Sunday, September 14, 2014

Peachtree Proud

I've had to wait since July 4th to brag on this guy, and that's a long time for such a big accomplishment. Coach K. And I secured our Peachtree numbers way in advance, so when Tanners all-star baseball team clinched the district championship and headed to the state tournament, we had to drop back and punt.
During the summers, football Coach Kirk does double duty and wears the hat of baseball coach, so there was no way he was running a race and not a team on that Friday morning. By the way, who in Atlanta schedules anything at the same time as the world's largest 10K??

So the question then was, what do we do with our extra number? Peachtree Road Race numbers are coveted things, so I knew we could find someone to step in last minute. Tucker had a better idea- he wanted to run. I wasn't so sure at first. I mean the kid had never even done a 5K let alone a full 6.2 miles of heat, hills, and humidity through the streets of Atlant; But he really wanted to run the race, so early July 4th Tucker and I headed to the ATL to find a parking spot, a Marta station, and our corrals.

We started off strong, hoping to finish the race, head to Woodstock, and catch the last of Tanner's first game. Mile one came and went and we were strong. He was making me proud. Mile 2 he said he might walk a little. "You go on and I'll catch up with you," he said. HA! yeah right, like I'm going to leave you in the middle of Atlanta with 65,000 other runners and hope to see you at the finish. Let's go, Buddy! and with that we ran, walked, and jogged our way to Piedmont Park and all the goodies that awaited us.

I couldn't then and still can't begin to tell him how proud I am of him. I think he was pretty proud of himself, too. And who wouldn't be? You don't just get a PRR t-shirt for signing up and paying your money. You have to earn it and earn it he did, with a time of 1:08 on his first EVER 10K!

We ran together the whole way and I may have lost my spot in the B group for next year, but I am ok with that.

Because everyone needs a picture like this:

Thursday, September 4, 2014

The Friendly Coach

Once upon a time, a coach was criticized by a parent, a die-hard, win-at-all-costs parent, for being "too friendly" with the players. "Friendly doesn't win ball games," he said. Friendly doesn't motivate and drive. Friendly doesn't get you anywhere. Sports teaches all kinds of valuable lessons-- I don't know if this is one of them.

Tonight as I type this, a young man is downstairs sleeping on our couch. Before he went to bed he had a hot supper, a warm shower, a fresh toothbrush, and a request for what kind of lunch he'd like for tomorrow. He also had a 5 year old wanting him to "sleepover."

Friendly may not win ball games, but it will take a homeless boy off the streets for a night.

Friendly may not get you the job and unfortunately the respect of some folks, but there are bigger folks we aim to please.

Tomorrow is Friday. Football games will be played and plenty of coaches will go home with a win. Names in the paper for how hard they coach; how hard they push; how far they will go this season. And it IS exciting and builds character.

But 4 years passes quickly and boys on the field become the men of the world. The things we accomplish as a "hard" coach will be forgotten: scores, tackles, bad calls. The things we accomplish as the "too friendly" coach will endure: love, kindness, and hope.

For our guest tonight, I hope he meets hundreds of other "too friendly" coaches along his way. I hope he always believes that another coach will come along when needed. And, of course, I hope one day he will BE that "too friendly" coach to another in need.


And I hope last night was the last night he will ever sleep in a baseball dugout to keep safe from the rain and storms.

But most of all, I hope he finds a home.


Lessons are learned every day on the field. A lot of them take place off the field, as well.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Billy and Jenn's Excellent Adventure

As much as I love the written word (and I do LOVE a good written word), sometimes a picture can be the icing on the essay. So as Coach K. and I celebrate 15 years of sickness and health, richer and poorer, I thought I would take a little stroll down Kodak lane.

I hate to rain on any marriage counselor's parade, but the first year was easy. Maybe it is age, but I can't really remember anything bad or ugly, only the good. I wince now at the foods I prepared and Billy always ate, stuff I won't even allow in my house now. I smile at the lack of laundry that occupied my time back then, the uninterrupted hours of exercising and sunbathing while I waited for Coach to come home. Ultimately, we celebrated the first year of marriage with a trip to the 5A State Championship, Coach's first degree, and a quaint 2 bedroom townhouse that fit us perfectly.


