Gift biz unwrapped episode 181 You have to fight the bad
Speaker:habits. You have to fight the lazy feelings.
Speaker:They don't just go away just because you have a particular
Speaker:goal in mind.
Speaker:Attention gifters,
Speaker:bakers, crafters and makers pursuing your dream can be fun.
Speaker:Whether you have an established business or looking to start one
Speaker:now you are in the right place.
Speaker:This is gift to biz unwrapped,
Speaker:helping you turn your skill into a flourishing business.
Speaker:Join us for an episode packed full of invaluable guidance,
Speaker:resources and the support you need to grow your gift biz.
Speaker:Here is your host gift biz gal,
Speaker:Sue moon Heights.
Speaker:Hi there And thank you so much for taking a little
Speaker:bit of your time to be with me today.
Speaker:Make sure to stay till the end of this episode because
Speaker:I have a special announcement for you.
Speaker:It's something that I've been working on for months and finally
Speaker:I'm so excited.
Speaker:Now is the time I can share it with you and
Speaker:yes, sometimes I can be a little bit of a tease
Speaker:and just play around and that's not why I'm waiting until
Speaker:the end.
Speaker:I just want to make sure to give my guests today
Speaker:all of the attention that she's due and then share with
Speaker:you something extra special.
Speaker:Like I said at the end,
Speaker:don't leave cause you don't want to miss it,
Speaker:but first I want to talk with you about my guest.
Speaker:She is an Olympic medalist and I brought her on the
Speaker:show because even though she's not a gifter Baker crafter or
Speaker:maker, she has qualities that she needs to use to get
Speaker:her to her level of success.
Speaker:That very much relate to success for us as maker entrepreneurs.
Speaker:Some of the things we're going to talk about are preparation,
Speaker:a mindset,
Speaker:dealing with factors that are sometimes out of your control and
Speaker:how intuition can play a big role in your success.
Speaker:Let's jump into this right now.
Speaker:I'd like to introduce you to Asia Evans.
Speaker:Asia is a two time Olympian and has won a bronze
Speaker:medal in the 2014 winter Olympic games as a brakeman for
Speaker:the USA women's bobsled team.
Speaker:Throughout her track and field career,
Speaker:Asia was known for her dominance in both the sprints and
Speaker:ShotPut at the university of Illinois.
Speaker:She won three big 10 titles the five time NCAA division
Speaker:one. All American recently completed her second Olympic game in February
Speaker:at the 2018 winter Olympics in South Korea.
Speaker:She and her driver,
Speaker:Jamie Gribble,
Speaker:poser placed fifth Asia,
Speaker:comes from a family of elite athletes and today we're going
Speaker:to talk about the drive,
Speaker:the passion and the discipline needed to win.
Speaker:Welcome to the gift biz on wrapped podcast Asia.
Speaker:Hi. Thanks for having me.
Speaker:I am so excited to have this conversation.
Speaker:I'm excited.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:it's kind of a different thing because you aren't like a
Speaker:maker or a creator like our audiences,
Speaker:but I think some of the drive and the passion yeah.
Speaker:And the commitment that you have to have to become the
Speaker:level of Olympian you are,
Speaker:the level of athlete can go over,
Speaker:I think.
Speaker:Yeah. I completely agree.
Speaker:I mean a lot of the things I've learned on my
Speaker:path to becoming an Olympian or even Olympic medalist have helped
Speaker:me in all areas of my life and I've grown in
Speaker:all aspects of my life,
Speaker:not only just the Olympics,
Speaker:so it's kind of worked synonymous with my life and every
Speaker:area. We are going to expand on that in a second,
Speaker:but before we do,
Speaker:I have a traditional question I like to ask everybody and
Speaker:that is if you were to describe yourself as a motivational
Speaker:candle, so in a color and in a quote,
Speaker:how would you describe yourself through a motivational candle?
Speaker:This was such a unique question.
Speaker:I had fun trying to figure out my idea for this,
Speaker:but I think my favorite color is purple and I never
Speaker:understood why I was so drawn to the color when it
Speaker:began, but I'm captivated by it and the more I looked
Speaker:into it and the kind of characteristics associated with the color
Speaker:purple, it's like just ambition,
Speaker:power, strength,
Speaker:peace, magic.
Speaker:And so that really ties into me and some of my
Speaker:characteristics. A motivational quote for that.
Speaker:Would be a Bible verse of mine that's a favorite of
Speaker:mine is Joshua one verse nine and it's have I not
Speaker:commanded you?
Speaker:Be strong and courageous.
Speaker:Do not be afraid.
Speaker:Do not be discouraged for the Lord your God will be
Speaker:with you wherever you go.
Speaker:For me,
Speaker:especially with the places my ambition takes me,
Speaker:it's a little scary.
Speaker:And developing confidence and whatever I do has been a game
Speaker:changer for me and knowing that from the beginning and having
Speaker:that confidence because essentially I went into the sport of bobsled
Speaker:where I had no background in this floor.
Speaker:I came from a completely different sport and to go in
Speaker:there and in two years when an Olympic medal sounds crazy
Speaker:even saying it right now,
Speaker:but it took a lot of confidence and trust and ambition
Speaker:for sure.
Speaker:Absolutely. And saying that it's scary,
Speaker:I would say is an understatement.
Speaker:I agree.
Speaker:It's definitely intimidating.
Speaker:Well, you know,
Speaker:I said in the bio as I was learning a little
Speaker:bit more about you F wheats have run in your family,
Speaker:right? And professional athletes from your father to your uncles all
Speaker:the way down.
Speaker:So you were surrounded by that already.
Speaker:How did your journey go in terms of zeroing in on
Speaker:your sport cause you were track and field in high school
Speaker:and college?
Speaker:I grew up with a very athletic family and it always
Speaker:encouraged me to want to do sports.
Speaker:My uncle and cousin both were major league baseball players and
Speaker:my father was a swimmer and my brother played in the
Speaker:NFL for eight years and my mother was a track and
Speaker:field Supersite in her collegiate years.
Speaker:And so growing up my mom just kept us really active.
Speaker:She never forced us to do any sports or do anything.
