@dougieeefresh1 @motionraceworks The hard times shape us in race cars (and life). Winning belongs to those who can stand to eat sh*t significantly longer than the next 10 people. The original build of your car is only half the work. It most certainly doesn’t get easier. The men and women that win almost embrace failure in a sick way. They take an L, a broken part, a wrecked car, and it makes them stronger. People love to glorify winning, but the true glory should be in overcoming the failure, it is only then that someone can see what it TAKES to win. To be good it’s going to take 500% more of a time investment than you first thought, it’s going to take 500% more money. This isn’t for the weak at heart. You may think you built a masterpiece but you’re going to be changing it all very soon, start over from scratch, throw that old idea away, it’s a learning process! If you find yourself a victim to some broken engine, part, transmission, and want to cry about it and play poor me.. Move on, nobody cares. Maybe go pickup fantasy football? That doesn’t require any sort of hard work, maybe a Netflix season to occupy your weekend. You have to love losing more than winning. Keep going when everyone else would have long since quit! These are my observations, but they hold true for EVERY SINGLE PERSON who wins or accomplished great things. If someone makes it look easy, it’s probably because they internalize more. If you are sitting here on a Sunday with a broken car, wrecked car, or just generally uninspired. I hope this helps you realize that number 1 you are not alone, and number 2 get your ass back to work if you want to do anything worth mentioning. Nobody cares that you are upset or that you’re feeling uninspired. But those same people who didn’t care will be there to congratulate you a job well done, when you do it.

A post shared by TBM Brakes (@tbmbrakes) on May 9, 2018 at 9:16am PDT