Set your Mind
What happens when a team of 20-something former Division I athletes gets outscored by "a bunch of old guys" in a men's league lacrosse game? Dr. Stephen Ginsberg shares that humbling story — and traces its lessons all the way to Rory McIlroy's scrappy 65 at Augusta, where Rory himself shrugged and said, "I guess I'm a wily old vet now." That phrase unlocks this episode's central question: What do elite performers actually start doing differently as they age — and what do they finally stop doing? In this episode, Dr. Ginsberg breaks down the four shifts that separate veterans from everyone else: * Restraint — Learning when to sprint and when to walk; when to pull the trigger and when to play it safe. Wily vets stop wasting energy proving they belong. * Trust — Great performers stop going it alone. Years of failure teach them that greatness is a team sport, and they move the ball accordingly. * Resilience — The short memory, long view mindset. Veterans have been burned enough times to know one bad shot, one bad quarter, or one bad week doesn't write the final chapter. * Identity — The longest lesson: making peace with who you are beyond the sport. When your worth isn't tied to the scoreboard, you stop performing to prove — and start playing to perform. Dr. Ginsberg's challenge to you: Find a veteran. Buy them coffee. Get curious and just listen. The wisdom they've earned through time, failure, and hard-won experience is something no training program can replicate. The goal isn't to wait until your body forces you to get smarter. The goal is to get there first. *Music Credit: “Kong” by Bonobo; Courtesy of Ninja Tune Records
21 episodios
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