Acknowledgments
As I sit down to write these acknowledgments, I can’t help but think back to 2014 when I ran my first marathon. Writing a book is a lot like running a marathon. Writing the proposal and the outline for the book is much like the training process. It gets your thoughts in shape, it focuses you for what’s ahead and, yes, near the end of the process, it can be more than a little tedious and brutal.
When you start writing the book, it’s a lot like race day. You start the marathon excited and full of energy. You know you’re trying to do something bigger than anything you might have done before and it’s both exciting and nerve-wracking. This is what you’ve trained for, but at the same time, there’s always that small voice of doubt in the back of your mind that says you won’t finish what you started.
What I’ve learned from running is that races aren’t completed one mile at a time. Instead, they’re run one foot in front of the other. The miles run are the sum of the individual footsteps. When my children are struggling with something, I laugh and ask them, “How do you write a book? One word, one single step at a time.” They usually roll their eyes, but in the end there’s no other way around this indisputable and ironclad law.
However, when you run a marathon, you might be the one running the race, but you’re never running it alone. There’s a whole team of people there to give you support, time, and advice along the way. It has been the same experience writing this book.