How To Be Remarkable

Happy Saturday! If you’re new to THE CRAZY QUEST, you may wish to read about it here. Basically, I’m tracing my journey as I attempt to answer the question: What would you do if you didn’t know you couldn’t do it?

This week of training: 117 miles

HOW TO BE REMARKABLE

As a cyclist, I enjoy following le Tour de France each year. I don’t always understand all of the intricacies of strategy and tactics, but I appreciate the difficulty of riding more than one hundred miles per day for three weeks over some of the highest, steepest mountains in the world.

cycle 5The other day a rider made a surprising statement during an interview. He explained that the best point to pull away from a competitor is on the steepest, most difficult part of a climb.

At first that seemed counter-intuitive, but his rationale made perfect sense. It’s nearly impossible to get away from the best riders on easier parts of the course because they can probably match any acceleration. Only the steepest climbs can separate the best from the nearly best.

I applied this idea to my own rides. It’s nearly impossible to make much improvement going downhill—gravity already does most of the work. If I really want to decrease my time on a particular route, I have to focus on the uphill sections. That’s where I’m the slowest, and that’s where it’s hardest. That’s where I can really improve my performance.

The easiest time to stand out is when the ride’s the hardest. I thought about that as a principle in many different arenas.

  • If you’re doing a project at work, everyone looks good on the easy stuff. You stand out by doing well on something that’s too challenging for others.
  • In customer service, anyone can please a satisfied customer. The remarkable person finds a way to work with an angry, difficult customer and convert him into a repeat client.
  • As a teacher, most good instructors could work well with motivated, curious kids. I always admired my colleagues who figured out how to reach the resistant, disinterested students.
  • In a workout, easy activities don’t increase strength or fitness very much. The biggest gains come when you’re tired and keep going while everyone else gives up.

Lots of people can do the easy stuff and navigate the flat terrain in life. Trials, challenges, and obstacles offer the opportunity to be truly remarkable.

What can you do to confront a challenge and be remarkable?

Did you enjoy this article? Please leave a comment, visit my website, and/or send me an email at rich@richdixon.net

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Related articles:

Why Not Enjoy The Ride?

Enjoy The Easy Terrain

Be Your Own Engine

There’s A Top To Every Hill

The Crazy Quest

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