Motivation Daily by Motiversity - DON'T QUIT
Episode Date: August 30, 2021I WASN'T RAISED A QUITTER! A Tribute to Dad. Thank you Dad. One of the Best Speeches and Motivational Videos Ever featuring former NBA athlete and Motivational Speaker Walter Bond (https://bit.ly/Walt...erBondMotiversity). Music by Jorge Mendez - Divergent (https://bit.ly/JMendezMusic). Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The first game of my senior year, I'm in great shape.
But unfortunately, I broke my foot.
I had never been hurt a day in my life.
My very first game, I broke my foot.
I threw me a pity party.
My trainer came to me since Walter,
we can get you back for the Big Ten season.
We can get you back, son.
We can get you right back in five weeks.
I said, Roger, when I come out of surgery, I want you to take me to the stationary bike, put me
on the bike and take my cast to the pedal.
But, Walter, when you come out of surgery, you're going to be on morphine and you won't feel
like to go back and rest.
I said, Roger, I don't have time to rest.
Can you do that favor for me?
Can you take me to the stationary bike?
Put me on the bike and take my cast to the pedal.
As soon as surgery was over, he carried me to the stationary bike, put me on that bike,
and he take my cast to the pedal, and I had a customary workout.
That was symbolic that I don't have time to rest.
I had tears on my eyes as I peddled their bike.
And I thought to myself, I can't quit, can't give up.
I came back in six weeks.
We're playing a guy so I'll stay Buckeyes on national TV.
They had a guy named Jimmy Jackson at that time.
On national TV, me and Jimmy Jackson are going at it.
In the first half, I had 15 points, five rebounds and five assists.
And as the first half ran out, I pulled up for my patent-based-line jump show.
that baseline jump shot and I felt my foot break again.
I've been trained to follow through.
Every day in practice my coach would say, Walter, shoot it like you owner, baby.
Shoot it like it's yours.
Even though I felt my foot break, I still follow through.
And my last college basketball shot went in all nets because I've been trained to follow
through.
Be disciplined every single day and train yourself to follow through on all your fundamentals
and that's how you're going to be successful.
You have to do it when you don't feel like it.
You have to do it when you feel discouraged.
You have to do it when you don't feel healthy.
You have to do it when you're under the weather.
Every single day, you have to train yourself to focus and commit to your business and follow
through.
My college and career was over.
I got offered a job to become a hospital administrator.
Two-year program, $75,000 job.
And right before I took the job, my daddy called me on the phone.
Let me tell you about my daddy.
When I was a little boy, my daddy would always pick me up.
When he came home from work, he picked me up.
When he saw me in the nursery after church, he picked me up.
No matter how long he works, no matter how tired he was, my dad would always pick me up.
So when I had my kids, I would always pick up my kids.
When I got home, sometimes I was tired.
They have a bottle in one hand and they just lifted up the other head and they knew what
daddy was supposed to do.
My job was to pick them up.
This is a spiritual interaction.
When you pick up a child, it is a spiritual transaction.
When you pick up a child, you change their perspective.
When you pick up a child, all of a sudden they can see the world the way you see it.
I don't care what your children have done.
There is nothing they can do for you to stop picking them up.
What my daughter is a drug addict, I don't care, pick her up.
My son messes up.
I don't care.
Pick him up.
I don't care.
That is your job, Mama.
That is your job, Daddy.
That is your drive, grandma.
That is your job, granddad.
Your number one job is to pick them up and change their perspective.
My saddest day, one day, my daddy looked at me and he says, boy, you're too big.
I can't pick you up anymore.
But when he couldn't pick me up physically, he would pick me up emotionally.
He would pick me up spiritually.
I had a great dad because he would always pick me up.
He would always change my perspective.
So my daddy called me on the phone and asked me a question.
He said, son, you had a tough year. What's next?
I said, Dad, I'm gonna be a hospital administrator.
He said, not bad, but let me ask you a question, son.
Do you believe you're an NBA player?
You can't out produce yourself image, son.
If you don't think so, go take the job.
But if you believe you're an NBA player,
my dad had the self-control and discipline and waited for my answer.
And my answer was yes.
You're right, Dad.
I can't work the rest of my life.
A playing in the NBA is a dream.
I've had ever since I was a little boy.
He said, go for it, son.
I leapt back into my coach's office with a cast of my foot.
I said, Coach, what do I need to do to play in the NBA?
I asked that question four years in a row
with tears in his eyes.
He said, son, when I recruited you, I heard you as a mama's boy.
But I'm here to tell you, you just like your daddy.
But what do I need to do to play in the NBA?
He said do two things you can play in NBA.
Lose 20 pounds and shoot a three-point shot with range you can play in India.
I think you should be a motivational speaker, son, but if you lose 20 pounds
and through the three-point shot with range, you can play in the NBA.
I lost 20 pounds, and every day I would shoot 500 shots today every single day.
I got invited to a training camp with the Dallas Maver, and not only did I make the team,
I became the first ever undrafted rookie free agent in the history of the Dallas Marriks.
to start open a night.
What was going through my mind.
I had not started the basketball games just high school.
I got to the arena and they dimmed the lights and they put the spotlight right on me.
Right through the spotlight I saw my mom and my dad and all my brothers and sisters.
They surprised me at the game.
Then I saw my dad and I just pumped my fist and he pumped his fist,
string down my face.
Thank you for all those timeouts.
Thank you for making sure that.
Thank you for making sure I was always home when the street lights came on.
Thank you for making sure I could always hear your voice.
Thank you for always changing my perspective.
Feels like to sit on a bench.
Know what it feels like to get knocked down.
Or what it feels like to have a hope in the dream.
And nobody believes in it but a few people.
Go for your dreams.
Don't live life with regrets.
Go for your dreams.
Don't live life with regrets.
Go for your dreams.
Don't live life with regrets.
I could always hear my daddy's voice.
You have children, you have grandchildren, can your children and grandchildren hear your voice?
I could always hear my daddy's voice.
He would say, go out, have a good time, play with the friends, but don't let the street lights beat your home.
When I started my motivational speaking business, I called my dad and said, Daddy, I'm going to be a motivational speaker.
He said, son, you think you can be successful at it?
I said, yes, sir.
You think you can make a lot of money at it?
I said, yes, sir.
He says, go for it.
That's all my daddy said to me.
Daddy said to me was go for it.
So when I think about life, when I think about my goals,
one thing he did for me as a father
is to make sure I was always where I was supposed to be.
He would have me write my goals down
and he would check in periodically,
basically asking me, Walter, where are you supposed to be?
You realize how powerful that is?
If you ask that question of your kids,
what are your goals, what are your future,
who do you want to be when you grow up?
And every now and then check in by asking a simple question.
Where are you supposed to be? The bell is ringing and I came to ring your bell and asked you the question father
Where are you supposed to be and ask that question to your children? Where are you supposed? And don't you quit until you're number one
