The Olympic Games just gave us some totally mind-blowing and jaw-dropping moments as we watched the best of the best from around the world come together to fight for ultimate sporting glory.
And yes, who doesn’t know about Michael Phelps’ superhuman feat of 28 medals, including 23 gold in five Olympic Games! Or Joseph Schooling, a 21-year-old from Singapore who didn’t let Phelps win the last solo race of his career, the 100m butterfly final. And Usain Bolt, the fastest man on earth with gold medals in 100 metres races in three consecutive Olympic Games.
There have been many memorable moments, astonishing victories, terrifying injuries and heartbreaking defeats in Rio, but we are not focusing on the Games right now.
What we are going to do is to find out how these amazing men and women gracing the Olympic arena become champions. What is it that they do that makes them the best of the best in the world. The secrets of their success in their respective sports can be guidelines for lesser mortals like you and me to make our own mark in whatever we want to do in life.
respective sports can be guidelines for lesser mortals like you and me to make our own mark in whatever we want to do in life.
Here are some personality traits and habits of Olympic champions that give them the edge, besides natural talent and suitable physique, over so many others. Read on and follow these tips and there is no reason why you can’t become a champion too!
Set goals
“You have to set goals. Mine is to be one of the greatest athletes ever to do the sport. ”
— Usain Bolt
At the age of eight, Michael Phelps, the most decorated Olympian of all-time, had set his sights on the Olympic gold by creating a ‘goal sheet’ where he wrote, “I would like to make the Olympics”. And what made his goal sheet different from the kind that many of us have created at one time or the other is the fact that he was specific about what he wanted to achieve by writing down the timings in different forms of races. Even after being in the Olympics and getting his goals, Phelps continues to write down his goals “in the form of times for various races” and checks on them daily.