"There is so much temptation to hold on to my career even more now. To try to micromanage and dictate every little aspect. But that's not how I want to do things anymore. I'm thinking about how can I trust God more. How can I surrender more? How can I bring him more glory? It's a fight. But it's one I'm going to keep fighting"
About this Quote
Lin is describing a peculiar kind of pressure that arrives after you "make it": once the dream becomes real, it also becomes fragile. The temptation he names isnt simple ambition; its the anxious impulse to clamp down on a career that can be taken away by an injury, a trade, a cold streak, or a single news cycle. In a sports world that rewards control - film study, training plans, personal brands, carefully managed narratives - "micromanage and dictate every little aspect" is the default survival strategy.
The turn in the quote is the refusal to keep living that way. Lin frames the alternative in explicitly religious terms: trust, surrender, glory. Thats not just piety; its a counter-program to the athlete-industrial mindset that tells you your worth is proportional to your output. "How can I bring him more glory?" quietly reorders the hierarchy: the career isnt the altar anymore, its the instrument.
"its a fight" is the most revealing line because it admits the contradiction. Surrender isnt passive; it requires daily resistance against ego, fear, and the marketplace's constant demand for self-authorship. Lin is also speaking into his own public narrative. As the face of "Linsanity", he became a symbol people felt entitled to manage - critics, fans, even well-meaning admirers. This is him reclaiming agency by giving it away: choosing a spiritual metric of success in an arena that measures everything, and rarely measures mercy.
The turn in the quote is the refusal to keep living that way. Lin frames the alternative in explicitly religious terms: trust, surrender, glory. Thats not just piety; its a counter-program to the athlete-industrial mindset that tells you your worth is proportional to your output. "How can I bring him more glory?" quietly reorders the hierarchy: the career isnt the altar anymore, its the instrument.
"its a fight" is the most revealing line because it admits the contradiction. Surrender isnt passive; it requires daily resistance against ego, fear, and the marketplace's constant demand for self-authorship. Lin is also speaking into his own public narrative. As the face of "Linsanity", he became a symbol people felt entitled to manage - critics, fans, even well-meaning admirers. This is him reclaiming agency by giving it away: choosing a spiritual metric of success in an arena that measures everything, and rarely measures mercy.
Quote Details
| Topic | God |
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