Despite the risks of her sport, Mikaela Shiffrin's primary fear is no longer crashing. Instead, it's the potential media and public backlash if she underperforms at the next Olympics, showing how psychological scars from public failure can outlast physical ones.

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Mikaela Shiffrin’s philosophy was shaped less by her idol Bode Miller’s victories and more by watching him navigate public criticism. This taught her to detach from external expectations and focus on her own definition of success: technical perfection.

For individuals with a high public profile or a famous family, the intense social pressure and potential for embarrassment from failure can act as a powerful motivator. This "can't fail" mentality becomes a driving force for success, turning a potential source of anxiety into a strategic advantage.

Shiffrin reveals a critical paradox in her mental game: focusing on the outcome (winning the race) almost guarantees she will lose. To win, she must focus exclusively on the process—the intensity of her skiing and executing the next turn perfectly.

Many people are held back by an intense fear of what others will think of their failures. This fear, often a product of childhood conditioning, prevents them from taking necessary risks. Embracing public failure as a learning process is the key to unlocking potential and reducing anxiety.

Beyond the desire for success, the intense fear of embarrassment and public failure can be an incredibly potent motivator. For high-profile individuals, the social cost of failure is so high that it creates a forcing function to succeed at all costs.

Mikaela Shiffrin admits to having recurring images of herself crashing while approaching a jump during a race. She overcomes this by focusing on her technique in the final moment, proving that elite performance is about managing—not eliminating—fear.

Despite enduring career-threatening injuries and depression, Lindsey Vonn identifies people-pleasing as her biggest emotional challenge. The constant, draining effort to make others happy was a harder obstacle to overcome than the physical and mental demands of her sport.

Fawn Weaver argues the paralyzing fear for many founders isn't the act of failing, but the shame of others witnessing that failure. If a venture failed in private, most founders wouldn't care. This reframes the core psychological barrier to taking risks and scaling.

When self-worth is tied to constant success (e.g., getting straight A's), failure becomes emotionally devastating. As an adult, this can translate into avoiding risks altogether, because the potential psychological pain of failing outweighs the potential rewards of a bold venture.

Shiffrin's season of winning by massive margins set an impossible standard. When she later won by smaller margins, victories were perceived as failures, leading to intense performance anxiety and physical illness before races.

The Lingering Fear of Public Opinion Can Outweigh the Fear of Physical Injury | RiffOn