I learned to tie my shoes from John Wooden. It is the very first thing he covers with every player. Already retired from UCLA, hundreds of teenage boys sat on a gym floor watching the Master explain with the seriousness of a surgeon. Socks must fit snug and straight - wrinkles will rub blisters. Open the laces all the way, not just the top row. Working from the bottom up: Snug but not tight, Snug but not tight, Snug but not tight. Over two summers, I spent a week each at Wooden's basketball camp learning more then just about the game. We saw black and white footage of his UCLA teams running the same drills he ran with us each morning- no ball. While we caught our breath, he spoke about balance and what it means to "Be Quick, but not in a Hurry". Quick: being prepared, in the moment, confident, decisive in action. Hurry: rushed, distracted, stress, going too fast. Hurry, sooner or later, creates mistakes. Winning is not as important as approaching the game (life) with commitment, respect and trying your best. The results of this effort will take care of themselves.
I was on location this past week when I learned of his passing. Soon my sadness turned to an inventory of teaching passed forward. His "Pyramid of Success" was the centerpiece of class translated through a striped floor and 10 foot high hoops. "Success is peace of mind which is a direct result of self satisfaction in knowing you made the effort to do the best of which you are capable". My memory heard our daughters 3 year old voices repeating mine, "Snug but not tight". CoachWooden.com
Jun 7, 2010
Feb 19, 2010
The 5 Rings
A couple of weeks ago, our family ventured to Belmont Plaza Pool in Long Beach, CA for a swim meet. Certain parts were largely the same as at any meet. An announcer calling out heat numbers, the smell of chlorine in the air (which I love), plus wet towels and lycra clad kids everywhere. The meet was open to anyone, so long as they met minimum qualifying times. Anyone also happened to include several Olympians with a passport stamp from Beijing including Katie Hoff, Jason Lezak and some guy named Michael Phelps.
We generally have a rule with our daughters. No TV on a school night, which only gets broken for random select occasions including major national news events, ACC College Basketball and once every two years, the Olympics. For me, the timing of the Winter Olympics could not be more perfect. The volatile map of what these athletes have faced to become the worlds best is both staggering and inspiring. For nearly all of them, every waking and sleeping moment for the past several years has been dedicated by an opportunity of a few minutes. One by one, they each step forward and take their shot at destiny.
Back at Belmont, my oldest daughter is called out of the stands by her coach, who walks her to meet and spend a few moments with his friend, Jason Lezak: the Savior of the Men's Relay in Beijing. Two years ago, Jason's moment with destiny came and he nailed it. Behind by a body length, he chased down one of the top swimmers in the world to touch first. The swimming equivalent of lifting a car above his head. Magic of the 5 Rings. My daughter returns to us floating above the ground because she has met royalty. Then there's Michael, the most celebrated olympic athlete on the planet, standing 30 feet from us wet from warm up. No entourage, no logos. As he takes his place to start, what strikes me is all the corporate sponsorship and PR hype is vacant. He's just a guy with no place to hide, no lip-sync track or second take parachute and 7 others gunning for his place as the best. 16 lung burning laps later, he proves he is yet again.
That night my daughter writes on her bedroom wall "Push Hard to make JO's (junior olympics) and I just smile knowing it's the first of many notes to come.
Jason Lezak with my girls
Phelps after winning the 400 IM
Feb 9, 2009
Mark, the Master's Trail

Village: There's a ton of Lamberth's. Mark's family is big and full of boys.... add in wives, in-laws along with friends and one needed a program to keep everybody straight. For 36 days, nearly all were there. Staff updates with all of us were held in shifts because the conference room couldn't hold everyone. There was a Prayer blog and Flicker page started that had over 200,000 hits within a month (link). Mark worked at Mission Hospital in Orthopedics. Administration at Mission all but demanded him from the county hospital he was first taken to (they air lifted him two days later).
Co-workers of both Mark and his wife Angie donated 100's of vacation hours allowing her to be there nonstop. The teddy bear from 3rd floor that Mark modified to help kids understand how a cast works. His boss, who insisted on being the official MD to shut the machines down. My small part came from pictures I had taken last year. Early on, I made several large prints for his room - to remind us all what we were working towards. Then the pictures became a window view of who he was, an experienced mountaineer who loved the High Sierra. Mark and Angie have a young son Nolan - who no doubt will hear 100's of tales (some of them tall) from his Mom and various Uncle's about who his father was. I'm glad to know a few of my images will be there to help.
Dec 17, 2008
Mark


