13.Self-satisfaction —A Deadly Competitor I am Peggy Fleming, a coach in the figure-skating team. I remember I suffered a serious failure when I was only 10 years old and the (1)
helped me win the Olympic ice-skating championship (冠军). It also gave me a deadly competitor — the other Peggy Fleming.
Just before that, I had been roller-skating, playing basketball, and could climb up a tree as well as any boy. So Dad (2)
me to take skating lessons. And soon I won several local figure-skating prizes. Then came the Pacific Coast Championship in Los Angeles.
I, a very (3)
young girl, proud of the praise from friends and newspapers, walked into the gym expecting to add another great honor to my recent success. Out on the ice, I totally enjoyed myself, flying through all kinds of figures I knew so well. But when the results were reported, I was shocked — out of the 12 competitors I had finished last! The lesson burned as bright as my skate knives: "You didn't skate your best!" I knew that only one person had (4)
me that day — myself, my own self-satisfaction.
The rules of figure-skating are: There are 69 figures in all. A skater must do five figures for the Olympics, but you aren't told which figures these will be until the last minute. So you must be very familiar with the 69 figures. When I (5)
every time, I would practice the same 69 figures over and over, eight hours a day. Often in the middle of practicing a figure, the other Peggy Fleming would say in a low voice, "Good enough — why force yourself so (6)
?" At this time, I remembered the lesson in Los Angeles.
Now I skate professionally — teach teenagers how to skate. But I still (7)
this competitor, myself. I surely believe that each of us has a special talent. And if we lock our talent because of our own self-satisfaction, simply do not want to make (8)
or fear trying, we will fail.