How to Create Your Goal Pyramid with Paralympian Trevon Jenifer by Guest Post TrueSport December 1, 2025 | 3 minutes, 39 seconds read TrueSport Check out more TrueSport video content on the TrueSport SportsEngine Play Channel Since he was only a few years old, Trevon Jenifer has focused on athletic goals and how to achieve them. Since he was only a few years old, Trevon Jenifer has focused on athletic goals and how to achieve them. With that focus and some strategic goal setting, Jenifer has gone on to become a four-time Paralympian in the sport of wheelchair basketball. While his goals in life and sport have changed over the decades, he’s been able to meet each challenge while utilizing his pyramid approach to goal setting. It takes more than determinationDetermination and grit got Jenifer through his elementary school and high school sporting career, he admits. He would see something he wanted to do—like wrestling—and go after it. But when he got to college, he was struck by how high the bar was for the wheelchair basketball team, and how far he suddenly was from the top. “When I got there, I realized that I needed to implement some sort of structure in order to see the progress I needed to achieve,” he says. “My freshman year, I realized that talent was only part of the equation. I would need a plan to accomplish my big goals.” Goals in sport are goals in lifeYou can’t set a goal in sport without it impacting how you spend the rest of your day. It’s no surprise that Jenifer first had this realization in college. Not only was the competition level higher, but college was the first time he had the independence to make decisions regarding his sleep, nutrition, class schedule, training schedule, and every other facet of his life. “In college, I realized that no one was going to tell you what to do, it’s up to you,” he says. “And those decisions impacted his sport: You need to eat well, sleep enough, work with the trainers and other experts who are available to you, and also do everything you need to do for the team and for school. It’s all part of the equation.” Break down the goalWhen Jenifer is setting a goal, he looks at the destination—and then backtracks to create the route. Whether your goal is six months or 10 years away, you need to plan out the steps. “No matter what your goal is, it’s important to look ahead, and then look at what you need to do along the way to hit that goal,” he says. “If your goal is to become a lawyer, then it starts with getting good grades in high school, going to undergrad and doing a program that makes sense for getting into law school, taking the LSATs, getting into law school, doing an internship at a firm you respect—all of that happens on the way to achieving the main goal. But you have to think about all the steps, not just the outcome.” Create a goal pyramidMale athlete with leg prosthetic sitting on bench writing on paper.Heading into the 2008 Paralympic cycle, Jenifer knew he wanted to make the team but also knew he had a long way to go before he would be ready. And as a visual learner, he knew having his approach organized in an easy-to-view way would help. “I created this pyramid for my goal of making the team and winning the gold medal, and I posted it on my dorm room wall,” he recalls. His goal pyramid allowed him to put his big outcome goal at the top, and work his way down to the bottom, where the process goals that would help him achieve that outcome would provide the foundation. “At the top was making the team. Under that, there were slightly smaller goals that I would need to accomplish to get there, like becoming an academic All American and winning National Championships. Under that, I put things that I needed to do during each month. At the bottom—the biggest part of the pyramid—was where the important stuff was. Things like working out a certain number of days per week or hitting a certain number of free throws. I know that the top of the pyramid was where I wanted to get to, but to get there, I would need to check off the little boxes at the bottom.” TrueSport supports athletes, parents, and coaches. Discover how > About TrueSport TrueSport®, a movement powered by the experience and values of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, champions the positive values and life lessons learned through youth sport. TrueSport inspires athletes, coaches, parents, and administrators to change the culture of youth sport through active engagement and thoughtful curriculum based on cornerstone lessons of sportsmanship, character-building, and clean and healthy performance, while also creating leaders across communities through sport. For more expert-driven articles and materials, visit TrueSport’s comprehensive library of resources.This content was reproduced in partnership with TrueSport. 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