Monday, May 11, 2026

Between Celebration and Loss: Remembering the Moments That Matter Most (May 11, 2026)

On Saturday, I stood among celebration, accomplishment, and the unmistakable joy that comes with graduation day. I watched student-athletes walk across the stage, embrace their families, and close one chapter while stepping boldly into another. There was pride in every smile, every handshake, every photo captured in the moment.

Then on Sunday came the news that a former student-athlete had passed away.

In less than 24 hours, I experienced the full emotional range that often comes with working in athletic communications. It is a profession built around moments — victories, defeats, championships, injuries, milestones, and memories. But beyond every stat, record book entry, or highlight clip are people. Real people who leave lasting impacts long after the final whistle.

I often tell people the true impact of this field cannot be measured.

On Saturday, I felt overwhelming joy.
On Sunday, overwhelming sadness.

And somewhere in between are the emotions that continue to shift from hour to hour and season to season.

As I reflected today, I thought back to seeing this student-athlete graduate. I remembered the pride surrounding that moment and the conversations we shared that went far beyond football or track and field. Conversations about life. About goals. About becoming more than just an athlete.

When news like this arrives, words never feel fully adequate. You search for the perfect tribute, only to realize there probably is not one. But as messages continued to pour in from teammates, coaches, classmates, and friends, one thought became clear:

Celebrate every moment.

Celebrate the ordinary conversations. Celebrate the long practices, bus rides, and random check-ins. Celebrate the milestones and the small victories that never make headlines. Capture the photo. Send the message. Tell people what they mean to you while you still can.

Because moments become memories faster than we realize.

Graduation reminded me how beautiful beginnings can be. Loss reminded me how fragile life truly is.

Both reminded me just how important people are.


For the Graduates

Caps raised high beneath the sky,
Dreams no longer waiting nearby.
Steps once small now lead ahead,
By courage, sacrifice, and purpose led.

The nights were long, the road was steep,
Through victories earned and promises kept.
Now doors swing wide to futures unknown,
Yet every lesson has helped you grow.

So carry the memories, cherish the climb,
For this moment belongs to your time.
And wherever your next chapter starts,
Take SMC with you in your hearts.


For the One We Remember

Though the stadium lights may fade from sight,
Your memory still burns strong and bright.
Beyond the jersey, beyond the game,
We remember the person more than the name.

In conversations, laughter, and stride,
Your impact still walks beside us with pride.
Gone too soon, yet never truly away,
Because love and memory continue to stay.

And while grief may visit without warning or plan,
We celebrate the life of a remarkable man.
For moments shared become part of our own,
And through those memories, your spirit lives on.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Lead Yourself First: Keep Showing Up (May 8, 2026)

 This week I’ve reflected often on this thought from Kevin DeShazo:

“Focus on your actions, your mindset, your intentions, your decisions. Lead yourself first.”

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Lead Yourself First: Raise Your Standard (May 7, 2026)

Inspired by this thought from Kevin DeShazo:

“Focus on your actions, your mindset, your intentions, your decisions. Lead yourself first.”

The more I reflect on that statement, the more I realize something simple but important:

Most people do not fall short because they lack talent.

They fall short because they slowly lower their standards.

Not all at once.

Gradually.

Quietly.

And eventually, what once felt unacceptable becomes normal.


Standards Shape Everything

Your standards influence:

  • how you work

  • how you respond

  • how consistent you stay

  • how disciplined you remain when nobody is watching

And over time, your standards become your identity.

That’s why self-leadership matters so much.

Because leadership is not built on occasional motivation.

It’s built on repeated behaviors.


The Danger of Comfortable Drift

One of the biggest challenges in life is that comfort slowly changes expectations.

You skip one routine.

Delay one goal.

Lower one expectation.

Make one excuse.

And none of it feels major in the moment.

But repetition changes standards.

That’s how drift happens.

Not through one major decision—but through small compromises repeated over time.


High Standards Require Accountability

The difficult part about self-leadership is this:

Nobody can maintain your standards for you.

Other people can encourage you.
Mentors can challenge you.
Friends can support you.

But eventually, discipline becomes personal.

At some point, you either hold yourself accountable or you slowly accept less from yourself.

That’s where growth either accelerates—or stalls.


