Goal Setting: Pops
Proves Its Never Too Late
by: Vic Johnson
Pops first set the goal in high school, but when he
graduated he thought he wasn’t mature enough to pursue it so
he enlisted in the U.S. Army.
He dreamed about it as a member of the 82nd Airborne as he
became an Army Ranger. Later, in the first Gulf War, he
thought about his goal again, as he also did during his
service in the Kosovo conflict. For 20 years, through his Army
career, a war, marriage and six children, Pops kept the dream
and the goal alive.
Never mind that he was considered far too old to pursue his
dream, Pops just couldn’t let go.
When he retired from the Army at 39, he decided it was
finally time to do something about the goal he’d set so many
years before. He moved his family to Columbia, South Carolina
and enrolled as a freshman at the University of South
Carolina.
No, he wasn’t considered too old for that. Many others,
much older, have pursued college degrees for the first time.
What Tim “Pops” Frisby did was even more special. At an age
when even most professional players have hung up there
helmets, he began working out with the South Carolina
Gamecocks football team during the winter. Working out with
players half his age, all of whom were young enough to be his
son, he competed for a position on a Division One major
College Football Team.
It was a goal that Pops had lived with for a long time and
he began to realize it when coaches invited him back for fall
drills. When South Carolina kicked off their season against
the University of Georgia, Tim Frisby was on the sidelines
wearing Gamecock jersey number 89. On September 25th, against
Troy, the legendary Lou Holtz, head coach at South Carolina,
sent Pops into the game for its final four plays. “I have a
lot of respect for the guy,” Holtz said. “A Ranger, 20 years
in the Army, six kids. He loves this team. I thought it would
be good to get him in. I’m sorry we could not throw it to
him.” But knowing the way that Pops Frisby makes his dreams
come true, that’s just a matter of time.
Frisby, who turns 40 in February, has been featured on
ESPN’s “College GameDay.” ABC’s “Good Morning America,” CNN,
the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times are all planning
stories.
Incidentally, the father of six between the ages of six
months and 16, also maintains a 3.88 (out of a possible 4.0)
grade point average.
Still think it’s too late for your dream? Goal setting and
goal starting is a process that can start at any age and at
any time. There’s no need to wait until January 1st to set or
start a goal. Goal setting and goal starting doesn’t have to
take place at the first of the month, or even the first of the
week. I once started on a big goal at midnight on the 24th of
the month.
Tim Frisby accomplished his goal and realized his dream for
two simple reasons: he never let time take his dream away, and
when the time finally came, he took action. It worked for Pops
-- and it’ll work for you too!
Vic Johnson is a popular motivational speaker, author
and Internet Infopreneur who has created some of the most
visited personal development sites on the Web. His
flagship site
http://www.AsAManThinketh.net has given away over
200,000 eBook copies of James Allen's classic. He is
co-author of "Goals 2004," which is found at
http://www.Goals2005.com