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The world’s greatest athlete, Trey Hardee, is Laura’s special guest on the podcast today.
Today, Trey shares his journey all the way from his beginnings in sport to what he is busy with these days in retirement, detailing the many highs and lows along the way. In addition to discussing mentors, injuries, and coming up short in competition, he offers his thoughts on encouraging children in sports, his Olympic competitions, adopting a professional mindset, and being a commentator at the Rio Olympics. Woven throughout is his strongly held belief in having no regrets in sport or in life. If you are in need of a ‘kick in the butt’ to pursue your dreams, Trey’s inspirational story and sage advice, combined with the humility and humor with which he shares them, are precisely what you need to listen to here today.
Episode Highlights:
Quotes:
“Sports became this after school daycare for me…it just became this way of life.”
“Basketball was the thing that I loved.”
“I’m going to show this idiot coach, like, how good of a pole vaulter I can be, and be the best doggone pole vaulter that’s ever been at this school.”
“It is a hard hurdle to get over to transition into internal motivation, the real ‘why’ of why you’re out there.”
“Do you want your kid to be good at sports, or do you want them to be happy and full of joy and contentment.”
“Genuinely, it’s one of the most deadly sports in the world in terms of participation and catastrophic incidents…people do pass away, have permanent brain injury.”
“There’s no feeling quite like it really in any other sport that I’ve tried or done.”
“Really good in a lot of things, but not great at anything, that’s kind of where decathletes fall.”
“The moment and everything that went along with it, I was, mentally, so unprepared for, that it just swallowed me up.”
“If I really wanted to be good, and take the next step, kind of, stand on the medal stand, I needed to professionalize this, both from the preparation side, but the mental side as well.”
“Coming up short when you’re giving your best can make you feel terrible.”
“It is far worse to live with regret than it is to put yourself out there and fail.”
“It became a beautiful thing for me to fail, and fail gloriously, because you learn so much from it.”
“Regret nothing, let’s go for it.”
“It was time to start being a dad and being, you know, a real family.”
“I’m still…trying as many hats on as I can to find that next thing that I’m passionate about.”
“It’s really important to me that I’m around and I’m available and, kind of, flexible to be a dad, all day, 24/7, and not out of commission too much.”
“Don’t be afraid to put it all out there. There’s worse things in the world but non more difficult to deal with than living with regret.”
Links:
Connect with Trey:
5
7070 ratings
The world’s greatest athlete, Trey Hardee, is Laura’s special guest on the podcast today.
Today, Trey shares his journey all the way from his beginnings in sport to what he is busy with these days in retirement, detailing the many highs and lows along the way. In addition to discussing mentors, injuries, and coming up short in competition, he offers his thoughts on encouraging children in sports, his Olympic competitions, adopting a professional mindset, and being a commentator at the Rio Olympics. Woven throughout is his strongly held belief in having no regrets in sport or in life. If you are in need of a ‘kick in the butt’ to pursue your dreams, Trey’s inspirational story and sage advice, combined with the humility and humor with which he shares them, are precisely what you need to listen to here today.
Episode Highlights:
Quotes:
“Sports became this after school daycare for me…it just became this way of life.”
“Basketball was the thing that I loved.”
“I’m going to show this idiot coach, like, how good of a pole vaulter I can be, and be the best doggone pole vaulter that’s ever been at this school.”
“It is a hard hurdle to get over to transition into internal motivation, the real ‘why’ of why you’re out there.”
“Do you want your kid to be good at sports, or do you want them to be happy and full of joy and contentment.”
“Genuinely, it’s one of the most deadly sports in the world in terms of participation and catastrophic incidents…people do pass away, have permanent brain injury.”
“There’s no feeling quite like it really in any other sport that I’ve tried or done.”
“Really good in a lot of things, but not great at anything, that’s kind of where decathletes fall.”
“The moment and everything that went along with it, I was, mentally, so unprepared for, that it just swallowed me up.”
“If I really wanted to be good, and take the next step, kind of, stand on the medal stand, I needed to professionalize this, both from the preparation side, but the mental side as well.”
“Coming up short when you’re giving your best can make you feel terrible.”
“It is far worse to live with regret than it is to put yourself out there and fail.”
“It became a beautiful thing for me to fail, and fail gloriously, because you learn so much from it.”
“Regret nothing, let’s go for it.”
“It was time to start being a dad and being, you know, a real family.”
“I’m still…trying as many hats on as I can to find that next thing that I’m passionate about.”
“It’s really important to me that I’m around and I’m available and, kind of, flexible to be a dad, all day, 24/7, and not out of commission too much.”
“Don’t be afraid to put it all out there. There’s worse things in the world but non more difficult to deal with than living with regret.”
Links:
Connect with Trey: