Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Skateboarding Legend Tom Schaar on How to Fall 999 Times and Still Win | EP 603
Episode Date: April 25, 2025In this powerful episode of Passion Struck, John R. Miles sits down with Olympic silver medalist and skateboarding legend Tom Schaar, the first person in history to land a 1080—a mind-blowing three ...full spins mid-air. But Tom’s story isn’t just about defying gravity. It’s about defying doubt, embracing failure, and staying grounded while the world spins around you.At just 12 years old, Tom did what no one had ever done in skateboarding. But what most people didn’t see were the 999 failed attempts it took to get there. In this intimate and inspiring conversation, Tom opens up about the mental discipline behind his success, how he handles fear, the evolution of his mindset from prodigy to pro, and what keeps him pushing limits even after Olympic podiums.Whether you’re an athlete, entrepreneur, or simply someone trying to overcome a personal hurdle—this conversation is for you.Click here for the full show notes:Join the Ignition Room!Join the new Passion Struck Community! - The Ignition Room: https://station.page/passionstruckKey Takeaways:What landing the first 1080 really required—physically and mentallyWhy failure isn’t a setback but a prerequisite to growthHow Tom manages fear and high-stakes pressure in competitionThe surprising truth about balance—on a board and in lifeWhat keeps him grounded and hungry after Olympic gloryHow the mindset of micro-improvement has fueled his entire careerFor more information on Tom Schaar: https://www.teamusa.com/profiles/tom-schaarSponsors:Factor Meals: http://factormeals.com/factormeals50off and use code “FACTOR MEALS 50 OFF”Rosetta Stone: Unlock 25 languages for life at “ROSETTASTONE.com/passionstruck.”Prolon: Reset your health with 15% off at “ProlonLife.com/passionstruck.”Mint Mobile: Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at “MINT MOBILE dot com slash PASSION.”Hims: Start your journey to regrowing hair with Hims. Visit hims.com/PASSIONSTRUCK for your free online visit.Quince: Discover luxury at affordable prices with Quince. Enjoy free shipping and 365-day returns at quince.com/PASSIONFor more information on advertisers and promo codes, visit Passion Struck Deals.Speaking Engagements & WorkshopsAre you looking to inspire your team, organization, or audience to take intentional action in their lives and careers? I’m available for keynote speaking, workshops, and leadership training on topics such as intentional living, resilience, leadership, and personal growth. Let’s work together to create transformational change. Learn more at johnrmiles.com/speaking.Episode Starter PacksWith over 500 episodes, it can be overwhelming to know where to start. We’ve curated Episode Starter Packs based on key themes like leadership, mental health, and personal growth, making it easier for you to dive into the topics you care about. Check them out at passionstruck.com/starterpacks.Catch More of Passion Struck:My solo episode on The Mattering Mindset in Love – Choose the Love You DeserveCan't miss my episode with Jennifer B. Wallace on the Consequences of Prioritizing Achievements Over MatteringMy episode with The Art of Listening: How to Make People Feel Like They MatterCatch my interview with Laurie Santos on How to Matter in a Busy WorldListen to my solo episode on Fading into Insignificance: The Impact of Un-Mattering in Our Interconnected EraIf you liked the show, please leave us a review—it only takes a moment and helps us reach more people! Don’t forget to include your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can thank you personally.How to Connect with John:Connect with John on Twitter at @John_RMilesFollow him on Instagram at @John_R_MilesSubscribe to our main YouTube Channel and to our YouTube Clips ChannelFor more insights and resources, visit John’s websiteWant to explore where you stand on the path to becoming Passion Struck? Take our 20-question quiz on Passionstruck.com and find out today!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up next on Passion Struck. At the end of the day, I'm very lucky that this gets to be my
job. And I remind myself of that every day, not to ever really lose my mind over skating
or anything like that. I do take it pretty seriously and I do try and do the best that I
can always. But my job is what I wanted to do when I was a kid. So I'm very lucky in that aspect of
it. But I think a lot of random I'm very lucky in that aspect of it.
But I think a lot of random little kids will come up to me at the skate park and
they tell me how cool it is that I get to do this as my job and that always reminds me it's very lucky that I'm not doing something else. Hopefully when someone watches me skate it can bring them a
little bit of joy or try and inspire kids to be better. I'll try my best to be a good example.
Welcome to Passion Struck. Hi, I'm your host, John R. Miles, and on the show, we decipher the secrets,
tips, and guidance of the world's most inspiring people and turn their wisdom into practical advice
for you and those around you. Our mission is to help you unlock the power of intentionality so that you can become the
best version of yourself.
If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays.
We have long form interviews the rest of the week with guests ranging from astronauts to
authors, CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders, visionaries, and athletes.
Now let's go out there and become
Passion Struck. Welcome to Passion Struck episode 603. Whether this is your first time tuning in,
or you've been with us for a while, thank you for joining a movement that's all about defying limits,
living with intention, and making what truly matters matter most. Now let me ask you something,
what does it take to defy gravity,
literally and metaphorically? What happens when a 12 year old doesn't just dream big but becomes the
first person in the world to land a trick that even the pros thought was impossible? And how do
you evolve when the moment that made you famous becomes just the beginning. Today we're answering those questions and more
with my guest Tom Schar. Tom is not just a legend in the making, he's already made history. He's the
first skateboarder ever to land a 1080 degree spin, the youngest X Games gold medalist, the youngest
do-tour and vans pool party champion, and most, a silver medalist at the Paris Olympics.
But behind these milestones is a mindset
that goes far beyond skateboarding,
a fearless dedication to growth,
resilience, and reinvention.
