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How Not To Break: Resilience Lessons from the Mat, Nature, and Life Paperback – April 2, 2026

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Management number 220497411 Release Date 2026/05/03 List Price US$7.18 Model Number 220497411
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Before business ventures, engineering achievements, health battles, or reinvention, Jerry C. Reeves was shaped on the wrestling mat. The mat was his first proving ground — a place where excuses dissolved, weakness was exposed, and resilience was not motivational language but daily practice.Wrestling is unlike any other sport. When you step onto the mat, there is no bench to retreat to, no teammate to substitute in. It is you, your conditioning, your discipline, and your will against another human being equally determined not to yield. Under bright gymnasium lights, in front of roaring crowds or silent practice rooms, Jerry learned the first principle of not breaking: pressure reveals structure.The book vividly recounts grueling practices — early mornings, relentless drilling, live matches that left muscles trembling and lungs burning. Conditioning was designed to exhaust the body beyond perceived limits. Coaches did not build comfort; they built capacity. In those moments when quitting felt logical and surrender seemed merciful, Jerry discovered that the breaking point is often a mental illusion. Stay one breath longer. Hold position one second more. Resist one more drive forward.One of the most powerful metaphors in the book is the wrestler’s “bridge.” When nearly pinned, a wrestler arches his back with every ounce of strength, keeping both shoulders from touching the mat. It is painful. It strains the neck and spine. But it prevents defeat. Jerry uses this image to describe life’s crushing seasons — financial stress, business disputes, health challenges, and personal setbacks. When life presses down, you bridge. You endure long enough to regain leverage.Weight cutting becomes another formative lesson. The discipline of managing every ounce taught him that greatness demands sacrifice. Hunger sharpened focus. Restraint built control. Wrestling revealed that controlled suffering — not chaos — builds mastery.Losses were equally transformative. Being pinned flat, staring at ceiling lights, stripped ego from identity. Wrestling offers no illusion; the scoreboard tells the truth. Instead of breaking under defeat, Jerry studied it. Every loss became data. Was it conditioning? Technique? Emotional reactivity? The mat taught him to analyze failure rather than fear it.Wrestling also cultivated controlled aggression. Explosive power without precision wastes energy. Rage leads to mistakes. True strength is disciplined intensity — channeling fire into focused execution. This principle later shaped his approach to business, negotiation, and adversity: respond with structure, not emotion.Beyond physical toughness, wrestling trained the nervous system to stay calm in chaos. In the final seconds of a tight match, panic destroys stamina. Breath stabilizes position. Awareness creates opportunity. The sport rewired his response to stress, transforming threat into strategy.Brotherhood formed in shared suffering. Though matches are individual, preparation is communal. Teammates push each other beyond comfort. Trust is earned through sweat, repetition, and accountability. The culture of wrestling built character anchored in responsibility and respect.Ultimately, How Not to Break argues that wrestling is not about domination — it is about durability. It teaches balance, leverage, and the art of regaining position after being thrown off course. Life, like a match, involves takedowns, reversals, and moments when defeat feels certain.But breaking is not inevitable.If you have trained — truly trained — you learn how to shift weight under pressure, control breath under stress, and rise after impact. The mat becomes a metaphor for every arena that follows.Wrestling did not merely build Jerry Reeves’ body. It built his foundation.And foundations, once forged in disciplined fire, do not break. Read more

ISBN10 1734080981
ISBN13 978-1734080988
Language English
Publisher Petra Publishing House
Dimensions 6 x 0.31 x 9 inches
Item Weight 9.3 ounces
Reading age 5 - 17 years
Print length 135 pages
Publication date April 2, 2026

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