Falling on My Ass…



Read More: Leadership  |  Personal Development

I sit at my home office chair with an extremely sore body and a bruised tailbone (I hope that’s all it is…), having just returned from our annual West Coast Hwa Rang Do® Academy TGT Snowboarding trip to Mammoth mountain.

(BTW, I also learned that Mammoth is an active volcano as well as a hot ski resort.)

We left Thursday evening to Mammoth Mountain and hit the slopes early Friday morning, under the leadership of Grandmaster Taejoon Lee.  Along with being one of the most incredible and talented martial artists in the world, he’s also a master snowboarder and loves shredding down double black diamonds with a warrior’s grin on his face.


Grandmaster Taejoon Lee in Mammoth (You expected an old guy, huh?) ;)

Anyone who goes snowboarding with Master Lee has one objective and one objective only – to conquer the mountain – no exceptions!

This was my 2nd time snowboarding and I’ve boarded enough to know that I am NOT a natural snowboarder. I have also boarded enough to know that, like many things worth doing, I don’t enjoy snowboarding… at all.

In fact, at times after taking some mean spills and tumbling down some of the tougher slopes in Mammoth, I was hating it.  Three days of boarding (falling on my ass) and trying to keep up with Master Lee and 20+ of his best students will quickly tear away at your body.


One of my many falls...

Most people would unstrap their board, turn in their gear, go back to the cabin, soak in the hot tub and give in to the mountain.

But there’s a stubbornness in me, which for some reason never allows me to give in to the pain I’m in – physical, mental or emotional. 

With my knees, elbows, chest, back, butt and even my face bruised from the beating the mountain gave me… I couldn’t give up…

On the 2nd day of boarding after lunch, Master Lee told everyone in the group, “Ok. We all move as a group together.  Wherever I go, we ALL go!”.

Everyone in unison responds, “Yes, sir!” 

I responded, “Yes, sir!” as well, although the prospect of following Master Lee to some of the more challenging parts of the mountain didn’t quite excite me, in the same way it excited some of the more experience boarders in the group. 


Master Lee and the crew... probably waiting for me.

That afternoon of boarding turned out being 4 straight hours of following Master Lee up the mountain, boarding down some steep and tough slopes, catching another lift, which went higher than the ones we took before… inching closer and closer to the top… my body becoming more bruised and beat up in the process.

At this point, I’m in survival mode. Saying very little, not complaining, just focusing on the challenge in front of me.

When reaching the top of one of the higher lifts, Master Lee points up and says, “Look! That’s the top of the mountain. It’s not much higher.  We can go there and take that slope down. It’s not much harder than what we’ve already done. What do you say?”

Everyone in unison responds, “Let’s do it!”

So we ride towards the gondola, which takes us to the top of the mountain.  I think at this point, I kinda zoned out and was in denial about what was happening.  Considering my skill level, I couldn’t see myself actually going to the top of the mountain and boarding down. 

I didn’t believe that I could do it, therefore I couldn’t even imagine myself at the top. It’s an issue many of as deal with in the process of building a business or participating in any purposeful venture.

Without the proper leadership and having someone lead the way, it’s not likely that many of the things we’ve accomplished in this life would have happened.  Such was the case on Saturday afternoon, as I followed Master Lee and the group onto the gondola ride to the top.

When I got to the top, I turned to Master Lee and asked him, “Is this really the top of the mountain?” He looked at me and smiled, “That’s right.”

We took a group picture at the top of the mountain, enjoyed the view and then proceeded to our final battle with the mountain – Cornice Bowl, a very steep black diamond run.

I was numb, in acceptance of my fate and ready to take on the challenge. As I walked near the edge to strap up and get ready… 2 powerful images were engrained into my mind…

The first was watching Master Lee jump of the edge on his board and let out a powerful and blood curling battle cry as he rode down.  And then I turned to a sign to the left that said, “Experts Only” with a picture of a black diamond – “Oh, crap!”

One by one, the others in the group went off the edge. I strapped in, sat at the edge and pushed myself off… (not giving myself enough time to think about it).

I wouldn’t describe going down Cornice as “riding down”, as much as it was tumbling down.  Notable moments on the way down Cornice was running into 2 people, one of them Reynaldo Macias, (also his 2nd time boarding), and a girl who’s shoulder I bumped as a slid down. As I bumped her, I yelled “I’m sorry” with an echo effect (like in the cartoons), which must have been pretty comical since I slid by her so fast.

