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  <title>The Race I Almost Quit — And Why I Didn't</title>
  <description>I almost quit my first Half Iron Man, and I want to tell you exactly why I didn't — because whatever race you're running in life right now, you need to hear this. In 2013, I entered the water with a busted wetsuit, a rip cord wrapped around my arm, and pure panic setting in, and what got me through was not talent or training — it was mindset. The three strategies I used that day are the same ones that will carry you through whatever you're facing right now. Key Takeaways  Everyone has moments of doubt, even those fully committed to their goals — what matters is what you do in those moments. Racing for someone else gives you a level of motivation you cannot manufacture for yourself alone. When people depend on you, quitting is no longer an option. Someone out there is facing something ten times harder than what you are right now — that perspective is fuel, not guilt. You owe it to yourself to finish. Everything you have been through has shaped you for this moment, and stopping now makes all of that suffering meaningless. The &amp;quot;quit in 15 minutes&amp;quot; trick is a powerful way to keep moving — delay the decision, and the finish line will often find you before the quitting moment does.  Action Steps  Identify who your goal serves beyond yourself and write their names down somewhere visible — that list becomes your anchor when your mind tells you to stop. When you feel like quitting, give yourself permission to quit in exactly 15 minutes, then reset the clock every time that window closes. Reframe your past struggles as proof that you are built for this — write down three hard things you have already survived and remind yourself: you did not come this far to fold now.  Notable Quote If I stop now, then everything that I went through was all for nothing — and I don't want a life defined by what could have been. </description>
  <author_name>Shark Theory</author_name>
  <author_url>http://baylorbarbee.libsyn.com/website</author_url>
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