure once I present this idea
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to to
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athletes we eventually get into this
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conversation of like okay I understand
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what that means but now what so the
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first question I encourage athletes to
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ask themselves is is what I'm doing is
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my current framework working for me in
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terms of re helping me reach my
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potential on a more consistent basis
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whatever that is whatever context that
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I'm in and whether it is or isn't The
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second question is usually what is my
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ideal formula What does my circle need
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to look like am I a more orange versus
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blue versus green what structure do I
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need in various
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circumstances and then finally and this
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is where individuals like myself come in
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is helping them get there So what does
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it look like it need to look like and
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how do I eventually get there
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now important in this discussion is also
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the the idea of why why is this so and
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again we're not saying I'm not standing
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here preaching a processoriented mindset
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What I'm talking about here is
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acknowledging the value of balance
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finding balance within yourself given
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the circumstances and context that
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you're in And so one of the things that
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we find when we have a balanced approach
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is that we develop more resilient
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athletes more resilient performers in
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sport and in life Setbacks are going to
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happen People are going to get injured
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Coaches are going to get fired People
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are going to get traded The environment
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is going to change altering your
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approach to it Now the individuals that
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have a more balanced approach are the
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ones that are able to look at those
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setbacks and really consider them more
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as stepping stones as opposed to
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roadblocks It allows them to think past
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that and consider the lesson that
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they're learning by going through this
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process The second thing it fosters is
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mental well-being Individuals with a
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more balanced mindset what we find is
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that they have decreased anxiety
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decreased stress level decreased
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frustration They're less likely to burn
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out They're less likely to or they're
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more likely to to remain motivated
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through an
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event And finally we've talked a lot
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about the the performance the individual
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but what about the team what about the
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coaches the leaders the teachers the
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parents the ones that cultivate the
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environment the ones that create the
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culture we tend to find that coaches and
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leaders who create a culture that foster
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balance by infusing processor
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orientation with performance and outcome
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tend to create environments where
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there's more psychological safety
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Athletes and kids and learners and
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performers are more likely to try even
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though they may not see success right
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away And so it's not just for the elite
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performers We have to think of this in
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the greater context of our youth as well
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because developing that over time will
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mean that it is going to be that that
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look like that for the rest of their
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lives So I'm going to leave you with
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this The process is not the journey It
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creates the foundation for the
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destination And at the risk of throwing
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yet another metaphor and image to kind
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of help illustrate my point I'm going to
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do it anyway The next time you perform
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or you're watching a performance here's
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what I want you to do I want you to
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picture an iceberg And this is something
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that we in the performance psychology
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world use quite a bit because the
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performance is but a glimpse a small
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portion of something greater When you
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look at an iceberg you see the tip You
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see a small proportion of what's
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actually happening under the water But
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the truth is without what's happening
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beneath the surface the tip sinks
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without what you see what you don't see
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behind the scenes the actual performance
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that's supposed to happen on camera in
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that Olympic final that 10 seconds it
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take from takes from somebody to go from
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the starting blocks to the finish line
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doesn't actually
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exist So big performances are a
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compilation of tiny pieces Embrace the
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process trust the work find balance and
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let the results speak for themselves
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Thank you