Speaker:We kind of played around with all types of sports and
Speaker:it wasn't until my freshman year of high school where I
Speaker:actually did track and field and I stuck with it and
Speaker:we were really successful.
Speaker:I went to Morgan park high school out in Chicago and
Speaker:the city and the Chicago public school and we had great
Speaker:success there.
Speaker:And then I went on to go to university of Illinois
Speaker:where I was told about the sport of bobsled.
Speaker:My senior year of college,
Speaker:my coach kind of introduced the sport to me and so
Speaker:when he was telling me about,
Speaker:I was a little hesitant because I'm used to checking fields
Speaker:and feeling like my Olympic success was always going to come
Speaker:from what I thought I was doing to get there,
Speaker:which was track and field.
Speaker:So I always saw myself being on the Olympic podium and
Speaker:making it to the Olympic games.
Speaker:But I just assumed that it was going to be through
Speaker:track and field.
Speaker:And so my senior year of college was in 2010 and
Speaker:I was doing the 2010 when I left Olympic games.
Speaker:And my coach told me about the sport and how they
Speaker:look for athletes like myself who come from other sports like
Speaker:track and field.
Speaker:I mean you have football players like Herschel Walker who did
Speaker:bobsled, but specifically he told me about this check if an
Speaker:athlete named Veneta flowers who became an Olympian in both summer
Speaker:and winter Olympic sports.
Speaker:And so it really inspired me at the time,
Speaker:but I just brushed it off because I thought that my
Speaker:bread and butter was going to be track and field.
Speaker:And about a year and a half later I went out
Speaker:and tried for bobsled because after college I graduated and I
Speaker:decided not to do track professionally.
Speaker:So I was working in Highland park at EFC sports performance
Speaker:and I was doing my internship and got offered a position
Speaker:there. So I was helping all these people I met accomplish
Speaker:their goals and the dreams they set themselves and I felt
Speaker:like I didn't give myself that same opportunity.
Speaker:And so I did a lot of research and went out
Speaker:for the bobsled team and ended up being a really good
Speaker:fit for the sport.
Speaker:That's interesting because you were seeing that what you were talking
Speaker:to other people and challenging other people to do,
Speaker:you had to turn the mirror around on yourself.
Speaker:Exactly. And I felt like I was preaching all these things,
Speaker:but I wasn't practicing it and I felt that void.
Speaker:I felt like something was missing.
Speaker:I loved what I did and helping them,
Speaker:but I felt like I didn't give myself that fair chance.
Speaker:Okay. This is perfect because I think a lot of people
Speaker:who are listening,
Speaker:I think that starting a business,
Speaker:which I know is a little bit different than sports,
Speaker:but starting a business is for everybody else.
Speaker:Like everyone else can be successful but not them.
Speaker:Right? And so I want you guys get biz listeners to
Speaker:be listening to this because this is what Asia did.
Speaker:And so my question for you is how did you change
Speaker:your mindset?
Speaker:You just can't say,
Speaker:okay, well Asia ante up.
Speaker:Let's do it.
Speaker:What did you do in terms of a mindset to turn
Speaker:around and say,
Speaker:okay, I'm going to not be afraid.
Speaker:I'm just going to put myself out there and do it.
Speaker:How did you do that?
Speaker:Well, I had to my resources for sure.
Speaker:After training and working at EMT sports performance,
Speaker:I went to the owner and I told him about the
Speaker:sport of BAFTA.
Speaker:And this was two years out.
Speaker:So this was in 2012 and the winter Olympic games were
Speaker:in 2014 and so within two years I needed to learn
Speaker:it and understand the sport so I could make it to
Speaker:the Olympic games.
Speaker:And so I told him about my vision and my goal
Speaker:and he said we could do it.
Speaker:And so in order to kind of get in the quote
Speaker:mindset, I could to a bobsledder I worked with football players
Speaker:and they are gritty,
Speaker:they have a great work ethic and they're used to that
Speaker:team atmosphere,
Speaker:but yet they're used to competing against each other.
Speaker:And that's simulator track and field.
Speaker:But in track and field is still a little more individual.
Speaker:So that on and off switch mentality I had to get
Speaker:used to as is being an athlete and a competitor at
Speaker:one moment and then a teammate and helping your essentially your
Speaker:competition and your team move forward and build a lot of
Speaker:the behind the scenes.
Speaker:So I had to learn how to switch that on and
Speaker:off as well as the physical and,
Speaker:and I worked really hard with all NFL players in the
Speaker:off season because it was around the same time as my
Speaker:preparation for Bob.
Speaker:But and so I trained with them for three months and
Speaker:went out and tried out for the team and my trials
Speaker:were going so well that the coach stopped me and had
Speaker:me come to the side and was like,
Speaker:okay, so we see what you can do but let's see
Speaker:if you could push a bop lift.
Speaker:So I actually stayed a few days later and in like
Speaker:plastic in New York we have the Olympic training center,
Speaker:which is where our headquarters is for the most part for
Speaker:bobsleigh. We have our push track there,
Speaker:which is how you practice pushing on dry land and training
Speaker:outside of winter time and being on the track as well
Speaker:as one of our home tracks.
Speaker:And so I stayed there practice and learn the technique and
Speaker:continue with trials.
Speaker:Over the next few months I've made the national team.
Speaker:And from there we went through the world cup season,
Speaker:so that was the season before the Olympic games.
Speaker:And then the next season I had to try out as
Speaker:well and make the national team before I made the Olympic
Speaker:team. Okay.
Speaker:So I have a number of questions for you now after
Speaker:all of that.
Speaker:Yeah. Oh my gosh,
Speaker:yes. But it's so good.
Speaker:So Asia first for some of our listeners who may not
Speaker:be that familiar with bobsled,
Speaker:talk us through the sport and how many people comprise a
Speaker:team and how the whole bobsled works.
Speaker:Yeah, so bachelor is a winter Olympic sport.
Speaker:So for women right now we only have two man Aqua,
Speaker:so you have a driver,
Speaker:but I also go by pilot and they're in the front
Speaker:of the sled.
Speaker:And then you have the brakemen,
Speaker:which is my position.
