Please check out my latest podcast, Sprinkled With Hope, where I was interviewed by Shane and Jason Baller. You can listen to the podcast by clicking on the PODCAST button at the top of this page and scroll down and click on the Sprinkled With Hope tab. There is also a YouTube version of the podcast that you can find under the VIDEOS button above.
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“Poverty is not dishonorable in itself, but only when it comes from idleness, greed, extravagance, and folly.” - Plutarch
Is your position in life due to what you have done or what you haven’t done? My radio interview on The Authors Show about my book, Sustainable Excellence, Ten Principles To Leading Your Uncommon and Extraordinary Life, will air on Tuesday, February 2 at https://wnbnetworkwest.com/ on Channel 7. The program will run all day and lasts about 15 minutes. Please take a few minutes to listen. Thank you.
“People may or may not say what they mean…but they always say something designed to get what they want.” - David Mamet
Do you mean what you say and say what you mean? Please check out my latest podcast, Level The Pursuit, where I was interviewed by Air Force Orthopedic Surgeon, Dr. Mary Carnduff. You can listen to the podcast by clicking on the PODCAST button at the top of this page and scroll down and click on the Level The Pursuit tab.
“Listen with your heart. Learn from your experiences, and always be open to new ones.” - Cherokee Proverb
How does your heart keep you open to new experiences? Please check our the 3 minute video clip from my Chai podcast with Same Dosa here: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6760517408210980864/
Please check out my latest podcast, Chai, where I was interviewed by Sam Dosa. You can listen to the podcast by clicking on the PODCAST button at the top of this page and scroll down and click on the Chai tab.
“I have to compete against me. I have to compete against my will. I have to push through and compete against me, every day.” - Herm Edwards
How do you compete and win against yourself every day? “It is better to have less thunder in the mouth, and more lightening in the hand.” - Apache Proverb
How do you use your actions to show others your character? “Bad things do happen; how I respond to them defines my character and the quality of my life. I can choose to sit in perpetual sadness, immobilized by the gravity of my loss, or I can choose to rise from the pain and treasure the most precious gift I have, life itself.” - Walter Anderson
How does your character respond to the pain you experience in life? Three of the Most Important Life Lessons You Can Learn from Sports
By Pat Sullivan Among the many values of sports, there are three special lessons that transition flawlessly into life. Every successful person I have ever worked with has developed these three concepts. FQ is more important than IQI was directing a basketball clinic in Salt Lake City, Utah when Dale Brown, the former Louisiana State University coach, spoke these words, “Your FQ is more important than your IQ.” He then explained that your FQ is your Failure Quotient. How often can you fail at something and have the resiliency to get right back up? Pat Riley, the president of the NBA’s Miami Heat, wrote, “Success is getting up one more time than you’ve been knocked down.” If there is one constant in the athletic world, it is that athletes will meet failure. Baseball players must develop strong FQ’s because failure is a huge part of their game. Great hitters fail 7 out of 10 at bats. They experience failure 70% of the time. Basketball players have a similar experience. A player is an outstanding 3-point shooter if he fails 6 out of every 10 shot attempts. The University of St. Francis basketball team I coached for 34 years played in a tournament in New York against the number 2 ranked team in the country. They were a great team and they beat us on a shot at the final buzzer. Our best shooter, who was averaging 17 points per game, took 10 shots in the game and failed to make one basket. We had to play another game the next day. Before the game I told him, “If I see you open and you don’t shoot, I am taking you out of the game. You are our best shooter and you will shoot us into the national tournament at the end of the season.” …And that is exactly what he did because he had developed a resilient FQ. Life can often be a struggle. Most of us will meet failure personally and/or professionally. There is a lot of adversity out there and none of us are exempt. We have to beat failure in life just like our player did in the athletic arena. We have to get back up. How? Two ways: Learn from it and put it behind you. Team egoBill Russell played for the Boston Celtics for 13 years. In 11 of those 13 years, the Celtics won the NBA championship. Russell said whenever the Celtic players entered a building for a practice or a game, they left their individual egos at the door. But what they brought in was their Team Ego. They knew they were a talented team and they also knew they played together. Their