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With my beloved dog Switch, in 1985 |
So,
I hope this blog post doesn’t end up being interpreted as a Sports
and Physical Education bashing. It may sound like that at times.
Team Sports has never really worked out for me. I do understand now
that it can have great benefit, even for people on the spectrum,
giving them a sense of belonging, encouragement, confidence and
success. I do wince at what can be interpreted as our society’s
overwhelming obsession with sports. There have been a few cases
where I have had people in the past criticize my obsession with video
games, or role playing games, or whatever I am interested in, but
those same people could not see their own obsession with sports, and
having their kids in sports. (Don’t worry if you think it’s you…
these people I haven’t spoken to in years, and they will remain
safely anonymous).
There
does seem to be a general social consensus about sports as the being an
acceptable past time, where other activities could be seen as
nonconstructive, anti-social or worse even deviant (video games can be an example of this). As long as it falls within this
mindset, everyone, or most everyone, agrees that it is socially
acceptable to be into sports. Video Games are not viewed as
negatively, if they are sports video games. Even conversation,
especially among males is more often than not, consumed with sports.
Even though I am familiar with some of the rules of varying types of
sports, most of the conversation can be a foreign language to me.
Again, as I have mentioned before, I will politely nod and smile when
sports is the subject of choice. Let’s just say I know a lot more
about car, pro-street and mudder (gear head) talk than I do sports,
but even that is a subject I still know little about, but
at least I enjoy it immensely.
Let’s
look at this though, sports gives the perceived accomplishments that
most parents and participants want; social interaction, working with
people in a group and playing on a team, physical activity,
benchmarks for apparent success or achievement, and sometimes hoping
that their kid’s involvement with sports will pave the way for a
free ride to college and condition them for the workplace. This
seems to be the attraction among the neurotypical and even not so
neurotypical society that we live in and what makes sports so
attractive for many people. But to be honest, not everyone fits
nicely into this world view.
Sports
and Physical Education in My Life
Now,
as I have gotten older, I have realized now that some of my experience has been muddled by my
perception, I admit this. How I perceived I was being treated by
classmates had a lot to do with my reaction to my experience and how I remembered it. I was
certainly teased, and at times bullied because of my inadequacy at
sports or even just physical prowess. But as I try to remember what I can, some of my experience
may have been what I know now to be kids just giving me a hard time
and should not have been considered teasing or bullying (as how I interpreted it at the time). The intent was not as harmful as I perceived it.
I do know this there were kids who I considered my friends who
didn’t treat me this way. They were friends, and I did trust them
enough to consider their actions as just giving me a hard time.
There were some who were even encouraging to me.
Then
there were others who are in every class, who are athletic, capable
of multiple feats of physical prowess, but a small minority mind you (I can't stress this enough), for some reason like to
just crush those who would appear weaker, or incapable of performing
like they can. This is predominately a male attribute that is found
most often among youth, but as these children grow into adults,
maturity kicks in and for the most part this behavior disappears…
for most. There are still others, who even as adults just don’t
get it and feel as though they still need to prove that they are
physically superior to everyone else. There were others that I was
afraid of, who by their mere presence intimidated me, and sometimes
they just knew it. It’s like the weak, pitiful wolf in the pack
who gets constantly harassed. That was my experience of Physical
Education.
See
kids like this that are weak, clumsy and uncoordinated are easy
pickings for the stronger of the pack. They can be used as a
stepping stone to masculine superiority. Let’s be honest, I was an
easy target. I was the proverbial ninety-eight pound weakling. I
could hardly do any pushups, or chin-ups and I couldn’t even climb
the rope to the ceiling in the gym, it resulted in an almost constant
rash of teasing.
I
want to make sure you all understand that this was a minor number of
kids that did this and I was not the only kid this happened too.
There were others and I had no idea how they dealt with it.
LAST
ONE PICKED
When
I was put on a team… there were those who would complain… and
loudly. “Awe Coach, not him, put him on someone else’s team”
or “No!! No!!, awe man!!, now we are going to lose!!” and then
there would be some laughter. That was my experience of team
oriented Physical Education. Nobody wanted the clumsy kid on their
team. Now, let’s look at this again, I was pretty sensitive about
that, pretty thin skinned. My view of myself was already low, and
then comments like those where maybe most kids could brush it off,
really bothered me and upset me. Sometimes I just couldn’t get
over it and move on. I carried a lot of depression and anger, when
maybe I shouldn’t have. But the reality is, I did, and that anger
grew.