The Mountain does not fear Winter. Warmth and Spring will once again come to melt the drifts, expose the rocks and fill the rivers with spectacular power. Then as before, the trail will lay waiting to guide Mark on his next adventure - and the Mountain will smile.
Mark is a friend from Backpacking in the Sierra. He has a warm heart, a comfortable smile and an endless sense of adventure. First day out this year, we're about an hour into the hike on a dusty trail. I'm just settling into the weight and altitude - my mind is focused on the 10 miles and 2000 ft of elevation we plan that day. First river we get to, He yells "lets go swimming", drops his pack and boots and jumps in the icy flow clothes and all. Yes, I followed him in and it felt amazing. I was reminded at that moment that the destination is not ahead - it's right here. Unfortunately, Mark shared the lesson this week all over again. A significant accident has left him on the edge of life. My heart goes out to him, his wife Angie and their son Nolan.
Nov 24, 2008
Firehouse

Jul 25, 2008
Rea Lakes Loop
My feet are still a bit swollen, my calves ache and the few clothes I took my wife thinks should be burned rather than washed. I just returned from backpacking the Rea Lakes loop in the California High Sierras. Here's the overview: 5 days, 45 miles, climbed 6,500 ft. to Glen Pass listed at 11,978 ft (let's just call it 12,000) and back. Rain one evening, Bear with his nose in one of our tents, Snow covering the trail near the pass and two days on the John Muir Trail. It was fun. As you're reading this, you're probably thinking one of two things. Wow - that's cool, I would love to do that. OR Are you freaking nuts! why would anyone want to hurt and be that uncomfortable by choice. Honestly, depending on the moment, I agree with you both - but I can't wait to do it again. The trip seems to be two parallel experiences at once. First is with the landscape - which dominates everything and constantly reminds that you're the visitor. The scale is so huge that at times it almost seems fake, then the boys catch another trout or you see a deer 30 feet away and it brings you back. The second track is the personal challenge of can I do this... I'm cold, I'm hot. Are we there yet? my lungs feel like they're going to pop out of my chest. What I love about shooting on location is exceptionally true here as well: things are changing all the time. How you adjust to change makes the difference.
There's something very satisfying knowing that your completely self contained. Every bit of food, shelter, and creature comforts is on my back. Do I really need this? gets asked of every single object. My camp towel folds to become a pot holder at dinner and then becomes my pillow at night. I made up my own concoctions of dehydrated chicken, couscous, vegetables and spices. If the mantra of most restaurants is location, location, location: then dinning at sunset by a campfire with my polycarbonate spork, surrounded by granite peaks makes this a five star event. I even squirreled a single bar of extra dark chocolate and a tiny 4oz flask of Tequila to ease the evening chills.
This is my second trip with the Lamberth clan. My buddy Tim, his three nephews and young Chance (Tim's son) is 10 years old and going into the 5th Grade. Before you call Child Services, you should know that last year Chance did 52 miles with us and this year he was the first back to the Ranger Station. Imagine what he'll be able to do when he's 20. For brothers Matt and Mark, this was a fishing trip - with a lot a hiking in between. As a result, they became the focus of many of my images. David provides the comic relief and overall boyish humor that is really necessary to keep it all in prospective.
Couple of quick plugs: Found a terrific resource for dehydrated food - wildernessdining.com that had many great options including a Gluten-free section, which we need for Tim. Also, met a number of nice people on trail including Jim McCrain - who has traveled the world, is a filmmaker, and is working on a 7 year documentary of the John Muir Trail. To check out his project go to theclimb.com
More pictures from this trip can be seen at my website smontgomery.com
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