Speaker:We also go by pusher and we're in the back of
Speaker:the sled.
Speaker:The goal of the brakemen is to get this leg going
Speaker:as fast as possible at the start of the race.
Speaker:And then we hop in after the man and then we're
Speaker:kind of like holding on in the back through this mile
Speaker:long track of twists and turns and bumps and all types
Speaker:of G4S while the driver Sears down the track using the
Speaker:velocity and the momentum we created at the top of the
Speaker:track. So you're the one at the back who's like ducking
Speaker:then so that you,
Speaker:So my goal is to stay as aerodynamic as possible and
Speaker:relaxed in the back of the sled regardless of how crazy
Speaker:it feels.
Speaker:So awkward.
Speaker:I don't even know what the compared to,
Speaker:I mean honestly,
Speaker:we have to wear helmets because you risk concussions.
Speaker:We wear burn invest because if you were to crash the
Speaker:friction from the ice and the speed we're going at a
Speaker:cocreate burns.
Speaker:So it's a very intense course.
Speaker:It's very loud,
Speaker:noisy, and as a brakeman you don't know what's coming next.
Speaker:So it's a little counterintuitive.
Speaker:You want to be nervous,
Speaker:you want to be tight,
Speaker:you want to be kind of scared,
Speaker:but you have to teach yourself to be relaxed and loose
Speaker:and taking all these twists and turns as you go down
Speaker:the track and hopefully come out in first.
Speaker:That's crazy because as you're just describing it at the beginning
Speaker:of the race,
Speaker:you need all your strength because you're the one who's building
Speaker:the speed and then you dump in and you have to
Speaker:do the exact opposite.
Speaker:You have to then relax.
Speaker:Yes, and the drivers,
Speaker:they go from straining to put all their effort into their
Speaker:push push to having to snap out of that relaxed and
Speaker:be focused and steer down,
Speaker:attract. And when I say steer,
Speaker:like it's not a steering wheel in there,
Speaker:we drive by using these D rings.
Speaker:So essentially like two wheel drive.
Speaker:So the runners,
Speaker:which are the blades this last,
Speaker:this one,
Speaker:so two runners in the front.
Speaker:If you pull the right D-ring,
Speaker:they go to the right.
Speaker:And then if people the left when I go to the
Speaker:left, and that's how you fear the sled down the track.
Speaker:I didn't know that.
Speaker:I thought you had a steering wheel.
Speaker:I mean one of the original bobsleds were included this year
Speaker:and we'll,
Speaker:but they advanced their technology so much that it's kind of
Speaker:a rope system and a D rating system where they're kind
Speaker:of pulling these rings to help maneuver this led down the
Speaker:track as efficiently as possible.
Speaker:Yeah. Got it.
Speaker:So let's talk a little bit about training.
Speaker:How do you as a professional athlete train for this?
Speaker:I'm sure,
Speaker:I mean it's physical,
Speaker:but it's also psychological.
Speaker:Can you give us a feel for how that works?
Speaker:I really started to embrace the psychological aspects a lot this
Speaker:past Olympic journey because I didn't realize going into the sport
Speaker:how much that was a factor.
Speaker:Especially for an athlete like myself.
Speaker:I'm one of those athletes that rely on what I produce
Speaker:and my production in like using that as my way to
Speaker:show that I'm doing good to show the team when I'm
Speaker:capable of show to where where I'm capable of.
Speaker:And sometimes in the sport you don't have as much power
Speaker:as you would like to.
Speaker:Like I come from track and field.
Speaker:If I'm an Elaine against seven other athletes and I come
Speaker:at earth and I'm in first place,
Speaker:but with Bob,
Speaker:just because you're the fastest say it doesn't mean you're going
Speaker:to be with who they deemed the fastest driver.
Speaker:Sometimes the coaches and the board pick and choose who races
Speaker:with who.
Speaker:So you don't really have much control over that as a
Speaker:brakeman. The coaches pick who the drivers race with and so
Speaker:the best thing I could do was put myself in the
Speaker:best physical shape as well as being mentally ready to accept.
Speaker:If I'm not racing with the person I had my eyes
Speaker:set on or if things change,
Speaker:being able bounce back because that's what happened to me at
Speaker:the 2014 Olympic game.
Speaker:I primed myself physically to be the best brakeman in the
Speaker:country, let alone the world and to race with the fast
Speaker:pace driver at that time.
Speaker:And so the entire season I raced with her and we
Speaker:were winning Meadows and doing great first in the world.
Speaker:And then at the Olympic games,
Speaker:the week before I race,
Speaker:they switched by,
Speaker:fled and I raced with the second rate driver.
Speaker:And so if this would've happened to me a few years
Speaker:side to that I might have shut down.
Speaker:I might have not been able to even pull off a
Speaker:metal. And so that mental aspect really came into play and
Speaker:I had to understand that this is the hand I'm dealt
Speaker:and I have to make the most of those cars.
Speaker:And so that's when Jamie and I really built a resilient
Speaker:bond and decided to go out and pull this off for
Speaker:ourselves despite who was calling the shots.
Speaker:And so the mental aspect has been a journey for me
Speaker:for sure.
Speaker:Physically, we do a lot of our off season training during
Speaker:the summertime leading into the fall.
Speaker:And so it's pretty much the same as like football off
Speaker:season training.
Speaker:You really want to work on your strength and conditioning and
Speaker:your speed.
Speaker:And so I don't necessarily have to be in like class
Speaker:in New York at the Olympic training center longterm over the
Speaker:entire off season training.
Speaker:I can do my workouts pretty much anywhere.
Speaker:So I worked with my trainer,
Speaker:Jacob Ross and my friend coach Les Spellman and together they
Speaker:helped me get into the best shape for the season,
Speaker:especially entering the Olympic year.
Speaker:It was a lot of the training as far as repetitive
Speaker:speed drove a lot of plyometrics,
Speaker:a lot of jumping and a lot of stuff just to
Speaker:be on my posterior chain.
Speaker:So like a lot of lifting weights,
Speaker:a lot of squatting,
Speaker:some power cleans and dead lifts.
Speaker:And so I really wanted to build up that muscle and
Speaker:that power early in the season so I didn't have to
Speaker:go as hard during the season because once the season starts,
Speaker:we're traveling from country to country each week as well as
Speaker:racing and training on the actual opposite track.
Speaker:So, So you really have to look out at a whole
Speaker:six months or a year and structure when you're training and
Speaker:then when you're on the road it takes a little bit
Speaker:of a different look,
Speaker:right? So you have to look out and plan.
Speaker:It involves a lot of planning,
Speaker:but during the season you have to be able to go
Speaker:with the flow and listen to your body.
Speaker:So as an athlete you become really in tune with our
Speaker:body and what it's telling us and we know how to
Speaker:push ourselves,
Speaker:which you also have to know how to relax and when
Speaker:to take it a little easier.
Speaker:As you go through the season you're dealing with,
Speaker:like I struggled with jet lag and all these European countries
Speaker:we were racing in as well as having to train at
Speaker:6:00 AM we would wake up,
Speaker:get breakfast,
Speaker:load our slips.
Speaker:So with Bob,
Speaker:so it's a really hands on sport.
Speaker:I fled weigh about 365 pounds and so that's the sled
Speaker:minimum wage and we have to move those sleds so we
Speaker:have to transport them ourselves.
Speaker:We put them in the truck.
Speaker:Coach's job is Chuck to the track.
Speaker:We unload the sleds,
Speaker:put them at the line.
Speaker:We do all of that stuff as well as racing and
Speaker:preparing to race a train.
Speaker:Oh my gosh,
Speaker:I for sure thought you had other people doing that for
Speaker:you. We have engineers And coaches that help and the engineers
Speaker:are really great and they do all the behind the scenes
Speaker:stuff and the more in depth stuff for the slab,
Speaker:but a lot of the hands on moving of the sled
Speaker:and preparation of the sled is done that especially the night
Speaker:before a race.
Speaker:People assume that's the day we have.
Speaker:Like You get pampered and you rest and carbo-loading like you
Speaker:do when you're running.
Speaker:Right. 94 race.
Speaker:We're sanding the runners,
Speaker:so the runners,
Speaker:like I said,
Speaker:are the blades,
Speaker:the SLAs that on,
Speaker:we're sending those down grid by grid from a hundred grit
Speaker:sandpaper down to polishing paper and then the drivers have their
Speaker:own busing system.
Speaker:So together that takes about four,
Speaker:maybe five hours to complete.
Speaker:But per runner,
Speaker:if you have people helping you,
Speaker:you can get it done maybe in three hours,
Speaker:but that's another day with the work we have to put
Speaker:in at the end of the night before race.
Speaker:Wow. All right,
Speaker:so from my listeners perspective,
Speaker:I have a couple of things I'm curious about.
Speaker:What do you do on those days when you're supposed to
Speaker:get up at 6:00 AM to train and you're like,
Speaker:seriously, like this is the last thing I want to do.
Speaker:I just want to push this news button and I'm not
Speaker:getting up.
Speaker:How do you force yourself to do that?
Speaker:I know we can all relate to this challenge.
Speaker:We're going to hear how Asia answers the question right after
Speaker:a word from our sponsor.
Speaker:This podcast is made possible thanks to the support of the
Speaker:ribbon print company.
Speaker:Create custom ribbons right in your store,
Speaker:craft studio in seconds.
Speaker:Visit the ribbon,
Speaker:print company.com
Speaker:for more information.
Speaker:Hard. I mean it's hard to force myself to get in
Speaker:that position or get used to pushing yourself.
Speaker:I think that was one of the biggest things for me
Speaker:was you have to fight the bad habits.
Speaker:You have to fight the lazy feelings.
Speaker:They don't just go away just because you have a particular
Speaker:goal in mind.
Speaker:Just because I knew I wanted to win an Olympic medal
Speaker:and go to the Olympic games,
Speaker:it didn't mean instantly boom.
Speaker:I'm a new person that likes to wake up very early
Speaker:in the morning and work out.
Speaker:No, I was still that same person that doesn't like to
Speaker:wake up there early to workout and so you just had
Speaker:to remind yourself why you're doing these things.
Speaker:And so when I was waking up very early to go
Speaker:to training,
Speaker:knowing I had to do all the behind the scenes work
Speaker:and do a workout on top of it later that day,
Speaker:it can be exhausting,
Speaker:but I had to keep my eyes set on my goal
Speaker:and I created a schedule so I knew what I had
Speaker:to do.
Speaker:So that helps me to get an idea of my day.
Speaker:Did the schedule just make you like you knew you had
Speaker:to follow your schedule?
Speaker:Whether you wanted to or not.
Speaker:Having a schedule one may mean knew I needed to follow
Speaker:it and it encouraged me to get stuff done because then
Speaker:once I saw my schedule was clear,
Speaker:I was like,
Speaker:okay, like I really have time off and I can enjoy
Speaker:the rest of my day without feeling like I'm missing something
Speaker:or I need to do something.
Speaker:And sometimes when you wake up and you know you have
Speaker:to do all these things but you don't have them written
Speaker:down, it can make you even more stressed and flustered and
Speaker:it can appear bigger than what it is.
Speaker:So one thing I tried to do was write down things
Speaker:I had to accomplish that day and if I could write
Speaker:a time for it,
Speaker:cool. If not,
Speaker:then I just knew I had to go through it.
Speaker:And so I will use my reminders app on my phone
Speaker:and I would literally put in my phone,
Speaker:everything from I'm training today,
Speaker:make sure my backpack,
Speaker:my workout for the day.
Speaker:If there was certain nutrition things I needed to follow,
Speaker:I would put that in there.
Speaker:And then as I would go throughout the day,
Speaker:I would Mark off when I did it.
Speaker:So if I looked at my phone and I realized I
Speaker:did two things already,
Speaker:I would Mark those off.
Speaker:And then I'm like,
Speaker:okay, halfway through my day I have such and such left,
Speaker:let me knock it out so I can enjoy the rest
Speaker:of my day.