I regained some control and slid down on my butt as I watched a skier going down the same run I tumbled down, with his girlfriend riding piggie back on him, while he tore into the side of the mountain so effortlessly – I was in awe.


Ferny Shredding the Mountain. :)

I got to the bottom of Cornice, relieved and excited.  It took me well over 30 minutes to get down the rest of the mountain, trying to keep up with the group, taking many more spills along the way with legs burning from me digging into the mountain with my board on the way down.

At one point I went down the wrong slope and I had to cross through a few trees to get back on the correct path. This delayed me quite a bit and I almost didn’t make it to the lift in time, which would take us back to the side of the mountain where our cabin was.

At the bottom, it was Master Lee waiting for me at the lift, trying to convince the lift operator to keep the lift going for a few more minutes. I made it just in time and rode the lift back with him -- my body in pain, legs and back exhausted.

On the way up, I thanked Master Lee for waiting for me and taking me on the adventure of a lifetime, one I’m not sure I would have done on my own. He said, “I’m proud of you Ferny. You should be proud of yourself, too.”

I replied, “I am, sir”

At the top of the lift, the rest of the group was waiting and we took an “easy” run back down to where our cabin was…

We enjoyed the rest of the evening at the cabin, had a nice dinner, played games and I still had enough in me to mix cocktails for the adults.  It was a night of celebration.

Sunday I took it very easy, as my body just about had it. I took a couple of leisure runs and spent the rest of the day helping teach some of the children who came with us how to snowboard – oh, the irony. J

Later that night, after arriving back in LA, I overheard Master Lee talking to one of the 1st time snowboarders of the group.

He said, “Remember the lesson here... The goal is not to get to the bottom of the mountain. That is not the right thinking. It’s like life.  Stop worrying about the bad things – the falling or getting hurt. Focus on the enjoying yourself while riding and look forward to the good things. The goal should be to have fun, pushing yourself to make the most out of what the ride offers and to get better. Boarding is not about getting down the mountain. Living is not waiting to die.”

I think I’ll need to buy my own equipment and board for next year… and get some extra thick padded shorts.

I’ve realized that the battle was not with the mountain after all… it was with myself.

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Ferny Ceballos is an internet entrepreneur, SEO expert and neophyte snowboarder. Click on the following resources for more information about Ferny and the businesses he operates:

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About the Author: Ferny Ceballos

 
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Comments

That was fantastic

That was fantastic Ferny,

I've never been skiing or snow boarding myself.   No snow in Western Australia.

But I've been surfing  which had similar types of analogies.

We all want to take the biggest waves, but  it sure hurts when you fall off.  And also your arms are aching with pain as you paddle out again.

But ofcourse, riding those waves gives you so much of an adrenaline rush I'd imagine snow boarding must be similar.

I'd really like to try it one day.

Cheers,

Steve

Steve Metcalfe — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 9:18am

Wow Ferny... that's

Wow Ferny... that's awesome.  To this day I've NEVER gone snowboarding/skiing.  Heck, I'm not even any good on rollerskates/rollerblades/ or even a skateboard.

You've got some guts, brother.  But that's why you're an Alpha Networker ;-)

All the best,

Adam Holland

=================================================

Adam Holland just joined the revolution.  Are you game?

Adam Holland — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 10:07am

Ferny, I Get It

Nice parable, and a good read. Applicable toward just about everything we do in life. Thank you, teacher.

 

Eric

Eric Walker — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 10:21am

Wish I would have had a video cam on my first double diamond

 Teton Village, Jackson Hole, Wy back in 1978.  That would have qualified as one of the worlds funniest video's, but I was certain I wouldn't live to see the bottom!  Well I made it, and even went back for another run, even more punishing!  Crazy in youth, still pushing limits!

Paul Murphy — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 11:38am

Great story, Ferny

I love how you made the story analagous to life.  You always seem to bring a great lesson forward.  Perhaps Master Lee is rubbing off on you?  Seems so. 

I use a lot of the same mentality with my swimming workouts.  The goal isn't necessarily to get to the wall, but to be good with every stroke while you're getting there.  Continue to improve with each workout.

This is a nice reminder that pushing ourselves to the limits in physical activities can teach us a lot about how to run our businesses and our lives!

Best,

Shecky

 

Jeff Schechter — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 2:03pm

Thank You

HI Ferny,

Thanks for sharing your story to illustrate this helpful point applicable to everyone.

