Saturday, June 25, 2011

Running On Empty


June brings madness to Keeneville--shocker, I know. My 24/7 career, Justice in summer school, Cameron a handful of crazy and yes of course basketball camp. This is no regular high school roll out the ball summer fun camp. This is a month of intense daily practice, a weekend at QU followed by a 5 night/6 day on the road adventure. Living with Coach Keene the three weeks of preparation for this trip is like hell on earth. He adds his receipts up well over 100 times, he confirms, reconfirms and triple confirms his hotel reservations, he freaks out the players will not raise their money, goes over the itinerary with a fine tooth comb nightly, and analyzes his bank account daily--sometimes hourly. On a side bar, where did I go wrong at home. If you ask Coach Keene what bank we even personally bank at I bet he cant tell you...no really, I caught him once pulling out his debit card to see.

Day four of this single parenthood week and I am beat. Justice asked tonight, "is daddy coming home tomorrow? This is the last nighttime, right?" I said, "No, one more nighttime and he will be home." Justice replies with the most serious gesture, "What the hell, did they run out of gas?" I am thinking, no--but I am.

I have not been the happiest camper this June--again, shocker. Being a basketball family is not all rainbows and concession stand popcorn. Every year seems to get harder as the boys grow. Deep down I love it, but on the outer layer of life it's exhausting, everyday. I have to ask myself--quite often--is all this worth it? I wonder too, 15 years from now will we look back and say,"time well spent." This generation of kids expects "the big time" but does not appreciate the sacrifice it takes to get there. Positively sure would never acknowledge the sacrifice the coach's families makes daily, sometimes hourly, to get a W. Not asking for a pity party, but really evaluating all this crazy. You cant make this crap up. Seriously we would make one heck of a reality show. When I say its nuts 24/7 here, I am not kidding. Time is precious and I cant remember the last time I was able to quiet my mind and rest. My upstairs is constantly planning--meals, school clothes, Dr. appointments, more meals, babysitting, bills, work, basketball schedules, housework, and the list is monstrous. Sometimes I think I am a machine.

Well, counting the days down until July 26th. No, not the fact that its my 8 year anniversary with Coach Keene-but that I have accrued 3 weeks vacation at work and I plan to take it. I am the planner, so if we are going somewhere the first week of August--because that's pretty much all we will have--I better get to googling. Not only is my gas tank on empty, but so is the computer battery. Night--its almost July!

Monday, June 13, 2011

Herald-Whig Classic Notebook: Illinois girls coach gets some help from special assistant coach


By MATT SCHUCKMAN
and BLAKE TOPPMEYER
Herald-Whig Sports Writers


With the Illinois girls struggling to score in the second half of Saturday night's McDonald's/Herald-Whig Classic, Illini West coach Zach Keene bent the ear of one of his honorary assistant coaches for advice.

Keene's 5-year-old son, Justice, sat on the Illinois bench, drawing up plays on the dry-erase board and acting like a coach.

So Keene turned to his son and asked, "What do you think we should do to score more?"

Acting like he was reading a stat sheet, Justice ignored his dad at first.

Finally, after folding the sheet in half, Justice turned to the coach and said, "Shoot."

Keene smiled.

"I agree," he said.

The Illinois girls shot plenty. They just didn't make enough. They shot 29.2 percent from the field and 18.2 percent from the line in a 69-58 loss to Missouri.

It wasn't because Justice didn't try to help.

Once during the second half, Keene got up from his chair and knelt on the sideline. Justice mimicked him. During each timeout, Justice knelt alongside his dad as he gave out instructions. Justice pointed to the players as if he was the one giving instructions.

Only one thing made him leave the bench at any point. That was to get some nachos from his mom seated in the first row.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Side Effects


Coach Keene and I just recently developed our Keene family mantra. "Striving for perfection, while settling for excellence in all we do." Those are strong words to live by and actually come with a package insert for side effects.

While visiting the ER last week, twice, I had some time to think while I participated in an EKG, Chest X-Ray, renal sonogram, Two Cat scans and numerous blood draws--I realized I am just pushing my young self alittle to hard. Between trying to hold up the image of having it all together at work and play I have earned the title of a National statictic over the last year of my life.

You wanna talk about side effects for being a driven family, how about them apples? or shall I say dollars. Here I am laying in the tube getting a cat scan WONDERING just how much this lil ER visit is gonna cost me--I AM my father.

In order to accommodate my new found realization of side effects I have resorted to pharmaceuticals, (love drugs! Miss the dealing..) a personal trainer and a boot camp. Did I mention I also have a prescription for a vacation, doctors orders. I told her, "I will book something in August--I am just to busy right now." Did I miss the direction or what? Anyhoo--Coach leaves for LSU in T-Minus 10 days and counting. They Will be gone for 6 days--Lord help me, and my heart.