Wooden’s Wisdom
“...In the pantheon of college basketball, nobody accomplished
more on the court than the late John Wooden, UCLA’s legendary and long-time
coach. Dubbed the ‘Wizard of Westwood’ for his unprecedented 10 championships
in 12 years, the Indiana native’s cerebral and simple style stands in contrast
to many of today’s larger-than-life sideline personalities.
‘Coach Wooden’ as he was known, has been gone for almost 9
years. When he died in June of 2010 at the age of 99, the highly-acclaimed
basketball genius was lauded and feted as a sage of the sport, and rightly so.
But even nearly a decade following his death, the remarkable
life of John Wooden can still teach us, and especially now in the midst of
culture’s madness.
Up until his death, the collegiate hall of fame coach kept a
folded-up index card in his wallet. On it was a handwritten 7-point creed that
his father had given him as a graduation gift from elementary school.
How instrumental of a role did that small piece of cardstock
play in the life of UCLA’s coach?
According to friend and NBA executive Pat Williams, it was
instrumental.
‘I believe,’ wrote Williams, ‘the character and achievements
of John Wooden can largely be traced to [that] piece of paper his father gave
him on the day he graduated from the eighth grade at a little country grade
school in Centerton, Indiana.’
Almost 100 years later, as political, economic, sociological
and even spiritual battles rage white hot, we would be wise to also heed the adages
of this 7-point creed:
1. Be True to Yourself. Are you living someone else’s plan for your
life? Nothing can stifle creativity like conformity and uniformity. What’s ‘your
thing’ – your unique ability? Nobody is here by accident. Everybody was placed
on earth for a purpose. Be comfortable in your own skin and chase your dream.
2. Make each day your masterpiece. It almost
sounds like a cliché, but everybody has the same amount of time each day (24
hours, 1440 minutes). Do you treat it like a rare gift? On average, over 150,000 people die every
day. Don’t take these hours for granted. The late Bil Keane, creator of the
Family Circus cartoon, once poignantly observed, ‘Yesterday is history,
tomorrow is mystery – but today is a gift, that’s why we call it ‘the present.’’ Don’t waste the day.
3. Never leave until tomorrow what can be done
today. Charles Dickens once called procrastination the ‘thief of time’ –
and he was right. We so often think
tomorrow is going to be an extension of today, but it’s usually not. Rather
than treat time like a blank check, think about it in finite terms – because
today is all we’ve got.
4. Help others. Narcissism is
destructive. Care about others and
practice blessed self-forgetfulness. As Dr. Tim Keller says, ‘Don’t think less
of yourself – just think about yourself less.’
Call a friend, visit someone in the hospital, pick up trash in your
neighborhood or volunteer in your community.
5. Drink deeply from good books, especially the
Bible. The late pastor Dr. Adrian Rogers used to say, ‘What goes down in
the well comes up in the bucket.’ Be
mindful of what you’re reading and watching. The apostle Paul probably put it
best of all when he advised, ‘Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is
right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable – if anything is excellent or praiseworthy –
think about such things and the God of peace will be with you.’
6. Study friendship and make it a fine art.
It’s been said we become the product of the five people we spend the most time
with. If that’s the case, are you picking your friends or letting your friends
pick you? The popular writer C.S. Lewis
wrote about the origin of enjoyable company. ‘Friendship ... is born at the
moment,’ Lewis noted, ‘when one man says to another ‘What! You too? I thought
that no one but myself . . .’’ If you want to have good friends, take the time
to be a good friend.
7. Pray for guidance and count and give thanks
for your blessings every day. Cultivating a discipline of prayer and a
spirit of gratitude will transform your life. It was Albert Einstein who once
opined, ‘There are only two ways to live your life: as though nothing is a
miracle, or as though everything is a miracle.’ We are living in an age of
daily miracles and many of us don’t even realize it.
As the curtain fell on his near century-long life, Coach
Wooden reflected that while he tried to live up to his father’s creed, he had
nevertheless fallen short, saying he was more like the guy who once said, ‘I am
not what I ought to be; Not what I want to be; Not what I am going to be, But I
am thankful that I am better than I used to be.’
A devout Christian, Wooden saw basketball for what it was –
a game that pointed to something of greater significance in his life. ‘I have
always tried to make it clear that basketball is not the ultimate. It is of
small importance in comparison to the total life we live. There is only one
kind of life that truly wins, and that is the one that places faith in the
hands of the Savior.’
A slip of paper with Wooden’s wisdom is now in my wallet,
and it likewise reminds me that all the madness of this world is manageable –
because all the madness is ultimately managed by a God who loves each one of
us.”
~Paul Batura
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