As a lifelong follower of basketball and avid hoops fan,
I've come to appreciate the important life lessons the game has to
offer. When I was a teenager, I religiously followed the on court
exploits of players like Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson not realizing
that the benefits would be more than just entertainment.
The
life lessons of persevering through adversity, determination and hope were glaringly obvious when my eldest daughter, Vanessa became
involved with organized basketball. It provided me with a great opportunity to teach what I learned. She was about nine years
old when she started and played until her mid teens. As a “basketball dad”, I naturally
was excited that she gravitated to a game that I loved. Despite this, I made a point of making it clear that the decision to start or stop was always hers to make.
During the practices, I used to sit on the sidelines and observe with
the other parents as her coaches ran through various drills and plays.
Despite knowing the game well enough to coach, I didn’t interfere with
whatever instruction given by her coaches. I played a support role and
left the “real coaching” for the car rides to and from practices and games. I remember one instance when
Vanessa wasn’t feeling particularly well and experienced severe cramping just before
practice started. I gave her the option of skipping out and taking a break but she insisted on
going.
She got to about the half way mark when the pain of the cramping intensified and I noticed Vanessa really started to struggle and was moving significantly slower than her teammates.
Her inability to keep up slowed down the practice considerably and I
could sense the agitation level in her coach rising. He perceived it as
“lack of effort” or not trying on her part. My natural instinct as a parent was
jump in pull her out of the situation and take her home but I held back and decided it would be best to let the situation play itself out.
At one point, Vanessa gingerly jogged by me during one of the drills
with tears in her eyes. As I offered her water, I gave her the option of
calling it quits. She declined and pushed on.
Her coach became
infuriated and abruptly ended practice citing lack of effort by a "particular individual" as the reason. Vanessa was pretty upset during
the “car ride” home and the tears flowed profusely the moment the door
slammed shut. I have to admit that as I was consoling her, I was extremely curious about why she insisted on continuing forward with practice
despite the obvious pain so I asked. She responded by simply saying, “I didn’t want
to quit”.
Vanessa learned a very important lesson that day in
perseverance and as a parent I couldn’t be any more thrilled. You see,
the ability to fight the tough times is a skill that all children will
need as they progress through their personal journey into adulthood and the earlier
they’re equipped and understand its importance, the better.
One of the hard realities of
life is that there will be days when things won’t go our way and you're going
to want to quit. Take heart in the fact that persevering through adversity and demonstrating resiliency will be the
difference maker between you reaching your goals or not.
I recently had an opportunity to listen to the incredible story of Kevin Rempel who's a member of Sledge Team Canada. You see, it was Kevin's dream to be a pro dirt bike racer but after an accident in 2002 that saw him fall from a height of nearly 30 feet, he became a paraplegic.
Despite being told by the doctors that he too would never walk again,
Kevin wasn’t willing to take that answer. After months of intense
therapy, he got back out of the wheelchair and back on his bike. In
just one year, he kicked it over and went riding again.
His sledge hockey team has their eyes on a gold medal from the next Paralympics in Sochi, Russia in 2014!
Congratulations Kevin!
You can read more about Kevin's inspiring story by visiting his website.
Being resilient means bouncing back despite the number of times you've been pushed down and believe me, you will get pushed but at the end of the day you have the final call as to how far you'll end up because nothing is truly over unless you believe it is.
The world doesn’t stop when bad things
happen so why should you?
See you on the court!
Follow me on Twitter @TheAudman
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