This private reflection is a part of a sequence known as The Massive Concepts, wherein writers reply to a single query: What drives us? You may learn extra by visiting The Massive Concepts sequence web page.
I’m not a pace addict, however I relish excessive speeds. Whereas I’m now retired, I spent 16 seasons as a Method 1 driver. Racing at over 200 miles per hour turned second nature to me.
It sounds loopy, however being behind the wheel of a automobile that would kill me turned my protected place. All of the noise in my life grew quiet the second I jumped into my racecar. This harmful atmosphere was the place I felt most alive and calm. Regardless of being beneath ultrahigh stress, it was the place the place all the pieces slowed down. It was as if I might disappear and neglect about time.
My love of driving started after I acquired a small go-kart as a childhood Christmas current. I grew up in Heppenheim, Germany. Because the yard of our home was too tight to make turns round, my father poured out a big bucket of water and taught me the right way to drift as a method to keep away from crashing right into a wall. I turned infatuated with the frenzy and management of driving. I discovered one thing that gave me confidence and self-efficacy. Finally, I began racing others, and I craved the feeling of pace.
However F1 racing isn’t solely about pure pace. It’s about how late you dare to brake and how briskly you possibly can handle to get across the subsequent nook. It’s about trial and error, and testing totally different approaches to go quicker. Racing was the place my thoughts might play and develop.
Whereas I normally choose chilly, quiet and spacious environments, the extraordinarily sizzling, noisy narrowness behind the wheel of a racecar is the place I’m most snug. I discovered it was the one place the place I fortunately embraced the dichotomy of life.
Generally, this was a psychological distinction within the intense moments main as much as championship-deciding races, when all my exhausting work boiled down to a couple laps. I bear in mind pondering that I couldn’t look forward to the race to start out, and I additionally didn’t need the race to start out.
There have been moments once I misplaced management of the automobile as a result of one thing broke or I merely pushed too exhausting. I’ve had my fair proportion of crashes. Regardless that a crash happens in a short time, when it occurs, time appears to decelerate. You start to comprehend the shattering actuality and penalties of chasing excessive speeds. The brutal pressure of a crash reminds you of what you’re enjoying with. However I saved racing.
In additional than 20 years of racing, there was a single time once I significantly questioned leaping into the automobile once more. It was in the course of the Belgian Grand Prix in August 2019, after a younger French driver, Anthoine Hubert, misplaced his life in a racing accident at age 22.
I’ve had accidents myself, however they had been fortuitously solely minor ones. I’ve seen others crash, too. However that younger man had his complete life forward of him, and it simply stopped with all of us watching.
I known as my spouse, Hanna, and instructed her I didn’t wish to race the subsequent day after the accident. I slept poorly that night time; but I made a decision to race. After that weekend, I felt in another way about my sport, which I solely grasped after I retired. I used to be by no means afraid of the speeds, however now I might see them, not simply really feel them. I started to expertise a duty that I had not had earlier than. I began to know that pace, progress and innovation solely matter in the event that they transfer us in the appropriate course.
In the present day, I reside a slower life and run somewhat farm. I nonetheless love excessive speeds, however I’ve merely stopped racing time. I realized that the best pleasure is to find one thing in your life that places you within the right here and now. Passing this lesson on to my youngsters is my actual job at the moment. Spending time with them and watching them develop up makes me extraordinarily conscious that the time we’re given is restricted. As an F1 driver and a father, I didn’t — and can’t — beat time. Time is just too quick to carry on to; it can at all times be quicker than me, whether or not I’m racing it or not.
I acknowledge that I might need been utilizing racing to keep away from coping with robust conditions. Racing was my escape. All of us have instances once we wish to disappear and keep away from troublesome issues. However ultimately, that is unimaginable. We should face the exhausting instances head-on and take the time to decelerate to take action.
When folks ask me about my greatest race, I say that it’s nonetheless to come back. I’ve a lot to sit up for. Nowadays I benefit from the means of exploration slightly than the consequence. I realized that my life isn’t about discovering the subsequent huge factor, however about trusting my curiosity.
I noticed that there’s multiple ardour or race I can pursue. Within the journey of self-discovery, regardless of how briskly you go, there are not any shortcuts.
There may be nonetheless a race to win.
Sebastian Vettel retired from Method 1 in 2022 after a 16-season profession throughout which he received 4 world titles.









