In the moments before a race, Lindsey Vonn's mind is "pretty empty." All preparation and visualization are done beforehand, allowing instinct to take over. Thinking about technique at 80 mph is a recipe for disaster; performance must be automatic.

Related Insights

Top performers often exist in a state of constant calculation. The key to sustainable excellence is learning to consciously switch between being 'on the field' (strategizing) and 'off the field' (being present). Deliberately switching off sharpens focus and makes you more effective when you are back 'on'.

While confidence is valuable, it can lead to carelessness. A state of being "fully present"—total immersion in the moment without self-consciousness—is a more powerful and reliable driver of peak performance. It replaces ego-driven thoughts with heightened awareness and flow.

Before her final race, injured and facing immense pressure, Lindsey Vonn’s 96-year-old coach offered a powerful reframe: "What is 60 seconds in your whole life?" This perspective minimized the moment's weight, freeing her to compete without fear and win a medal.

Olympian Lindsey Vonn journaled daily, especially when things were going well. This created a reference point to reverse-engineer success when she later struggled, by documenting what foods, equipment, and feelings contributed to her peak state.

When facing the immense pressure of doing Oprah's eyebrows on live TV, Anastasia Soare’s calm came from having performed the task thousands of times. This deep, repetitive mastery creates an autopilot mode that overrides fear and ensures quality performance when the stakes are highest.

As expertise develops, one can shift from rigid plans to relying on deep 'programming'—the sum of instincts and experience. This allows for adaptability in high-stakes situations, turning potential disasters into moments of authentic performance that a rehearsed script could never achieve.

Lindsey Vonn views crashing as part of her job description and a necessary tool for finding her limits. Instead of avoiding the memory, she meticulously analyzes videos of her crashes to understand her mistakes and improve, treating catastrophic failure as invaluable feedback.

Lindsey Vonn admits to being two different people: supremely confident on the ski slope, but shy and reserved in normal social situations. This suggests high-performers can compartmentalize their confidence, harnessing it as a tool specifically for their domain rather than a general personality trait.

In crises, focus only on what's inside an imaginary "hula hoop" around you: your attitude and your actions. Surrender the outcome to external forces. This mental model, used by endurance athlete Dean Otto when paralyzed, prevents overwhelm and allows for clear-headed decision-making when stakes are highest.

Studies on elite athletes and Tony Robbins reveal a specific biochemical response to high-stakes situations. Testosterone surges, enhancing focus and memory, while the stress hormone cortisol drops. This creates a state of pure, focused power that can even be transmitted to an audience.