I was 17 when my driver's ed teacher passed away. It's been almost twenty years, but I remember attending his wake like it was yesterday. I was blown away by the turnout. Thousands of people showed up that day, and the line was out the door. I had never seen anything like it.
As I sat in line waiting to pay my respects, I listened to the stories being shared by people around me. From childhood friends to fellow teachers to students like me, everyone had unique stories about how he impacted their lives. He was only in his late 50's when he passed, but it was clear he made the most of his time here. He was an incredible person, and his impact has never left me to this day.
Growing up, my dad had always instilled in me to consider how my actions affected those around me. But the wake was the first time I felt a clear-cut purpose: When I died, I wanted to know I did everything I could to leave a similar impact.
When my college coach passed away at age 29, it was a wake-up call that tomorrow's promised to no one. I've been very aware of my mortality ever since - I think it's where a lot of my social anxiety comes from. Not death, but the idea of making the most of my time here.
Last night before falling asleep I read about Demaryius Thomas passing away. He was only 33 years old - younger than me. He had overcome so much to not only have a hall of fame career on the field, but also to create a hall of fame impact off of it. He had so much good to do still. It triggers that feeling I had when Coach Dave passed away.
It upsets me. It wasn't fucking fair when Coach Dave left us, and this doesn't seem fair either.
But it's reality, and it's what has me writing this at 4:30 in the morning. Death comes for all of us. That may sound dark but I never forget that. I don't want to forget it. What if I die tomorrow? Will I have done everything I could to leave this world better than I found it? I don't fear it, but I do feel motivated by it.
It's why I decided to walk away from chasing the AVP dream to focus on coaching, and it's the real reason behind why my friends will tell you I'm incredibly hard to lock in for social gatherings. I feel a lot of guilt for not being more outgoing for that matter, but I just feel like that's not why I'm here. I'd like to think I'm always a message away if my friends REALLY need anything, but I feel I can do more as a coach for the greater good. These kids need me more than my friends need me at their parties/outings.
Just last night, I had a player return to the sand for the first time in months. She's a freshman in high school. I remember her first practice with us - she was incredibly shy but I could see her gifts. She was hesitant to swing at the ball for fear of messing up. I told her mistakes are part of life and I wanted to see GLORIOUS ones in practice - and I'd help her figure out how to correct it when she made them. One of my new favorite quotes is "mistakes don't define you - they refine you".
BOOM - she launched her first swing way out of bounds. But there was a confidence behind that miss that was unlocked, and I heard a few parents on the sidelines shout with excitement. They understood why this lost point was actually a win: People had been apparently been trying to get her to be more aggressive for quite some time and that was the first time they had seen her take a swing like that. Over time, the hits became more accurate, and her true personality is coming out.
Fast forward to last night, and as we come off the court I tell her how great it was to have her back at practice. "It's great to be back - it's such a confidence booster."
Music to my ears. I don't know if she'll continue to play volleyball long-term. I know that confidence will help her be successful with whatever she chooses to do.
That's why I coach.
I've had the privilege of working with some of the best athletes in my area year in and year out. I'm so proud of these players and it's an absolute pleasure to help them be prepared to succeed at the next level - and many have indeed been successful. But I'm equally grateful to work with kids like the one above. There are a lot of them that need that reminder of what they are vs. what they aren't. It's why I work as much as I do. Because for whatever reason, my life has gifted me with the opportunity to positively influence young athletes.
So many of these kids don't yet realize how incredible they are or have the confidence that they can accomplish great things. Many of them are feeling quite the opposite due to coaches that have made them feel inferior to their peers as people because of their lack of natural talents as players.
The real victories are helping those kids realize they are not defined by those coaches. They're not supposed to be finished products. Our jobs as coaches are supposed to be to help them figure it out. Contrary to the current youth sports culture, it shouldn't be about victories and scholarships: It should be about teaching kids to be the best they can be and having fun while doing it.
It's a privilege to be chosen to oversee a child's youth sports experience. I think a lot of coaches aren't always treating it that way - and I think parents need to be more in-tune with the quality of mentoring their kids are getting. A good coach can change lives for the better: A bad one can really damage a kid.
94% of high school athletes won't play in college. So what are we doing for the roughly 16 out of 17 that will end their athletic journey with us? Have we used our platform to build these kids up or tear them down?
For my competitive readers that may consider that a soft take, I also find many of my players happen to play a lot better when they're given that confidence. When they can give their physical/mental best effort without fear of getting yelled at or punished, it's truly the best chance they have to win.
I feel like Mr. Rogers did when he began his children's show on TV. I feel there are a lot of parallels with what I'm trying to do in youth sports and what he did with television. Here's an incredible tool to help kids find their self-esteem (TV for him, youth sports for me), and yet we're watching it be used in damaging manners (violence on TV for him, abusive coaching for me). When I watched the documentary on Mr. Rogers, I connected so much with his frustration of how a positive tool was being used in such a negative way, all because of money. It's challenging to work in an industry where profits are tied to the quantity of athletes enrolled vs. the quality of education provided, but that's where we're at.
Maybe you'll think I'm crazy, but I know my purpose is to change that, or at worst offer an alternative for those that feel the same way I do about it.
I sometimes wonder if I should focus more on my income than the outcome, or maybe spend less time working and more time socially. But deaths like DT's like this remind me of why I've chosen this journey. I don't know what happens to me after death: I know that those still here will reflect on what my life meant to them.
I hope when that time comes, it was that I saw the best in them. I hope I helped people see the best in themselves. I hope I helped people through tough times when they needed it - and for the MANY people that have helped me, I hoped they knew I've tried to pay it forward if I didn't pay it back. To those I clashed with, I hope they know it was never personal. I'm sure if we truly understood each other it would have been different. In the end I'd like to think we're trying our best with the hand life's dealt us. I think everyone has good in them, even if their environment has skewed their perspective to be something that seems otherwise from the outside.
If there's an afterlife, I look forward to being reunited with people like Coach Dave. I'll look forward to seeing people again down the road when they cross over too. And if there isn't? Then I have peace of mind knowing I spent my time trying to leave whatever impact one youth sports coach can have on his community.
In the meantime, there's work to be done.
I love you all. Be good to each other, be good to yourselves.
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