Our 5th anniversary saw us settled in a new town with two kids and our first house. I was 31, Coach 32 and our little guys were 3 and 2. Despite a full load of IEP's, football and golf practices, Coach managed to secure a second degree and I realized I could get PAID to go to the gym every day. I also discovered the half marathon and my biggest cheering section. Life was, well, perfect!


By the time year 10 rolled around we were living the words from our vows: "where you go, I will go; your people will be my people." We were on our fifth town, our 4th football team, our 3rd house, and, ahem, our 3rd son. Coach capped that year off with a new diamond to match my gift of a child, which made the "I will follow" part a whole lot easier. We continued to cruise through school years, football seasons, and relaxing summers while our boys were quietly growing up in front of us.



Today we celebrate again, 15 years of football, babies, big boys, baseball, new houses, new schools, new friends, new churches, new adventures. Tomorrow we send an 8th grader, a 6th grader, and a kindergartner to school. We'll do it the same way we have done all the other stuff: together. Yes, sometimes we have to tag team, divide and conquer, go into zone coverage, draw straws (just kidding), but we are lucky. In the midst of all the chaos (and there's alot), we always come home to each other.


So today we'll attempt to celebrate these excellent adventures we've had around a schedule of back to school shopping, football practices, a teething baby, and an overly adventurous 5 year old. As I look around, our once quiet townhouse has been replaced with a cul-de-sac 2 story littered with Tonka trucks and baseball gloves. Our garage spills over with bicycles and a jog stroller. Our lazy Saturdays beside the grown up pool have been replaced with squeals and splashes from the backyard pool and games of "tips" and cannon ball contests.


A lot has changed in 15 years; a lot has stayed the same. I can't wait to see where year 20 finds us: Tru will be walking, Tate will have shot his first deer, and the big boys will be driving.

So as much as I would like to get sappy and sentimental over how excellent married life has been, who has the time? I have supper on the stove, one kid to pick up from practice, one to drop off, and more excellent adventures waiting on Billy and Jennifer.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Back off, Psychologists, I Like Social Media (even the Selfies)

Several years ago, I sat in bed most nights watching as Coach Kirk filtered through his Facebook pages, reading and commenting while I peeked over his shoulder. He exchanged messages with former teammates, now-grown students he once coached, and cousins he's grown up with. More than once, he offered to set me up my own page(The man does not like people reading over his shoulder). I declined, thinking this whole Facebook thing was just not me. Weeelll, almost 5 years later and I admittedly LOVE me some Facebook. Granted, it took me all of those five years to figure out how to post a blog, upload a picture, and all of the other good stuff, but now it's game on!

So imagine my dismay to find that some of my favorite Facebook categories are being criticized by other Facebookers as well as fancier folks with Ph.D's behind their names. Well, it just doesn't sit well with me that people don't like social media sites, especially my two faves, Pinterest and Facebook.

I literally wake up anticipating what all my friends have been doing while I was wasting time sleeping. I usually find excessive pins on exercise routines, Paleo meals, and simple stuff like pictures of the kids at last night's baseball games. I don't know about y'all but the people I follow on Pinterest and the folks I allow as friends on Facebook are there because I ALLOW them to be; so when these people talk, post, or pin, I listen.

Yes, I know counting and posting miles to Facebook may seem mundane and excessive to some people (non-runners,cough, cough), but I. LOVE.IT! Somebody has to set the standard for the amount of miles per week, someone has to inspire me, because let's face it, pushing that jog stroller is a whole other ballgame. So I expect, nee, need some real life people doing real life running to make me feel like I'm not crazy for putting the weather shield on the Jeep jogger and heading out in the snow or rain.

Along those same lines are people who are criticizing pictures of FOOD! What? Anyone who cooks, prepares, or manages meals for a living (every mom, right?) gets to that point where she is simply at a loss for what to fix for hungry family members every single day! Why are we going to hate on people who take the time to snap a shot of their plates, pots, or fire pits when all they are really doing is sharing some ideas on what to fix next. Heck, I live with one of those snap-a-pic-of-the-Egg guys and his photos always have plenty of likes. I mean, your picture has 100 likes of a smoking Boston Butt, you must be doing something right. I for one say, Thank You!