Speaker:If I wanted to go have dinner somewhere or if I
Speaker:wanted to do some of the sports stuff,
Speaker:those types of things,
Speaker:I would try and knock out as much as I could
Speaker:earlier in my day so I can have the rest of
Speaker:my day off.
Speaker:Sure. And then you'd have that portion of the day off
Speaker:and you deserved it cause you put in all your time
Speaker:for the day.
Speaker:So yeah,
Speaker:that's what I said.
Speaker:So like it kinda made me realize what I had to
Speaker:accomplish today.
Speaker:But then as I started to accomplish those things,
Speaker:I felt encouraged.
Speaker:So I was like,
Speaker:okay cool.
Speaker:I knocked this out.
Speaker:That was the biggest thing on my list.
Speaker:I only got this,
Speaker:this and this.
Speaker:I can knock that out in a minute or it doesn't
Speaker:even feel like you'll go throughout your day and realize you've
Speaker:done so much and you still have the rest of your
Speaker:day. So I think having things written out really helped me
Speaker:and was a game changer for me because it didn't allow
Speaker:my thoughts to overwhelm me as far as like,
Speaker:Oh my gosh,
Speaker:I have so much to do and it's time to do
Speaker:it and you forget everything.
Speaker:Right. That's a great takeaway for our listeners because it correlates
Speaker:so well for business and it's so much better to do
Speaker:the things that you don't like first and just get them
Speaker:out of the way done,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:at the first top of the day.
Speaker:Well, yeah,
Speaker:it's not even just that.
Speaker:I don't like the ones that will take the most odd
Speaker:needs because I work out so hard at such an elite
Speaker:level, but I'm just like everyone else,
Speaker:I don't get extremely drained after work.
Speaker:I see it release endorphins and you get energy and stuff
Speaker:despite how tired you are from the workout or how fatigue
Speaker:you are.
Speaker:So I like to accomplish my workouts earlier in my day.
Speaker:Not bright first thing in the morning,
Speaker:but I definitely like to accomplish my workouts and things that
Speaker:I know that will physically and mentally exert me the most
Speaker:earliest Monday so I can knock it out.
Speaker:And then as I go through my day,
Speaker:I just pay attention to things I need to do,
Speaker:whether it be respond to emails or this and that.
Speaker:I write kind of things down as they come to my
Speaker:head because I find that really helps me to remember what
Speaker:to do and to knock it out.
Speaker:Yeah. So you're following a plan.
Speaker:Let's circle around to nutrition.
Speaker:What does that mean for an Olympic athlete?
Speaker:Yeah, nutrition could be like for an Olympic athlete it could
Speaker:be your best friend or your worst enemy.
Speaker:Myself, I love to snack.
Speaker:I love to eat without any strings attached and I just
Speaker:want to enjoy my meal.
Speaker:Yeah. So Asia,
Speaker:I would say to that,
Speaker:well, yeah,
Speaker:you can cause you're going to work off any calories that
Speaker:you have throughout the day.
Speaker:So just go ahead with whatever you want.
Speaker:Right? And that sounds so simple,
Speaker:but that's not exactly how it works because even though my
Speaker:schedule is in 10 I still have to maintain a certain
Speaker:weight throughout the season because it's essentially kind of a weight
Speaker:class sport.
Speaker:You don't want to go over the maximum weight of for
Speaker:the race day.
Speaker:So it's the combined weight is you the driver and the
Speaker:sled. And so after our first run down the track they
Speaker:weigh us together and if you're over weight you're disqualified.
Speaker:Oh man.
Speaker:So that's important.
Speaker:And as well as your energy.
Speaker:So like you don't want to just eat anything that tastes
Speaker:good or eat crazy candies and sugars and junk food.
Speaker:You want healthy things to give you the energy.
Speaker:Cause I have very long days,
Speaker:especially behind the scenes when it comes to maintenance on the
Speaker:sled and doing my workouts and different things.
Speaker:So I have to make sure I'm energized and myself so
Speaker:I'm not eating as many of the bad things as I
Speaker:want. It's more so about fuel in my body and making
Speaker:sure I'm managing my weight throughout the season.
Speaker:And does nutrition at all.
Speaker:Have to do with building muscle and all of the behind
Speaker:the scenes thing too.
Speaker:Yeah. For me,
Speaker:I don't have a problem building on muscles.
Speaker:I'm one of those athletes where I need nutrition to help
Speaker:me to maintain a lighter weight because they changed the weight
Speaker:limit for Bob slit down 15 kilos from 2014 when our
Speaker:Olympics 2018 went Olympics,
Speaker:so that's essentially over 30 pounds a different,
Speaker:so we had to be 30 pounds lighter.
Speaker:That's a lot.
Speaker:Yeah, that's a lot.
Speaker:Five of the kilos could come from the slip,
Speaker:but the other remaining,
Speaker:I'm sorry,
Speaker:it's 15 yeah,
Speaker:so five of the kilos come from the sled.
Speaker:The remaining 10 so the remaining 22 pounds has to come
Speaker:from the driver brakeman combination and so team USA is a
Speaker:little on the muscular built side and so we were already
Speaker:in 2014 near the way limits,
Speaker:so we really had to work to move weight and maintain
Speaker:a healthy lean weight for the 2018 winter Olympic games because
Speaker:we had to be lighter.
Speaker:I want to take a little bit of a step back
Speaker:in your journey also because I liked when you were talking
Speaker:about the fact that it was kind of a step by
Speaker:step process.
Speaker:You know you first were seeing success obviously in college.
Speaker:People had their eye on you already and then when you
Speaker:jumped over into sled,
Speaker:the nationals,
Speaker:the world,
Speaker:it was a progression.
Speaker:So you kept going from one event to another and seeing
Speaker:success along the way.
Speaker:Talk a little bit about that,
Speaker:cause no one just goes from being local to all of
Speaker:a sudden being an Olympian.
Speaker:Right. I don't think I explained it that well because the
Speaker:success progression wasn't as smooth as it found it.
Speaker:It was rough coming into the sport in 2012 I came
Speaker:in alongside three or four summer Olympians from the 2012 summer
Speaker:Olympic games and we were all really good.
Speaker:So it's a competitive atmosphere.
