Jump directly to the Content

The Discipline of Success

What productive leaders can learn from the four-minute mile.

Neal Bascomb has written The Perfect Mile (Houghton Mifflin Co., 2004) in which he recounts the 1950's story of the pursuit of the four-minute mile by Roger Bannister, Wes Santee, and John Landy. For those of us who love running, the book is a delight.

In its earliest pages, Bascomb writes: "All three runners endured thousands of hours of training to shape their bodies and minds. They ran more miles in a year than many of us walk in a lifetime. They spent a large part of their youth struggling for breath. They trained week after week to the point of collapse, all to shave off a second, maybe two, during a mile race—the time it takes to snap one's fingers and register the sound. There were sleepless nights and training sessions in rain, sleet, snow, and scorching heat. There were times when they wanted to go out for a beer or a date yet knew they couldn't. They understood that life was somehow different for them, that idle happiness eluded them. If they weren't training or racing or ...

April
Support Our Work

Subscribe to CT for less than $4.25/month

Homepage Subscription Panel

Read These Next

Related
Why Moral Failure Happens When Ministry Is Going Great
Why Moral Failure Happens When Ministry Is Going Great
7 characteristics of success that can lead to adultery.
From the Magazine
Fractured Are the Peacemakers
Fractured Are the Peacemakers
A Christian reconciliation group in Israel and Palestine warned that war would come. Now the war threatens their relevance.
Editor's Pick
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
Understanding God and our world needs more than bare reason and experience.
close