

Read biographies of your idols on the obstacles they overcame to get to where they are today.That is why we practice a great deal of Positive communication and reinforcement at Tiger Sun Martial Arts Dojang. Having supportive people around will help deflect negative thinking and will rub off on you, we become who we hang out with. Surround yourself with positive people who push you to be your very best, believe in you and your goal and will help you achieve it.FEEL and TOUCH the championship belt around your waist and the crowd’s energy as you put up your hands in victory. TASTE the salt from your sweat on your lips. Visualize as if you have already obtained your goal, SMELL the scents of the arena.Also be sure to feel the emotions that come with it. Visualize yourself always moving quickly, effortlessly and being victorious.Always visualize what YOU are going to do not what your opponent is going to do because you can only control yourself.


This will feed positive messages of victory in your conscious and subconscious mind. Take time to visualize your match or techniques in your mind with a clear, detailed and realistic picture for 10-30 minutes twice a day once in the morning when you awake and before going to sleep. Here are some ways to train your mind to have the edge over your opponent. If two opponents of equal strength and fighting ability step into the ring the man with the stronger mind will be victorious. You have to train and condition your mind to focus on your goal so you have a burning desire to obtain it. When you don’t feel like training because you are tired from a long day at work or your or there are other things you need to get done these could be excuses that can be in the way of you achieving your goals. An indomitable spirit that never gives up, that is the attitude you need to defeat your opponents in the ring or outside of it in the real world. It’s all about attitude that sets you apart from every one else. “WHAT THE MIND CAN BELIEVE THE MIND CAN ACHIEVE”Ī lot of people do not like to hear this because it makes them responsible for where they are at in life, it takes away excuses for failing, not trying or giving up. We are all in control of our destiny because we control our thoughts. So how do you go about it? First it starts with your most powerful asset or weapon you have, your thoughts. Knowing the right way to train/condition your mind and body will increase your odds in becoming a champion. Focus, hard work and commitment are some of the key factors in the making of a champion. Having an indomitable spirit that never gives up! This is the attitude you must have to overcome all the obstacles in your training and in life. The difference between winning and losing. But it isn't until he agrees to meet handicapped youngster Nelson Gary, Jr., who idolizes him, that Gray finally comes to terms with several life realizations.Ī Winner Never Quits was released on VHS on August 18, 1993, by Columbia Tri-Star.That’s the difference between a champion and just another martial arts practitioner. Driven by anger, he finally makes it to the big leagues.
Quitter never wins and winner never quits professional#
But through the encouragement of his immigrant parents, Antoinette and Peter Wyshner, Sr., and the constant coaching of his older brother Whitey, Gray never gives up on his dream of playing professional baseball.

Raised in the Northeastern Pennsylvania mining town of Nanticoke, Pete Gray loses his right arm while still a young boy. With the war depleting big-league baseball's manpower in 1945, Pete Gray finally achieves his goal of entering the Majors when he is hired by the St. Though a success, Gray maintains a tough, defensive veneer, which is softened only by the love of his life Annie and the adulation of baseball fan Nelson Gary Jr., who has also lost an arm (and who would, in real life, become a top minor-league ballplayer himself). A Winner Never Quits is a 1986 television film based on the true story of baseball player Pete Gray, the first one-armed man ever to play major league baseball, hired in 1943 as a "freak attraction" and wartime morale-booster by the Memphis Chicks, Class-A minor league ball club.
