In Pursuit of Excellence
Terry Orlick
“Who cares what others think?Their thinking can’t hurt you. You don’t have to be a hero. You can be whoever you want to be. Just being, with no pretense, it’s fine.”. This quote is just one of many that makes you strive for excellence by helping to train your mind, by mentally training you to become great in sports and in everyday life.
In Pursuit of Excellence, by Terry Orlick, who is a sport psychologist, writes a nonfiction book about personal experience of what he has learned throughout his studies and what he has learned in his experience with talking with professional athletes around the world. The book digs deep into you by trying to teach you how to overcome certain obstacles to face in different roadblocks that you will face in different opportunities in life.
When reading this book I thought the structure of how he made up the book was very well organized as the author made sure different tasks, tips and reviews from athletes flowed. However, I also thought it was very confusing at parts because at different chapters he would talk about a new topic, but when reading about the new topic it felt like I was reading about the previous topic from the last chapter. For example, in the chapter one it talks about commitment. It states,“Are your goals clear, challenging, and targeted at being or contributing your best?” ,but in the third chapter it says “A commitment to do quality work is prerequisite for excellence, but unless you also master the art of focus control you will continue to fall short of your goals or dreams. Excellence requires the development of strong, positive focusing skills, as well as an openness to learn from others.” To me this meant the same thing just in a different perspective , so I found some parts of the book like this. But, besides the beginning where the repetitive topics were the book flowed very well. For example it talks about what we should think about at the start of athletic events to get our minds prepared all the way until what we learn and should teach our mind to do at the end of an event.
I feel like anyone who is committed to try and make a difference with their mind and try and change things up to help with a certain roadblock, or anyone who wants to try and help to fix the way they think about something could read this book. I say this because, if you’re not into changing things up, or trying to get things to help try and fix things you won’t enjoy it because it gives you a lot of advice like, “Negative perspectives do the opposite.”. This advice may be good to someone who is willing to change, but if you’re not a guy that likes to try and change things then you may find it hard to read because you don’t want to change. I also think that if you’re not good at trying to put a bunch of advice and training into one goal this book is not for you because you need to be able to put all his advice into one goal if not this book will seem like a huge blur. Personally, I liked this book.
I found this book very enjoyable in the end because it had taught me valuable lessons of how to power through and succeed at certain things in my sports and in my life. For example this sentence real stood up to me, “Shouldn’t you be thankful for your relatively good health, your lifestyle, your mental and physical skills, your opportunities, your strengths, your freedom, your friends or family, and your capacity to direct the rest of your life?”. This stook out to me because it connects to me and the world today. For example, most of us, including me, don’t realize how lucky we are to have certain skills and strengths, certain opportunities, our freedom, and the friends and family we have. So, in conclusion, this book has taught me to be thankful and to realize how good I am and can be if I just take the right preparation and take the right mindset so I can develop and become great.