Lifter Stats
Select the year below to find your stats. Lift results are gathered during events, immediately following events, or sometimes at the end of the year using available records (e.g. event spreadsheets, lifter goal journals, certificates, etc.). Thus, the stats contained therein may not be 100% complete.
Your stats are not a matter of pride or vanity. They cannot encapsulate your uniqueness or social contributions to the team and the sport. What they do represent are valuable feedback from which you can acquire an acute sense of perspective and direction. These elements cultivate your sense of purpose, which motivates you to realize it through further action. But you must listen to these cues before you make your next leap, and in so doing is the essence of learning a skill...
Your stats are not a matter of pride or vanity. They cannot encapsulate your uniqueness or social contributions to the team and the sport. What they do represent are valuable feedback from which you can acquire an acute sense of perspective and direction. These elements cultivate your sense of purpose, which motivates you to realize it through further action. But you must listen to these cues before you make your next leap, and in so doing is the essence of learning a skill...
In the Learning Process Model, you:
On your journey you (and coach) are continuously evaluating your focus, attitude, and effort each and every week. Events and in-houses provide snapshots of your progress periodically throughout the year. Progress follows a persistence for change, and contrary to popular belief it is not deserved - only earned. Naturally, steps #3 and #4 are where the talkers are separated from the walkers.
Moreover, as is the case in sport especially, setbacks are part of the process and you don't get a purple ribbon for every bump in the road. Everyone is in the same boat, so we support one another to keep the herd moving. Some years you will not meet your goals - you may not even make any progress - you might even regress. That is normal, and it is OK.
The important thing is that you learn to love the process: observe others, be inspired, dream big, embrace challenge, be willing to "fail" while expecting to achieve, reflect on your path, learn by doing, and lead by example!
- Receive input (i.e. quantitative: your stats; qualitative: technical cues or suggestions)
- Make a decision (i.e. determine what you want: you can make a goal to change or stay where the same)
- Act on your desires (e.g. focus on your new goals, apply coach's technical cues, put in the time & effort)
- Receive feedback / results
On your journey you (and coach) are continuously evaluating your focus, attitude, and effort each and every week. Events and in-houses provide snapshots of your progress periodically throughout the year. Progress follows a persistence for change, and contrary to popular belief it is not deserved - only earned. Naturally, steps #3 and #4 are where the talkers are separated from the walkers.
Moreover, as is the case in sport especially, setbacks are part of the process and you don't get a purple ribbon for every bump in the road. Everyone is in the same boat, so we support one another to keep the herd moving. Some years you will not meet your goals - you may not even make any progress - you might even regress. That is normal, and it is OK.
The important thing is that you learn to love the process: observe others, be inspired, dream big, embrace challenge, be willing to "fail" while expecting to achieve, reflect on your path, learn by doing, and lead by example!