
During my 25-year career as a boy’s head basketball coach, I found the most satisfying (and most important) part of coaching was planning and devising game plans.
Putting my knowledge and experience to test to give my teams the best chance of winning was challenging and time consuming, but also enjoyable and exciting. Equally enjoyable and exciting was making adjustments to the game plan during the course of the game.
At times the game plan worked to perfection. Sometimes, the plan …
Read the full story »

The holiday season is rapidly approaching. The changing colors of the leaves on trees remind us that we will soon be bombarded with Black Friday advertisements. I was surprised during a recent visit to a department store to find that Christmas decorations are already on the shelves.
It is so easy to get caught up in the hustle and bustle of this season and lose sight of the meaning of the first holiday of the season, Thanksgiving Day, which …
Read the full story »

Our local high school football coach asked me earlier this year to speak to the seniors on his team on a weekly basis. I have always enjoyed public speaking, so I jumped at the opportunity. Although I am finding plenty of meaningful activities to keep me busy since retiring nine months ago, speaking with the players is one of the most enjoyable things I do now.
My talks with the team members are not lengthy – perhaps five to ten …
Read the full story »

It is interesting to note the clichés that have become common in our lexicon. Some of those clichés are useful for describing life with multiple myeloma. However, there are clichés that, because I have multiple myeloma, I am not so fond of.
My favorite cliché, which appeared about five years ago, is "It is what it is." A colleague of mine, who heard me use the saying frequently, gave me a plaque with the phrase engraved on it. I kept the …
Read the full story »

Despite my love for sports and the fact that I have been directly involved in sports in one form or another for most of my life, I have found that there are not many sports movies worth watching. Few, if any, have realistic sports action scenes, and it is obvious that the writers and producers know very little about sports or, giving them the benefit of the doubt, it is just too difficult to create sports action that resembles what we …
Read the full story »

Since retiring from my job as a school superintendent nearly six months ago, I have made a concerted effort to not allow what time I have left in life to be preoccupied with the fact that I have multiple myeloma. In other words, I try not be defined by the disease.
Little did I realize how difficult that would be.
Because my life would be less structured with much more free time during retirement, I was concerned that the challenges …
Read the full story »

It is easy to become self-centered when diagnosed with a serious illness like cancer. That self-centeredness becomes even more intense when the cancer is considered incurable, as is the case with multiple myeloma.
It's easy to give someone a pass in such a situation because it is completely understandable how, when confronted with their own mortality, they would tend to look at things differently.
As I reflect on the four years that I have lived with multiple myeloma, I …
Read the full story »