A Rugby Confession

10924 rugbyconfession
10924 rugbyconfession

rugbyI’m going to publicly confess to something. This is tough to say, but here goes… I am hopeless at rugby. There, I’ve said it, “I’m no good at rugby”.  Not an easy thing for a kiwi male to admit to… because for many people it would throw doubt both on my kiwi-ness and my maleness.

I am sure my lack of rugby prowess was a disappointment to my father. Every Saturday he worshipped at Eden Park or the local Waitemata ground. He coached teams, and my older brother was an Auckland senior rep. But our family’s rugby genes were all used up before I came along.  I was pathetic. I truly was a total ball-phobic bumbler. My gangly body never learnt the advantages of team-work. I was even capable of running into myself.

But to give my father due credit, he never showed his disappointment.  As it became clear that my clumsy childhood had merely been a rehearsal for an even clumsier adolescence, he stopped projecting  any vain hopes of sporting success on me, and instead, encouraged me in areas I did have strengths. He built a dark room for me – not to hide me away in but to develop my love and talent for photography. I might not have been good at many things but I knew how to turn out a pretty good glossy 10×8. I got a lot of my self esteem as a teenager from my skill in photography. I was too shy to ask girls out on dates but they’d model for me! And I’ve still got the pictures to prove it.

Rugby was a big thing for my Dad. But he didn’t use his love of sport  to squash me. I’m grateful for that.

If you’ve got kids, find something they excel in. There will be something. Of course you can have dreams for your kids – but if you want to see them fly, nudge them in the direction of their dreams – not yours.

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