Damayanthi :)

 

Damayanthi Jaya... — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 3:20pm

Falling Down

Awesome story Ferney, that's goes to show it's not whether you fall down that matters sounds like you did plenty of that lol, it's whether you get back up that counts, it only makes us stronger.

kevin thomas — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 4:16pm

My aplausse!!!

Dear friends!

Thank you for this lovely story besides a big BRAVO to advertising and marketing, as customers, attracted to the story, the story
that roll as a series of round the mountain, and any link and corporations, pass through this story. Thank you and regards!

Stjepan TOKIC — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 4:25pm

WOW! parable indeed

Thank you my friend,

I can definitely relate to falling on my face and being bruised all over; although not physically-it hurt. You teach determination, relentless repetition and so much more... 

Your leadership, to me, comes from how you put your heart into what you teach. Anyway, thanks for all your contributions and for helping me get on my way with action steps towards accomplishing whatever I set my mind to. Thanks Bro! de corazon. 

 

Fernando (tocayo)

Fernando Prieto — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 6:47pm

Love your Humility!

 

Ferny,
You are an awesome teacher and leader. I have been feeling overwhelmed, dismayed and lacking belief in my ability to succeed with all that I am learning from you and Ray and all the great leaders you are introducing to us, with a fire hose, at SEO Networker.
Lesson 5 on the Dark Arts was what turned things around for me when you taught what to do and how to get in front of a launch.( thanks to Joe O'Day too) I set up a 16 page web site, seo’d and silo structured with a 5 page matching blog, in less than 24 hrs( never in a million years thought I could) I am already seeing it rank under some key words in 2nd and 7th position in 36 hrs. I will continue working at it and hopefully by launch date I will have more top positions, hits and a conversion or more would be good, based on what you and Ray have taught. I am really excited now and hope I have great results to report.
You are right; even though sometimes you can't see your way and you get caught up in the trees... a breakthrough is around the corner. You just gotta keep striving, growing, realizing the joy and experiencing it all with gratitude for the opportunity.
 Hope you feel better… try applying peppermint oil, it may burn at first but really relieves the pain.
You Rock!!!

DR Deb ND

Dr Deb DiBiasie ND — Tue, 04/07/2009 - 6:56pm

Life Challenges

Ferny

Thanks for sharing you adventure, and Master Lee philosophy.

Pain last for a short time, but success last a life time

Life and business are full challenges, giving up should

never be an options.

 

Rallie Rallis — Wed, 04/08/2009 - 12:28pm

Thanks for telling your

Thanks for telling your story. I am a snowboarder and a single mother of two children(one an infant). If I could just use the strength that I have in my everyday life, to make my business a success, I'd be doing great. You give the rest of us someone to look up to and to try to model ourselves after.

Thank you,

Tamara

 

 

Tamara Dedmon — Thu, 04/09/2009 - 4:07pm

Good Story.

I enjoyed reading this Ferny - hope your body's healing up...lol. You tell good stories dude, I like reading your stuff.....always an underlying message.

Mike Morgan — Thu, 04/09/2009 - 9:18pm

Hooray for Fun

I've been a skier my whole life.  And for every time someone's wished they could ski as well as I do, I've flailed.  And almost killed myself, twice.  But it's always worth it for how perfectly, absolutely fun it is when you get it right.  And the more you push yourself, the more you find yourself in amazing places that few people have been. 

The times in my life that have been the toughest, I always try to think about it as if I'm skiing really fast someplace scary...you can throw yourself into it and go like a bat out of hell and feel incredibly alive, or you can freak out and bail--and bailing costs so much.  Your life.  The life you want.

Success in business isn't a pipe dream...it's just deciding that there's massive fun to be had if you never give up.

Sometimes I feel like all I hear around me is the crazy focus it takes to succeed (which is absolutely true)...but it's so worth doing because it's also crazy fun.

Alicia Andersen — Thu, 04/09/2009 - 10:59pm

Very Powerful Story

When I read stories like this one it really inspires me to push a little harder to get the things I want out of life. Thank You very much.

Dennis

Dennis Bradford — Sun, 04/12/2009 - 10:31am

Snowboarding!!

I'm totally new to better networker, but as a snowboarder who would have been on these slopes EASILY, and who's brought beginners to double blacks on Blackcomb Glacier, I LOVED this. It's totally true, and when I'm teaching snowboarding, that is exactly the kind of attitude that makes me stoked to be riding with a beginner. I was so proud of you when I was reading this. I'm like, AWWWW. And what an important lesson. For the first thing for me to be reading here, it was great. La-la-loved it!

Tamara Barnett — Fri, 04/24/2009 - 5:32pm

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