In today's conversation, we dive into
what it really felt like to land that historic 1080,
how Tom manages fear, and why it's part of the process.
The mindset shift from prodigy to Olympic medalist, how to stay grounded when the spotlight
hits, and the power of redefining success over and over again.
But this episode isn't just about gravity-defying tricks, it's about resilient self-mastery
and how to stay grounded when the world is watching.
Before we dive in, a quick heads up.
If you're looking for a space to connect
with other purpose-driven high performers,
we've just launched The Ignition Room,
a private membership community where podcast listeners,
readers, and intentional leaders like you
can go deeper on the topics we explore here.
Think of it as your home base for curated tools,
behind-the-scenes access,
and conversations that fuel your growth.
Check the show notes to sign up.
And if you're just getting started with PassionStruck, check out our episode Starter Packs theme
playlist on resilience, mindset, and emotional mastery at Spotify or passionstruck.com slash
Starter Packs.
And this week we've had some amazing conversations.
On Tuesday I spoke with Yonge Mingyur Rinpoche,
one of the world's most respected meditation masters
on how to awaken your true nature.
And Thursday, we unpacked how sponsorship,
not just mentorship, can transform a career
with Carnegie Mellon's Rosalind Chao.
And I have a special announcement
that we just learned about today.
Passionstruck has earned two gold Stevie Awards at the 2025
American Business Awards. Passionstruck was awarded gold for Best Business Book and the
Passionstruck Podcast was awarded gold for the Best Independent Podcast. These prestigious accolades
underscore Passionstruck's mission to help individuals and organizations lead with greater meaning,
intention and humanity.
And these awards validate the impact we're making through powerful storytelling, science-backed
tools and real conversations that transform lives.
Now let's jump into this inspiring episode with a living legend of skateboarding, Olympic
medalist and true Passionstruck trailblazer, Tom Schar.
Thank you for choosing Passion Struck and choosing me
to be your host and guide on your journey
to creating an intentional life.
Now, let that journey begin.
I am so excited today to welcome Tom Schar on Passion Struck.
Welcome Tom.
Thank you. Thanks for having me. As you and
I were getting to know each other before we came on, I can't imagine as you were going through high
school the thought of being an Olympic medalist. I remember when I was in high school, I was just
focused on how well could I perform in cross country or track? Looking back, did you ever in a million years imagined that you'd be where you
are today when you were 14, 15, 16 years old?
No, not at all.
Especially because when I first started high school, they hadn't even announced
yet that skating was going to be in the Olympics up until then.
Well, it's still, I'll finish what I was saying first, but up until then I was
just skating for fun or whatever and doing just because I love it. And I still do. That's
the point I was getting to. But no, it was a weird transition. Like you could really
feel it. People just kind of this more nonchalant approach to skating and then overnight it
switched and then all of a sudden everyone became athletes and not
skateboarders, which was pretty funny actually.
Well, how did you originally get into skateboarding?
Were you a cyclist at first and then transitioned or was this kind of the first passion you
had?
I got into it because my older brother skated and being the little brother, I had to copy, steal whatever he was doing. That's how I got into it because my older brother skated and being the little brother I had to copy,
steal, whatever he was doing.
That's how I got started and yeah, no, as soon as I started, I just fell in love with
it and that's pretty much all it's been.
Never looked back.
Yeah, I remember you and my son are about the same age and I remember when he was in
elementary school, even in middle school, he loved the rip sticks and the scooters and really anything he
could find out how to ride. And he's a really good snowboarder as well. So to me, the rip stick is
hard for him. He just picked it up right away. Yeah. Snowboarding, I have some beef with snowboarding.
I broke my collarbone twice in the same season. So I'm on a long hiatus from snowboarding at the moment.
You know what, having been a skier my entire life, what always does it for me is when you ski,
you're really leaning forward. And that's what gets me on when I snowboard all the time,
is I catch that front lip and then those faceplants hurt. Yeah, no, they do not
feel good. Snow is not soft. So I'm going to take you back in history to what we were just talking
about middle school. You landed the first ever 1080 when you were just 12 years old. Can you take
us back to that moment and for a person who doesn't understand what a 1080 is, maybe explain it to them?
And yeah, what was going through your mind when you finally stuck it?
A 360 is just one spin around full circle. And then a 1080 is just three of those. So it was like you go up in there, grab your skateboard, spin around three times, come back down. I was the first person to ever do one, but I was 12.
I was 13 years ago and I can honestly hardly remember it at all.
I don't know if it's from like maybe hitting my head a few too many times
skating, but my memory is not the best.
And I do remember that day, but I really don't remember the whole process of it
or like really how it came to be or like how just the idea came up or anything.
But I remember landing it, it took five tries,
which was very surprising.
I thought it was gonna take 500 or something.
And yeah, that really changed my life pretty much.
I went on the Ellen show after that
and did a whole bunch of crazy things
that a 12 year old had no idea what any of it really meant.
But yeah, it feels, it's just so long ago that it feels like it was a different
lifetime or a different person or something.
When you look at the competition today, has the 1080 become more of a regular practice skill or is it still pretty far in between to see people do it?
It's still pretty far in between.
There's five people that have done it now, me included.
So it's still not that many people have done it, but yeah, I don't know.
It's, it's like a weird side of skateboarding.
It's just like, uh, not everyone really enjoys or wants to be the
person that spins a bunch.
So it's not for everybody, but it's still, I think it's cool in my book.
Well, we were talking about snowboarding and I wanted to ask, what was it like to
watch Sean white attempt the 10 80 and then becoming the one to land at first.
