Lets say your son is a very good baseball player , but not the greatest the planet has ever seen . He can probably play college baseball, but not at the school of his dreams. Not at the school with the business degree or the architecture program or the sports medicine program that he had dreamed about attending. Not at the school with the top-20 football team nor even a top-100 baseball team that you've seen play 100 times.
But he's good enough...good enough to play at a different school. A different school you never thought about, a decent school, but its more expensive (private?), out of state and doesn't offer the academic programs he said he wanted to pursue just two years ago.
He probably won't be a pro baseball player someday, but he says he wants to play college ball...even more than get that architecture degree that was important a short memory ago. You too want to see him play college ball. You want it bad. Why? So much joy and happiness watching your boy play for the past 12 years. (And perhaps a little bragging rights around the neighborhood? ).
We often say "athletics are important!" We say they are important to be a well-rounded individual...a more complete person...but certainly NOT more important than academics. Academics MUST come first we proclaim!
But then this baseball thing jumps in front of us and we rationalize how we're preserving our "ideals" while pursuing our athletic dreams...just in a different way.
Is it worth it? Do we change our minds? Or do we just become better "educated" on the whole thing and thus the new ideal?
I talk to many parents who seem more focused on getting their son into college athletics and less-and-less focused on helping their son follow their "other" dreams. Hey, I'm not perfect! I wonder about this issue too.
What about you? What were your dreams for your son when he was 2 years old? Are they the same or similar now? Is it easy for you to draw the line on the whole be-a-college-athlete-at-all-costs thing? Is it grey? Or is it confusing as heck?!
Thoughts?
Original Post