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This quote is worth translating for the HN crowd. It's a typical Nils van der Poel answer, from an interview with Swedish Radio. When asked how he did it, how he could sacrifice so much for a gold medal, his answer was

"I think it's important to understand that you're not doing it for a gold medal. Regardless of which life you chose to live, you will sacrifice something, that's the way it is.

As soon as you go in one direction, you also choose to not go in all other directions at the same time. It's the basic precondition for going anywhere at all.

But on the path you take, you will experience fantastic things, even though it's uphill there will be a great view when you're at the top, and that's what makes it worth it, to be on this journey with people you love. It doesn't matter that much where the journey ends. A movie with a sad ending is also a good movie - and a movie with a nice ending makes you happy.

I'm very happy for this medal around my neck, and for getting all the way here. But why do you do it? I don't think you get to pick your dreams, they pick us. It's up to us to realize them or not, and it seems like people who try to realize their dreams are happier."

Source in Swedish https://twitter.com/Radiosporten/status/1491090244652969984



Agreed, I think this is a great quote. It also makes me think, though, that certainly there are parameters of certain activities and sports that lend themselves more to this mindset vs. others.

For example, I've said somewhat jokingly but also somewhat for real that "If I have kids, I'm going to get them into something like snowboarding or freestyle skiing." You look at those competitions and I nearly always feel such a "joie de vivre" from the competitors, even to the point that they practically always look genuinely excited when anyone does a difficult trick really well.

Contrast that with, for example, figure skating (and I realize figure skating is easy pickings given the current drama in that sport). Half the time I feel like the competitors are relieved when they get off the ice. The current scandal notwithstanding, I just found it really disheartening that this beautiful, otherwordly 15 year old, who did multiple things that no other woman/girl had ever done before in Olympic competition, seemed sadder at the end of her performance that she fell (again, on a super hard quad jump) than that she completed 2 quad jumps, a triple axel, and otherwise skated beautifully.

This is not an isolated incident. It is certainly pretty well known that there are just some sports (and other activities) that, in retrospect, many people feel like they "sacrificed" their childhood for, rather than served as this unique, incredible foundation for the rest of their lives.


Truly amazing. Thankyou for translating Jacob.

As an Elite Athlete myself; hoping to represent my country in the 2024 Summer Olympics it resonates with me greatly.

I will be printing this off and putting it in a place I see often.

Thankyou


What event?


[flagged]


In the United States Gymnastics Association, "Elite" is a classification - in the old days it meant you were probably going to get a college scholarship, you'd be asked to invitational meets and might try out for the Olympic team.

There are no professional gymnasts (except perhaps retired gymnasts who are employed as sports commentators) so there's no confusion between paid versus unpaid.

https://usagym.org/


I’m not OP so can’t answer your question literally. If you’re questioning why use the phrase “elite” and not professional or competitive:

You can be a professional (by definition being paid) athlete and still never be in the top 10% of players (see decades of PGA [golf], ATP [tennis] results etc). I’m not sure on the definition, but there’s absolutely tiers of professional players. Take the NBA (basketball) - there’s over 500 players in the competition, they’re good by definition but there’s a subset that are elite. There’s further subsets, for example “generational” which are “once in a generation talent” etc.

However, being an Olympian doesn’t make you elite by default (in fact there’s numerous “loop hole” athletes that prove this is the case, eg Elizabeth Swaney).


yes i was asking about the phrase. to me its just strange to refer to yourself as 'elite'. as far as i know the phrase is usually used in praise of someone else


There's probably a lot of context missing here.

Take the London marathon for example. Anyone can take part, but only a few people are allowed to start at the front. Runners must achieve a certain time at other accredited marathons to be able to start at the front. Those who do are classed as Elite level runners.

So I don't see it as a boastful thing, just a matter of fact. If thewizardofaus has reached this status in their sport, then it's reasonable to use the term when describing themselves.


This might be a language thing. In Denmark "elite" is the official label assigned to those who compete at the highest level in any given sport. So say a runners club may have an "elite" team or "elite" runners. It's just a label really, nothing else.


Not sure why you were downvoted for the original question, it's a reasonable query.

In most sports, there isn't really a formal distinction between elite or competitive or whatever. Professional just means paid, elite or not (lots of golf pros would not be elite by most people's definition).

Anyways, in my little corner of athletics (local 5k-10k running, mountain biking), if a promotor has an "elite" category, it's usually just the name for the fastest wave of athletes. They probably get a front-row start, at a marathon they might have their own hydration/nutrition at aid stations, and they may or may not receive an appearance fee. Local running clubs (competitive ones) tend to have "elite" divisions, where athletes must qualify by pace/results, and this gets them club-funded event entries and possibly travel expenses. In mountain biking, at least outside the realm of international sanctioning bodies, the fastest category is often labelled "expert/elite" or similar and athletes self-select into it (vs sport/intermediate, beginner, masters 45+, or other categories).


> Not sure why you were downvoted for the original question, it's a reasonable query

i am confused too. i am genuinely curious about this label


Elite means being among the best at something.

Professional means getting paid to do something.

Not all elite athletes are professional athletes, and not all professional athletes are elite athletes.


I think professional is that you're not only paid, but that it's your principal form of income.


It was very normal for those in the Elite Athlete program at my uni to refer to themselves as elite athletes


I'm guessing it's a language issue. Might be a cognate word of elite with different connotations in OP's first language.


No, in English this is a very common phrasing in some sports.

For instance, major running events typically have an “elite” start vs the mass start for non-elites. And elite is the exact word used.


it is common if you are describing someone else, yes. rarely it is used in english to describe yourself. the term besically means being superior. i think it is strange to refer to yourself as superior also


There are a fair number of "loop hole" athletes at the Beijing games, Men's Giant Slalom has the most.


TIL professionals are now (mostly) allowed to compete in the olympics. Professional means paid, and competitive probably has negative connotations, so elite doesn't seem a terrible adjective for 'intending to win but not being paid'.


well the term 'elite' means being superior in comparison to the rest. refering to yourself like this is just strange to me

competitive cannot have negative connotations in sport by very nature of sport


How is a dev claiming that they are a 10x coder any different?

Maybe if they state they are a l33t athlete, it would be less strange?

Does someone describing themself as elite come off as bragging to you vs correctly identifying their skill/competitive level? Just trying to grok the reason to your reaction to this word.


i think all are strange if you are referring to yourself in this way. i think talking about your own achievements is ok, but if the listener thinks that is "elite" than that is just praise, which is also fine. but if you are saying you are better than everyone else you are tooting your own horn


I honestly envy you if you've never had to interact with egotistical people that refer to everything they do as vastly superior to others. I guess you've never worked in advertising ;-)


Competitive in the sense of 'competitive compensation'. I occasionally compete in running races and invariably perform terribly. I'm a competitor in the sense that I'm competing but not in the sense that there's any risk of me winning.


The last bit is very reminiscent of Schopenhauer: "Man can do what he wills, but he cannot will what he wills."

Thank you for translating :)


You don't master anything because you enjoy being good at it, because everyone enjoys that. You must enjoy learning.


there is dopamine vs. endorphins distinction: motivation (next fix) vs. pleasure (pain relief)—anticipating reward vs. reward itself.

A rat pressing a dopamine-stimulating lever is not happy it is just motivated to press it.




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