Did that fuel your drive at all?
I think I was like seven and I'm from LA.
So we used to live up there and the X games always was in LA for a long time.
So we would go, my brother was obsessed with skating.
I was obsessed with skating.
So we would drag our parents to take us to the X games.
And I remember, I like remember, I think it was like seven when I saw him try it.
But I remember, I like remember, I think I was like seven when I saw him try it, but I remember just being, it was in Staples Center that had the big vert ramp set up and
that was pretty crazy. But I remember seeing Sean try it a few times and he almost did one. And then
I think time ran out for the contest. But yeah, I mean, I don't really, I don't know if that exactly
connects with why I tried it. Maybe it does like subconsciously from
being a kid, but that is pretty strange that I saw him try it first and then I somehow
did it years later.
For your sport, the X Games are really the pinnacle. Can you explain how they in the
sport differ for the Olympics? Because X Games is where the sport became the sport.
And it's more recently started to become an Olympic sport.
Is that a good way to understand it?
Exactly. X Games has been like our Olympics for the longest time.
It's where a lot of pretty groundbreaking stuff for action sports have happened.
Tony Hawk doing the 900, Travis Pastrana doing the double backflip on the dirt bike.
A lot of stuff is because of the X Games and what they've done for action sports is pretty remarkable.
A lot of people, I guess, well, we wouldn't be doing much without X Games.
They've really put action sports onto like a whole nother level for everybody to see.
But yeah, that was all we had for a while.
So it really going from X Games to the Olympics is a pretty crazy jump, but I think it prepared
us pretty well for what to expect.
For people who aren't familiar with you, I'm going to just go down
this path a little bit longer.
So it makes sense why I'm asking you some of the questions
later on in our discussion.
Not only did you shock the world when you landed that 10 80, but then
you shocked them even more when you became the youngest X games called
medalist after winning the Asian X games in Shanghai. Can you walk us back to that experience?
How much of that do you remember? How much do I remember? I remember just being in China with my
mom at 11 or 12, which is a pretty crazy experience. Just getting lost everywhere we were going. It was
pretty fun though. That was like the first time I really got to meet like all these other guys that I
would end up skating with over the rest of my life and they were all very nice to
me, which is cool and they're all very supportive and yeah, that was a crazy
moment.
I didn't really know what I was getting into going into that contest or anything,
but yeah, I guess I could launch the beginning of my
competitive skating career in a way.
Well, you hear a lot about parents who take their kids all over the place
because they're doing club sports, whether that's club soccer or volleyball
or club hockey, but it's next level when you're a parent and you take your kids
to China, how in the world and you take your kids to China.
Yeah.
How in the world did you convince your mom to do that?
I have no idea.
That's a great question.
She's been to China with me, Australia, Brazil, everywhere.
You can think of pretty much.
I can see going to Australia every time I go there.
That's a good, pretty good destination.
You're right about China though.
I've been to Shanghai myself and man, it's such a big city.
Yeah.
With so much going on.
It's a lot different from the U S.
Yeah.
So not only were you not satisfied with one record breaking feat, you also
became the youngest do tour champion, the youngest van pulls party champion, and the youngest big
air gold medalist. It's like one after another.
I had so
Yeah, I don't know.
I guess where I wanted to go with this is how did breaking
these barriers so young shape your mindset for where you are now in your career?
Do you feel like it's a blessing or do you feel like it's a challenge to have
to lift up to those moments when you've accomplished so much already?
Definitely both.
I think when I was younger, I was very like vert skating oriented.
And that was all I knew. I probably couldn't kickflip on flat until I was like 14 or was very like vert skating oriented. And that was all I knew.
I probably couldn't kickflip on flat until I was like 14 or something, which is very
embarrassing.
But I think as I got older, I either just got burnt out on skating vert and just mega
ramps and I don't know, I just lost interest in it somehow.
But skating started to kind of transition into more of what the Olympic park format looks
like, like concrete bowls and that kind of skating.
So I slowly transitioned from Vert and Mega into that.
And I think when I was younger, I was pretty good at Vert and Mega.
And then those few years that I was transitioning was, it just, I felt a little lost.
I didn't really know exactly what I was getting into.
But then I got older, I got stronger and figured out where I felt like I belonged
in the world of skating and everything started to click again, which I'm very
happy about because there was a few years I was like, I don't know what I'm doing right now.
There was definitely a large break in my competitive skating, or not really break.
I was still doing contests and whatnot, but I was just trying to figure out
how I fit in kind of in a way.
Yeah.
I'm going to come back to that in a second because I don't care if you're a
skateboarder, you're jumping off the ski jump, you're doing
the tricks in the terrain park, you're doing the Sean White types of things.
All of these things demand a tremendous amount of overcoming fear.
How did you process that fear?
Because I guess before you ever landed the 1080,
you probably had to practice that thing a thousand times and probably wiped out
about 990 of them. That's funny actually. Some random kid on Instagram just DM'd me and asked
me like the exact same question. He was like, are you scared when you skate? And to be honest, I'm terrified most of the time.
Some of the stuff is pretty scary, but there's a fine line
that you have to ride along
because if it's not scary, then there's not really much of a reward, it feels like.
But at the same time, don't hurt yourself.
But
you just got to take things slowly.
Take a trick and break it down into smaller pieces
and kind of work on the individual parts of it
until you feel you have the confidence
to try and actually do the trick.
But most of skating is, that's really it.
It's just mostly confidence.