You Don’t Rise to Goals

A lot of people set goals.

Far fewer build standards.

And there’s a difference.

Goals are directional.

Standards are behavioral.

Goals say:
“I want to achieve this.”

Standards say:
“This is how I operate every day.”

That distinction matters.

Because when motivation disappears, standards remain.

And in difficult seasons, your standards determine whether you keep moving or start negotiating with yourself.


Raise the Standard Again

Sometimes the biggest adjustment you need is not a new goal.

It’s a higher standard.

A return to consistency.

A return to intentionality.

A return to doing the small things well again.

That might mean:

  • protecting your routines

  • managing your time better

  • eliminating distractions

  • improving your focus

  • following through on commitments

  • becoming more disciplined in private

None of those things are flashy.

But all of them matter.


Self-Leadership Is Built Daily

Lead yourself first.

Not occasionally.

Daily.

Because the standard you accept today eventually becomes the life you live tomorrow.

And the people who continue growing are usually the people who refuse to let comfort lower what they expect from themselves.

So take inventory.

Where have your standards slipped?

What have you started tolerating that you once would have corrected?

And what needs to change starting today?

Because growth rarely begins with a massive breakthrough.

Most of the time, it starts when you decide to raise your standard again.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Lead Yourself First: Know When to Reset (May 6, 2026)

Monday's thought from Kevin DeShazo:

“Focus on your actions, your mindset, your intentions, your decisions. Lead yourself first.”

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Lead Yourself First: But Make Time to Think (May 5, 2026)

Yesterday I introduced this thought from Kevin DeShazo:

“Focus on your actions, your mindset, your intentions, your decisions. Lead yourself first.”

I am at a stage in life where I find myself reflecting more on the different phases of the journey. Earlier this year, I turned 50—and somewhere along the way, I realized I had lost sight of some goals and even a few milestones.

Why is that?

I asked myself that question this morning as I started writing this.

And the answer wasn’t complicated.

I didn’t stop long enough to think.


Busy Isn’t the Same as Intentional

We live in a world that rewards constant movement. Stay busy. Stay active. Keep going.

But busy doesn’t equal better.

And movement doesn’t always mean progress.

Somewhere between responsibilities, routines, and daily demands, it’s easy to shift from being intentional to just being active.

That’s where the disconnect happens.


Discipline Isn’t Just Doing—It’s Thinking

Daily discipline still matters. Showing up matters. Doing the work matters.

But there’s another level to it:

The discipline to step away and think.

If you’re always reacting, you’re not leading—you’re just responding.

If you’re always moving, you’re not necessarily progressing—you’re just staying in motion.

At some point, you have to create space to ask:

  • What am I actually doing each day?

  • Is it aligned with where I want to go?

  • Or have I just fallen into a routine?


Why We Avoid It

Because it requires honesty.

It’s easier to keep going than it is to pause and evaluate.

  • Honest about your habits

  • Honest about your focus

  • Honest about what needs to change

But that’s where growth happens.

Not in the noise.

In the moments where you actually stop and take inventory.


Self-Leadership Requires Adjustment

Leading yourself isn’t a one-time decision. It’s a daily check.

A reset.

A recalibration.

You don’t just build discipline—you refine it.

You don’t just take action—you evaluate it.

That’s the piece I missed.

Not the work. Not the effort.

The reflection.


The Next Step

Discipline gets you started.

Awareness keeps you improving.

So yes—lead yourself first.

But don’t just focus on doing more.

Take time to think. Adjust. Refocus.

Because the difference isn’t who’s doing the most.

It’s who’s staying aligned with what actually matters.


Monday, May 4, 2026

Lead Yourself First: The Daily Discipline That Separates Professionals (May 4, 2026)

“Focus on your actions, your mindset, your intentions, your decisions. Lead yourself first.” – Kevin DeShazo


In the spring of 2012, I was introduced to Kevin DeShazo after hearing him speak about social media and its evolving impact on athletic departments. That initial exposure turned into a lasting professional influence. Later in my career, I had the opportunity to bring him in to speak to student-athletes and coaches at LeTourneau University—an experience that reinforced the clarity and practicality of his message.

