Weekly Inspiration
Another great reflection from The Grip. Replace "triathlon" with your favorite endurance sport...
The Smallest Test of a Triathlete’s Character
Feb 5
Triathlon has a funny way of revealing who we are.
Not just on race day when the cannon goes off and our heart rate spikes, but in the thousands of quiet moments when no one is watching. The moments when the course marshals aren’t there, the medal isn’t waiting, and the result won’t show up on a leaderboard.
That’s where the real athlete lives.
And lately I’ve been thinking about a place that has nothing to do with swim-bike-run… and everything to do with who we become because of it:
The grocery store parking lot.
Specifically: the shopping cart.
There’s a popular idea called the “shopping cart theory.” The basic premise is simple: returning your cart is a tiny act of responsibility that comes with almost no reward and almost no punishment. Nobody gives you a trophy for it. Nobody times you. Nobody hands you a coupon. And most of the time, nobody even notices whether you do it or not.
That’s the point.
It’s one of those rare, everyday moments where your behavior is guided purely by one thing: self-governance.
Do you do the right thing because it’s right… or do you only do it when someone’s watching?
If you’ve done triathlon long enough, you already know why this matters.
Because endurance sport is nothing but a series of shopping cart moments.
Triathlon Is Built on Small Decisions
Most people think triathlon is about big moments:
• The start line adrenaline
• The attack on the bike
• The last-mile suffering on the run
• The finish chute where you try not to look like you’re dying
But the truth is, triathlon is built on small decisions.
The decisions that happen when it would be easy to skip it.
• Do you put your gear away after the workout, or leave it in a heap?
• Do you rinse the wetsuit, or toss it in the trunk?
• Do you clean your bottles, or let them ferment into a science experiment?
• Do you return the cart… or just shove it onto a curb and drive off?
Those decisions don’t feel like much.
Until they become your identity.
A triathlete doesn’t become strong because of one heroic day. We become strong because we practice integrity in the little moments so often that it becomes automatic.
That’s what consistency is.
And consistency is the engine of performance.
The Shopping Cart Is a Micro-Transition
If you’ve raced Ironman, you know transitions are where people give away free time. Not because they’re weak, but because they’re sloppy. Because they rush. Because they don’t think the details matter.
They do.
Shopping carts are like a micro-transition between “my world” and “shared world.”
You’re done shopping. Your job is complete. You’ve got what you came for. You’re ready to leave.
And then there’s that last step: take the cart back.
That step doesn’t benefit you directly.
It benefits the next person who needs that space. It benefits the person pushing a stroller. It benefits the older shopper who doesn’t want to dodge a cart rolling around in the wind. It benefits the employee who has to collect them in the rain, the heat, the dark, and the chaos of traffic.
Returning the cart is basically saying:
“I’m finished, but I’m still part of this.”
That’s a powerful mindset. It’s the mindset of someone who understands community.
And triathlon whether we admit it or not is a community sport.
We’re Not Just Athletes. We’re Models of Behavior.
Triathletes like to think we’re “just regular people.” And in many ways we are.
But we also walk around wearing bright kits that say TRIATHLON across our backs like neon billboards. We post our workouts. We talk about discipline. We talk about mindset. We tell people endurance sport changed our lives.
So here’s the question:
If we’re willing to represent the sport, are we willing to represent the values?
Because the shopping cart is one of the cleanest, simplest tests of values you’ll ever find.
It asks:
• Will you take ten extra seconds for the good of others?
• Will you do something inconvenient for you because it makes the environment safer and more orderly?
• Will you hold yourself to a standard without external enforcement?
That’s not a grocery store question.
That’s a training question.
That’s a life question.
The Cart Return and the Ironman Mind
When I was racing Kona, I learned that the hardest part of the day isn’t always the hardest physical moment. It’s the moment when your mind says:
“Close enough.”
Close enough pace.
Close enough nutrition.
Close enough effort.
Close enough integrity.
That “close enough” voice is the same voice that says:
“Someone else will return the cart.”
Triathlon is partly about learning to not negotiate with that voice.
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Sherwick Min
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