Performance Coach | Speaker | ICF PCC | Creator of The Attention Standard System™ | Helping Athletes, Leaders & High Performers Build the Standards That Sustain
Consistency Is the Standard That Builds Trust
Everyone starts strong. Few stay committed long enough for their standard to become visible.
Almost everyone starts with enthusiasm. A new season. A new goal. A new routine.
Motivation is high. Energy is everywhere.
The commitment feels real.
Then something changes.
The excitement fades. The routine becomes ordinary. Progress feels slower than expected. Small compromises become easier. Yesterday's non-negotiable become today's exceptions.
This is where many athletes, coaches, leaders, and high performers become complacent—not because they lack talent or ability, but because they stop living the standard they set when they began.
This is where your standard is tested.
Your standard isn’t revealed by what you do once. It’s revealed by what you do consistently.
Over the years, I've learned that the people who sustain excellence aren't necessarily the most talented. They're the ones who stay committed long after motivation has left.
Because consistency isn't about perfection. It’s about honoring your standard, especially on the days you don’t feel like it.
Consistency is the standard you choose after motivation leaves.
Consistency requires trust. Trust in the process. Trust in your preparation.
Trust that today's small decisions are shaping tomorrow's performance.
Over time, consistency becomes visible. Coaches know what to expect from you. Teammates rely on you. Leaders earn credibility because their actions consistently match their words.
People don't place their trust in potential. They place their trust in patterns.
That's why consistency is one of the clearest expressions of your standard.
It's what turns intention into identity, repetition into reputation, and potential into performance.
Before you can strengthen your consistency, you have to honestly evaluate the standard you're living today.
Coach Druzz's Reflection
• Where has consistency quietly given way to complacency, and what has that cost me?
• What standard have I said is important, but my daily actions consistently fail to support?
• What one standard, if lived it consistently, would have the greatest impact on my performance?
Awareness creates change only when it's followed by action. Here's where to begin.
This Week's Practice
• Show up every day, even when motivation is low.
• Build one routine you can repeat consistently.a
• Track your follow-through, not just your results.
If you want to raise your standard, prove to yourself that you can stay committed long enough for it to matter.
Because consistency isn't just part of success.
It's the standard that builds trust.
Raise the Standard.
👇 Leave me a comment. I'd love to hear what standard you're committed to living consistently.
The Standard Is the Difference
Why elite performance begins long before the moment it is tested
Have you ever wondered why some people continue to reach higher levels while others work just as hard but never seem to break through?
Athletes train harder. Coaches search for better systems. Leaders read another book. High performers look for the next strategy.
Yet many are still asking the same question:
Why am I not getting the results I know I'm capable of?
Most people believe the answer is more talent, more confidence, or more motivation. I believe the answer is something far more fundamental.
The difference isn't found in the moment you perform. It's found in the standard you've been living long before anyone was watching.
Every result you produce is either reinforcing your standard or exposing it.
That's why one of the most important questions you can ask yourself isn't, "How can I perform better?” It’s: "What standard am I living by every day?"
The truth is, people don't wake up one morning and decide to lower their standard.
It happens gradually when you stop doing the little things, accept one excuse, cut one corner or settle for one average effort.
Over time, what was once unacceptable becomes normal. Eventually, your performance reflects the standard you've learned to tolerate.
Over the years, I've worked with All-Americans, professional athletes, championship coaches, and leaders in business. The people who sustained excellence rarely had the most talent. They had standards that they upheld.
Their standard shaped how they prepared, how they responded to adversity, how they accepted coaching, and how they showed up every day.
Your standards work the same way, they shape your habits, influence your decisions, determine what you tolerate, and ultimately, they influence the quality of your performance and your life.
The important thing is this: Your standards must be your own.
Standards built on perfection, comparison, social media, or someone else's expectations eventually lead to frustration, burnout, and anxiety.
The strongest standards are intentional, realistic, and rooted in the person you're committed to becoming.
Coach Druzz’s Reflections
Take a few minutes to think about these questions:
• Where have I started accepting what I once refused to tolerate?
• What behavior no longer reflects the person I want to be?
• What standard would change my life if I lived it consistently?
This Week’s Practice
• Choose one behavior you'll no longer compromise.
• Notice where your actions don't match your expectations.
• End each day by asking, "Did I live my standard today?"
Winning isn't the standard. Recognition isn't the standard. Championships aren't the standard. These are outcomes.
The standard is the way you prepare, the way you respond, the way you lead and the way you show up when no one is watching.
Because when the moment arrives, you don't rise to the occasion - you reveal your standard.
The Standard is the difference.
Raise the Standard.
👇 Leave me a comment. Let me know if this post was helpful.
Only 25% of kids regularly play out on their street.
This number used to be 80%.
Adults have ruined play.
Why? Traffic + fear and Safetyism.
When we see threats everywhere, we default to avoid and protect mode.
And it's ruining our kids mental health.
It was inspiring to see the patriotism 🇺🇸 displayed by the @USMNT and the way they came together after the victory to give praise to God.
Moments like these remind us that gratitude, humility, and faith can be just as powerful as athletic achievement. It's an example that the @USWNT and other women's professional sports teams may find worthy of reflecting on.
It was inspiring to see the patriotism displayed by the @USMNT and the way they came together after the victory to give praise to God.
Moments like these remind us that gratitude, humility, and faith can be just as powerful as athletic achievement.
It's an example that the @USWNT and other women's professional sports teams may find worthy of reflecting on.
The Power of Paying Attention
What you notice shapes what you become
The athletes who rise above the average are usually the ones who stay present when it matters most.
In my work with athletes, one thing shows up over and over again: It’s not lack of talent that holds them back. It’s lack of attention. Half-focused reps. Rushed warmups. A mind that drifts during drills. Their body is there. Their attention isn’t.
That’s the gap.
Paying attention isn’t just a skill. It’s a discipline. You can’t perform above the level of your attention. Champions don’t leave their focus to chance. They choose it. They train with intention. And when their focus slips. They reset. Quickly.
That’s what separates them.
High performers aren’t perfect. But they are intentional. They understand that how you do the small things shows up in the big moments.
When an athlete is truly paying attention, they start to notice when they drift into autopilot. They become aware of what situations trigger strong emotions. They recognize when their focus starts to slip. And instead of staying there, they reset.
That’s the skill. Being present.
Because growth only happens in the present moment. And one of the simplest ways to return there is the breath. It slows you down. It centers you. It brings you back.
This is why the off-season matters. It’s your opportunity to strengthen your discipline. Not just in training. But in your habits. Your preparation. The way you show up when no one is watching.
Small improvements compound. And over time, they don’t just add up…They separate you.
So today, don’t try to overhaul everything.
Train your attention in small ways:
Slow your reps in training - quality before speed.
After each day, take time to ask: Where did I lose focus today?
Pick one small detail to improve tomorrow - just one.
Attention is built in moments, not motivation.
In a distracted world, the athletes who learn to stay present are the ones who pull ahead.
Share this with someone that needs to hear it.
👇 And tell me: what’s one area you’re committed to staying focused on this off-season?
The Lessons You Can’t Afford to Ignore
Why The Lessons From This Season Matter More Than You Think
After my last post, “The Best Athletes Don’t Just Recover — They Rebuild,” I kept thinking about what separates athletes who simply move on from the season from the ones who actually grow from it.
One of the biggest mistakes athletes make after a season ends is moving on too quickly. They rush to the next thing without stopping long enough to ask, What did this season teach me that I cannot afford to ignore?
It’s an important question that allows an athlete to grow with clarity and courage.
If they don’t ask that question, they risk carrying the same habits, the same behaviors, the same blind spots, and the same frustrations into the next season.
In my work with athletes and teams, I see this way too often. Every season reveals something. The question is whether the athlete is willing to take the time to see it.
High performers take the time to reflect on the season. They want to know what held them back. They want to understand which habits served them, which behaviors cost them, and how their presence shaped the culture around them. Because they know that growth doesn’t happen by accident—it happens when you slow down, get honest, and turn what the season revealed into action for the next one.
Here are three questions that will give you clarity on your last season:
• Did your daily choices support the level of performance you want?
• How did you respond when things got hard, or when you were challenged, or when the outcome did not go your way?
• What kind of teammate were you, and how did your presence impact your team’s culture?
These questions can help you see what really mattered this season — not just what happened, but what shaped it. Habits shape performance. Behaviors shape culture. And leadership shapes the standard everyone else follows.
If this season exposed something that needs to change, do not ignore it. Use it. Learn from it. Build from it.
The offseason is not just a break. It is an opportunity to get honest, adjust course, and strengthen the habits, behaviors and leadership skills that will shape your next season.
If you are interested in learning how to apply these ideas connect with me and schedule a free call at https://t.co/02jUMvyBdt. You can also DM me on Instagram at coachdruzz or LinkedIn at cathyandruzzi.
WOW… this is what REAL “proud to be an American” looks and feels like. Fans are absolutely done with anti-American “WOKENESS”….
Pay attention NFL, NBA and MLB. 😀🇺🇸❤️👏🏾
The Best Athletes Don’t Just Recover — They Rebuild
The space between seasons is where the next season is won.
Most athletes think championships are won during the season. They’re not. Championships are won in the quiet
moments between seasons. When no one is watching and no one is cheering, the best athletes are rebuilding the habits, mindset, and discipline that will determine their next level of performance.
High performers understand that recovery isn’t a luxury - it’s a necessity. This break is an opportunity to step back, recharge physically and mentally, reset priorities, and reflect on what’s working and what needs to change. It creates space for learning, perspective, and renewed focus so that when you return, you do it with clarity, energy, and purpose.
This window matters. It will either sharpen you or soften you. Without a clear plan, it’s easy to drift into complacency.
This period will test an athlete’s discipline.
Self-led athletes don’t wait for a coach to tell them what to do. They take ownership. They lead themselves.
Too often, athletes lose structure when the season ends. They waste the offseason - the time when they have the freedom to improve without the pressure of competition.
I’ve seen athletes take control, build a plan, and maximize this time to come back stronger, fitter, and more prepared. I’ve also seen athletes waste this valuable time.
If you’ve drifted, it’s not too late to reset and get back on track. If you’re already executing your plan, keep going.
Here are three ways to maximize the offseason:
• Recover with purpose. Be clear about what your body and mind need to rebuild.
• Train with intention. Create and follow a specific plan that raises your standard.
• Reflect with honesty. Use what you learn to sharpen your next level.
This offseason is one of the most important development windows you have. How you use it will either move you forward or set you back.
The best athletes don’t wait for things to get better - they train for what’s next.
Your next breakthrough will not come from hoping it gets better - it will come from choosing to get better. If you feel like you're not on track, all is not lost. I’ve worked with many athletes who found themselves stuck in complacency and helped them turn that moment into a clear plan, renewed focus, and real offseason momentum.
If you’re ready to stop drifting and start building, DM me on Twitter or connect with me to schedule a free call at https://t.co/NNF6XhLp7U. Let’s turn this offseason into the foundation for your next breakthrough.
Self-Awareness Is a Competitive Advantage
The Performance Edge Most Athletes Overlook
The biggest reason athletes plateau isn’t lack of talent - it’s a lack of self-awareness.
The athletes who know themselves best usually improve the fastest. Unfortunately, many athletes focus almost exclusively on developing their physical skills when they should also be focused on their emotional skills.
Over the years, while coaching athletes and high performers, I have observed that those who understand their own patterns, triggers, strengths, and blind spots are often the most prepared to grow. Why? Because they are no longer guessing. They know what helps them perform, what hurts their performance, and what situations bring out the best—or worst—in them.
These athletes and high performers are self-aware.
Self-awareness is a superpower and one of the most underrated advantages in sports. In fact, it is one of the most important topics I address in my Leadership & Performance sessions.
Unfortunately, many athletes spend countless hours trying to improve physically but very little time understanding themselves mentally and emotionally. That becomes a problem when adversity shows up. If you do not understand how you respond to stress, disappointment, failure, or pressure, those reactions can control you before you even realize what is happening.
Self-awareness helps you lead yourself better. It allows you to communicate more effectively, recover more intentionally, and respond rather than react. It also helps you become a better teammate because you stop viewing everything through your own experience and begin to understand how your behavior impacts the people around you.
One of the biggest challenges I see is that many athletes want results without reflection. They want confidence without clarity. They want growth without self-examination.
Real growth requires looking inward.
When athletes engage in meaningful self-reflection, they develop a deeper understanding of their motivations, strengths, and areas for improvement. They begin to recognize the habits and behaviors that support success, as well as the patterns that hold them back.
The problem is that blind spots remain blind spots until they are addressed.
The blind spots come at a cost. They limit consistency, damage communication, hinder leadership, and create patterns that often show up at the worst possible times. Self-awareness helps you identify those blind spots before they become barriers to your performance.
Are you ready to address yours?
Here are a few reflective questions to help you build greater self-awareness:
• What triggers me?
• What strengthens me?
• What distracts me?
• What habits make me dependable?
• What patterns hold me back?
The more honest you are with your answers, the more opportunity you create for growth.
If you want to become more self-aware, more reflective, and more intentional in the way you lead and perform, reach out to me. I would be happy to share tools, strategies, and practical exercises that can help you continue growing in these areas. DM me on Twitter or request a free call at https://t.co/FpqZ7dmzdO.
Dr. Naomi Wolf:
"Pfizer tried to kill us. They tried to sterilize us."
"They killed the babies... and poisoned the breast milk, and knew it."
"They lowered the sperm count and they knew it."
"This is satanic on a massive level... They knew they were doing this."
Rick Pitino shares the hourglass lesson he gives every team and why it's one you should be sharing with your team.
"I brought in a 60-minute hourglass. During our film session, I turned it over and said, 'That's how quick this next 6 weeks are gonna go for you. And then your career is over.'"
That's not a metaphor - it's a warning.
"Every player I've ever coached that's had great success - from Kentucky, Louisville, Providence - they said, 'If I could just have one more year back in college.' Even though they made the pros."
"Antoine Walker always says, 'If I could have that one more year like the '96 team.'"
The guys who made it to the highest level still wish they could go back.
"They're gonna miss it. But that hourglass - I want them to know it happens quick. All of a sudden it's gonna be February, you're into March, and it's over."
Don't wait until it's over to appreciate what you have.
Every day is an opportunity to choose gratitude.
(🎥 St. Johns )
LSU's Jalia Lassiter walked at graduation while wearing her full softball uniform.
She got her degree, then went right to the ballpark for LSU's NCAA regional game.
LSU's Jalia Lassiter walked at graduation while wearing her full softball uniform.
She got her degree, then went right to the ballpark for LSU's NCAA regional game.