Molly Fletcher
đ„ Speaker and former sports agent
đ #1 USA Today Bestselling Author of Dynamic Drive
đ Game Changers with Molly Fletcher
For legal reasons, this is called keynote speaking. đ
I'm in New York City today, and the Knicks championship parade has the city buzzing.
And it got me thinking about something I saw over and over during my years as a sports agent.
The biggest wins don't answer every question.
Eventually, the confetti settles.
The parade ends.
The trophy goes on a shelf.
And you're left with something deeper:
Who did you become on the way there?
The habits.
The discipline.
The resilience.
The relationships.
Those are the things that last long after the celebration is over.
The trophy isn't what stays with you.
The person you became while earning it does.
What's a goal that shaped who you are today?
06/17/2026
If youâre new here, welcome.
Most people know me as a former sports agent. What they donât always know is that the lessons that shaped me had very little to do with contracts and everything to do with people.
Over the years, Iâve learned that success is important. But success alone isnât enough.
The highest performers Iâve worked with werenât just trying to achieve more. They were navigating pressure, managing relationships, making difficult decisions, and trying to stay connected to what mattered most. Thatâs the human side of high performance, and itâs where some of the most important lessons live.
Those are the conversations weâre having here.
So whether youâre leading a team, building a business, navigating a career transition, or simply figuring out whatâs next, Iâm glad youâre here.
06/16/2026
Everyone saw the breakthrough. Nobody saw the years before it.
Yesterday, millions of people (myself included) discovered Cape Verde goalkeeper Vozinha after his performance against Spain.
What most people didnât see was the two-decade journey that came before it.
At 40 years old, he became the second-oldest player ever to make his World Cup debut.
He didnât become a professional footballer until his mid-20s.
At one point, he almost left the national team. But he kept going because he couldnât let go of the dream.
Then came 90 minutes.
27 shots.
7 saves.
And the kind of âovernight successâ we all recognize.
He went from 50,000 followers to more than 7 million followers.
The world suddenly knew his name. But nothing about that moment was overnight.
This is for anyone in a season where progress feels invisible.
Where you wonder if your opportunity will ever come.
When the voice in your head starts to wonder if youâre too late.
Keep going.
Stay ready.
Your moment may arrive later than expected.
06/14/2026
Discomfort isn't a warning sign. It's a direction sign.
The athletes I worked with didn't wait for it to feel comfortable. They learned to move toward the discomfort instead of away from it.
That's where growth actually lives.
What's something that felt uncomfortable at first, but turned out to be exactly right? âŹïž
He knew exactly who he was. No convincing needed. đ
Credits: .and.arlo_
You keep thinking the problem is time.
If you could just find a little more of it, things would finally feel manageable. So you optimize. You squeeze. You get faster at everything. And somehow the fuller the calendar gets, the emptier certain parts of life start to feel.
This week's guest, Dr. Cassie Holmes, a UCLA professor who studies the science of time and happiness, has spent years on exactly this. Her research says something most of us never stop to consider. The people who feel starved for time and the people who feel rich in it often have the same number of hours. The difference is what happens inside them.
That's the part worth sitting with. You can get everything done and still feel like you missed it. More hours were never going to fix that, because the problem was never the amount. It was the relationship.
If you've ever felt time poor in the middle of a full life, this is the conversation for you. It's the latest episode, Link: https://lnk.to/CassieHolmes
Some setbacks you forget by next week. Others you can still feel years later.
The Spurs just lost a game they led by 29. The largest comeback in Finals history, finished off by a tip-in with 1.2 seconds on the clock.
That's not the kind of loss you shake off by morning.
But here's what I keep coming back to. A result like that either defines a team or develops it.
Does a collapse like this break the Spurs, or is this the exact thing that forges them?
06/10/2026
I kept telling myself life would start once this season calmed down.
But it never calmed down because there was always another season right behind it.
What I know now is that the busy, ordinary, unremarkable, messy middle wasnât the wait before my life began. It was my life. I just kept mistaking it for the part I had to get through.
Save this if you needed this reminder.
06/10/2026
I kept telling myself life would start once this season calmed down.
But it never calmed down because there was always another season right behind it.
What I know now is that the busy, ordinary, unremarkable, messy middle wasn't the wait before my life began. It was my life. I just kept mistaking it for the part I had to get through.
Save this if you needed this reminder.
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