
Author of When Turtles Fly: Secrets of Successful People Who Know How To Stick Their Necks Out
So how does an Olympian prepare mentally for a once-in-a-lifetime event that can literally be over in seconds, but its results will last for the rest of his or her life? Because of my background as the first American Olympic gold medal aerial skier, motivational speaker and author of a much-talked-about inspirational book, I was honored when the U.S. Olympic Committee engaged me to help train the current and upcoming athletes on overcoming challenges, finding motivation, and dealing with these pressures at the Games.
So what are the secrets of the training program that every U.S. Olympian — from Apolo Anton Ohno to Bode Miller to Lindsey Vonn to Shaun White — has to attend before stepping foot on the Vancouver Olympic venues? In highlighting a few of the most intense obstacles presented to the athletes at an Olympic Games, you’ll see that my recommendations for coping with their issues can easily be paralleled into the real world.
| OLYMPIC CHALLENGES | NIKKI’S COMBATIVE TOOLS |
| Fear of failing to make the Olympic podium or even winning the Games | Ask yourself, “If I knew I couldn’t fail, what would I try?” After you answer this question, ask yourself why it would be so awful to fail at the task or activity. We learn much more from our failures than we learn from our accomplishments. |
| Focusing too much on the Olympic medal, extensive media, or hometown parades | We need to learn to live in the moment and concentrate on what we have control over. And that’s the process, not the end results. For example, we can’t control someone else’s impression of our work; we can only control what we produce. |
| No accountability! Not claiming your goal of winning an Olympic medal or taking the blame when you don’t | Most successful individuals will take credit for the good AND bad results. Write the challenge down on an index card and tape it to the wall to remind yourself of your goal. This commitment will make you accountable to your goals and responsible for your actions. Read your index card and/or check in with your friend weekly to keep yourself on track. If you aren’t willing to put a goal in writing, you probably aren’t really committed to achieving it. |
| Intense pressure of personal / family’s / country’s expectations, extensive media hounding you, and thoughts of what you could lose out on all bottled in a one-time shot for the next four years | The best way to deal with the stress, pressure and anxiety is to build your confidence. Start journaling to recognize what you do well and what you can improve. Each day, write down one thing you did well that day and one thing you could improve on. It’s often easy to see the achievements and improvements others make, but we have to take the time to recognize that regardless of what we are going through, we can change, too. Build your confidence by getting to know and appreciate yourself. |
| Unexpected incidents such as weather, equipment / course problems, sickness, competitor issues, changing schedules / delays, trouble sleeping, etc. | No one can control unexpected incidents, but you can control how you prepare for their possibility. Pick a project or activity you are working on and come up with three alternate plans in case something goes wrong. As with fire drills in grade school, it helps to plan several escape routes in case of an emergency. Expect the unexpected and you will never be thrown too far off course. |
| Distractions such as media, family / friends, other events / athletes, Olympic village hype, podium celebrations, teammates’ successes and failures, etc. | There are so many distractions in life and if we don’t build a hard shell to defend against their enticements, we’ll be sucked into mediocrity. Whether it’s the hype of Opening Ceremonies, meeting Wayne Gretzky in the Olympic Village, a bad flu, or an impending deadline, we all have to block out external factors. Keeping your goal fresh in your mind will allow you to clear the clutter of all your distractions. Remember what’s most important and make sure that this factor is driving all of your actions. |
My experiences as an Olympian have effectively prepared me for every future pressure I’ve ever encountered. The pressure was so great for me leading into the 1998 Games in Nagano that I ground through the hard plastic of my teeth night guard in the month leading into the Olympics. When you have three seconds to perform a maneuver in front of 40,000 spectators and have cameras six inches from your face televising your experience to another several hundred million viewers, your nerves are a little harried. I’m now ready for any last minute obstacle that will turn the heat on in a seconds notice . . . and I believe you can too.
©2010 Nikki Stone, author of When Turtles Fly: Secrets of Successful People Who Know How To Stick Their Necks Out
Author Bio
At the Olympic Winter Games in Nagano, Japan, Nikki Stone, author of When Turtles Fly: Secrets of Successful People Who Know How To Stick Their Necks Out, became America’s first-ever Olympic champion in the sport of aerial skiing. What made this performance so unbelievable was the fact that, less than two years earlier, a chronic spinal injury prevented her from standing, much less walking or skiing off a twelve-foot-tall snow jump that launches aerialists fifty feet into the air. She overcame the injury and went on to earn 35 World Cup medals, 11 World Cup titles, 4 national titles, 3 World Cup titles, a World Championship title, and membership in the Ski Hall of Fame. Nikki is also a magna cum laude graduate of Union College and a summa cum laude masters graduate of the University of Utah. Her aerial retirement is less than restful as she trains Olympic athletes and business professionals in speaking/media skills, coaches personal and professional development courses, hosts group skiing adventures, sits on five different charitable committees, and writes articles and columns for many magazines, newspapers, and websites. Nikki’s career focus is now on traveling around the world working as a sought-after motivational speaker, sharing her secrets to success by inspiring her business audiences to “Stick their necks out.” Every spare moment is spent with husband, Michael Spencer, and daughter, Zali, in Park City, Utah.
For more information, please visit www.WhenTurtlesFly.com.






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