“PHYSICAL
SCIENCE”
Imagine
for a minute how that would make you feel. And this isn’t just one
time, it happened constantly. I hated Physical Education. It was
probably one of the worst and most humiliating experiences of my
life. In fact, just to give you an idea of how shy, naïve and
terrified I was of Physical Education, when I was in the 8th
grade, we were signing up for classes for High School, we were
supposed to take “Physical Science” our freshman year. I was so
consumed with not taking a Physical Education classes; I thought that
science class was PE, so I didn’t enroll in it. That put me a year
behind the rest of my class in science. Also, I was not smart, in
that I was afraid to ask anyone what that class really was. It never
occurred to me until later it was the name for the freshman year
Science course, not Physical Education. That’s just an example of
how I could and sometimes today still misunderstand things, and not
wanting to look or feel stupid, I wouldn’t ask for
clarification.
SCHOOLS TODAY TOO SOFT?
I have read and heard about a lot of complaining about how students in today’s schools are treated too softly today, or coddled. To a certain extent I agree, but when it comes to things like I experienced, that sort of crap needs to end. Just speaking in general terms, allowing this kind of treatment of kids who cannot perform physically creates a lot of unnecessary problems for those kids in the future, primarily mental and emotional issues that they could carry with them for the rest of their life, like I have. Also, allowing the more capable kids to treat others this way should not be allowed, and it should be shut down as soon as it rears its ugly head. Rather those physically capable kids should be mentoring and encouraging the ones who have a hard time keeping up (I think in some certain instances this has already happened). Today, based on my own children’s current experience, the schools my children have attended have been for the most part encouraging and focused more on the physical health of kids and getting them interested. All of their schools have zero-tolerance for bullying, which I wish existed when I was in school. My wife and I have been very vigilant about our children’s experiences. For the most part, thankfully they have not had to deal with the extent of bullying and issues I did.
I have read and heard about a lot of complaining about how students in today’s schools are treated too softly today, or coddled. To a certain extent I agree, but when it comes to things like I experienced, that sort of crap needs to end. Just speaking in general terms, allowing this kind of treatment of kids who cannot perform physically creates a lot of unnecessary problems for those kids in the future, primarily mental and emotional issues that they could carry with them for the rest of their life, like I have. Also, allowing the more capable kids to treat others this way should not be allowed, and it should be shut down as soon as it rears its ugly head. Rather those physically capable kids should be mentoring and encouraging the ones who have a hard time keeping up (I think in some certain instances this has already happened). Today, based on my own children’s current experience, the schools my children have attended have been for the most part encouraging and focused more on the physical health of kids and getting them interested. All of their schools have zero-tolerance for bullying, which I wish existed when I was in school. My wife and I have been very vigilant about our children’s experiences. For the most part, thankfully they have not had to deal with the extent of bullying and issues I did.
How
did I Deal with All of This?
The
teasing and bullying became less and less the further along I went in
school. Some of this was just the maturity level of the kids, my
maturity level as a young man. By the time I was a senior in High
school, it was non-existent. I had had some successes in life, such
as working a part time job that gave me confidence and exposed me to
all sorts of people and personalities, so I was interestingly enough
able to adapt and avoid behaviors and situations that would make me a
target for bullying.
One
of the greatest things that helped me overcome my weaknesses was
ironically, physical activity in and of itself, but it wasn’t team
sports, it was individual sports and activities that built up my
confidence and rebuilt some of my views of myself.
WEIGHT
TRAINING
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1994 I think.. Clare took this. |
Living
with the humiliation that I had been beat up by a kid virtually twice
to three times my size made me realize I needed to do something to
protect myself, or at least prepare my mind and body for another
eventual confrontation that would come. Lifting weights and becoming
stronger was that first step. I had a lot of anger inside of me,
because more often than not, I never fought back. I was afraid to.
I feared more getting into trouble, disappointing my parents, and to be
blunt, I was worried I would hurt the very person beating me up. So
a lot of the aggression, anger and humiliation was bottled up inside.
Lifting weights released that tension. I became addicted to that
release. I
fed off of lifting, and for years I worked out at least three times a
week.
