Meet
Stuart Jenkins
He’s standing on top of a box!
Used with permission of Joel H. Weldon &
Associates, Inc.
http://www.SuccessComesInCans.com
Have you ever
wondered about the word “discipline”? What images does it
conjure up in your mind? Doing what you have to do? Toeing
the mark? Keeping your nose to the grindstone? Putting
restrictions on your behavior and actions? Setting limits?
If these are some of the negative connotations you would
assign to the word “discipline,” then you’ll really enjoy
hearing the story of Stuart Jenkins, and you may find it
quite an eye-opener.
“Mrs. Jenkins,”
the grade school teacher announced to Stuart’s mother, “your
son will never graduate from high school, let alone attend
college. It’s because of his dyslexia, you see, he’s
learning disabled.”
Stuart sat in the
slow class in the one-room schoolhouse in a little town in
Nebraska where everyone knew everyone. The worst part was
not that the town labeled him “dumb” and “stupid.” The worst
part was that Stuart believed the labels. Until, that is,
the day that everything changed.
When Stuart
reached junior high age, he was given the opportunity to
attend private school away from home, and it was there that
the earlier labels that had been placed on him were
gradually displaced. Not only did he become the school’s
track star and champion runner, but the confidence he gained
helped him distinguish himself academically as well.
Contrary to the earlier predictions, he not only graduated
high school, but he became student body president and went
on to graduate college with a 3.2 grade point average. And
all because of his very unique concept of the word
“discipline.”
Stuart’s love of
running prompted him to set a long-range goal—to qualify for
the Olympic trials by running the Boston Marathon in two
hours, nineteen minutes, and four seconds. Beginning at age
15, every single day for eight years, Stuart ran in
preparation for that great race. He did not miss one day in
eight years! Would you say that was discipline? In fact, by
the time Stuart reached Boston, his daily log indicated he
had run exactly 26,000 miles in preparation for that one
26-mile race! That’s 1,000 miles of preparation for every
mile in the race! Here are his own words about what happened
as he ran in the Boston Marathon:
“Everything was
going great until I got to the 17-mile mark—Heartbreak Hill,
as it’s affectionately called. It was as if somebody had
turned on Bunsen burners under both my heels and I had
4-inch blisters on them. My shoes were full of blood. There
was more pain than I could ever remember in my life. I had
to ask myself, am I willing to take one more step on these
feet? Then the answer came: Stuart you are within six miles
of reaching the goal you set eight years ago. The goal you
have pursued for 26,000 miles! And the power of the goal was
much greater than the power of the pain. I kept going,
climbing the next hill. As I reached the crest of the hill I
looked out and saw a huge digital clock. It read: TWO HOURS,
EIGHTEEN MINUTES, 46 SECONDS. That meant only one thing. I
had just eighteen seconds to get from there to the finish
line! Then I heard a voice on the loudspeaker: Ladies and
gentlemen, here comes Stuart Jenkins. He’s the last runner
who has a chance to qualify for the Olympic trials. Let’s
bring him on in. Twenty thousand people jumped to their feet
and began cheering wildly. But my entire focus was on that
digital clock! Tick. Tick. Tick. I’m not a sprinter, but I
believe I actually sprinted for the finish line, and in just
fourteen seconds I was there, qualifying for the Olympics—by
just FOUR SECONDS!”
Now ask yourself,
what day should Stuart Jenkins have skipped in his training?
What day should he have allowed himself not to pursue his
goal? What mile in those 26,000 miles of preparation should
he not have run? So what does the word “discipline” mean? It
means freedom! It’s not putting yourself in a box, it’s
putting yourself on top of the box, giving yourself a
structure that can support you. The box is not a trap, a
confinement, or a prison cell. It’s a platform, a solid step
that affords you a higher vantage point from which to view
your possibilities. Eight years of running every single
day—that was discipline for Stuart Jenkins. But that
discipline is what gives you freedom—freedom from
mediocrity!
Here’s what you
can do: Think of discipline as the path to freedom—freedom
from limitations!
© JOEL H. WELDON &
ASSOCIATES, INC. http://www.SuccessComesInCans.com ®