Entitlement or Paying Your Dues
This post might be more appropriate
for two old broken down coaches sitting on the front porch of a rest
home talking about the good old days, but here goes: You just being
there and putting in the time are not enough. Good
enough is not good enough if you want to be the best. To be the best at
what you do requires more that saying you are the best. You must pay
you dues. Earn respect. Continue to learn. Never be satisfied. I must
admit I am baffled by a lot of what I see I see today in the younger
generations, especially generation Y and X. For some reason these
generations seem to have a sense of entitlement. I have heard too many
thirty something coaches complaining about the long hours and low pay,
the time they must put in the off season, in short all things that are
part of earning your way. Wake up guys and gals pay your dues. Show
your worth. Do not let other people define your jobs, you define them.
Do the job better than anyone else. Prove your worth and then and only
then will you get rewarded both professionally and financially. I asked
someone the other day why he deserved a pay raise when the team is
terrible and underachieving, there are too many injuries. I asked him
what he had done to make the team better? The response was it is not my
fault, then whose is it? It is simple if it is to be it is up to me, my
fate is in my hands where it should be. Get up, get out, get going
seize the opportunity and prove your worth and then the rewards will
come.