Now they want to tell us that people who take Selfies are arrogant and narcissistic? Wait just a cotton pickin' minute! Now, I will admit that I don't think I've ever taken a selfie or am planning to anytime soon, but let's don't discount the ones we see on Facebook. Some days, a gorgeous selfie of a good friend may be the only inspiration I have to put on make-up that day. In my head I'm thinking, if she can do it, so can I! And while that person is busy posting a flattering picture, we secretly get a glimpse of how the rest of her world looks: unmade bed, messy bathroom, dishes in the sink. Just another glimpse of normalcy. That right there is reason enough to continue the selfie craze!

But seriously, some of us aren't lucky enough to live in the same town where we grew up, with the same people we grew up with. Some of us are long drives away, and phone calls just aren't enough. Some of us are far removed from the places and people that feel like home; so to be able to share our lives with those people and have them share theirs with us, all for the price of an internet connection, is something not even the best cartoon caption can express. I have watched my nieces and nephews grow up because of social media. I know that friends from way back when are healthy and happy and doing jobs that they love! Again, all because of social media.

But perhaps most importantly, some of us had friends and family in the direct line of the storms that came through this week. Some of us were comforted to read and see that little damage had been done to our hometowns, to find that while the tornado passed right over a loved one, it didn't touch down. Some of us, seeing something discouraging, were urged to call and check in. But all of us, after the damage has been done, are humbled and grateful for those whose lives were spared, who lost property but survived; and of course, all of us are hurting and praying for those who were not so fortunate.

So back off Facebook critics! There is enough hate in the real world and still a lot of good in the cyber one.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

T-Ball and Tackles

Well, it was T-ball at its finest yesterday. Saturday was Opening Day around these parts and after watching his big brothers play every sport under the sun for the last 4 years, Tate finally stole the spotlight at his first T-ball game. He "earned" the honor of being the Braves' first baseman and kept runners and balls at bay for three solid innings under a rather warm March sun. And as adorable as he was in his uniform, there were a few other "situations" that kept parents, grandparents, and siblings giggling for those same 3 innings.

Our Braves took the field first, everyone (ok, some of them) in baseball-ready position. The Red Sox started the line-up with a stocky four-year old who hit one to the second baseman. His impressive hit was trumped by the fact that as our 2nd baseman was fielding the ball, our rightfielder TACKLED him, and held on until both boys were lifted and separated by coaches. The volunteer coach who happens to coach football for a living was quite impressed, though only I recognized it (15 years of marriage will do that for you.) This tackling fiasco happened a couple other times until the coaches did some switcheroos and surreptitiously moved the aggressive right fielder to left field where so far no balls had ventured.

Ours wasn't the only team with entertaining little players. The Red Sox boasted a right fielder (what is it with right field?) who, in the middle of a live ball scenario, would stop. drop. and roll. Apparently his pre-K class had done some fire safety prevention and this was fresh on his mind, because it happened several more times amid teammates bumping into each other and one incident where the entire team cleared the infield and bolted to center to retrieve a hard hit ball.

Of course with both teams there was the usual playing in the dirt, chasing bugs, and our littlest player who kept checking on Tru K. in the stroller (he loves babies, says his Mom). We were also asked several times how much longer do we have to stay here and "do we get a snack?"; all good and typical questions from first year athletes, as this is NOT my first rodeo and Coach Kirk was quick to point out this would NOT be our last.

All in all it was a great day doing something we all love, and I can only imagine how much fun we will have when Tru K. gets his turn at sports. Heck, they may be drinking Muscle Milk and running bleachers by then, but that will only serve to make it that much more fun.

Besides, four years will be here before we know it!

Monday, February 10, 2014

Yipes! Stripes! I'm a Stereotype!

Last week my friend Marsha updated her blog with a post on the limited Southern stereotypes the media tries to pin on us. One would do well to know Marsha in order to understand her logic and thinking on this matter, so here's the abridged version. Marsha is the girl we all want to be when we grow up. She pledged at Ole Miss, lived in London for a short time, and married a handsome football star. Oh, and she's also a published writer, an attorney, and a judge. That's right, a Judge-- as in sits on the bench, bangs a gavel, doles out sentences, fines, and such. She also squeezes in the role of Momma, too, so what she writes holds a lot of weight with me for all the above reasons (I just so happened to marry a handsome football star, too, but I assure you, readers, there's more to it than that).

