Tom Brady Keeps Saying This 1 Word And Credits It With His Amazing Success Drives People ‘Crazy’

Tom Brady helped the New England Patriots win six Super Bowls. It’s all about football, success and love. Yes, Brady uses the word “love” all the time, and doubters don’t like it at all. Well, love helps Brady win bond with his teammates and win Super Bowls.

There’s another word that doubters don’t like. Moreover, they hate it. “Pliability.”

Brady and his trainer and business partner Alex Guerrero use this word to describe the goals of the TB12 Method. The New York Times summarized Brady’s 2017 book perfectly.

“Pliable muscles, which are not the same as flexible muscles, are ‘soft’ and not ‘dense,’ [Guerrero] and Mr. Brady assert.

“Dense, stiff muscles are easily injured, according to the book, because they are not resilient and can tear during physical activity. On the other hand, soft, pliable muscles absorb the stresses and impacts that occur during daily life and sports, Mr. Brady writes, as when, for instance, a 300-pound lineman slams into your side.

“At that moment, he writes, ‘My brain is thinking only lengthen and soften and disperse.’”

The quarterback and his trainer have built an entire empire around the pliability theory. It’s a post-NFL business, and it’s already bringing Brady success.

Family and football. These are the two things Brady is focused on.

“[T]rying to talk to Brady about things other than football … is usually a waste of everyone’s time, especially his,” Court writes. “He would be the first to tell you that there is no more or less to his reality right now than the sport of football and his family.

“Whenever Brady talks about his family, which he does easily and without prompting, he comes to life, waving those long arms and breaking into laughter as he describes how each of his kids delights him.”

Gisele is really supportive, and Brady is grateful for everything she has done for him.

“Maybe Brady is the kite and Bündchen is the tether that allows him to soar. It wouldn’t be the first time a man owed so much to his wife,” Court writes.

The Brazilian supermodel helped Brady grow in so many ways.

“She left home at 14; she lived in Japan at 16 in an era with no cell phones. She lived in New York City at 17 without speaking English. In her mind, there are no boundaries. ‘Why can’t you do that? Why do you have to go to school?,” Court quotes him as saying. ” Why can’t you just leave and live in a different country?’ In her reality, you can. … And you know what, she’s right. I’m the one that had to go, ‘You’re right!’ And that’s helped me grow.”

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