Want what Shawn Johnson East has?
Well, then, welcome to the club. Declaring “I am second” isn’t natural. Believing in someone you can’t physically see?
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“I felt like I had failed the world. I felt like since the world saw me as nothing else, that if I failed at being a gymnast, I had failed at being a human being.”
Failure.
That’s how a lot of the world saw Shawn Johnson in 2008. She was supposed to be the next great American gymnast and take home a handful of gold medals at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. Instead, she won one and mostly played runner-up, losing the coveted all-around title to teammate Nastia Lukin.
That feeling was seared into her memory when the person presenting her a silver medal at the games leaned in and said two words: “I’m sorry.”
That disappointment motivated her to win “Dancing with the Stars” the next year, and fueled a comeback attempt for the 2012 London Olympics. But, soon the weight of perfection and the expectations to be, look, and act like everyone wanted her to took a toll.
She found freedom one day while preparing to practice her balance beam routine. That’s when something—or rather someone—spoke to her.”
Well, then, welcome to the club. Declaring “I am second” isn’t natural. Believing in someone you can’t physically see?
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