| It Takes 10,000 Hours To Really Shine! |
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| Written by Administrator | |
| Wednesday, 29 October 2008 09:26 | |
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My son, like many of yours, has a personal goal of playing baseball at the highest level - in the Majors. Millions of boys have this dream, but there is a heck of a lot of work - years and years of work - between youthful daydreams and one day stepping onto the diamond in the Bigs. The reality is that very few ever make it to the Majors and even more rare is the player that becomes a legend. Talent is one component of Big League success, but even more important is the sheer quantity of sweaty work behind the scenes. And according to one British sociologist, it'll take at least 10,000 hours of such sweaty work to reach the pinnacle of success!
The simple secret is that "the years spent intensively focused on their area of expertise place the world’s most successful people above their peers." That translates into approximately three hours a day for 10 years. That's it. It makes perfect sense to me. Because as I've explained to my son, it doesn't matter how much talent he has, he WILL get passed up by boys who OUT-TRAIN him. It's up to him whether he allows that to happen or not. He has since developed the mentality that he will not ever be out-worked. That mind-set alone will take him to heights his natural talent can't reach. There will always be plenty of players who can pitch as fast as he can, but there will be far fewer of them who will train relentlessly to be The Best. That is where he will shine. How many times have you watched a truly gifted athlete skate by in his early years on sheer athleticism and coordination alone - easily out-playing lesser-developed boys the same age? I have. But guess what? Those boys never developed a work ethic, or a self-discipline that pushed them to work harder the older they got. I always told my son that if he could out-work his peers, he would out-strip their early achievements. It's just fine to be a home-run king when you're nine years old, and it's quite another to parlay 400' high-school home runs into a college scholarship or professional draft! So what's in between the Little Leaguer and the Major Leaguer? Well, only about 10,000 hours of hard work! |