Speaker:They named nine women to the national team.
Speaker:Three of them are drivers and then the other six are
Speaker:a pool of brakemen.
Speaker:So we all travel together throughout the season.
Speaker:But only three pregnant end up racing.
Speaker:And so every time you're on the ice,
Speaker:you're basically competing against your teammates for a spot in the
Speaker:top split.
Speaker:So that's where you were talking about the difference between a
Speaker:solo sport but also a team sport and you have to
Speaker:go back and forth.
Speaker:Right, Exactly.
Speaker:And so you really have to be able to understand that
Speaker:no matter how good you are individually,
Speaker:you still may not get the race you think you deserve
Speaker:or you may not get this or they're testing different combinations
Speaker:so you're not raising.
Speaker:And so that's hard to understand because in track and field,
Speaker:if I didn't race or if I didn't get anything,
Speaker:it was mainly probably because like,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I wasn't performing at my best.
Speaker:You were responsible for your own performance then.
Speaker:Exactly. But now with Bob,
Speaker:but it just may be a combination of other factors that
Speaker:you're not even in control of.
Speaker:And so you have to be able to understand that and
Speaker:not let it affect your performance and your motivation moving forward.
Speaker:That is so interesting and I'm sure so tough.
Speaker:It's Delta.
Speaker:Yeah. What did you learn from that that you take away
Speaker:today? One of my biggest lessons I learned from the sport
Speaker:of bobsled was to separate business and personal.
Speaker:I've always kind of been,
Speaker:if I don't like you and the person,
Speaker:I don't like you in the business atmosphere type of person.
Speaker:So like it's not going to switch on and off just
Speaker:because of the setting.
Speaker:And so as an Olympian and as a bobsledder,
Speaker:you have to be able to separate the two.
Speaker:So on the personal side,
Speaker:you're thrown into a situation with eight other women where you're
Speaker:traveling the world around each other.
Speaker:24 seven I'm rooming together,
Speaker:eating together,
Speaker:doing all these things.
Speaker:And these are women you may not necessarily get along with
Speaker:or you would choose to be around outside of sport.
Speaker:And so you're kind of forcing the situation where you have
Speaker:to kind of embrace it and you build bonds and friendships,
Speaker:but you have to be able to separate the two because
Speaker:it gets messy,
Speaker:it gets drama,
Speaker:food. And in order to perform,
Speaker:you have to be able to put feelings aside and do
Speaker:what you need to be done in order to be successful
Speaker:in the floor.
Speaker:And a lot of times we have to help out the
Speaker:same people we're competing against.
Speaker:And it's so confusing and it's so hard sometimes because you
Speaker:can easily come right off of the ice and move to
Speaker:your teammate or something and then you're all there helping each
Speaker:other move on your sleds and to the truck and doing
Speaker:all this work when you don't even feel like seeing them
Speaker:let alone helping us.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:So how do you do it?
Speaker:Just continually try and keep your feelings in check or what
Speaker:do you do?
Speaker:Well, I had to understand that people aren't going to hold
Speaker:you in the same regard as you hold other people in
Speaker:and yourself.
Speaker:And so you just have to be open to understanding different
Speaker:people and personalities and act accordingly.
Speaker:I think that I kept my goal and my mission in
Speaker:mind, which was to make the Olympic games and when the
Speaker:Olympic medal And you did.
Speaker:Yeah. And having that in mind helped me to maneuver through
Speaker:a lot of the unnecessary BS that would have distracted me
Speaker:throughout the process.
Speaker:I had to learn that this girl would act like my
Speaker:friend one day,
Speaker:but then secretly be trying to take my position and just
Speaker:name that.
Speaker:Even though I have a good relationship with one,
Speaker:it may not mean that I raised with them the entire
Speaker:time and I had to learn how to be a good
Speaker:teammate to everyone despite how I was feeling.
Speaker:So it was a lot of internal things I had to
Speaker:work on to be become a successful Bob better because it's
Speaker:not just about results and statistics,
Speaker:it's so much more involved and you're around these people for
Speaker:weeks and months at a time in other countries and small
Speaker:city and so you have to learn to respect each other's
Speaker:space and to still get what you need to do done.
Speaker:Very interesting.
Speaker:I had no idea there was this whole other level behind
Speaker:bobsled. That's crazy.
Speaker:I think for our listeners too,
Speaker:you can kind of take this back and relate it to
Speaker:a work environment.
Speaker:If you have an assistant who's coming in and maybe they
Speaker:have been challenging,
Speaker:they're in a bad mood for some reason.
Speaker:You still have to keep your eye on the goal And
Speaker:not let it affect your peace.
Speaker:One of the things that really helped me get through a
Speaker:lot of that stuff was to understand that sometimes how a
Speaker:person is acting as a reflection on them and where they're
Speaker:at in their life and not a reflection on you.
Speaker:And so if you stop taking so much to heart and
Speaker:everything someone does or says You think it's about you.
Speaker:Yeah, I think that can mess you up.
Speaker:Especially with me going into a sport like that,
Speaker:I didn't realize people were doing stuff because they were maybe
Speaker:intimidated by me or you know,
Speaker:we're essentially all working for a different position.
Speaker:I'm thinking people don't like me that like obvious other factors
Speaker:and then once you realize it's a competition or it's a
Speaker:business, you got the personal feelings aside and you get what
Speaker:you need to get done for your own goals.
Speaker:If you remember what you have except for yourself and why
Speaker:you're there,
Speaker:it helps to mute out all the other noise.
Speaker:Excellent. I love that we brought this up.
Speaker:That's really going to be helpful to everybody,
Speaker:so I really appreciate that.
Speaker:Let's move on and talk about what's happening with you today.
Speaker:Tell us what you're thinking.
Speaker:What's in your life today?
Speaker:Right now I'm kind of on this open path to discovering
Speaker:what's next for myself.
Speaker:I've been blessed to be in two Olympic games.
Speaker:I don't think that chapter of my life is officially over
Speaker:with because I have had Olympic goal set on my sites
Speaker:since day one of being an athlete,
Speaker:let alone being in the sport of boxing.