If you get to a certain point in skating
where you know you can do certain things,
but you just have to remind yourself that you know you can do them. Because a lot of it just
testing the waters and seeing what feels right. But I don't know where I was going with that one
exactly. But back to the point is there's, I think every skater is scared of what they're doing, but you just learn to let that sit with you and just, yeah, I guess it's
like a kind of fight or flight situation that you get into when you're trying new
stuff.
I myself am not a Navy SEAL, but I spent time working with them and deploying
with them when I was in the service.
And one of the things that I learned while I was with them
is to get over fear. We did a lot of exercises and involved breath work, mindfulness, yoga,
things like that. Are any of those types of techniques, things that you've employed at all?
For how long? Yeah, I think so. I think a really good one is to just stay present too.
Just because a lot of the fear that you'll have is from thinking of what could go wrong.
But that's just thinking into the future of something that hasn't happened yet.
Because if you're trying a trick and you're scared that you might get hurt doing it, well,
you don't know if you're going to get hurt because you haven't tried it yet.
So I think it's just about staying in the present
and just trying to not really think about
what could go wrong or what could go right even,
just staying in that moment
while you're gonna try something.
I remember I was interviewing Heather Moise.
You probably have never heard who that is,
but she's a Canadian Olympian
who's won a couple of medals in the bobsled.
And she was telling me, first time she ever got in the bobsled, she was in the two seater and she
was behind the driver and no one really gave her any instructions. So she said that they're
starting to fly down this course and she didn't know that she's supposed to duck her head.
And so she's going down and she's getting the full feel of gravity and
starting to pull all these G's.
And she told me she's about ready to, she's starting to freak out because she
sees how fast they're going and then almost blacks out and the force ends up
pushing her down, but she definitely told me that in bobsledding fear is an, is
one of the main things that you have
to overcome because when they bite it, they bite it really hard. Yeah. Yeah. So I want
to talk about mindset for a little bit. Skateboarding to me is got to be one of the most mentally
demanding sports because you're constantly pushing limits, you're constantly risking failure and that failure has got to get to you after a
while. How do you like mentally prepare yourself for that failure and to keep
attempting new tricks?
It's a great question. I get very frustrated a lot while I'm skating because
it's just a lot of,
like you said earlier, you're going to try something 999 times, but on the thousandth try, you'll land it eventually. But yeah, that a thousandth try feels pretty good after
falling 999 times. It's really, yeah, it's a lot of, it's just, it's just a long process.
Every, for me at least, there's a lot of people that learn and pick up skating very fast.
But for me, every trick I've ever tried to learn is, has been a struggle at some point,
whether I learned it when I was a kid or now.
But yeah, it's just a lot of kind of making yourself just keep trying stuff and you're
going to fail. Absolutely. It's's just it's not avoidable but that's that's why I like it though
it's just always this process of failing and learning from your failure and kind
of continuously improving on what you've learned I end up even if you don't end
up landing a trick you'll still be learning from that.
And the more you fall, the more you'll figure out stuff. And it's just, it's like a chess game in your head until you finally figure
out exactly what you're doing wrong.
And then it all clicks.
One of the things that I talk a lot about on this podcast is the need to push
boundaries and you can't ever stay comfortable with where you're at.
And one of the big things, whether you're an executive, whether you're a coach, whether you're
an athlete is the mental blocks that come about when trying to push boundaries. And you talked
about this earlier, where you went through a period of time where things weren't just clicking like they had before when that was doubts crept in.
Like, how do you analyze them?
How do you overcome them?
Because this is something that a lot of people face.
A lot of people who are a lot older than you.
Yeah.
For me, I just, I took a really big step back and just kind of looked.
I just tried to figure out where I wanted to be
and fit into this skating world.
It was never like the idea of me like stopping
never came into my head.
I just didn't really know where I fit in.
And I think just kind of trying to,
I don't know, just do your own thing is kind
of what I figured out.
If you love what you're doing, like it'll eventually it'll all come together.
And I think that's what happened for me.
I just found a different path and I'm very glad that it worked out though.
So I wanted to go to Paris for a little bit.
So it was a little bit in doubt that you would even go to Paris. Can you talk a little talk us through that story?
Yeah, I barely qualified by the skin of my teeth.
I missed out on the first the Tokyo Olympics, well the first one for skating and I missed it.
They take three Americans and I was the fourth by five points or something crazy. And then going into this one
I was number four again by five points or something crazy. And then going into this one, I was number four again by five points again.
And the last qualifying stop was in Budapest,
which was like June, like right before the Olympics.
And I had to get second place.
And the person that was in third had to get like 16th or something like that.
Like it was very long shot chances that it was going to happen.
Cause the person who was in third was very good.
They would always do well in the contest and somehow going into the finals.
I didn't really, wasn't really paying attention to the placings or anything,
but he was in 16th and the finals were about to start and I was like, Oh my God,
this could happen.
And then I ended up in second.
So it was like the exact number of points or whatever I needed to qualify.
And I barely made the team, but then I think that kind of helped me because I
got to Paris with the mindset of I'm not really supposed to be here.
So I'm just going to have fun and try and take everything in.
the mindset of I'm not really supposed to be here. So I'm just going to have fun and try and take everything in.
And I think that helped me mentally instead of knowing months prior to the
Olympics that I was going to make it and really stressing out for a long time.
I just got thrown in and was like, okay, I got to just deal with this, which I
think was honestly maybe better for me.
It makes you just wonder about what goes through the mind of Sean White, who we
talked about,
or Simone Biles, or some of these athletes who are expected to win and have all that
pressure and to feel like you got a whole country like begging you to win and then when
you don't.
That's a lot of pressure.
It is.
That's why I was so happy for Sean that last Olympic when he got people pushed through, man.
