“I have heard there are troubles of more than one kind. Some come from ahead and some come from behind. But I've bought a big bat. I'm all ready, you see. Now my troubles are going to have troubles with me!”
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About this quote
The line flips waiting for problems into choosing how you meet them. It asks you to pick one concrete thing you can do — prepare, practice, or grab a tool — and then stand ready. That choice changes the tone from worry to action and shifts control back to you. So pick a practical next step now and test it; small, ready moves deflate future headaches.
When to use it
- At the product-launch huddle before a risky demo: "We've staged backups and a rollback plan — let the demo break if it must; we've got it covered."
- The night before finals, saying to your study partner: "I finished the practice sets and memorized the formulas — bring on the test."
- Before the championship match with the underdog team: "We tightened our defense and practiced those plays — let them try to score against us now."
- On a phone call with a debt counselor: "I set up a repayment plan and pared down expenses — I'm ready to deal with what's next."

