Adolescence and Athletics
It is no secret that adolescence is a trying time. The word
adolescence itself is derived from a word meaning “to burn.” But, as
fire can be a destroyer it is also a nurturer; a source of culture.
The masculine adolescent propensity is one that seeks physical
experiences and their emotional corollaries. Adolescent passions are
bent on encounters that experiment with the dangerous and the
amorous. Such passions are not unnatural, and therefore they are not
to be discouraged; only guided. Too much restriction results in
deformities that cripple a person for life, which is itself a risky
and emotional enterprise. Adolescence must
be permitted, though it
involves the taking of risks. The risks can be calculated; the
falls, few. But risks there must be, and falls as well, if young men
are to learn and grow. Adolescence (especially male adolescence)
must be allowed to run its normal, healthy courses in the process of
human development, which includes not only the body, but the soul as
well. A mature Faith cannot exist in a body, mind, and soul that
have been inhibited from their due maturation by excessive caution.
Adolescence can be
a time where passions are misspent and given to rage, to the ruin of
character, or a time where passions are controlled, given necessary
vent, and temper character. The teenage years often manifest an
inherent urge for trials to discover the limitations of individual
abilities in a rebellious nature, where the limits of circumstances
are pushed, which is a misplacement of a young man’s natural
tendency to discover his strengths and his weaknesses.
Such
necessary examinations and discoveries should result from an
appropriate venue. This important discernment of self can be
achieved with marvelous success through gymnastic involvement, where
a young man is able to embrace challenges, assume risks, and gain a
real and raw knowledge of himself based on his own accomplishments
and failures alike.
Education in Exercise
It is the duty of a boys’ school to understand the nature and
disposition of boys, which is to
understand their psychology,
physiology, and temperaments. At St. Gregory’s Academy, competitive
sport is a crucial source of educational development and formation
in these vital areas. The body must be cared for as well as the soul
and mind. Playing sports leads a boy to a true self-awareness and
can teach him such important virtues as perseverance, courage,
self-mastery, and magnanimity. Athletics also give boys very
tangible lessons about human nature and how to react to adversity.
Winning or losing a hard match properly and in the right spirit
teaches young men much about what it is to be a man. Therefore the
students at St. Gregory’s are strongly encouraged to participate in
the Academy’s well-organized sporting programs and engage in
structured physical education.
The daily training in
the athletic programs at St. Gregory’s carries a two-fold purpose.
Firstly, boys require exercise for healthy development both
physically and mentally. Secondly, methodical sporting endeavors
demonstrate the importance of proper training and discipline, both
on the practice pitch and in the games. When these requisites are,
or are not, done well the effects eventually become evident to the
players and they are able to see clearly the consequences of their
actions. In this world of immediate gratification obsessed with
convenience and instantaneous acquisition of whatever is desired,
the role of physical competition is a true awakening. In sports,
good results are the outcome of long, hard toil, dedicated effort,
strict discipline, and responsibility. It is no mean lesson. All
ends that are worth achieving in this life entail such drawn out
processes, requiring both patience and practice.
Competing at a high athletic level demands that the
contestants invest themselves to a certain degree and take the
necessary risks to become proficient and confident. Also, given the
academic focus of St. Gregory’s, athletics cultivates and balances
intellectual efforts by supplying a critical outlet for young men to
exercise their bodies, while testing and determining their
individual physical capacities. The teaching and coaching staffs
take these truths a step further by pedagogically pointing out to
their athletes that sports can and should be viewed as
a microcosm of life. As such, they can at least disclose to an
individual his own stamina to succeed and level of devotion to a
cause.

The
School of
Rugby
Rugby in particular is an essential component in the
formation at St. Gregory’s. The very nature of the game drives boys
to become men. Elevation of heart and soul are intrinsic to the
language and art of rugby. The game was created for the very purpose
of teaching leadership and virtue to young men. While violence mixed
with malice is the worst of crimes, the ability to push one’s body,
sustain injury, and hit hard for the sake of a good end is a
vigorous participation in reality. It is a game of glory,
leadership, sacrifice, suffering, and joy which rises in a Catholic
environment to heights
beyond which its founders ever conceived.
It is in the participation of this sport that boys can
discover themselves most deeply and
accurately.
Rugby compels boys to control and overcome their fear;
not to evade it. The elements and nuances of the game give the
students a truly unique opportunity to live out many of the heroic
and moral standards they learn in the classroom. It is on the rugby
pitch the boys can apply themselves to the challenge of meeting
these standards in a very real situation where their actions can be
judged, by themselves and others, as honorable, brave, or otherwise.
In addition, the intellectual aspect of the game develops cognitive
agility and strengthens the ability to make decisions with
confidence.
Since rugby is a very difficult sport to master, it requires
a high level of resolve; but, with continued perseverance, the boys
learn what perseverance actually is and the value of this moral
virtue – one necessary for men to possess in the world and critical
for the realization of our noble calling as sons of God and heirs of
heaven.