It's like the hero story.
That was a very special one.
So I understand that you got to meet Snoop Dogg.
I did.
I did.
He was just bouncing around during all the different events.
And he was like this myth.
You'd be like, you'd hear rumors, be like, oh, Snoop's here.
And we'd all be looking around for him.
And then we saw him.
He came to the skating and he was sitting up, up top next to Tony Hawk.
They were all hanging out.
And then like midway through the finals, he started to leave.
But as my run started, they played a Snoop Dogg song and I could hear it.
I had my headphones in, I was listening to my own music, but I could hear it over my headphones. And as I was about to drop in
I just started smiling because I like saw him walking down the like exit path
and then song came on and I dropped in and then I landed my run. I popped out of
the bowl and he was like the first person I saw. He was like 10 feet away
from me and then he like yelled the music, over here. And he gave me like a high five and gave me a hug.
And then, yeah, I met him for five seconds, but I'll, I'm counting it for sure.
That is pretty awesome.
Yeah.
I just have to ask you, I watched the opening ceremonies and I thought that the
French did a really cool job of how.
As the boats were going
down, they were showing all these different events that kind of traced the
history of France.
How much of that did you get to experience being on the boat?
I'm guessing it might've been something better to watch on TV than be there,
but I'm interested in your perspectives.
It was still very cool from the boat.
It was pouring rain, which was rough, but it didn't affect me that much.
I felt bad for the girls that were in full makeup and then looked like their
mascara was running and everything by the end of it, but for me, it was fine.
It was just a little cold and wet, but we still got to see the whole set up and
all the different kind of just, they set up everything.
It was really cool.
Just going down the river. They had a little skate park floating skate park in the river that they, we went past.
And then we, it was the bango Jira, the metal band, I think they were set up.
It was cool, but we only got to see these parts of it for 30 seconds as we floated by.
But seeing everything was pretty cool.
Do you ever go back and watch it on video?
No, I haven't actually, I haven't seen that.
Yeah. They just made it so dramatic. everything was pretty cool. Did you ever go back and watch it on video? No, I haven't actually, I haven't seen that.
Yeah. They just made it so dramatic.
There were a couple of things I thought were cheesy.
Like the dude who kept jumping over buildings the whole time.
There was always going to be some cheesy stuff, but yeah.
But I thought some of the performances on TV were just amazing.
Yeah.
I saw some of it on Instagram.
It definitely was cool looking.
Tell me about, did you, you told me you didn't expect like you had to perform.
You weren't expected to metal.
You didn't have this heavy weight of pressure on you, which made you feel
like you could just go out there and just go for it.
Can you lead us through like what was happening in the competition and when did you realize
that you had a shot to be on the medal podium? It really wasn't going into it. I hold
expectations of myself. I have my own goals but going into it I just really was just happy to be
there. I was just enjoying hanging out in the village and just seeing all my friends,
enjoying the fact that we made the team actually.
And I was doing more of being like a tourist than being an Olympic athlete,
honestly, which I think like really did help though, because I saw, I mean,
there's 10,000 of us in the village or something. And I saw everyone and there was just, it's just this like, such a serious
vibe going on and everybody just, no one's really talking to each other.
It's not like a very friendly experience.
Like everyone's there to, everybody is there to win.
So it's not everyone is going to win.
So it's just like frenemy,
not between the skaters at all, but more the other sports. Kind of this like, just a weird
kind of vibe. So I was just trying to have fun. I was running around doing dumb stuff
in the village the whole time. And I think just trying not to like super stress out over it. Like I definitely was mentally preparing and getting ready for it.
I wasn't just like goofing around the whole time, but I think just having fun
was more what I was getting at then.
Pretending like this is a life or death moment.
The future depends on this or whatever.
I was just having fun with my friends.
And when did you realize that, that you would want to metal?
Did you know immediately?
I nailed it.
I had my whole run planned out.
Like I knew exactly what I wanted to do.
And you never know how the judges are going to judge your run.
Really?
Skating is a very subjective
sport so it's hard to tell. One thing for someone can be really hard and it can be
easy for someone else so it's hard to really put a perfect score on a
skateboarding run but I think for the most part I think 95-99% of the time the
judges nail it. They usually, and they're all professional skaters
and they know what they're talking about.
They know what they're looking at.
So, but I just wanted to land my run.
Like I knew what I went there to try and do.
And I ended up landing it.
And I honestly didn't really care
if they put me in last place or if they put me in first.
I just wanted to go do what I wanted to do.
And that would have been good enough for me.
And I noticed I got a good score for it.
And I was like, that's, that could hold for a while.
And it did. I stayed, I got put in second and I stayed in second the whole rest of the contest.
Well, congratulations again.
And I have to talk about two things more about related to the Olympics.
I heard you on another show, a person asked you, what was your favorite
thing about the Olympics?
And you told them table tennis.
Oh, by far.
It was so cool.
Like how competitive I haven't seen those matches like in person.
So you can't really judge the speed and stuff.
What's it like?
It, the ball is just teleporting from side to side.
You can't even follow it with your eyes.
It's, but those were like more of the very locked in people that I saw in the
village, like they were not there to have fun.
They were there to win and it was cool.
I admired that intensity, but it was crazy.
I went, we saw the mixed doubles finals and it was crazy. I went, we saw the mixed doubles finals and it was crazy.
It's in a smaller like arena. It was like a high school basketball size stadium and it was just packed.
Like there was five thousand, six thousand people in there and it was loud.
Like it was insanely loud. You had to be completely silent while they were playing.
But as soon as somebody scored these 6,000 people
just yelling, it was pretty cool.
