Humpty Dump Is Living A Fairy Tale
His teammates affectionately call him "Humpty
Dump", but not because he fell off any wall.
What he did was fall off his bicycle when it hit a
curb earlier this season and separated his shoulder.
Lee Humphrey is his real name, and he's the junior
shooting guard for the National Champion Florida
Gators who has been living a modern day fairy tale
lately.
I'm sure Lee didn't feel any magic though when he
had to sit out a game, and play 3 or 4 at less than
full strength. Not only was he tempted to get down
on himself, but his team lost five games during that
stretch.
Ask anybody who saw him play in the NCAA
tournament though, and you'll know Lee was the
3-point shooter who's marksmanship gave fits to
Florida's opponents when it mattered most.
When interviewed in a campus newspaper and
asked how he stayed confident in the face of
adversity Humphrey had this to say:
"You have to know you are going to miss shots.
You're not going to play the perfect game every
time either... You just have to keep working hard
and keep your head up and know there is more to
this life than wins and losses. You have to play
and do the best you can."
Lee's right. If you're going to be a winner you
have to learn to use the feedback from failure, and
like a guided missle eventually hone in on your
target.
That's one of the first lessons you learn from Dr.
Maltz' "Zero Resistance Living" program, and that
lesson alone applied in your life can be priceless.
So stop missing your targets and zigzag on over to:
http://deandelker.com/zero_resistance.html
Shoot for the Stars,
Dean Delker - The Dean of Shooting Hoops
Copyright, Delker Enterprises, Inc. 2006
Dump", but not because he fell off any wall.
What he did was fall off his bicycle when it hit a
curb earlier this season and separated his shoulder.
Lee Humphrey is his real name, and he's the junior
shooting guard for the National Champion Florida
Gators who has been living a modern day fairy tale
lately.
I'm sure Lee didn't feel any magic though when he
had to sit out a game, and play 3 or 4 at less than
full strength. Not only was he tempted to get down
on himself, but his team lost five games during that
stretch.
Ask anybody who saw him play in the NCAA
tournament though, and you'll know Lee was the
3-point shooter who's marksmanship gave fits to
Florida's opponents when it mattered most.
When interviewed in a campus newspaper and
asked how he stayed confident in the face of
adversity Humphrey had this to say:
"You have to know you are going to miss shots.
You're not going to play the perfect game every
time either... You just have to keep working hard
and keep your head up and know there is more to
this life than wins and losses. You have to play
and do the best you can."
Lee's right. If you're going to be a winner you
have to learn to use the feedback from failure, and
like a guided missle eventually hone in on your
target.
That's one of the first lessons you learn from Dr.
Maltz' "Zero Resistance Living" program, and that
lesson alone applied in your life can be priceless.
So stop missing your targets and zigzag on over to:
http://deandelker.com/zero_resistance.html
Shoot for the Stars,
Dean Delker - The Dean of Shooting Hoops
Copyright, Delker Enterprises, Inc. 2006



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