Saturday, October 07, 2006

Inside The Mind Of A Winner

Year 1 - Did not finish
Year 2 - Did not finish
Year 3 - 36th
Year 4 - Did not finish
Year 5 - Did not enter
Year 6 - Did not enter

If a NASCAR driver had a record in the Daytona
500 anything like this would you bet on him in
year 7? What if he'd taken the last 2 years off to
fight cancer?

Well that is exactly what happened to Lance
Armstrong in 1993 thru 1998. Not only that, but
he was also physically decimated by
chemotherapy in a sport that takes mountains of
endurance.

His situation was grim, but he did have a giant ace
in the hole. He had the mind of Lance Armstrong.
He had the mind of a winner. And that was enough
to win a record 7 Tour de France's in a row.

Do you think maybe Lance learned something about
winning while he was losing so much. He must have.
And do you think he learned how to use his mind at
the highest levels to overcome both cancer and build
his body back up to world class competitiveness.

How do you feel about losing? Does it eat away at you
and knock you off your game for an extended period
of time? Or can you let go of the pain and treat it like
the learning experience it is.

More relevant, as a shooter how do you react to
missing shots? I've said it before, but you really need
to learn how to miss before you'll ever become a great
shooter.

Coach Stan Kellner will teach you how to miss shots
and recover your confidence in moments on his new
"Prime-Time Shooter" DVD, and that's just one of the
ultra powerful mental techniques you can start
practicing in days if you order now at:

http://www.deandelker.com/wissel_order.html

Shoot For The Stars,

Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops

P.S. In his camps Stan has kids hitting 100 shots
in a row and more when he teaches them 3 magic
words that cause them to lock in on their target.
Find out how to execute the shooter's internal
success programming today at:

http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html

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Sunday, September 03, 2006

Use It Or Lose It

A number of years ago in a business I got to know
two brothers from South Florida. To maintain their
privacy I'll call them Chip and Dale.

A friend and I ended up training the 2 brothers so
we spent quite a bit of time with both of them, their
wives, and their children. Over time we heard their
life stories, and Chip and Dale were as different as
any two siblings could be.

Chip was ambitious, smart, respectful, fatherly,
generous, positive, prosperous, and loyal.

Dale was broke, working at a menial job, childless,
disrespected his wife, was usually negative, and
drank too much.

They had both had it rough growing up. An
abusive father, a mother who died, in foster homes
together, etc. I noticed one thing from hanging
around them so much though.

One of them had had gotten bitter, the other had
gotten better, much better. I'm sure you've heard
similar stories. They abound, and they all point out
a very important lesson.

You can use your past to make excuses and fail, or
use it to to motivate yourself and rise to success.

It's all up to you.

Shoot for the Stars

Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops

P.S. Chip sought out help dealing with his past.
You can too. "Zero Resistance Living" is a unique
life mastery course that teaches you in detail how
to reprogram your subconscious internal
computer and change your life.

Don't let anything from your past stop you from
experiencing the success you deserve. See what
I mean today at:

http://www.deandelker.com/zero_resistance.html

P.P.S. You will be a better shooter if your mind isn't
burdened by nagging issues of inferiority, failure, etc.
Let Coach Stan Kelner show you how to believe you
are a shooting machine today at:

http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html

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