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TIMES THEY ARE A-CHANGIN' |
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| Features | Friday, 16 October 2009 09:04 |
Some say change is good, some say change is bad. I guess it all depends on how things have gone for you in the past. I’ve never really liked change, but recently I’ve been thinking about change a lot. In the last month I’ve moved to a whole
Take a look back at this time last year. James Stewart was engulfed in change with new everything from head to toe. Things were a little sketchy in the beginning for James, but he persevered and became the 2009 Supercross Champion. And what about Ryan Villopoto and Josh Grant? Moving up to the 450 class, new teams, new people to work with, even living and training in new parts of the country for Josh, he moved from his familiar Southern
roduce the results we expected when they moved to what was thought would be a great team for them.
So far this year we haven’t heard too much about change. There are a lot of dollars being held firmly until a few critical pieces fall into place. It sounds as if Ryan Dungey will be back at Makita Suzuki, hauling the mail on their highly successful 450f. Chad Reed seems to have found a new home with Monster Energy and 
So how do you ensure a change will be for the better? Well, if we can learn anything from Stewart’s 2009 season it’s to never give up. From Villopoto we can learn to take the good with the bad and stay positive. And from Grant we can learn that new things don’t have to be intimidating and that home is where you make it. The common fact between any successful change is hard work. Maybe change is what you make it. If you sit back and fear it, and never really commit, 9 times out of 10 you are not going to be happy. But take that new situation and own it, make it yours and create the ending you want out of hard work and perseverance, and you will be begin to embrace change as a new beginning to be welcomed. As I write this it’s beginning to sink in that kids are kids, no matter what school I teach at. They have the same energy, creativity and also the same problems and fears. And sure this city is a little bigger than back home, but there is so much more to discover. So is change good or bad? I’ve decided it’s whatever we make it. I’m psyched that every morning when I leave my new home I get to drive down





