I Found the Antidote
There was a time when I had a skewed idea of what a coach is. My
earliest memories of people who called themselves coaches are that of
older men yelling at me in gym class. I suspect you may have had a
similar experience, so let me make it clear, they were not coaches. In
my case, they were just “grumpy old men” dealing with kids who had bad
attitudes. They were terrible roll models as well. In one instance my
junior high coaches mercilessly made fun of the class of mentally
challenged kids calling them “F Troop.” Perhaps you remember “F Troop.”
It was a popular television show, of that day, about a western outpost
manned by a quirky collection of misfit Army soldiers. Simply put, this
was not a good introduction to coaching.
Good coaches are altogether different. It was former Colorado football
coach Bill McCartney who said, “Coaching is taking a player where he
can't take himself.” Alabama’s legendary coach Paul “Bear” Bryant knew
that the solutions resided in his players when he said, “No coach has
ever won a game by what he knows; it’s what his players know that
counts.”
One of the best things that ever happened to me was finding a coach and
mentor who I could bounce ideas off of and one who was committed to
drawing the best of me out of me. He is called a Life Purpose Coach.
He does not impose his will on me but instead, like coaches McCartney
and Bryant, help me to know myself better. Like daredevil Baumgartner,
standing at the edge of space, my coach motivates and encourages me to
consider all the options and opportunities that are before me.
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