But some of those rallies go on for so long
and there's so much strategy behind it,
speed, all the spins that they do.
Cause I'm like you, I grew up playing ping pong
all the time with my brother.
And I always thought of myself
as pretty good ping pong player.
And until I remember I was at a family camp one year
and there happened to be an Asian, when I say Asian,
they were an exchange student over from Japan or China.
And I played them and I got literally annihilated.
It's crazy.
They'll be 20 feet behind the table,
still hitting it as hard as they can.
And it was pretty fun to watch.
Okay.
And then I got to get real here.
So here you are.
You won silver medal.
You're this Olympian.
And do I have it right that you flew home in a middle seat?
Yes, I did.
I, to be fair, I changed my flight to come home early.
I was supposed to stay for the closing ceremonies and everything, but not everybody stayed all
the way from opening ceremonies till closing.
And our event was pretty much at the end of the two-week Olympic window.
So by the time I was done skating, I just wanted to go home.
And I also, I got maybe three hours of sleep the night before the contest.
I just couldn't go to sleep.
It was like 4 a.m.
when I finally did, I had to be up at seven.
So it was a very long 48 hours after that.
And then I went, I got home the night after the event at 4 a.m.
again, and I had to be up at six to do interviews.
I got five hours of sleep in the course of 48 hours.
So I was dying.
So I just wanted to go home and that was the only seat that was available.
So I was like, it's fine.
Thanks NBC.
So it was all right.
Okay.
So I'm going to go back to some of the main stuff we talk about on the show.
One of the core things that we like to talk about on this podcast is this
innate need to feel like we matter, to feel like we belong, that our lives hold.
Some form of significance, not just about success, but in how we impact others.
Do you feel like your skating truly matters beyond the competition?
That's a tough one. Yes, I do. At the end of the day, I am, I'm very lucky that this gets to be my job.
And I remind myself of that every day, not to ever really lose my mind over skating
or anything like that.
I do take it pretty seriously
and I do try and do the best that I can always,
but my job is what I wanted to do when I was a kid,
so I'm very lucky in that aspect of it.
But I think a lot of random little kids will come up to me
at the skate park and they tell me how cool it is that I get to do this as my job and that always reminds me just, I don't
know, it's very lucky that I'm not even doing something else.
I don't think I could do a nine to five honestly, but I don't know, it's hard to say if it's
really an essential job.
Hopefully if someone watches me skate it can bring them a little bit of joy
or something like that,
or try and inspire kids to be better
or anything like that.
I'll try my best to be a good example.
I'm glad that's where you took it.
To me, what you're doing is really filling you with purpose.
It's something that you absolutely love.
And the fact that you're inspiring an entire generation of young skaters
has got to make you feel like the stuff that you've done, the hard work that
you've put in that it matters and that other people recognize it and make you
feel like it's been worth it.
Do you ever feel the weight of that responsibility?
For sure.
But I just try and be a good example.
And to a lot of skaters that I maybe would say
aren't the best examples for kids growing up,
but I just always try and remind them to have fun.
And we are just, it is a kind of a children's toy
at the end of the day.
So just have fun with it and do your own thing
and everything will work out. So what advice would you give to some of the day. So just have fun with it and do your own thing and everything will work out.
So what advice would you give to some of the young athletes
who are listening to the show,
or it could even be an older athlete
who has put it in their mind that they wanna do a marathon
or maybe wanna do a triathlon or something,
and they're struggling to find that passion,
something and they're struggling to find that, that passion, that strength to push through the setbacks.
What would you tell them to do?
What's a starting point or a trick that you have used?
For me, you got nothing to lose.
And failing is a lot easier than living with regret, I think.
Failing is a lot easier than living with regret.
I think so it's better to try and fail than it is to never start and regret not ever trying.
So I think just, if you're going to do something, give it your all.
Have fun and take it seriously, but not to a point of where it becomes not fun.
And maybe I'll just ask you another question on that. Have you ever put a goal in front of yourself or a trick that at the onset you thought,
man, this is virtually impossible, but I'm going to go for it.
And what, and if you did, like, how do you psych yourself up that you have the ability
to do it?
I think with skating, it's a lot of who you surround yourself with.
There's a lot of tricks that or just stuff that I would not want to do alone
or by myself.
And if you get a good group of friends or just a good group of whoever you're
skating with or whatever you're working towards doesn't have to be skating.
That can really help push you out of your comfort zone a little bit in a good way.
Because if you're all in it together, it feels not as daunting or something like that.
So I think just having good people surrounding you, working towards a goal with other people
is a lot more fun also than trying to do something by yourself. So I think that also helps.
And I'm sure having those people there as you're trying these new things, they're analyzing
what you're doing and probably trying it out themselves.
And you each using different techniques to do it probably helps in the learning curve.
Yeah, you learn with each other for sure.
One of the things I have really been talking to my son a lot about who's 26 is like for kids who have grown up in your age
group, I sometimes wonder who are the role models that you guys look up to. So as you look at people
who are older than you, who do you look for inspiration? Within skating? Well, in skating or beyond?
Okay.
My brother is still one of my main inspirations.
He got me into skating and he's always been there for me.
So I'm very grateful for him.
My mom and my dad too.
They drove me to the skate park probably 10,000 times.
And yeah, I definitely wouldn't be doing any of this without them.
But within skating though, I've known, I've known a lot of the professional
skaters that I looked up to as a kid.
And they always say, don't meet your heroes.
But within skating, it's the opposite of that.
I've, to me, every skater is a very cool, nice person.
And they've all helped me along the way.