Speaker:I know it's possible for us and I know we have
Speaker:the talent and it's right there,
Speaker:so like the fact that I know I can really go
Speaker:for gold makes me want to return,
Speaker:but I've also had a knee surgery and I've just been
Speaker:trying to lay low and figure it out the next move.
Speaker:I think that my mindset is so different this time after
Speaker:your Olympic game versus 2014 after the Olympic games.
Speaker:Because I felt like I had to have a plan,
Speaker:I had to have something said,
Speaker:I had to have my next idea down.
Speaker:Because that's the first thing that after you win an Olympic
Speaker:medal is like what's next and you gotta feel like you
Speaker:have all these things.
Speaker:And I rested into something that,
Speaker:I guess I wasn't ready for it because I ended up
Speaker:getting injured and having knee surgery.
Speaker:So I think that right now I'm just kind of trusting
Speaker:the process and seeing where my journey takes me,
Speaker:trying to approach this phase of my life with the same
Speaker:confidence I had when I approached,
Speaker:but in the Olympic and going for that.
Speaker:And so I think that it's gonna pull off for me
Speaker:and I'm gonna make myself,
Speaker:You also have maturity now you have experience with two Olympics,
Speaker:right? So you're walking in as a different and more experienced
Speaker:person really.
Speaker:And you have four years,
Speaker:you have four years now.
Speaker:Yeah. And the things I want to explore it and relate
Speaker:to my old shirts and some of my create some new
Speaker:shift for me fell.
Speaker:It's all about I think at this point in my life,
Speaker:the mentality asset and not scaring myself and stressing myself into
Speaker:thinking that I don't have it or I don't have anything
Speaker:next like I just have to trust us and trust the
Speaker:process and this culture with the same confidence I did when
Speaker:it came to wanting to win in the Olympic medal and
Speaker:Bob said when I had no background in this sport.
Speaker:You're right.
Speaker:I love when you say it that way because so many
Speaker:people are afraid of the unknown and for you just to
Speaker:say, I'm going to trust the process,
Speaker:I'm going to go with what feels right.
Speaker:I don't have to decide everything right now yet and just
Speaker:see what comes of it And doors for yourself.
Speaker:Even when I look back,
Speaker:just from talking to you and looking back when my coach
Speaker:told me about Bob flick,
Speaker:I had a set in my head that I was going
Speaker:to be an Olympian and track and field and you couldn't
Speaker:tell me otherwise.
Speaker:And so little did I know that he planted a little
Speaker:seed in me that kind of stuck around and I ended
Speaker:up accomplishing my goals just a different way.
Speaker:And sometimes I think you have to be open to the
Speaker:various ways your goal comes to fruition.
Speaker:Like a lot of times we think you have to do
Speaker:this, this and this in order to get your goal.
Speaker:But if you focus more on your goal and what you
Speaker:want for yourself,
Speaker:and it shows up in various ways and manifests in so
Speaker:many different ways.
Speaker:Like I never would've thought I would have ended up becoming
Speaker:an Olympic medalist in bobsleigh,
Speaker:let alone a two time Olympian and Bob.
Speaker:But, And think of what would have happened if you would
Speaker:have been so rigid and say,
Speaker:no, it's track and field.
Speaker:I'm not doing bobsled.
Speaker:You might've missed it entirely.
Speaker:Hi or if I had that feeling where I wanted something
Speaker:more, even though I was having success at EFT force performance
Speaker:and even though I had great success training my clients and
Speaker:helping them,
Speaker:but I still had that feeling on the inside.
Speaker:I think your intuition kind of guides you a little more
Speaker:than you give it credit for sometimes.
Speaker:Yeah. Just listening to it and trusting that it's meant for
Speaker:it to work out in the end and you're meant to
Speaker:be happy and confident and that could fear it as much.
Speaker:I think everyone's just in a fearful state a lot of
Speaker:the times and even when it comes to talking to other
Speaker:people and getting feedback and help,
Speaker:sometimes you got to realize people project their own fear onto
Speaker:you so they may have their own fear,
Speaker:insecurity and you have to make a decision of what you
Speaker:want for yourself regardless of what anyone tells you what anyone
Speaker:else says and do it because a lot of times you
Speaker:won't even accomplish something that you know you want for yourself
Speaker:because other people are scared for you.
Speaker:Yeah, it's true.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it's just like how love is,
Speaker:success is the same way,
Speaker:not a zero sum game.
Speaker:Just because you're successful doesn't mean another person can't be successful.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:when you win an Olympic medal,
Speaker:no one else can win that medal in that game in
Speaker:that year like you,
Speaker:but it doesn't mean they can't be successful in some way.
Speaker:So if they lose to you in one race,
Speaker:that doesn't mean they might not win in another race.
Speaker:And honestly,
Speaker:I'm going into 2014 Olympic games,
Speaker:one in win gold.
Speaker:I didn't go into just one into one.
Speaker:An Olympic medal.
Speaker:No. Cause you want to shoot for the top.
Speaker:Yeah. And I won Brian.
Speaker:Then you think I'm complaining about bronze or not winning and
Speaker:go? No,
Speaker:you shoot for the stars.
Speaker:Well I don't think you missed very bad.
Speaker:I've held your Olympic medal and I think it's pretty super
Speaker:awesome. Asia.
Speaker:So real quickly,
Speaker:are you doing anything else right now?
Speaker:Are you testing out some other things right now since you've
Speaker:got four years or what's up with you?
Speaker:Yeah, I can turn it around with a few things.
Speaker:Yeah, it's possible that the games,
Speaker:I've worked with some really amazing sponsors and so I've been
Speaker:getting into a lot more modeling things and I did some
Speaker:broadcasting, so I'm going to play around with those a little
Speaker:bit. You might see me on your television screen.
Speaker:Oh, you got to tell us if you are.
Speaker:I will for sure.
Speaker:So hopefully some of those things will be coming into place
Speaker:so, and it's all been so fun and so I'm enjoying
Speaker:every minute of it.
Speaker:Wonderful. Well,
Speaker:I love that you are testing out new things and just
Speaker:keeping all of your options open.
Speaker:I think that's a great example for us.
