Baseball Training
You Are What You Do Everyday
Imposter syndrome is not a problem.
Every player who moves up a level in baseball has imposter syndrome. Every. Single. One.
The D1 commit who arrives on campus wondering if he belongs. The SEC guys who get there and realize for the first time that things are actually hard. I've seen high school legends playing junior college ball after one season in the SEC.
Imposter syndrome is universal. It is not a unique problem.

Recruiting
Recruiting Will Be Back Next Week
Story Time
This Is Why You Feel Like You Aren't Getting Better at Baseball
You cannot always see your baseball progress, but that doesn't mean you're not progressing faster than you realize.
For example, a painter shows up to work and paints a wall. At the end of the day he can see exactly what he did. The whole painted wall is there. The work is visible. It's very satisfying.
But you, a baseball player, choose a much less satisfying passion.

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That’s it for this week.
Stay tuned for next week’s newsletter. Get better everyday and embrace consistency.
Anyone can play college baseball if they do the right things.
The Athora Lab Team
