To be a better leader and to lead a better life, you need to stop worrying about who you are not and start benefiting from who you are.
Too often, a basic slip-up flusters us and leads to larger, more consequential errors that could’ve easily been avoided.
If we want to achieve our goals, it's the bad days that matter most.
One mistake doesn’t define a game or career. How everyone reacts does.
Every day, we work toward our own Springsteen-like moment, never sure when it might come. But with that work comes necessary experience.
"Life is like creating art, but most of us don't realize that we have control over the paintbrush. Instead, we listen to the instructions from others and paint a reality that doesn't match our vision."
The Daily Coach recently spoke to legendary University of North Carolina Women's Soccer Coach Anson Dorrance about lessons from a five-decade career in the sport.
Don't take life too seriously. Nobody gets out alive.
Our decision of whether to jump on someone else's terrible luck can be incredibly revealing of our own character.
Selfless leaders believe in finding the truth and know right from wrong. They make facts a central part of their life through their character development.
When we assess our achievements, we hardly ever acknowledge the role that time and circumstance have played or whether luck was involved.
You can either raise the bridge or lower the river.