"All genetic influence is in concert with external environments," explains Shenk. "Every highly-developed skill is actually the result of an athlete's entire life – an accumulation of millions of tiny lessons learned from the moment of conception." Which means the place you call home can determine your child's genius potential, before they're even born.
Get the edge
Where you live, what you eat and how you’re taught can have a profound effect on children's development. Australian research suggest that sports stars most often come from regional towns, where they eat more healthily, have more space to play and are exposed to a wider range of sports than city kids.
Nutrition is also vital for maximising brain development. If your kids only eat junk food, they won't get the full range of amino acids needed to develop healthy brains, says professor Sophie von Stumm.
Oh, and it helps if you make a lot of money, too. “Those with an economic advantage that exposes them to more opportunities, and allows them to fully devote themselves to their preferred pastime, are in a better position to become genius material,” explains Hopsicker.
5: Make sacrifices
Working that hard means missing out on a lot. To become a genius they’ll have to sacrifice free time, relationships, family – all of those things that distract the elites, but that the rest of us call ‘life’.
Get the edge
“To stay focused on a specific activity, perfect it, be the best at it, never stray from it or be from distracted from it – that’s the sort of dedication the sporting genius needs,” says Hopsicker.
Behind every one of Messi’s effortlessly slinking runs lies hours spent on cold, wet training grounds, practicing the things he hates at the expense of everything. And is that really worth £30m a year, global adoration and waking up to Antonella Roccuzzo every morning?
It is, isn’t it?
If 10,000 hours seems daunting, motivate yourself with MH’s guides to getting up and getting going:
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