Jun 23, 2009
Summer break is an extraordinary feeling for all of us students, whether we are in 1st grade or 15th. The relief from rigorous academics, more free time, and the warm weather satisfies all but few. Summer itself has always been my favorite season. Since I was eight years old I have played competitive summer baseball, but this year, graduating from high school, I did not. Not playing has really given me a break during the summer for the first time in a while.
I did not know, however, how to handle this “break.” In sports, I was always told that practice during the off-season is where the best are born. Every time I heard this, especially from a coach, I would be incredibly pumped up to go and spend hours in the weight room, but it proved much more difficult to maintain the interest, excitement, and effort during the times when no one was forcing me to participate. My faith life has mirrored that scenario this summer. With no baseball to occupy my time and more freedom from parents, it is easy to put my faith life on the back burners. Summer is, in a sense, the off-season for the faith life. You are away from your team, the group of students you rely heavily on at school, but it is essential to continue to work hard, because it can be a time of incredible growth.