A special book because of its ordinary season... | Season of Life: A Football Star, a Boy, a Journey to Manhood | Jeffrey Marx
 
 


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Season of Life: A Football Star, a Boy, a Journey to Manhood
Jeffrey Marx

Simon & Schuster, 2004 - 192 pages

average customer review:based on 77 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended






Simple story with a great lesson.

This book was enjoyable and easy to read. The story demonstrates a man giving of himself to help others. He lives a true 'alternative lifestyle' to the Hollywood fed standards prevalent in America today.


Caught-up in the story

Jeffrey Marx began to contact "old" Baltimore Colts' players after "saying" goodbye to fabled Memorial Stadium just before its demolition in 2001. One of those players was Joe Ehrmann, the All-Pro leader of the Colts' "Sack Pack" in the 70's. Ehrmann had nicknamed him, Brillo, when Marx was a Colts' ballboy. At that time, Ehrmann was an example of a the stereo-typical fun-loving, hard partying and substance abusing athlete that "graces" the news from time to time. When Marx traced down this former Colt, he found that much had changed. After thirteen years of professional football, Ehrmann's "calling" had finally found him. He had since founded and led a wholistic ministry in Baltimore's inner city for 20 years and was volunteering as a coach at Baltimore's Gilman School. He had founded "Building Men for Others" and was also serving on the staff of a Baltimore area church. As Marx traces Joe's journey and the journey of the Gilman School's 2001 season, he is drawn into his own "journey to manhood." His "side-by-side" story-telling draws in the reader as well. A very good read and must reading for every father, for every father's son and for every woman who wants to better relate to the men in her life.


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A special book because of its ordinary season...

I think the book impacted me so much because of the fact that the season wasn't special...it was actually quite ordinary. Everybody can connect to these boys because they had some good wins and some tough losses, just like all of us. And it was in this tangible and real-life protrayal that the imparted message becomes so meaningful. Its not the fact that we lose (in any arena of life) that is important, because everybody loses, but how you respond to those losses is what will define you. I was hooked from the time I read the poem early in the book, "The Man in the Looking Glass" to the touching last chapter. A must read for HS coaches in any sport.


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You don't have to love football to love this book!

Loved SEASON OF LIFE by Jeffrey
Marx . . . it is the author's account of the Gilman High School
football team that is unlike any sports book that I've ever read,
in that it is more about how Gilman's coaches use the game
to teach such principles as love, empathy, integrity and living
a life of service.

The 2001 Gilman Greyhounds did not go undefeated; in fact,
they barely had a winning season (having previously been one
of the top teams in the country) . . . however, their record
was never the important thing.

As the head coach noted when a mother asked him how successful
did he think the boys were going to be, he replied, "I have no
idea. . . . I won't really know how successful they're gonna be till they
come back to visit in twenty years. . . . Then I'll be able to
see what kind of husbands they are. I'll be able to see what kind
of fathers they are. I'll see what they're doing in the community."

Marx often quotes Joe Ehrmann, a former NFL football star and
volunteer Gilman coach . . . now also an ordained minister, Ehrman
devotes his life to teaching the Gilman team the precept of
his Building Men for Others program: Being a man means
emphasizing relationships and having a cause bigger than
yourself. It means accepting responsibility and leading
courageously. In addition, it means players saying "I love you"
to each other and coaches professing their love for their players.

There were several memorable passages; among them:
* [Erhmann] "And I think the second criterion-the only other criterion
for masculinity--Is that all of us ought to have some kind of cause,
some kind of purpose in our lives that's bigger than our own individual
hopes, dreams, wants, and desires. At the end of our life, we ought
to be able to look back over it from our deathbed and know that
somehow the world was a better place because we lived, we loved,
we were other-centered, other-focused."

* "I expect greatness out of you," Biff [Poggi, the head coach] once
told the boys. "And the way we measure greatness is the impact
you make on other people's lives."

* Ultimately, Biff said, the boys would make the greatest overall impact
on the world-would bring the most love and grace and healing to
people-by constantly basing their thoughts and actions on one simple
question: What can I do for you? . . .

"Because in case you haven't noticed yet, we're training you to be
different," Biff said. "If we lose every game of the year, go oh-and-ten
on the football field, as long as we try hard, I don't care. You learn
these lessons, and we're ten-and-oh in the game of life."

Toward the end of the book, there's a thrilling account of Gilman's
last game of the year . . . yet I was even more moved by the
author's last chapter . . . at the conclusion of the season, he visited
his father and took some of the lessons that he had learned during
the season to help revitalize that relationship.



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Should be required reading for coaches

I bought this book as I was told it was an inspiration. It truly is, and I've passed it along to many people, most importantly anyone who works with kids. With such an emphasis on "winning at all costs" these days, this puts being on a "team" into perspective. I then thought it would make a great gift for my daughter's coaches. It is one of the best books I've read, and think it should be required reading for all coaches!!!
Lisa


reviews: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, page 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16



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