Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Who am I?

Pretty much my entire life has revolved around playing a sport or doing something of competitive nature.  I am a super competitive person and I am always striving to be better or the best.  Volleyball is a huge part of my life and will continue to be (I will be playing in college), but it has also taught me a lot about myself and everything around me.  A lot of people say that I am following in my dad’s footsteps (he played basketball at Penn State), but I really would like to be my own person and do what I want.  Having a volleyball scholarship is hard and comes with a lot of pressure from everyone around you. I have always felt pressure from all around me to be very good and to not make mistakes.  I have really learned to become my own person through these pressures and the stress of recruiting and playing.  I have had to face many hard decisions and societal pressures to do things that could put my scholarship in great danger.  From all of this I have been able to grow as a person and learn that all that really matters is doing what you want and what benefits you, not what others want and what could benefit them.  The outside influences/pressures of what people think and want you to do have actually shown me what I really want and to keep my eyes on my goals.  One goal that I had always had was to get a volleyball scholarship to college.  Now that that is complete, I am focusing on other things like college that is looming ahead and doing well there and hopefully continuing onto law school.  Besides volleyball I love music and I play the piano in my free time. My friends are big influences in my life and they share a lot of the same views as I do so we all get along great.

1 comment:

  1. Your blog looks great.
    Getting a volleyball scholarship to college is quite an accomplishment. All the lessons you learned on the way will help you to continue to succeed. I'm sure you will do well in college and in law school if that is still your goal in 4 years. Try not succumb to too much 'senioritis' as your high school career comes to a close.

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