After I started dating Clare, she would sometimes watch me lift in the basement. I was taken back when she made an observation one time. She told me, “It’s not like you are working out or exercising in a fun sort of way, but it’s almost like you are punishing yourself.” That really shed a lot of light on my mental, emotional and physical state at that time and since I was twelve, I hated myself, I was disgusted by my cowardice, my weakness, my clumsiness, my awkwardness. I don’t know if I can explain to you how that feels. You are just so embarrassed with yourself, you can’t stand yourself.
CYCLING
I
was late at learning how to ride a bike. It was until I was almost
10 years old, I finally learned how to ride. Once I learned how to
ride, I couldn’t stop. I started riding back and forth to school,
because the school bus was a whole other arena for potential bullying
and teasing. I rode my bike all over the Kansas City area.
Sometimes I could ride all day, if I had the time. Just to give you
an idea of range of an average “ride”, when I was in college, I
could ride from 75th
street and Woodson in Raytown, all the way to Blue Ridge Mall, and
then over to Bannister Mall, and I was just getting started. I also started wearing a backpack full of weights, to get that "extra workout". I usually finished my rides by carrying my bike on my back and running between 1 to 3 miles, with the backpack full of weights. Riding
from Central Raytown to Downtown Independence was nothing. The
faster I could go on the bicycle, the better. Mind you this was
before the big push in the 90’s for everyone to wear helmets while
cycling, so yes, as fast as I could, sometimes on the shoulders of
highways, on a mountain bike, with no protection whatsoever. I
sincerely loved the wind blowing past me.
BOXING
Next
was boxing. Now, I never was trained in boxing, I learned everything
on my own. For a gift when I was 16 or 17, I got an eighty pound
boxing bag. This was the one of the best gifts I had ever received.
It was one thing lifting weights to increase physical power, but the
boxing bag allowed me to apply that physical power. Boxing became a
regular part of my weekly workout. Three times a week I worked out
on the bag, till I couldn’t lift my arms. Again, maybe it became a
part of that “punishing” myself, but I became very adept at
boxing on a bag. I quickly discarded the protective boxing mits that
came with the bag, and I trained barehanded almost all of the time.
It was exhilarating to release all of that tension and aggression.
KARATE
When
I was in community college, I came across the Shotokan style of
Karate, an ancient form of Japanese martial art that was used by
peasants to protect themselves from bandits and roving bands of ronin
in a time when weapons were forbidden to be owned by the lower
classes for fear of an uprising. This was perhaps the greatest
awakening I had ever experienced. Karate melded everything that I
had been searching for. As a hot tempered, angry young man, who saw
very little worth in himself, Karate gave me an outlet for my
aggression yet at the same time taught me self-control. Karate
taught me to seek that inner peace and calm within myself as well as
training me in all sorts of skills to protect myself from a would be
attacker. My sensei instructed us on the basis of never attacking
first, but defending, then counter attacking to render the opponent a non-threat as quickly and efficiently as possible.
I
also started running barefoot to toughen my feet for karate, because
you practice and train barefoot. I started running all the time…
on pavement, gravel, anywhere… in all weather, in 30 degree
weather, with rain or snow… with only shorts on… People would
drive by in their cars, all bundled up in coats and gloves and just
stare at me as I ran by them, half naked, barefoot, running in the
rain… or snow… yes, I was intense.
Fortunately,
except for sparring, which in those days we only wore a mouth piece
and cloth mits, I never have fought another human being to protect
myself. Yet, even today, the basics that I learned in those karate
classes have remained with me even unto today. But to bring back the
concept of the empathy I have, harming another person causes me a
lots of issues, but that perception can quickly change if it means
protecting my wife and children.
MELEE
WEAPONS
Now,
I am not expert or master in the use of any melee weapons (from
clubs, axes, knives, spears and swords), but I am intensely
interested in the entire subject and mostly self-taught, never being
instructed under any weapons master… yet. This encompasses all
forms of melee weaponry from both East and West. I do have many
padded weapons I train with off and on, as well as a number of
manuals on fighting with melee arms. Several are copies from the
Renaissance, translated from Latin into English on use of the spear,
pole-axe, staff, short sword, long sword and knives and daggers. I
use a lot of these movements, of both the East and West to test
movements of my characters in the stories I write which are heavy
laden in both melee and hand to hand combat.
So
my experience with Physical Education and Sports was not good at all,
but if I could glean anything positive from it, it spurred me to
pursue individual endeavors which helped me cope with the world I
lived in. I also found a way to combine what I love with Physical
activity. Also, Physical activity in and of itself aided greatly in
releasing tension, aggression, anger, and anxiety.
Until
Next time...