Saturday, September 23, 2006

All on my own

I realize now that this may only make sense to me, so I will try to pull all this together at the end. I understand that this sounds completely narsassitic and self important and perhaps it is. At the time when I thought this though, it was a sweet moment during a great run.

Triathlon and by extension Ironman, is that little peice of life that I allow myself to believe no one else can take credit for. Sure I am thankful to many and have lots of praise to give my wife and my support team but sometimes I feel that in my life I have become overshadowed in the 'big' areas.

When the history of my company is spoken by others, I will be not mentioned as having a crucial role in it though my partners and I would disagree. The credit for its success and rightly so will go to the two partners the rest of us support and prop up, the two who control the day to day management. And I love them for taking that stress upon themselves and love the position I have in the system. But when I am introduced to new employees its usually not as, "He is a partner (or owner)," but mostly, "He the auditor, don't piss him off."

When the history of my marriage is spoken, its Mistress who really gets the credit for keeping us together and rightly so; she relates better to my parents, she spends the most amount of time with our son because I work and workout longer than she; she is better at the day to day operation that is a family. And I love her for it and thank God everyday for bringing us together.

So when I think of all the 'big' areas in my life there is always credit that will be assigned to someone else for my success or continuation. Ironman is my own being, my own struggle to overcome. No one can take credit for my success or assign it to someone else, its already assumed no one will carry my failures for me.

When my personal history is spoken I will be assigned to groups of great people and family that helped me make the money I make, live in the beautiful house that I live in and be the stable family man that the outside world believes I am. But when they say, "ironman," and I hope they do, there is only one person that it can be assigned to for its success and thats me.

Then I have the responsibility to thank the creator, my family, my training partners and my business for all the support that I pulled or took from them on the road to ironman. But in that first spark of thought at the mention of the name, 'ironman' all thoughts will be on me and not that I was carried on the backs of greatness. I will be recognized for stroking all those yards, riding all those miles and running all those kilometers.

Postscript. I have re-read this a few times before posting and though completely self absorbed I hope you the reader will see this is a tale of giving myself permission to believe I am capable of my own success in the eyes of others and not dependent upon luck or being in the right place at the right time. Ironman Florida for me has been a 500 day personal journey to stretch my capacity and overcome my personal demons of only being known as a Common Man.

13 comments:

mipper said...

this was taken by me exactly as you inteded it to be. and i understand your feelings. and i will be so proud of you when you are finally able to claim the title you have worked so hard for and will have most definitely earned. God speed, my friend.

Habeela said...

There's something powerful in knowing that you alone can accomplish something - create the dream and then make it happen. And you're not self-absorbed for that. :) Great post!

Joseph Vinciquerra said...

Amen brother - kudos for being able to put it into words.

Nancy Toby said...

It's all your responsibility, and all the credit goes to you at the finish line. Nothing self-absorbed in that!!

Flatman said...

I TOTALLY get what you are saying and you are correct. This will be ALL YOU, brutha!!!

GET SOME!!!

Comm's said...

GET SOME!!!

Cliff said...

Great post....

stronger said...

You are the most uncommon of common men.

The way it reads is that you have built your life on a great support system. Your family, your business partners, your training partners, etc. Take away the 'you' and there is no marriage. Take away 'you' from the partners and the business doesn't run the same.

Can you imagine if there were no Mistress? How would you train? Mo would be attached to your hip. Can you imagine if there were no partners? How would you train? You'd be auditing on the treadmill.

You have a good balance in your life. Yes, IM will be all yours- but not really. YOU will take Mistress, Mo, business partners and training partners (and even a few bloggers) across the finish line with you. That's gotta be far more rewarding than just carrying yourself across the line.

But I get your point.

Rainbow said...

Loved it Comm...there are some good vibes being put out there today.

the Dread Pirate Rackham said...

/unsolicited advice/

tell these people how you feel. Especially the mistress. I think you will find it a further enriching experience.

/end/

oh, and good for you for recognizing your place in all this.

Joy | Love | Chaos said...

It's all about ownership.

You OWN your triathlon successes. No caveat or apologies needed. You own it.

Papa Tweet said...

Whoops, commented as Nytro. You knew it was me

Nytro said...

Great post comms. And by the way, you don't ever have to worry about what we think. You write for YOU. Don't worry about us.

I need to give you a call because I want to talk to you about something. Don't worry, it's about Ironman. I'm sure your mind will be in the right place for a conversation like that. Take care friend
Benny