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The one and only Apolo Ohno is Laura’s very special guest on the podcast today.
Apolo begins the conversation by reflecting upon his first broadcasting experience, the effects of the Olympic postponement on athletes, and the first sports in which he participated as a child. He then compares and contrasts short track and long track speed skating, and relates his storied career in speed skating, including the game changing life lesson his father taught him, the importance and power of his shift in mindset, and especially the tremendous impact that sports psychology has had upon his performance. Apolo goes into great detail about the ‘assertive intentionality’ which revolutionized his training, and he provides all the details behind his infamous silver medal at the 2002 Olympics and his transformation as he reinvented himself for the 2010 Olympics. This fascinating conversation concludes with Apolo offering his sage advice for athletes. As an athlete who has experienced so very much throughout his remarkable career, Apolo Ohno possesses a unique perspective on setting goals and accessing each and every ‘reservoir of potential’ during their pursuit. Today you have a front row seat to hear him share his extensive knowledge, insight, and wisdom with Laura in this very special episode.
Episode Highlights:
· Apolo’s first broadcasting experience
Quotes:
“It looked so impossible to me that these guys were leaning over at these impossible angles, going like 30 miles an hour, inside of a hockey rink. It just was so cool looking.”
“I don’t like racing against the clock – that seems very boring to me – I liked racing against other athletes and testing my might against them.”
“I was racing against men who were 30, 35 years old, who had been skating and training longer than I had been alive on this planet, and I was beating them with ease which was very, very weird.”
“At a flip of a switch, I was now being talked about as being a statistic, as being a kid who had it all but threw it away, who didn’t know what hard work and discipline was. And that was painful.”
“Whatever it is, I want to see real dedication and commitment from you.”
“It’s only a true failure if you stay down.”
“I have a mindset…that you are not willing to go to. I will go to the places in my mind that you are afraid to go through.”
“I have something upstairs and in my heart that other people around me do not have.”
“I had this untapped reservoir of potential, and that was my mind.”
“You’ve got to take pleasure in those small wins.”
“I was able to make such assertive intentionality around each training, pre-, during, and post-, that the quality of my training went so high.”
“Everything scarred me in some degree, and…it wasn’t healthy back then, but when it comes down to sheer performance, I think there was no one that was more driven.”
“We, as a country, needed to see some athlete like that, to get knocked down when he was supposed to win, and to not complain about it, and to not gripe about it, but to say...‘Life happens’…it was a blessing.”
“I’m so grateful that I didn’t win that race…anything else would have been different.”
“It was really about me exhausting any and all of the options, leaving no stones unturned in that preparation.”
“Every up, every down, every mediocre performance is an incredible learning experience and opportunity to light that fire within.”
Links:
Laura’s Social Media:
Connect with Apolo:
Website: https://www.apoloohno.com/
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The one and only Apolo Ohno is Laura’s very special guest on the podcast today.
Apolo begins the conversation by reflecting upon his first broadcasting experience, the effects of the Olympic postponement on athletes, and the first sports in which he participated as a child. He then compares and contrasts short track and long track speed skating, and relates his storied career in speed skating, including the game changing life lesson his father taught him, the importance and power of his shift in mindset, and especially the tremendous impact that sports psychology has had upon his performance. Apolo goes into great detail about the ‘assertive intentionality’ which revolutionized his training, and he provides all the details behind his infamous silver medal at the 2002 Olympics and his transformation as he reinvented himself for the 2010 Olympics. This fascinating conversation concludes with Apolo offering his sage advice for athletes. As an athlete who has experienced so very much throughout his remarkable career, Apolo Ohno possesses a unique perspective on setting goals and accessing each and every ‘reservoir of potential’ during their pursuit. Today you have a front row seat to hear him share his extensive knowledge, insight, and wisdom with Laura in this very special episode.
Episode Highlights:
· Apolo’s first broadcasting experience
Quotes:
“It looked so impossible to me that these guys were leaning over at these impossible angles, going like 30 miles an hour, inside of a hockey rink. It just was so cool looking.”
“I don’t like racing against the clock – that seems very boring to me – I liked racing against other athletes and testing my might against them.”
“I was racing against men who were 30, 35 years old, who had been skating and training longer than I had been alive on this planet, and I was beating them with ease which was very, very weird.”
“At a flip of a switch, I was now being talked about as being a statistic, as being a kid who had it all but threw it away, who didn’t know what hard work and discipline was. And that was painful.”
“Whatever it is, I want to see real dedication and commitment from you.”
“It’s only a true failure if you stay down.”
“I have a mindset…that you are not willing to go to. I will go to the places in my mind that you are afraid to go through.”
“I have something upstairs and in my heart that other people around me do not have.”
“I had this untapped reservoir of potential, and that was my mind.”
“You’ve got to take pleasure in those small wins.”
“I was able to make such assertive intentionality around each training, pre-, during, and post-, that the quality of my training went so high.”
“Everything scarred me in some degree, and…it wasn’t healthy back then, but when it comes down to sheer performance, I think there was no one that was more driven.”
“We, as a country, needed to see some athlete like that, to get knocked down when he was supposed to win, and to not complain about it, and to not gripe about it, but to say...‘Life happens’…it was a blessing.”
“I’m so grateful that I didn’t win that race…anything else would have been different.”
“It was really about me exhausting any and all of the options, leaving no stones unturned in that preparation.”
“Every up, every down, every mediocre performance is an incredible learning experience and opportunity to light that fire within.”
Links:
Laura’s Social Media:
Connect with Apolo:
Website: https://www.apoloohno.com/