Monday, July 27, 2015
"Then Die" Bruce Lee
“Bruce had me up to three miles a day, really at a good pace. We’d run
the three miles in twenty-one or twenty-two minutes. Just under eight
minutes a mile [Note: when running on his own in 1968, Lee would get his
time down to six-and-a half minutes per mile]. So this morning he said
to me “We’re going to go five.” I said, “Bruce, I can’t go five. I’m a
helluva lot older than you are, and I can’t do five.” He said, “When we
get to three, we’ll shift gears and it’s only two more and you’ll do
it.” I said “Okay, hell, I’ll go for it.” So we get to three, we go into
the fourth mile and I’m okay for three or four minutes, and then I
really begin to give out. I’m tired, my heart’s pounding, I can’t go any
more and so I say to him, “Bruce if I run any more,” –and we’re still
running-”if I run any more I’m liable to have a heart attack and die.”
He said, “Then die.” It made me so mad that I went the full five miles.
Afterward I went to the shower and then I wanted to talk to him about
it. I said, you know, “Why did you say that?” He said, “Because you
might as well be dead. Seriously, if you always put limits on what you
can do, physical or anything else, it’ll spread over into the rest of
your life. It’ll spread into your work, into your morality, into your
entire being. There are no limits. There are plateaus, but you must not
stay there, you must go beyond them. If it kills you, it kills you. A
man must constantly exceed his level.”
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