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Summary Of The Art Of Failure By Malcolm Gladwell

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The Art of Failure
In the essay, “The Art of Failure” by Malcolm Gladwell we are given the meanings of “choking” and panicking while being in a stressful situation. Gladwell began to illustrate his writing by giving us other people's story, with the stories of Jana Novotna, John F Kennedy Jr, to name a few. Gladwell starts off by telling the story of Jana Novotna a professional volleyball player who developed stress when she saw who her opponent was, as she was getting near her chance of winning the championship; she lost it when “choking” took over her.
As Jana developed choking while playing she “began thinking of her shots and lost her fluidity, her touch” as the author said in the essay in pg. 267 (first paragraph, second sentence). The author describes Chocking as a failure, as he says “to choke or to panic is the same to quit”. Malcolm Gladwell gives a description to what “choking” is in the world of sports. “Choking is when a person under stress begins to focus more on how they are doing or on other things that they then begin to lose track of what they are doing.
The author also briefly puts in the story of the New York Yankees' second baseman Chuck Knoblauch, who developed sports "shocking" while playing in front of thousands of fans, Knoblauch had trouble throwing the ball to first base, while stressing Knoblauch found himself reverting to explicit mode, throwing like a Little Leaguer again", as the author said in pg. 267 (last paragraph) Choking is also

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