Back in 1954, Roger Bannister was the first person to run a mile in under four minutes.
Runners tried to run a sub-four minute mile for many years before Bannister finally accomplished it, but they had no luck.
Word was that the milestone was “impossible”. You might as well have tried to lift 10,000 pounds or leap tall buildings in a single bound.
But after Bannister did it in 1954, a bunch of other runners also did it in the years immediately after that (16 others ran the four minute mile by the end of 1957).
So what happened to allow all of those runners to suddenly achieve something that so many couldn’t do pre-Bannister?
It was the power of belief.
Once other runners saw that Bannister could do it, they knew that they could as well. They no longer had a limiting belief that it was unachievable.
When others break a milestone, they pave the way for others.
Here’s another example, from the world of baseball:
Before the Houston Astros paid Nolan Ryan $1 million per year to pitch for them in 1980, nobody thought that a pitcher would ever earn that much (since starting pitchers only play 30 or so games out of the 162 games in a season, compared to position players who can play every game).
But nowadays $1 million is peanuts for a pitcher to make. Mediocre ones can make millions per year, and the top-earning ball throwers are in the $30 million to $40 million range.
In the coaching world, a lot of coaches are held back by limiting beliefs.
And if you have something that helps them push past that and make what they should, become a Coaching Jungle VIP to reach 30,000 of them with your offers.
If you become a VIP before tomorrow night’s deadline you’ll get a bonus, 3 months in my Coaching Jungle Mastermind ($891 value).
Here’s the link:

