My Favorite Goal Story

Soul Thoughts

Found this story on the web years ago and when I think about goals-setting and goal accomplishing, about finishing the race, I think about this.

Her goal was the California coastline –a 34 km swim from Catalina Island. It was no more distant than the width of the English Channel, a goal she had already conquered as the first woman to swim it from both directions. Although she was a seasoned long-distance swimmer with incredible stamina, she trained arduously to prepare herself to achieve her goal.

July 4th, 1952
Millions watched on national television, as 34 year old Florence Chadwick began her swim. The water was icy cold; the fog — so thick she could hardly see the support boats alongside her. As the hours passed, she was repeatedly stung by jellyfish. Sharks had to be driven away with rifles. Yet she pressed on, determined to achieve her goal.

15 hours later
Numbed with the cold, she was ready to give up. Her mother and her trainer were in a boat at her side. “Florence. You are almost there. Don’t give up now.” Encouraged by her mother’s admonition, she continued to swim.

Failure
Fifteen hours and fifty minutes after she began her swim, the support team reluctantly agreed to pull Florence from the water. Several hours later, after she warmed up, she realized she had given up only a few hundred meters from her goal! If she had continued just a little while longer, the waves would have carried her to the beach. “If I could have just seen the land for myself, I would have made it!”. She told reporters it was not the sharks, the fatigue, or even the cold water that defeated her. She had been defeated by the fog alone. It had obscured her goal and blinded her reason, her eyes and her heart.

Never give in to defeat.
1952 was the only time Florence Chadwick ever quit. Two months later she swam that same channel. The water was still ice cold and still inhabited with sharks. Once again fog obscured her view. But this time she pressed on, BELIEVING that somewhere beyond that fog, her goal would be reached. Not only was she the first woman to swim the Catalina Channel, but she beat the men’s record by two hours!

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Kahiau  •  Jan 1, 2009 @12:18 pm

    For myself, I think my “personal fog” would be lack of faith in myself to accomplish something bigger than me. I tend to stick to things that are within my reach, not “BHAGs”, as they were called back in the 80′s and 90′s(remember those discussions, Ka`ala, around staff meetings?). I leave the big, hairy, audacious goals to the dreamers. I’m too much of a realist, I think, when I look at my gift mix. I didn’t think we could pull of “Miss Saigon” because I didn’t take a look at the team that I was surrounded with (although they were incredible). I lacked the faith in myself to be a viable, contributing member that brought something of worth or value to the table. The end result was very evident on stage and everyone’s contribution physically evident, but mine – not so much. Yet, it was an incredible success. Maybe the fog will lift a bit this year?

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