Concepts & Curiosity
Welcome to the rabbit hole.
Here, we dig into the ideas that punch us in the gut, light a fire in our brain, or whisper something unsettling at 2 a.m. The kinds of things that actually are helping me move the needle. Leadership, self awareness, identity, the pursuit of performance, the poetic dance of becoming something more. We’re chasing all of it. Not because we have answers, but because the questions won’t leave us alone.
So take a breath. Stay curious. Read what we’re wrestling with—and maybe wrestle a little yourself.
The Quiet Pulse of What Once Was
There are days. The quiet, bitter ones, when I miss coaching track with a kind of holy ache. Not just the whistle and making small adjustments to relay exchanges, or the monastic obsession with technique, but the entire absurd religion of it. The cathedral of the track, where sermons were preached in sweat, in muscles that felt like they pumped battery acid and PRs eked out by the grace of biomechanical nano-adjustments and sheer human will. Coaching wasn’t just work. It was devotion. A stubborn, beautiful masochism. It was my own personal evolution.
Honestly, I miss the athletes most. Their ridiculous optimism, standing by them in solidarity after tough losses, their unwavering trust, their savage work ethics.
A Student Of Chaos
Step into this life holding nothing too tightly in your clenched fist. Be ready to learn and receive from a place of curiosity rather than judgment. Be a student of the chaos, not its critic.
There will be things in life that are difficult, and others that are refreshing.
You’ll go through chapters and, at the end, do your best Tiger Woods fist shake. You know the one. It’s his sacred flex. The seismic twitch that tells everyone, “I own this moment”.
Other times, you’ll mutter under your breath, “This is all a bunch of cosmic horseshit.” You’ll want to hang it up. Close the book. Set fire to the shelf.
Honestly, I hope you get to experience both.
A Miracle of Carbon & Conviction
I have to remember that I both transcend and include. The truth is, everything that occurred before has conspired, sometimes brilliantly, sometimes clumsily, to make me who I am today, and it lingers like an old cologne. Faint but familiar. What happened before doesn’t keep me from growth. It is a part of me that I now celebrate with the serene resignation of someone who’s endured the brutality of adolescence and every version of themselves that tried to find their purpose before 25, because I understand it was steps down the path to who I am and where I find myself today.
We all have a story.
Yours is yours.
Mine is mine.
You sit where you are now, reading ramblings masquerading as meaning, this black text on a glowing screen.
Slow The Game Down
Every athlete I’ve worked with wants to perform at their highest level, but in order to enter the elusive state of flow (aka the zone) you must first master the art of slowing the mental game. I recently talked to a college player who said, "I know I’m the best on the floor, but I get in my own way." More and more athletes are stepping into a new way of working on their mentality. There’s a quiet shift happening. A move away from "tough players win" toward the realization that those fully living in the moment are the ones who find a way to dominate. Yet slowing the mind remains a maddening paradox, like trying to fall asleep by trying harder, only to push it further out of reach.
The Audacious Torch
It is inexorable. The path is relentless.
At some point in your journey as an athlete, you'll face the choice of what to dedicate yourself to. Every year several athletes approach me with some version of this question… should I stop playing this sport so I can throw all my efforts into the one I love the most?
I answer with the very words my dear man Rob Bell once told me, “…you can do whatever you want to do.”
Too often we hear great things from great people in life and we cling to their perspective as our own without ever stepping back to examine whether or not it fits. Years go by before we realize the very thing we see the world through has skewed our perspective on this life. And we end up down a path we never wanted to walk.
Athletes tune in for a second.
The real truth here is you can decide to do whatever you want.
Reps No One Claps For
If you’re an athlete, you’re a machine when it comes to suffering. You’ll lace up for another brutal hill sprint with blood in your mouth and call it therapy. You’ll train until the floor starts breathing, just to get 100 more makes. Over the years you’ve made friends with the pain. You gave it a nickname, tucked it in at night, and called it growth. You know the body keeps the score, and you want to be on the scoreboard.It drains you of excuses, of illusions, of the cozy blanket you wrapped around your comfort zones. And you show up everyday for more.
We all know the work is hard. It’s soul scraping, bone aching hard. Like getting a liver punch by your own potential, repeatedly, all while smiling for the camera.
Underperformance Comes With Luggage
Underperforming comes with luggage. And it’s not a carry-on.
We (coaches, parents, athletes) tote this luggage replete with the history of our story. Dragging it from home to practice, practice to home, home to competition, competition to home.
It is tethered around our waist and we lug it everywhere we trudge.
Some of these items are our own.
Some items have been handed to us by others and are not ours to carry.
The articles occupying space in our soul were an unkind gift given to us at some point in our story.
At What Depth?
When we value who someone is, we value them entirely. Not as a utility, not as a reflection of our pride, but as themselves. Fully.
No conditions.
No agenda.
No performance bonuses.
No unreadable fine print.
