Wednesday, December 4, 2013

We Don’t Recruit Pricks

That title isn’t my typical language but it was used to describe the type of soccer player colleges aren’t looking for to join their programs. Yes character matters and as closely as we might be examining a college’s campus, academics, soccer programs, and personality of coaches, players and college staff, they too might have a kid under the microscope.

Recently a coach from a major university told my husband Chad, “We don’t recruit pricks.”  Well, alrighty then!  It was more of a man to man conversation than a formal recruitment spill, but for this momma, it was a powerful statement.  Luckily coach, we have a nice boy for ya!
So, although we have just finished leg one of the college-road-trip-recruitment-selection process, my insight tells me that there are a few things to consider when preparing kiddos for college 101.

Manner um up!
Manners are non-negotiable in our household.  When I fix your breakfast, find your lost sock, or fold 8 loads of your laundry, you better say Thank You, with all sincerity. If you want to be hauled over to the mall, top-golf or to your friend’s house, you best start your request with a Please-Mommy-dear-honey-sweety.  Even if we are sitting on the couch, and I pass you the tissues, I expect a thank you.  Don’t “yeah” me and don’t “nope” me if you don’t want the icy momma stare-down.  I expect a yes ma’am, or a no ma’am and those rules apply, forever and where ever.  One of the greatest compliments is to have another adult tell you how well mannered your child is with them; those mannerly skills are etched into their soul when parents expect it and it serves them well in preparation for many of life’s interactions.  People remember a kid with good manners!

There is a whole lot of shaking going on!
A hand shake, eye contact, and a pleasant salutation! First impressions can be impactful!  One tradition I love about the FCD Academy teams is their traditional hand-shake greeting.  Players and coaches greet each other for practice, games, and any interaction, with a hand shake.  It is sometimes a hand-shaking frenzy around here!!  The players even make special effort to shake hands with everyone’s family members.   I can barely make it onto the pitch without being met with 5 hands to shake,  a kiss on my cheek, and sweet “momma Jackie” hug by a kid or two.  Kids need to learn how to give a good firm hand shake; nothing like shaking a noodle-hand that feels like you are going to break it; give me a firm strong grip! The art of hand shaking has translated over to nearly all greetings for Coy, Bailey and yes, it has rubbed off on Shelby as well; love a 12 year old girl who shakes her coach’s hand after practice; a sweet blond who introduces herself with a hand shake, good eye contact and a warm smile.  Love that! People remember a kid with a good hand shake!
                
Practice Makes Perfect

It is important that kids practice their words, and even actions, especially when they have the opportunity to represent themselves with coaches, college representatives, class presentations, etc.  In the beginning of the college recruitment process, we would be contacted by the FC Dallas college liaison and told that a college coach wanted Coy to call him. (Coach’s can’t call or contact young players; there are lots of rules on the timing of recruitment activities).   As you can imagine, to a 15 year old kid, that was very intimidating. So we would practice salutations, discuss possible questions they might ask, and formulate questions and conversation points that he could initiate as well.  Even during the first few conversations, I was close by in case he needed a life-line or a help.  Then before long, he was well versed and prepared for any spontaneous requests to call coaches.  People remember a kid who can carry on a decent conversation, has some confidence,  and speaks with curiosity and interest.
Represent Me Well! Or else! 

A few weeks ago, when Coy got a list of interview questions from topdrawersoccer.com, the reporter’s statement was “I saw on twitter that you had committed to UNC?”  In Coy’s most recent trips to National Team camps, the pre-camp information requested twitter, instagram, facebook  handles and reminded players that they represented usasoccer on and off the field.  People are watching!  It’s important that the images and words that are used in social media represent the character that they would like to emulate to the business and college world.  Otherwise just shhhh.  I remind my kids that where ever they go, where ever they are, and in all circumstances, they represent the Craft family and more specifically, Chad and I.  The “or else” lessons I remind them of are: we pay for your phone, all of your luxuries, and that we, in fact, own you. You are not entitled too much as a kid; I will dress you appropriately, feed you to keep you alive, provide a reasonable place to sleep and exist, and I will make sure you get to school; but beyond that, you should be counting your blessings for all the extras! Until  you are self sufficient, then respect and represent me well or else you can live with a lot less “things” than you currently are privileged to have in your life.  People like a kid who represents their family well!
Be nice! To everyone!

It is so much easier not to be nice.  The instinct to be nice and helpful is a learned, and relearned process; a daily process, no perhaps,  an hourly process.   It is easy to be nice to people you like, who like you and with whom you enjoy their company.   There is so much character built in being nice to people you don’t like, you don’t typically associate with, and with whom you have chance encounters. It is especially meaningful for pre-teens and teenagers with their peer groups. If someone needs encouraged, encourage them;  If someone drops their papers all over the floor, pick them; if someone doesn’t have a partner in a class activity, go be their partner; if someone stops to speaks to you, take the time to hear them.  If someone is being bullied, stand by their side or put that bully in their place! Shelby recently came home from a middle school football game telling us she had smacked a classmate; what? Apparently a kid was creating drama and false information that was upsetting another fella who happens to be a friend of Shelby. Yikes, bullying the bully perhaps? She got commended by her father and reminded by me about the consequences that she was lucky to have avoided – getting punched back, getting in trouble for fighting on school property, etc.  But I treasure those teacher emails, those stops in the school office, or a comment on the sideline of the soccer fields when folks share particular moments when my kids have been kind, went out of their way to be helpful to someone, or just simply had good manners and sweet behaviors around friends and their families. Everyone likes a nice kid!
My kids ain’t perfect. But we sure spend a lot of time and energy trying to training them right. Active parenting is so very exhausting.  If you aren’t tired, frustrated, wanting to choke a kid or two here and there, or get a little teary eyed by the way they bless you on occasion, then you need to be all that, all the time! Chad assigns each grey hair in his beard to one of our three and getting that credit isn't a compliment, ha!  We make lots of mistakes.  But in the end, our kids leave us and grow from many of the seed we plant throughout their entire life. If we don’t plant some good stuff, then good stuff won’t grow.   So start planting!

Monday, September 16, 2013

43

43!
 
Today I turned 43 years old. Boo! Hiss! Scream, kick, run away! Yes, I am fighting it! But I thought I would reflect on my wonderful 43 and consider some of the most relevant, fun, truth-giving, real, enlightening, wisdoms that I could think of in the last 96 hours of my life; Enjoy and comment. Happy Happy Bday to me!  Listed in no particular order after #1, btw.

1
. You lose if u don’t have a personal relationship with Christ. You will try to fill the void with lots of other things; unless you recognize your sinful nature, the wretched fallenness of the world, and the need for a Savior, you won’t have peace, ever.
2. Your family is the most important thing in this world; stick with them, be focused on acts of service, love them with your whole being, give more than you receive, and you will be blessed.
3. Coffee, it's a fabulous morning friend.
4. Education is more important for personal attainment, in the grand skim of things, than for a career choice. It’s earned and no one can take credit for it or remove it from your existence.
5. As a mom, learn to cook; add flavor. Your kids and husband will forever remember and appreciate this about you.
6. No matter what, keep your pantry full; invite friends and family into your home for meals and quality time. It doesn't matter how clean or tidy your house is if it is filled with warmth and hospitality.
7. Math is over-rated :)
8. If you are over 35 and can run 3+ miles, then u rock.
9. Frisco TX has to be home to the fittest moms in the world! Thanks to PTs like Juliet, Sam and others at FAC who challenge us each week.
10. Enjoy sunrises and sunsets as often as you can.
11. Southwest Virginia has the most beautiful views in the world and it is an awesome place to raise a family.
12. Parenting is hard; if it is easy, you aren’t doing it right. Even good kids require time, attention, and ongoing direction.
13. A good night's rest can give you new perspective.
14. Alzheimer’s sucks. Someone find a cure fast please!
15. Eat good food - free of additives, fat, grease, sugar, sodium and u will in fact feel better - goes back to cooking for your family thing.
16. Never under estimate the power of healthy physical touch. Whether it is for romance, for affection within a friendship, for family bounding, and for loving on our kids, our touch connects us to those we love.
17. As a mom, taking good care of yourself is as important as taking care of all your peeps. They love and need to see you healthy so do what ya got to do.
18. You are more critical about yourself than anyone else - while you might think all eyes are on you, they aren't, nobody really cares, so be you, love your family and carry on.
19. Silence or ignoring the idiotic-nature of others is often the best answer. Less is more. You can’t argue with stupid, or rationalize with the irrational.
20. Life is an unpredictable process. Try planning it out, God laughs. We are blessed with hindsight more so than foresight - except for parents, you doofus teens, your parents know stuff, listen to them.
21. A vacation is only a vacation if it involves the ocean, sand, water, waves, crabs, sandcastles and lots of sunshine.
22. Chiropractors are life changing, if you have a good one. Shout out to Dr. Todd Watson!
23. Every believing adult needs to be involved in AWANAs or VBS at some point in their life- kids hungry for quality attention and interested in God can change your live. You will be blessed.
24. In all our travels across the country, Pizza Plus Pizza and Los Arcos Mexican in Abingdon Va are the bomb.com, hands down!
25. The Va Creeper Trail could be the most beautiful/peaceful place in the nation.
26. You will sleep better with lotion on your feet and Chap stick on your lips. I don’t know why but you just do.
27. We all have our weaknesses and do things that are not good for us = "real" movie theater popcorn with butter, caramel bugles, and fresh Krispy Kream donuts. Save me!
28. Despite our planning and good intentions, life gets in the way, so unplan accordingly.
29. A family that snuggles together, stays together.
30. When the opportunity arises, play in the snow.
31. Teach your kids to ask; caring adults like to help, so you don’t know what good can come from a situation unless you communicate; make people say "no" - most don’t want to so ask politely.
32. I am not sure why corn hole is so fun, but it is, so play it!
33. Bonfires and s'mores should be a common theme among all families.
34. Kids need the opportunity to catch lightening bugs, sand crabs (at night with flash lights, nets and a bucket at the beach) and hunt in neck deep ocean water for the biggest sand dollar - at least several times in their life.
35. Don’t let your appreciation turn to expectation -if you are old enough and able, to do something for yourself (laundry, fixing & feeding self, cleaning up, organizing, purchasing supplies etc) then when someone loves you enough to do it for you, day, after day, demonstrate ongoing appreciate, not apathetic expectation.
36. Pray.
37. Ladies, if you want good shape, lift heavy things, and shake flabby parts, weekly, if not daily.
38. If you eat more than you burn, you chunky dunk instead of skinny dip.
39. We do get better/wiser with age; I am waiting for the age I don’t feel that anymore, but so far it is working for me. My husband said today that I was like a fine wine, getting better with age.  I think I believe it! 
40. Pinterest is my friend! Recipes, fitness motivation, humor, holiday cheer, and on and on. It is an awesome place to escape.
41. What doesn’t kill you, will make you hotter! (pinterest). Ha.
42. You don’t know until adulthood who your best friends are/were.  People will enter and exit during seasons of your life.  Most times you don’t see it, accept it, appreciate it, or understand it until you are looking back.
43. Wrinkles, strains of grey hard, saggy places, aches, and pains are the marks of a women who is living well.

Friday, September 13, 2013

Pitching It!

I have considered blogging since starting the new chapter of life in Texas last August (2013). But living gets in the way of even the very best intentions. So, a year later, I am at least making one post and an honest go at blogging. Hopefully this might inspire or motivate me to write a book one day. I doubt it but maybe.

So, here is my intro to Pitching It!

My family and I have, thus far, lived an extraordinary soccer-focused life. Fortunately, or unfortunately, it is a significant part of our family identity. My kids are still young; Chad, nor I, played soccer as youth, so our experience is novice to some, while in our "circle" of soccer families/network might appear to be extensive. The name of the blog, Pitching It, is intentionally soccer themed; the pitch, "a soccer field", which is the place we spend a great deal of time and for which many stories, ideas, observations, jokes, insights, and crud life-awareness has motivated anything of interest I might have to say. The title also reflects my intent to "pitch" ideas and topics of interest to soccer moms, "regular" moms, crazy moms, and other adult women as well as reflect on real life insight from my years as an athlete, mom, daughter, sister, wife, aunt, student, counselor, advisor, mentor, teacher, co-worker, taxi-mom driver, friend, enemy, liker, hater, facebooker, social media stalker (ha), and all the many other hats I wear.  You all wear similar hats so perhaps we can "Pitch" together and enjoy dialogue about real life, silliness, suffering, and whatever else is going on in the world around us at any particular time.

 So I hope you will revisit Pitching It and provide comments and feedback that contribute to the convo!

Let's Chat,
Jackie