This picture captured the moment I knew my boy was going to
be OK in high school. A spontaneous moment with heads bowed before a race, they
weren’t praying to win but for strength of body and mind along the way. My boy had found his tribe—the cross country
team, a group of hard-working, high-achievers.
They’ve all learned something most runners eventually learn: the hard
work of running translates into real life.
Plugging away at something that doesn’t show immediate results or give
instant gratification is hard, but the payoff can be big somewhere down the
road (or cross country trail).
The leader of this “tribe” is Coach T. Quiet and unassuming, he is the unsung hero
of this team and decades of other teams who have run long before my boy was
even crawling. He frequently stands at
the edge of the race course and quietly encourages his runners as they go by.
He gives them advice and suggests subtle tweaks to their form. They listen because you can see their posture
change as they run by. I’ve thoroughly
enjoyed watching him coach my boy, taking his awkward gait to a runner’s form.
I find myself wishing Coach could fix my form.
He has been the cross country and track coach since my son’s high school
opened. You can’t go far in this area without
running into someone who knows him or knows someone who does. Kevin Bacon has six degrees of separation,
but I’d bet Coach T has TWO degrees of separation. Coach has an incredible memory. He remembers a kid’s PR whether it was last
season or a season 20 years ago.
Last Spring, at a meet, Coach T collapsed. In the days that
followed, he had a stroke. He fought his way back all summer --fighting his way
back to coaching the cross country team this fall. His speech, mobility and cognitive abilities
were left intact after the stroke. That’s
pretty amazing. He does have a complication
that prevents him from driving for the time-being. But he isn’t finished
coaching. Parents have been taking turns
driving him to factor appointments and to and from practices. He is so grateful
for the support. He jokes that it’s too
bad he had to have a stroke to realize how big his support network is. He
thanks me profusely (and I’m sure everyone else who helps him) every time I
pick him up. I’m the one who should be
thanking him. It occurred to me
yesterday when he was showing me the huge maple tree in his backyard that
during all of these car rides, he is telling me his story. Tell me your story.. He has lived in his house since he was 10 years
old. They moved here from Ohio, and they brought the maple tree with them to
have something from ‘home’ in their yard. That tree takes up a large portion of
the backyard now. Tell me your story.
As most of you know, I could talk all day about
running. So can Coach T. He always asks me about how MY training is
going, my current weekly mileage, my long run distance. I told him I was starting to become tired at
this point in the training. He reminded
me that races aren’t won in November, they are won in June and July. He’s wise—and right. That reminder made it easier for me to get up
this morning and run 9 miles. In a way, my wish to have him coach me, came
true. If I could just get my left leg to
not look so wonky on turnover…
I sense Coach T is beginning to wonder how he can keep
coaching if he continues to be dependent on us to get him to and from practices
and events (and, oh, he is the voice of the football games on Friday
nights). He desperately wants to stick
with this group of kids through their senior year. He sees the potential in them and wants to
see it come to fruition. I don’t know if
that’s possible—I really hope it is—but if it isn’t, I know these kids have
already learned more from Coach than running.
Things that will stay with them, no matter who their running coach
is. We will keep driving him as long we
can. Until the day comes that he decides he can’t coach, I will continue to look
forward to hearing more of his story in my car. Tell me your story, Coach.
What a fantastic story about your son's coach!
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