Tony Hawk's given me a lot of help and he's been very supportive of my career,
especially as of recently, I ride for his skateboard company now Birdhouse.
And he's helped me out a lot, but I don't know outside of skating.
I don't know.
I really just stick within skating.
I'm not too well versed in other sports or any other kind of stuff like that.
Yeah.
I guess part of what I'm looking at is I'm very interested for younger men and
understanding like, what is your definition of a man of courage?
Like when you think of that, who pops in your mind is it, and what are the
qualities or values that they possess?
I think just being, having the humility to really be yourself, I think, is a
very courageous thing to do, which is really trying not to just to go your own
pace and doing your own, what you want to do.
I think that does take a lot of courage.
Yeah.
I maybe, I guess humility is probably pretty good one.
That's a good one because you need to be humble to also be self-compassionate.
So I wanted to ask you a couple of things about progress and peak performance.
One of the people I interviewed on the show was Sally Jenkins, who's a sports reporter.
And I was asking her for the people like you who are world class and reach that elite level compared to the people
who are really great but never become the LeBron James or the Simone Biles. I asked her like what
does she see different between a Steph Curry and a player just underneath them and she was saying that
and a player just underneath them. And she was saying that it all comes down to the training
and how they go through the exercises
and the unseen moments when no one's looking.
It's the extra reps that they put in,
their willingness to try things
that their peers aren't willing to do.
Like Steph Curry learning how to dribble
just as proficiently with his
non-dominant hand as with his dominant one and all those things. Do you think that there's truth
to what she says? Absolutely. I've been trying to make skating sound like this very fun adventure
that I've just been just like going along but I've definitely put in a lot of hours and a lot of stuff that no one will ever see.
But I think at a certain point there is like a,
there's people that have the talent that don't put in the hard work and then there's also people that
might not have the talent but put in the hard. And then I think there's those few that have both.
And I think that's the Steph Currys and the LeBrons of the world.
I always love the stories that you hear of the Michael Jordans or the Larry
Byrds or the Wayne Gretzky's or these people who they're amazing, but Michael
Jordan was also the first person in the practice facility. Typically the last person to leave, put in the hours was hard on his teammates,
trying to uphold them to the same levels of performance that he held himself.
I, it makes me wonder what does training look like for a world-class skateboarder?
Like how much do you do weight training?
How much does food come into play?
Do you have to run and do things like that?
What's training like?
A lot of it's just basic stuff.
Just eating well.
I do, I do go to the gym a lot of weight training, but a lot of it's like more
kind of injury prevention kind of stuff.
Like you couldn't get as strong as you want, but being a super jacked
skateboarder doesn't really help you at a certain point.
It's just eating really well, drinking enough water, just staying healthy and
trying, I should stretch more.
That's my big downfall, but being, staying flexible and yeah, most of the stuff I do
in the gym is injury, like prevention, weird knee movements and trying to stay, just kind of stay in agile.
I definitely don't run. I do other versions of cardio, but I think I would die if I tried to
run more than five miles right now. But for the most part, I would say I'm a pretty healthy person
and I like to try and stay on top of that as best as I can. Okay.
And I've had past guests on this show.
You may or may not have ever heard of them.
They're behavioral scientists like BJ fog and Katie milkman, who talk about
habit formation and how do you create the behaviors that influence your life?
And where I'm going with this is our habits something that you concentrate on and have you found your habits have been crucial in your evolution as an athlete?
I think so. I think most of it is just kind of the habit of just showing up.
There's a lot of days where I don't want to go skate or train or go to the gym or whatever it is and you just got to make yourself go and
just make your brain follow your feet in a sense. If you just got to make yourself go and just make your brain follow your feet in
a sense if you just get there it'll all come together a little bit but besides
that I'm not really a very superstitious person I don't have these super strict I
don't do the exact same thing every day I go skate pretty much every day but I'm
not always skating the same thing or really doing the same stuff.
But I think just getting in the habit of just showing up
and just trying to go to work in a sense.
So I've just got a few last fun questions for you.
Skateboarding has changed so much over the years,
even from when you got into it.
How do you see the sport evolving, especially now that it's in the Olympics?
Well, with how good these kids are getting, I'm going to be
out of a job in a few years.
So I'm trying to keep up with these kids, but it's, it's very cool.
Since it got added to the Olympics, it's the competitive side of it is completely changed.
It's not anywhere near the level it was at a few years ago, in the
sense that it's higher now. And it's crazy. Every day I see some, some nine year old kid
doing a trick that I've been trying to do for a few years or something like that. And
but it's good. It pushes me a lot for sure. So it's, I mean, it's only going up and it's
still evolving. There's tricks in the past couple years
that people have done that,
if you told me a few years ago happened,
I would not have ever believed you.
It's in good hands.
The next generations, they got this pretty figured out.
So we got a lot of fun things to watch
over the next 10, 15 years is what you're saying.
Yeah, it's just getting better.
And what's the biggest for someone who's not in the sport?
What's the biggest difference between competing at the X games versus the Olympics?
I'm trying to think the X games is more of the Olympics is okay.
Well, the X games before the Olympics was our, it was our, our Superbowl, our NBA finals, or whatever you want to call it.
But now it's become this more, it's more of a, it's more like the all star game
now, it's just this fun like debut of what skating should be.
We all definitely take it seriously.
It's still very fun and there's a, there's some good money in it.
So we're all trying to do our best.
There's some good money in it, so we're all trying to do our best. But the X Games is, it's very different the way they run it.
It's not as serious.
There's a lot more events too.
There's motocross and BMXing and there's the winter one too,
which just happened a couple days ago.
