A person is a reflection of their culture, of what they believe and how they live their lives. A bridge between the past and the future, between time and space and needs to try to keep them in harmony, less they become unbalanced. Not to be aware of the past and give it due consideration in the building of the future can distort the future. Neither is it wise to sacrifice your future because you choose to live in or as if you are in the past. One World One Human Race One Destiny (OWOHROD)
Saturday, 11 June 2016
LEWIS HAMILTON - MONTREAL IS A NEW CHALLENGE
Having recently had his first Grand Prix win in the 2016 Formula 1 season, Lewis Hamilton is back on the track tomorrow, to compete for the Canadian Grand Prix. Canada has, over the years been good to Hamilton and has awarded his track mastery with several wins.
Success, it is said, feeds on itself and breeds further success, which is something Hamilton will most likely use to fortify himself, as he psyhe up himself for tomorrows race. Yet, repeated success can also makes a person arrogant and complacent, which, arguably, Hamilton might have been, towards the end of the 2015 Formula One season, and which might or might not have cost him the momentum to launch himself into the 2016 season.
Hamilton's fans and many of us who enjoy Formula 1 races would be buzzing if he were to add another Canadian F1 race to his already increasing tally. However, if he is to do so, he will be going some way to placing himself in a winning frame of mind, by removing any build up of arrogance and complacency from his mind, and let quiet contemplation and stoical determination and clear thinking predominate over his preparation for and execution of the race.
However many successes a person has achieved in the past, none of them, collectively or individually, will cause him/her to have to put in less effort into achieving the success which has not yet been won.
This is partly because the past cannot, or, if you prefer, never be recreated in its entirety, and, even if it could be, one cannot entirely predict the precise circumstances, including the ratio of luck versus skills and experience which shall pertain, in an event which has not yet taken place.
Having said all that, how great it would be, if Hamilton were to win the 2016 Canadian Grand Prix, and dedicate it to the memory of his 'hero' or ' most admired person', Muhammad Ali?
So, let Hamilton and his team mate, Rosberg, have an exciting race, fighting it out, safely, with each other, and with the rest of the field.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment