The chances are, after you get lost on a large field, job interview, or in Billie Jean King’s World Tennis Match, you will know exactly where you failed. But have you ever wondered after you win why you won exactly?
“People are still thinking, learning more than failure,” the 81-year-old tennis legend is exclusively distorted Happiness In the strength of the women’s sports summit that presented the beauty of the Elf. Instead, says, Top 1% “find out how to win.”
Like a gene z, which are huge fans manifestation Success, King agrees that there is power positive thinking. “If you think you fail, you won’t succeed. If you think you are the winner, you will win,” said American former world player no. 1 female tennis player.
But in her eyes it is more manifested than to say “I’m happy“Until the reality. It’s a logical reason why people who call themselves winners are good because they are anailz, what their forces are and that doubles them and doubling them.
“I want people to pay attention when you win: why did I win? And it really matters, because so you can continue to continue the construction site, building and buildings, and in life,” King explains.
“What kind of sentence did he write well? Are you kind to others? All these things build blocks to have a better life.”
Shifting of thinking that Billie Jean King made the champion – again and again
Before became a global icon, won 39 Grand Slam titles, campaigns equal payAnd then he founded a female tennis association, the king always had a congenital belief that he would be successful.
Even as a child from Long Beach, Californa, with a racket, a blue necklace, a little spare cash, and barely every coaching, the king would say it was destined to become a star that was today.
“Here’s how I used to think like a younger player: Every time I won a younger match, he was just a step that in the world was the number one in the world,” she said Happiness. “I’ve never thought about a younger tennis. All I did was to be one world as an adult.”
That long-games mentality meant that a small victory in the way they were not the end point – they were studying the material. As after the loss, she would be wondering: What I’m right? What can I replicate?

Fortune’s Orianna Rosa Royle sat down with BJK in the power of the women’s sports summit, which presented the beauty of ELF.
Habit has become a cornerstone of her success, but says it was really in practice during and during a Wimbledon Match Wimbledton Against the Austin’s Tracy in 1982. years. For the first time, the king won Austin, despite being twice her age and a year from retirement.
The king is fully aware that Austin knew all the kings of moves and was predicted he shot that he shot (transverse court). So, the king knew that the only way to win to get down the line, her weakest blow.
“I knew before I hit that ball, if I didn’t succeed, I’d probably lose the game. If I did, I would probably win,” she says. She went because of that – and she worked.
That moment has strengthened the basic belief that followed since: success comes from understanding exactly what it takes to win. “You need to know why you win,” she says. “I don’t study more when I lose. I learn more when I win to keep me learning how to win how to win, not how to lose.”
For the king, feedback is not just something you apply after failure. It’s a habit of asking hard questions after high.
“Everyone should really think about it with your lives,” she says. “What’s your strength? Play on it.”