But yeah, I don't know. It's just, you'll see the same people that are in the
Olympics, but just with a different mentality.
Different way to think about it for sure. So you've completed in everything from vert
to park to mega ramps. Do you have a favorite or do you thrive on being able to master all
the different styles? I think the mega ramp might be my favorite.
It's, it's dead now.
There's not, there's one mega ramp in the world and it's pretty old.
It's falling apart and there's only a handful of us that can skate it really.
But I think back 10 years ago, whenever it was really at its peak was,
it was pretty special.
There was a lot of people skating it.
I think it's, I think it's the most exciting thing to watch too.
So hopefully they could add that to the Olympics someday.
It'd be pretty cool.
I remember watching it years ago and it was, it looked like a
heck of a lot of fun to do it.
Yeah, it is.
You're still really young.
You're 25, but you're already a legend in skateboarding.
What do you want your legacy in the sport to be?
Right now I'm trying to work on, there's like the competitive side of skating,
and then there's like the more core side of it, which is like filming video parts and releasing
your own videos of trying to do your best stuff. And I've been focusing on that a lot more,
because the people that I looked up to as a kid were more kind of
video part oriented and you can win a contest and that'll be exciting for a few months or
a year or whatever, but a video will last forever.
That's your legacy.
That's what you leave with skating.
And that's what I've been really trying to focus on more.
And I've been working on one since as soon as the Olympics finished.
So it's almost done.
That should be done in the next couple of weeks or something.
Just got to finish a few more things and then start working on another one.
And then I guess probably keep doing that until 2026 or whenever the next Olympic
qualifiers, the season starts.
So I want to go all the way back to high school and thinking about your high school
class classmates and everything else.
If you didn't make it as a pro skateboarder, what do you think you'd be doing right now?
I have no idea.
I think about that a lot.
I honestly have no idea what I'd be doing.
My dad runs a construction company, so he always says I can go work for him if I need
to.
So I'd probably be doing that right now. But I took wood shop in high school and my teacher would always make fun
of me. He was like, you're putting all your eggs in one basket. He was like, what happens if it
doesn't work out? And I was like, I don't know. I guess we'll find out if we get to that point.
Well, cool. Oh, the last question I wanted to ask you, Tom, is looking back on your journey so far,
what's been the most defining moment for you not just in skating but in life? Oh that's a tough, that's a tough question.
I think like making the switch from being more of the mega ramp vert skater to doing more parking
concrete kind of stuff that's definitely changed my life a lot.
It's introduced me to a whole new side of skating,
new people, and I'm very grateful that I made that switch
because I love vert.
That's like where my heart remains.
That's what I grew up skating.
My first love was vert, but now it's switched
to this new, different side of skating.
And it showed me a lot that I definitely wouldn't have been able to do or see if I never ventured
out of what I was doing before.
Well, I'm not even sure if you know who Steven Kotler is, but he is an author and really
focuses on peak performance, but he decided to first
get into park skiing when he was in his fifties and you talk about a sport
that is a young person's game.
That's it.
But he was able to do it and get quite good at it, which proves can do
anything you set your mind to, regardless of your age.
Absolutely.
So Tom, I just wanted to end.
I typically ask people if there's a place that someone can go to learn more about someone,
you're pretty discoverable.
Is there anything that you're promoting right now or want people to know that you're doing?
I guess the video part that I've been working on, it's been a long process, a very frustrating
one, and it's almost done.
It should be coming out in like March and yeah that's about it. The rest of my skating's on my Instagram and
yeah it's pretty much all I got going on right now. Tom, thank you so much for
being on Passion Struck and congratulations again on all your
success and for winning that silver medal. Thank you, thank you very much.
And that's a wrap on this high-, high impact conversation with Tom Schar.
From being the first to land a 1080 at just 12 years old to standing on the Olympic podium
a decade later, Tom's story reminds us that greatness doesn't just come from talent.
It comes from the courage to go for it again and again.
Here are a few takeaways I invite you to reflect on.
First, fear doesn't go away. It's how you ride with it that counts. Second, you don't have to
wait to be ready to start rewriting the rules. Third, success isn't about one
moment, it's a mindset you keep choosing. And lastly, sometimes the biggest
breakthroughs happen when no one's watching. If today's episode inspired you,
please consider leaving a five-star rating and review on Apple or Spotify.
It truly helps PassionStruck grow and reach more people who are ready to ignite their purpose.
For show notes, resources, and links from today's conversation with Tom,
including video highlights, head over to passionstruck.com
or catch the full video interview on my YouTube channel at John R. Miles.
If you're interested in bringing this kind of high- high impact storytelling and intentional leadership to your team's organization,
check out JohnRMiles.com slash speaking to learn more. And next up on Passion Struck,
I'm joined by bestselling author and happiness expert Gretchen Rubin as we dive into our
latest book, Secrets of Adulthood and what it really takes to live a life of joy, wisdom
and purpose.
So this book is really
an exploration of how to fall in love with the questions of our lives, particularly the ones that
can be painful and especially in a culture in which so many of us have become addicted to fast,
easy answers. And I'll say too, this book is really about my journey to explore this question through science, history, philosophy,
poetry, religion, art. And I wrote it because when I was facing down this really painful
uncertainty in my life, I was craving a guide to help me navigate it. Not someone or something
to give me the answers, but to help me understand the experience better and to share wisdom from
folks who had been there
and come through it.
Until then, remember the fee for the show is simple.
If you found value, share it, but more importantly, live it
because knowledge alone doesn't change the world,
action does.
Until next time, live life passion strung. you