Team Ego was telling their opponent that they better bring an outstanding game if they were to beat the Celtics, because the Celtics knew they would bring a great game every night. The essence of athletics is teamwork. John Wooden, the legendary UCLA basketball coach, taught, “The main ingredient of a star is the rest of the team.” He was fortunate to coach numerous stars and he got them to believe in his team first philosophy. Michael Jordan was a star. I saw him play in person at the Chicago Stadium and the United Center at least 40 times during the most important time of the season – the NBA playoffs. He is the best player I have ever seen play the game. When you think of Jordan, you think of his great scoring ability, but you seldom hear what a great teammate he was. He practiced harder than anyone on the Bulls; he was their best defensive player, arguably the best defender in the entire NBA; and he is the leading assist man in Bulls history. Jordan set the tone for the Bulls Team Ego! I have worked with some outstanding leaders – principals at the high school level and presidents at the collegiate level. They knew they could not lead alone; they needed to develop a strong team and they did two things toward this goal: They surrounded themselves with good people and they gave all the credit away. They created a strong Team Ego by taking the blame but passing the credit on. ListeningSport is a great arena to develop the skill of listening. Every sport begins with the teaching of the fundamentals. Every sport teaches a system of play. Every athlete wants playing time and that begins and ends with listening. It is only by listening intently that a player can successfully understand and implement the fundamentals and the system. One player not listening to game planning and game coaching can destroy team play. One player not in the right spot at the right time leads to broken plays. Classroom teaching and the teaching of sport are the same, with one exception. Teachers and coaches teach their subject matter in the classroom and their systems on the athletic fields and courts. When the classroom exam comes, the students must know the subject matter to perform well. The exam in athletics is the game. The players must execute the system the coach has taught them during the game. However, the opponent will do all he can to not allow the team to run their system. It would be like a student taking an exam with someone’s hand waving over his eyes during the entire exam! Players must develop the skill of listening if they are to beat the opponents who are waving their hands at them throughout the game. Every great leader I’ve worked with was a great listener. They listened with their ears and their eyes. Their eyes were riveted on the person speaking as they gave that person their full attention. The bottom line to listening in life is simple: LISTENING IS RESPECT. The development of a strong FQ, concentrating on team ego, and listening – great lessons that can be learned in athletics – do lead to a successful life. If these lessons of sport and life lead to success, you may want to remember John Wooden’s maxim: Talent is God given, so be humble, Fame is man given, so be thankful, But conceit is self-given, and you better be careful. Pat Sullivan was a successful coach, teacher, and administrator in the Chicago area for 44 years – 10 years at the high school level and 34 at the collegiate level. His basketball teams won 602 games; he was named Coach-of-the-Year 11 times; and he has been inducted into 8 Halls of Fame. He has received Lifetime Achievement awards from Lewis University, the Joliet, Illinois, Chamber of Commerce, and the Illinois Basketball Coaches Association. Pat has offered basketball clinics and camps in Austria, Ireland, Belgium, and Greece and has spoken at clinics throughout America for the USA Coaches Clinics. He has also spoken to business executives from IBM, Accenture, and Sun Microsystems, as well as the University of Notre Dame’s Play Like A Champion conference. He is the author of Attitude-The Cornerstone of Leadership and Team-Building: From the Bench to the Boardroom. “I count him braver who overcomes his desires than him who conquers his enemies; for the hardest victory is over self.” - Aristotle
How do you conquer the enemies inside you? “How old would you be if you didn’t know how old you are?” - Satchel Paige
How can you feel younger by what you do and what you think? “The person who neglects their duty as a citizen is not entitled to their rights as a citizen.” - Tiorio
How would you define a good citizen? |
Author & SpeakerTerry is a sought after speaker who believes in the power of a story to motivate, inspire, and help others lead their uncommon and extraordinary lives. By combining his twelve-year cancer journey with his diverse business, athletic coaching, and hostage negotiating expertise, he delivers compelling yet relatable presentations for conferences, on-line events, panels, meetings, and seminars. Archives
October 2024
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