Just pure, simple support and love. The kind of love that doesn’t clock in or out.
But when we value someone for what they are, a title, a role, or a highlight reel, we aren't loving a person true to their full identity. We're applauding a performance. And in doing so, we unwittingly teach them that their worth lives in the product, not the producer.
A Thousand Moments of Zen
After years of sitting in the trenches of deep conversation with people scattered across the vast spectrum of ambition, goals, anxiety, insecurity, pain, doubt, and performance paralysis, I’ve come to believe one thing with unshakable certainty:
What people crave in the depths of their being most isn’t reaching a goal. It’s to be seen. To be heard. To be loved, supported, and empowered to be the best version of themselves.
To truly see someone, to hold space in a way that makes them feel like their existence isn’t just tolerated, but respected, requires something radical. A heart steeped not in agenda, but in something softer, bare-boned.
Gold Is Buried In The Darkness
Being content with your skill level today isn't complacency, it’s strategy. It’s the conscious decision to anchor your mind in the present, standing on the shoulders of every gritty, unglamorous, unseen day you've stacked before this one.
It’s not as if your life is a movie with a rising action, climax, falling action and resolution. The pursuit of mastery isn’t born in a grand cinematic moment of glory. It’s built in the quiet repetition of showing up when no one’s watching.
Ink From The Ashes
My route to coaching wasn’t the same as most-there was no childhood dream, no coaching ladder climbed with a whistle in hand. Coaching was never part of my post college five-year plan. Neither was it the stranger softly knocking on my door asking for a moment of my time. It just barged in one day and said, “You’re doing this now.”
So when I landed in the muddy trenches of the coaching world, I quickly realized my approach didn’t quite… match the wallpaper. While others were focused on upholding the tradition passed down from generations before, I kept hearing this rebellious whisper in my head:
“But we don’t have to do it that way.”
Unvarnished Reality
Malcolm Gladwell popularized the idea that it takes 10,000 hours of work to become an expert. I don’t know how many hours I’ve logged in this work, but I’ve loved every second. Or at least, I’ve convinced myself I have—because if I stopped to count, I might start questioning my sanity.
The truth is, the behind-the-scenes isn’t glamorous. It’s not dopamine. It’s not dopamine’s cousin. It’s spreadsheets at midnight, a wall of research papers that don’t know how to shut up, and the existential weight of athletes trusting you with their minds.
The Torch of The Craft
The more I’ve worked with athletes, coaches and business leaders, the more I’ve witnessed why questions driving people internal and at times shutting down the process of personal evolution. Why questions run the risk of causing us to feel like something is wrong with us.
Why do I keep making the same mistake?
Could be changed to…
What is it in this situation that I’m missing that is leading to me making the same mistake over and over again?
A Sledge Hammer For Polishing Floors
An athletes internal language/reality creates the perspective from which they see and experience the world. The perspective is being constructed daily.
It is a lifelong process of build,
tear down,
update the design,
rebuild.
While athletes are the builders, coaches are contractors in the construction.
A Tradition of Excellence
Building a tradition of excellence doesn’t simply happen by accident. It takes strategy, care, love and most importantly - words spoken with grace and integrity. The most powerful words in a coach’s vocabulary are “I’m sorry.”
Every season as a track and field coach I felt the need to say those words. They came out from time to time in training, in competition and at times at the end of a long season.
The Cost of Underperforming
Under performing comes with luggage. And it’s not a carry-on.
We [coaches, parents, athletes] tote this luggage replete with the history of our story. Dragging it from home to practice. Practice to home. Home to competition. Competition to home. It is tethered around our waist and we lug it everywhere we go. Pull it long enough and our walk will become a trudge without us knowing.
Athletes Can Help Us Be Better Parents… If We Will Let Them.
Over my time coaching I’ve had people ask about when kids should lift or start agility training and what the best methods might be for such an endeavor. But over the past 2 years I've had more parents than I can count want to get their son or daughter in the gym with us before they are 12 years old. I applaud the parents for being on top of their kid’s training but this athletic culture we live in today in the states is crushing young people. It is grinding them up and shitting them out on the daily. I only make a statement such as that because of my experience with years of mental work with high school and college athletes.
SomeTraining Days Suck
We’ve all had those days when we walk into the gym and we’re stoked about being there. Even if we know the workout is going to wreck us, for some crazy maniacal reason we can’t wait to get in there and suffer with other athletes who have similar dreams. Even as coaches we walk into the gym and hit it. Those days when flow is achieved and the weight seems to move itself.
Yesterday, for me, WAS NOT ONE OF THOSE DAYS!
In A Previous Life
In a previous life I was a photographer. I FREAKING LOVED IT. 10 years ago if I wasn’t on a trail running into the middle of nowhere, I had camera in hand snapping photos. I have my own Photography business for a while and it has been a blast. Mostly I shoot weddings, engagements and a few solo sessions here and there but my passion was street and documentary photography.
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