The gist of her argument was that no one should try to put any Southern girl in a corner, let alone one that has me wearing camouflage and sitting in a deer stand. I don't do that. Neither should anyone suggest that I NEVER go anywhere without a face full of Merle Norman. Far too many Kroger employees have seen me at my worst to try to fit myself into that Southern girl stereotype. So while I totally agreed with her ideas on Southern girls being too unique, too educated, too diverse to pigeonhole, I couldn't help but think that although I don't fit into a corny, Cracker Barrel-t-shirt Southern girl stereotype, there may be a stereotype that I do embody.

If anyone asks me what I "do," my first response is "I have four children." So that makes me a mom. I've been a room mom, team mom, and currently hold the moniker of soccer mom, complete with the cool, new age mini van sporting a 26.2 bumper sticker on my back windshield. On any given day, my minivan typically holds baseball batbags, school backpacks, an emergency stash of healthy snacks and juiceboxes, and a Tervis tumbler in my cup holder so that I can get my required 8 glasses a day.

Before I head home to pack processed-free lunches for my honor roll-achieving, public school-attending kids, I squeeze in a great work out at the local YMCA or meet the ladies for a good sweaty tennis match or maybe go for a run pushing my perfect baby in the Jeep jogger. I, of course, am dressed in all Nike dry wick, so as to avoid any unnecessary chaffing (and maybe look good while I'm at it). Coach loves to taunt me with lunchtime texts that say, "How was your serve today?" or "don't forget your sunscreen." Methinks those messages are riddled with sarcasm, but what do I know? I am networking, exercising, and learning valuable tennis tips I can pass on to my children should we ever join "the club."

I am guilty of sooo much more than this as I find myself putting myself into this suburban stay-at-home stereotype, but I'll finish with this: Yes, my kids wear new clothes on Easter Sundays; yes, I always send in homemade goodies when it's my day for snacks, and yes, I think Girls' Night Out is underrated and overly necessary, wine or no wine(but please, someone, bring the Cokes). So while I'm not the typical Southern belle, stalking anyone's deviled egg plate or secret pound cake recipe, I am currently fundraising for whatever teams my children are playing on and diligently rounding up some of those Southern Belle types who like to sit around and read good books and share good recipes and call it a Book Club. And if being that Stereotype is wrong, y'all, I don't want to be right.

Monday, January 13, 2014

Two's Company, Three's a Crowd, and Four gives you the Line in a 4-3 Defense

Almost exactly 4 and a half years ago, Billy, Tucker, Tanner, and I brought home what we thought would be the final member of the Kirk family. Tate was and is a blessing and has made us laugh, cry (he throws Lego's sometimes), and give thanks daily for turning this family of four into a family of five. Tate was the icing on the cake, the final chapter in my child-bearing years. Well, you know what they say, if you want to make God laugh tell him your plans for the future. I guess we spoke too loudly of the "last" child, laughed a little too loudly when folks asked if we would try again for a girl. Because God not only laughed, I'm pretty sure he giggled, smirked, and may have even cackled when we brought home this 4th bundle of boy home to make our family of five a family of six. At 5:46 am on January 2, the world stopped for just a tiny second and we laughed, smiled, giggled, wept, and gave thanks for the best "surprise" in life.

So once I got over the shock of being pregnant again and Billy and I got over the shock of starting over again with diapers, sleepless nights, and a fifth jog stroller, we were pretty happy. Two boys are fun, three are more fun, and for a football family like we are, four boys gives you just enough players for the line in a 4-3 defense. And really, isn't that the important stuff?

So now, just two weeks in,I find myself packing a diaper bag instead of a Gucci bag, completing my miles behind a Baby Jog, and spending 3 am blogging instead of sleeping. Truett has already stolen my heart, wrapped three little boys around his little fingers, and even has Daddy prepping for the day when the Falcons' defensive line sports 4 jerseys that all say Kirk. Surely that guarantees me a suite on the Georgia Dome 50 yard line or at least a spot in a Campbell's Chunky Soup commercial.