By

Lloyd de Vries /

CBS/ February 11, 2009, 4:59 PM

Being No. 1 Is Over-Rated

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I was saddened to learn last week that the National Cheerleading Championship team, Wichita State University, was disqualified, thereby losing its title as "National Champion." It was discovered that they cheated by using a cheerleader who was not enrolled in the University. It upset me not because I follow cheerleading competitions — I didn't even know there was a national champion. No, it bothered me because it was one more example of the lengths people will go to so they may be declared "No. 1" or "the best."

I'm tired of hearing about politicians, business leaders, writers, and students who cheat in their pursuit of winning or being declared "the best" at something. And now cheerleaders are cheating? What's next? Are infants going to fake burping just to get all the praise?

I'm not against ambition. I think it's a good thing for all of us to try to be the best person we can be. But that's different from having a need to be better than everyone else.

Some people don't care what they're the best at as long as they're the best at something. This explains many of the entries in the "Guinness Record" book like the "Most Live Rattlesnakes Held In The Mouth," "The World's Longest Fingernails," and "The Fastest Sandwich Made By Feet."

Some people also have to surround themselves with "the best" things. You'll hear them say their kids go to "the best school," they live in "the best house" in "the best neighborhood." We hear people claim they have "the best doctor." I don't remember there being a "Medical Olympics" in which doctors compete by performing surgeries, delivering babies, and convincingly telling worried patients, "I had the same thing, it's nothing, and it'll go away." So, how do they know that theirs is the best doctor?

Telling themselves that they have the best doctor, the best lawyer, the best car, the best lawn, the best kids, the best spouse, and the best sunscreen obviously makes some people feel better and more secure. But it's sad that this need exists.

Many of us are taught at a very young age that "good isn't good enough." The implication is that everyone should try to be No. 1. Of course, it's impossible for everybody to be No. 1, but sometimes parents, teachers, and coaches don't tell kids this.

So, what happens when kids or adults realize that they just might not be the best at something? Too often, they feel like failures, or they cheat — or both.

People seem to have forgotten that it's more important to do your best than to be the best.

Should we have less admiration for the kid who works really hard and gets all B's and C's than for the kid who doesn't have to work at all and gets all A's? I don't think so.

It's the process that should be celebrated and enjoyed at least as much as the result.

Phrases like "winning is everything" and "keep your eye on the prize" miss the point about the joys of pursuit and competition. I'll bet when those cheerleaders first started jumping and tumbling and holding each other in the air with one hand it was pure fun and they weren't focused on being No. 1.

Often champion athletes will talk about their winning season. Their struggles, their wins, their losses, their grueling practices, and the camaraderie that developed among the teammates are as important to them as that trophy they got at the end of the season. Those lessons they learned all season long will last a lifetime. That trophy will be tarnished by next year.

I love to write. If I happen to write something good and other people like it, or maybe even get some acclaim for it, well, that's the cherry on top of the sundae. But the sundae tastes awfully good even without the cherry.



Lloyd Garver has written for many television shows, ranging from "Sesame Street" to "Family Ties" to "Frasier." He has also read many books, some of them No. 1 on the best-seller lists.

By Lloyd Garver
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
6 Comments Add a Comment
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interobserv says:
We live in a society that values winners and does not tolerate anything else. We say to our children "do your best and you will make me proud." But what we telegraph our disappointment to them when they fall short. Our parents did it to us and our kids will do it to theirs.

We are NOT a team driven society. We value individual achievement. I worked for a large Swiss pharmacetical company that talked the talk about teamwork, but walked a VERY different walk regarding individual perfromance. They actually played employees off against each other in order to foster "competition" among them. You don't need a libretto to figure what happened.

Any way, my point is that as long as we are obsessed with winning, being number one, etc., cheating will be rampant and I don't ever see us not being obsessed with winning.
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harp1963 says:
I was a B/C student in college and so was my roommate, but he made straight A's. The difference was he cheated regularly to make straight A's. This guy could legibly write the Declaration of Independence on his thumb if neccessary. I'm not going to say I never cheated, because I did, but it was rare and it was usually out of desperation to make a passing grade. My former roommate is a corporate vice president of a fortune 500 company and I'm a packer on a packaging line for a fortune 500 company. The difference: preception is reality and cheating works in this world.
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meb955 says:
the standard saying among youth in japan seems to be "i'll do my best." not win, not stomp down everyone else to be considered successful, just do their personal best. now, granted, japan has a cut-throat education system that drives some to suicide, and there is a cultural norm of blending in that americans don't seem to have, but it does seem to be ahealthier standard as a standard.

i doubt if it will ever take root here. far too many seem to need the goal of being no. 1 in order to conclude their is no point and proceed to sluff through life -- another american standard.

a great column.
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sparkplug54 says:
Great piece, Lloyd.

Keeping up with the Joneses, or trying to top them is a dangerous treadmill to get on. Often, those Joneses are trying to keep up with their own Joneses, and would like to get off the ride.

I learned a lesson about being Number One a long time ago. I attended a radio advertising seminar in the 70's. One of the speakers was from a programming service, and he made the statement: "Not everyone can be Number One. But you can still make a lot of money being Number Two, or even Number Three." That has stuck with me for an obviously long time. Your business needn't be the biggest, or even the best in its field. It must, however, be the best in its niche. Find a need and fill it, fill it better than anyone else is doing, and you will succeed. I encourage others to find a copy of Tom Peters' "Excellence" books. They help you to see the better goals.

Granted, some niches may disappear, such as "buggy whip manufacturer," but there's plenty of others.
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tejasdemo says:
you da number 1 man !
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wogerwabbit says:
Amen, Lloyd. You're number one!
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