Over time, his work—especially Keep Chopping Wood—has become a steady, quiet driver in how I approach my daily responsibilities. The quote above, in particular, has stayed with me. It’s simple, but it’s demanding. And as we begin May—Mental Health Awareness Month—it felt like the right time to reflect not only on professional growth, but also on personal accountability and mental health.

Because the truth is, those four elements—actions, mindset, intentions, and decisions—don’t just shape careers. They shape stability, resilience, and well-being.


Lead Yourself First: The Competitive Advantage No One Can Take

In sports communications, it’s easy to misdiagnose success. The industry often makes it seem like outcomes are driven by external variables—access, relationships, institutional resources, or market size.

But strip all of that away, and what actually determines long-term trajectory is far more controllable:

Your actions. Your mindset. Your intentions. Your decisions.

That’s not just philosophy—it’s operational reality.


Control What Compounds

Your day is built on micro-decisions:

  • How you respond to an email

  • How quickly (and accurately) you turn around a recap

  • How prepared you are for a postgame interview

  • How intentional your digital and social strategy is

Individually, these moments feel insignificant. Collectively, they define your reputation.

Consistency—especially when no one is watching—is what compounds into trust and credibility. If you’re waiting for a bigger role to raise your standard, you’re already behind. The professionals who separate themselves operate at the next level before they’re given it.


Your Mindset Sets the Ceiling

This profession will test your capacity—mentally and emotionally.

  • Long hours

  • Constant deadlines

  • Public visibility and scrutiny

  • Internal expectations

If your mindset is reactive, the job will always feel overwhelming. If it’s proactive, you create structure within the chaos.

A strong mindset doesn’t ignore difficulty—it reframes it:

  • A tough loss becomes a storytelling opportunity

  • A mistake becomes a systems improvement

  • A heavy workload becomes a chance to build efficiency

And from a mental health standpoint, that shift matters. Perspective is often the difference between burnout and growth.


Intentions Drive Identity

Execution matters—but intention defines consistency.

You have to ask:
Are you chasing visibility, or are you building value?

Intentional professionals anchor their work to standards:

  • Accuracy before speed (until you can consistently do both)

  • Clarity over volume

  • Impact over recognition

When your intentions are aligned, your output stabilizes. And in a field built on trust, consistency becomes your most valuable asset.


Decisions Define Direction

Careers aren’t shaped by one breakthrough moment. They’re shaped by accumulated decisions:

  • Preparation over procrastination

  • Accountability over excuses

  • Long-term growth over short-term comfort

These decisions are rarely visible to others—but they’re always consequential.

And importantly, no one is managing them for you.


Lead Yourself First

Before you lead a brand, a team, or a department—you have to lead yourself.

That requires:

  • Holding your standards, even when no one else enforces them

  • Managing your time with intention

  • Taking ownership without waiting for direction

  • Showing up consistently, regardless of circumstances

Leadership in sports communications isn’t positional—it’s behavioral.

And those who establish that discipline early don’t wait for opportunity. They create it.


A Final Thought for May

As Mental Health Awareness Month begins, this message carries an added layer of importance.

Leading yourself isn’t just about productivity—it’s about sustainability.

Your mindset, your habits, and your internal standards directly impact your mental health. Structure creates clarity. Clarity reduces stress. And intentional action builds confidence.

So if you’re looking for an edge—professionally or personally—don’t overcomplicate it:

  • Focus on your actions

  • Refine your mindset

  • Clarify your intentions

  • Own your decisions

Everything else builds from there.

Lead yourself first—and the rest will follow.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Release the outcome. Keep the boundary. (May 2, 2026)

Burnout isn’t a result of caring too much. It’s what happens when care turns into control—when you start gripping outcomes that were never yours to hold, while quietly stepping past the limits that protect your energy.

There’s a difference between full effort and overreach.


Effort is participation. Control is attachment.


You’re responsible for how you show up—your clarity, your consistency, your willingness to engage. But the result? That lives outside your jurisdiction.

Boundaries aren’t restrictions on your effectiveness. They’re what make sustained effectiveness possible. Without them, even meaningful work becomes depletion.

So the practice is simple, but not always easy:


Show up fully.
Release the result.
Hold the line where your energy needs protection.

Do that consistently, and you don’t just avoid burnout—you build something you can actually keep showing up for.