Make today your National Signing Day

imageImagine you are 18. You’ve been recruited, sought after and now, you’re about to put your pen to the dotted line. You are being given the gift of a college education — but you’ll have to earn it. You have hours of sweat and hard work ahead of you. Long hours on the playing field. Injuries. Time in the classroom. But still, you’re being given the opportunity of a lifetime. You’re about to step onto the stage. What are you going to do with it? How will you change your life?

Do you have a 5-star heart to go with that ability?

I wasn’t a college athlete. I can’t even fathom how exciting National Signing Day is. And it has been a long time since someone recruited me for my talents. But what if we treated today as our own personal National Signing Day? What if we made a commitment to our jobs, our families, our spouses, our friends and our lives? What if we stepped onto the stage with a 5-star heart? Can you make a commitment that will change your life? The lives of everyone around you.

By waking up this morning, you were given a gift. Today is your National Signing Day. Put in the work. And receive your rewards.

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Fit4Change Blog Day 14 of 48 — Habits

It was 4:50 a.m. when I pulled into the Madison Central parking lot. I blinked, looked around and didn’t see many cars. Was it Senior Skip Day? Had the bad weather the day before scared folks off? Then the urge to skip hit me. But I got out of my car and proceeded to have good, tough workout. I was on autopilot. Even the siren song of my pillow couldn’t suck me in.

(In everyone’s defense, most everyone showed up by 6. We had a pretty good turnout)

Habits rule us. By now — 14 days of workouts later — a new habit is forming for you. That habit helped me overcome my inherent laziness.

If you want to change your life, change your habits. It’s hard. But so very worth it.

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Fit4Change Blog: Day 13 of 48

Fit4Change blog: Day 13 of 48

I didn’t write about Friday, but it was a leg workout and my legs are still sore from it, so in a way, any discomfort I had today was a leftover from Friday. So there you go. I also ran 11.5 miles on Saturday and 3 yesterday. Coming into today’s workout, my legs were spent.

So guess what we did a lot of today?

If you guessed “run,” you are a genius.

Honestly, I like running and it burns fat well for me. We did the Indian Run (which is an Indian Sprint with Line One), did bags and ladders (quick feet!) and ran four 100-yard sprints. (We also worked in the weight room on chest and arms and did stations with Coach NASCAR). My heart rate stayed way up today. I think it might have been because of the warmth (it felt like summer).

I was sweaty mess.

On the last sprint, I poured everything I had in me onto the fire. Sure, I was tired. But I wanted to prove something to myself. I could push through pain.

Pushing through pain. How many of us pull up when we’re tired? I do.

I’m at a point in my life when I can’t afford to anymore.

Today at 5:55 a.m., I hit a wall and pushed through it. I ran off the field a different man.

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Five lessons I learned from Bert Case

imageFinishing up Bert Case’s obituary cartoon got me thinking: What’s his legacy? What did he leave behind for the rest of us who knew him so well.

When I say “the rest of us who knew him so well,” I mean everyone who watched him for 50 years. He appeared on all three Jackson TV stations. He was a legend in this community. When someone comes into your living room for five decades, you know them.

Bert was family.

I had the pleasure of getting to know him a little bit over the years. We had a mutual admiration society going and I enjoyed visiting with him when I could. I respected Bert. And this is what I got from his life:

1. Love being yourself. Bert loved being Bert. Whether it was in front of the camera or out on a sandbar on the Pearl River, I’ve never seen anyone enjoy being themselves more than Bert Case. That’s why he fought sepsis for so long. Sepsis will kill you quickly. Not Bert. Bert had a lion’s will to live.

2. Stand up to the powerful. Bert respected people, but he didn’t put up with their crap either. Whether it was a mad governor or a ticked pit bull, Bert held his ground. That was a great service to a state that needs that kind of journalistic oversight.

3. Love your job. Bert enjoyed 50 years of doing what he loved to do. Life is too short to hate your occupation. And when it looked Iike he would have to retire, he continued to work and finished on his own terms.

4. Find the love of your life. Bert loved Mary. And Mary loved Bert.

5. Be an original. How many can hear his trademark “Berrrrt Case!” in your head? I can. He came up with that when someone said his name sounded like “bird cage.” I’ve lived in several TV markets and never seen anyone quite like him.

Bert was one of a kind.

And that’s why I will miss him so darn much.

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Fit4Change Blog: Day 11 of 48 — COMPETE!

Competition is good for the soul. Pick someone who is better than you and work your butt off until you can beat him or her. Push yourself beyond your comfort zone and leave it all out on the field. Use the fire of competition to forge your soul. To push your spirit. And to shape your future.

I come from the participation trophy generation. And I got a few of them along the way. But I’ve learned nothing inspires you more than receiving an award for your hard work. No, I take that back — the sting of losing does, too. Don’t beat yourself up when you do lose. Feel how bad it sucks and then lose from it.

Your worst moments can give you your best education.

I’m in Line One. They are the best athletes and I’m the Clydesdale in the midst of Race Horses. But I want to work out with them. I want to get smoked by them. Because it’s the fuel that makes me better. And I have gotten better. Today, I held my own in a 100-yard sprint. I didn’t finish first. Still, I was up in the front. I will push myself even harder tomorrow.

I’m a Clydesdale with a little bit of speed and a lot of stamina.

Winning isn’t everything. Being out on the field of life competing is. Winning is just gravy. Delicious gravy at that.

