Possessing natural ability is important. It can jump-start a career, a professional
bent or a sports icon. However, without
character, that talent soon fades.
John Wooden, legendary coach of the UCLA basketball program
and the only coach in history able to boast of 88 consecutive wins knows a bit
about character and talent.
How did John Wooden become John Wooden? He had a profound sense of integrity – or character,
as is our focus today.
“I believe ability
can get you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there. It is easy to begin thinking you can just
turn it on automatically, without proper preparation. It takes real character to keep working as
hard or even harder once you’re there.
When you read about an athlete or team that wins over and over, remember
- More than ability, they have character.”
~John Wooden
Character gets a person out of bed and into the practice
room.
Character helps one focus on the immediate job at hand – a
difficult passage, a messy measure.
Character drives one to perfect practice principles.
And that, parents of the people I have grown to love, is one
more reason to guide your child into habits and skill-set development that will
launch their ability to realize dreams and goals regardless of the path they
pursue.
Carolyn Biggs
Steps and
Skips
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