Speaker:Yeah, I agree.
Speaker:Let's close this out now,
Speaker:but as we do,
Speaker:I want to invite you to dare to dream.
Speaker:I'd like to present you with a virtual gift.
Speaker:It's a magical box containing unlimited possibilities for your future.
Speaker:I don't know,
Speaker:maybe there's even some golden there.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:We'll see.
Speaker:This is your dream or your goal of almost unreachable Heights
Speaker:that you would wish to obtain.
Speaker:Please accept this gift and open it in our presence.
Speaker:What's inside your box?
Speaker:Asia. Ooh,
Speaker:this is fun.
Speaker:I've never really like kind of done this and a lot
Speaker:of times like you set goals for yourself and you set
Speaker:these things for yourself,
Speaker:but then you're scared to say it kind of out loud.
Speaker:Well, this is like the law of attraction.
Speaker:You're putting it out into the universe so it can come
Speaker:back to you.
Speaker:Olympic gold is definitely in my box.
Speaker:I know it's there.
Speaker:I feel it every day.
Speaker:I felt this since I've been an athlete,
Speaker:let alone done.
Speaker:Bob says so I know Olympic gold is in that box
Speaker:and I know,
Speaker:I think a successful career for me is in that box
Speaker:for acting or broadcasting.
Speaker:I've been doing a lot of stuff on television and it's
Speaker:been working out for me and I'm getting a lot of
Speaker:good feedback from that as well as getting my foundation off
Speaker:the ground with my mom.
Speaker:I know that's intuition.
Speaker:We've been working on that for awhile.
Speaker:I don't know anything about that.
Speaker:I've been working with my mom creating the Asia foundation.
Speaker:My name is spelled Aja,
Speaker:so it stands for aspiring journeys ahead and if we want
Speaker:it to be a mentoring program to work with Chicago public
Speaker:school students and basically kind of introduce them to for us
Speaker:and it can help create different types of journeys and lead
Speaker:to different types of paths.
Speaker:Like I said,
Speaker:I started off in track and field.
Speaker:It ended up leading to me and an Olympic medal in
Speaker:a totally different sport.
Speaker:But I have friends who did football and basketball in college
Speaker:and one's a lawyer and one's a doctor so it can
Speaker:lead to different things.
Speaker:And so I think it's all about just opening your eyes
Speaker:up to the journey and see where it takes you and
Speaker:sports are one of those avenues that I think can really
Speaker:help kids And starting off young like that too.
Speaker:Yeah, Getting involved young.
Speaker:Well you are certainly a great role model to start a
Speaker:foundation. I think that's fabulous.
Speaker:If any of our listeners want to know more about this
Speaker:foundation, where would you direct them?
Speaker:I can direct them to my Facebook page.
Speaker:It's Asia Evans,
Speaker:facebook.com Asia Evans,
Speaker:and then if they want to learn more they can shoot
Speaker:me an email and we can send them some more information
Speaker:or direct message on there.
Speaker:We're still working out all the details and it's kind of
Speaker:just been something I little project so hopefully we'll get a
Speaker:project off the ground and our first even herself later this
Speaker:year. Super well give biz listeners,
Speaker:you know there's a show notes page that's going to be
Speaker:attached to this.
Speaker:I will give you all of Asia's social media sites as
Speaker:well as any updates,
Speaker:Asia and the foundation as they come by.
Speaker:We'll just update the show notes page too,
Speaker:so cause people might actually listen to this a year from
Speaker:now, two years from now,
Speaker:maybe four years from now when you're on your way to
Speaker:gold again.
Speaker:So we can always keep this alive and update it accordingly.
Speaker:Because I love the Asia foundation,
Speaker:I didn't know anything about it.
Speaker:On behalf of me and my listeners,
Speaker:I want to wish you all the luck and I'm so
Speaker:excited to watch your journey continue and thank you so much
Speaker:for sharing.
Speaker:Really, really solid advice in an interesting different way,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:from an athlete perspective,
Speaker:but so much of it that we can relate to our
Speaker:businesses. So thank you so much Asia.
Speaker:Thank you for having me.
Speaker:It's been a blast talking to you.
Speaker:There you have it.
Speaker:Gift biz listeners and I really liked this episode because I
Speaker:have some intuition of my own.
Speaker:I feel like four years from now I'm going to be
Speaker:reminding all of you about this episode and that's going to
Speaker:be because Asia Evans wins a gold medal at the next
Speaker:winter Olympics.
Speaker:That will be so exciting.
Speaker:And something else that's exciting that I referenced in the very
Speaker:beginning of this podcast is that I have a special announcement
Speaker:for you.
Speaker:I have just put the finishing touches on my free masterclass.
Speaker:It's called how to turn your hobby into your business.
Speaker:So if you've been thinking and wondering if it was possible
Speaker:for you to turn a hobby or a craft that you
Speaker:love into a profitable business,
Speaker:this masterclass is for you.
Speaker:Whether it's something that you want to do on the side
Speaker:or whether you're seriously thinking about leaving your nine to five.
Speaker:This free masterclass shows you the way you'll learn.
Speaker:The one crucial thing that will take you from hobbyist to
Speaker:pro in no time.
Speaker:You'll also discover the five crucial steps to set your business
Speaker:up on a solid foundation so that you can make money
Speaker:now and in the future.
Speaker:As a maker,
Speaker:he know everything about your craft,
Speaker:but you've never really needed to know all that business stuff
Speaker:until you started thinking about creating a company of your very
Speaker:own. To register for the class,
Speaker:just jump over to gift biz,
Speaker:unwrapped.com forward slash masterclass.
Speaker:That's gift biz on wrap.com
Speaker:forward slash mass Stir class.
Speaker:Are you discouraged because your business is not performing as you
Speaker:had envisioned?
Speaker:Are you stuck and confused about how to turn things around?
Speaker:Sue's new best selling book is structured to help you identify
Speaker:where the holes are in your business and show you exactly
Speaker:how to fix them.
Speaker:You'll learn from Sue and owners just like you who are
Speaker:seeing real growth and are living their dream maker to master
Speaker:find and fix what's not working in your small business.