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A lion’s will to live

Bert Case has fought a 15-round battle with Sepsis and is down on his knees before the final bell. His lungs are struggling to recover — and the prognosis isn’t cheery. But Bert is tough. And Bert loves being Bert. I think the only reason he has survived as long as he has is because he has a lion’s will to live. I want the best for Bert. I also want the best for his wife Mary, who I am also very fond of. I don’t want either of them to suffer.

Life is tough. But Bert is, too. I will continue to pray for my friend’s battle and journey. And I will also be inspired by his heart.

Be like Bert. Love your life and be willing to fight for it. When that final bell does ring (hopefully years from now), that will be his true legacy.

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Fit4Change Blog Day 10 of 48: Pushing past discomfort

 

I wore shorts on a windy, 35-degree morning. My legs were nearly as blue as my shirt. But I did it for a reason.

I wanted to feel as much discomfort as I could today.

Don’t get me wrong, the coaches are very capable of bringing plenty of pain. But I wanted a little bit more. I wanted to remind myself what it felt like to suffer. And I wanted to push past it.

See, I’m training for more than just a physical goal. I’m pushing my brain, too. I need to learn to keep pushing when logic tells me to quit. I am learning the ability to shut my mind downs when it screams “quit.”

I’m learning resilience.

So I was cold. But it didn’t last long. Paul LaCoste (who was with us this morning) made sure of that. We did a four-corner drill (running laps around the field with quick-foot ladders, burpees, mountain climbers, thirty yards of bear crawls, 60 push-ups and squat jacks. Then we went to Paul and did motion drills (sprinting backwards and cutting one direction or the other.) We then went into the weight room and then back on the field (and out into the cold) and an up and down the football field. By the time the hour was up, I wasn’t cold any more.

I had accomplished another workout. I had pushed through my discomfort.

Look on either side of you. The person next to you is going through tough times. If you’re not, you will, too.

I froze for an hour. I can handle anything else the next 23 hours throws out at me.

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Fit4Change Blog: Day 9 of 48 — stories we tell ourselves.

 

We are the product of the stories we tell ourselves.

If you say, “I can’t,” you’re right. If you say, “I suck,” you’re right.

I know. The voice in my head was telling me today would be a great day to sleep in. Look, I’ll be honest: I am exhausted. I drove 800 hundred miles this weekend. I sat in an emotional meeting. Heck, the whole thing was emotionally exhausting. The alarm went off after my six hours of sleep and I thought, “One more hour. I am so tired.”

Then I changed my story. I though, “If not today, when? If I quit today, I’ll quit tomorrow. You’ve got this Marshall. Put your feet on the ground now. Then take it one step at the time.”

Even if they are very fast steps.

We started with an Indian Run. Line One’s version of an Indian Run is a sprint then you sprint even faster. I heard some people call out for the line to slow down. But I wanted it to go faster. I kept telling myself, “Keep pushing. This is how you get faster.”

We are the product of the stories we tell ourselves.

There were several times when I thought to myself, “I can’t.” But I quickly pushed it out of my mind. I told a different story. When Clark was killing us during a core workout, I kept saying, “I AM GETTING STRONGER.”

This is a skill-set that translates to the other 23 hours of my day. Change your story and change your life.

Because we are truly the stories we tell ourselves.

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The heart stays strong

IMG_7409He was standing by the fireplace when my sister and I walked in. Winter’s chill affects him more now — both figuratively and literally. Time and disease are taking a once strong man away from us. But no matter what, he’s still our dad.

I once thought he and I were too different and that somehow I disappointed him. He played baseball and basketball and owned a car repair business. I wasn’t particularly good at all three. I drew pictures and played football. I didn’t think I could live up to his expectations.

But I wasn’t giving my dad enough credit. While I am sure I frustrated him, I know he loved me because I was his son. He valued family before things.

“You are the first person I’ve known who knew what they wanted to do when they were eight and did it. I’m very proud of what you’ve accomplished.” He told me that 15 years ago when I spoke at the Milsaps Arts & Lecture series. When his dad died, he opened up to me more. I remember the first time he hugged me. I about fell over.

My dad thinks the world of me.

I can see it in his smile when we walk into the place where he lives now. Dementia has stolen so much from him. But it will never steal the fact that he is my father and I know he loves me.

My sons are just as different from me as I am from my dad. But I love them, too. Because they are my family. And like my dad, I value that before anything else.

I think the world of my sons.

And if some damn disease robs me of my memory, I know that fact will be safe in their hearts. Just as my Dad’s love is safe in mine.

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When you make it to the big stage….

When you get invited onto the big stage, you must perform.

That’s what I think of when I think of writer Emily Gatlin. I met Emily when she worked at Reed’s Gumtree Books in Tupelo. I got to know her better during the (amazing) Mississippi Book Festival. It was her job to herd the authors (like cats). She showed me she has the ability to handle huge projects.

Bob Guccione Jr. would agree with me .

Guccione, founder of Spin Magazine, met Emily while he was an adjunct professor at Ole Miss. Emily was editor of hottytoddy.com and wanted to run one of his articles. Guccione was impressed by Emily’s writing and soon, he invited her up on the stage.

And she performed.

She has written two nationally published “bookazines” for him. One is “The Unknown Hendrix” and the other is “101 Greatest American Rock Songs.” Both are very well written and both were turned around remarkably fast.

Guccione says of Emily, “I think she is a superstar.”

Trust me, as a guy who churns out quality, it’s sometimes difficult to match quality and quantity. Emily is doing it.

I look forward to our interview. When it airs, I’ll give you a link. But the next time you walk past a magazine stand anywhere in the country, know that another Mississippi writer is well on her way to fame.

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