A break from my normal posting time: it is
roughly 5:30am and I am getting up to go for a shoot 60 miles away in another
county. My teammates are due any minute
to give me a lift and my girlfriend has kindly made me a cup of tea for the
journey. (She has promptly gone back to
bed and is sleeping peacefully)
It does make you think about why we put
ourselves through this. The early mornings and long hours practicing, all for a
tin medal round your neck- which you are never guaranteed to get.
It can be a tough question to answer but in
reality we do because we love it.
We do it for the challenge, the team, the
feeling of elation, and the knowledge you are pitting yourself against other
competitors on a level playing field.
Athletes like Anya Shrubsole thrive on that challenge [1]
That is the essence of why you do sport. If
you win or beat your target, the feeling that you were the best on that day is
unassailable. Nothing and no one can
take that away from you. That is why you
keep coming back and putting those long hours in.
Sport has been compared to a drug as you
keep going until you have had your fix and then repeat it to try and get the
same fix. I, for example, stopped
shooting/coaching for 2 years but yet I came back and never felt better. With all addictions though it can be
disastrous and athletes find it hard to go cold turkey.[2]
Links
[1]http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/cricket/20936477
[photo] http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/02476/Anya-Shrubsole_2476136b.jpg
[2] http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/20646102
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