I hope you had a good Thanksgiving this week. For me, it was a time to count my
blessings.
I'm thankful for my health.
I don't take it for granted. It's
what gets me up every morning and to the gym or out on the bike. It's why Dr. Kevin Turner knows me on a first
name basis.
I'm thankful that my kids chose Blount County to live their
lives. That means those six wonderful
grandchildren live here too.
I'm thankful that Blount County is the kind of place where
they want to spend the rest of their days.
The schools. The community. The mountains, lakes, and land.
I'm thankful that I get to share my life through this
space. I used to be known as "Joe
Black, the physical therapist." Now
I'm mostly known as "Joe Black, that guy that writes in the newspaper."
I'm an educator at heart (which was my first college degree)
so this column serves as my main avenue to fulfill that.
I'm thankful for friends.
Lots of people criticize social media and smart phones but both of those
allow me to stay in touch with those friends far and wide.
I'm thankful for football.
The sport I love above all others is under fire. Interest in the NFL is declining. Lots of parents are prohibiting their
children from playing football.
Most of that has to do with injuries. Chief among those are concussions.
I get it. I have
those same concerns. I played one game in
high school that I don't even remember.
My son tells about getting slapped in the head so hard by a Florida
State defensive lineman that he didn't remember
anything until he got to the sideline.
But I still believe it is the best sport out there (not the
only sport by any stretch) for learning about teamwork and how hard work is
rewarded. Football helped make me the
man I am today.
Interest waning? I
don't think so. Tell that to college
football fans all across the nation that continue to pack stadiums. And I'll still insist that high school
football games on Friday nights during the fall are the best place to be.
It's just up to me (and others) to do everything we can to
make the sport as safe as possible. Rule
changes happen almost every year, almost always with the intent of making the
game safer.
I'm truly thankful for all sports. They teach life lessons, help create active
adults, and make exercise fun.
On a day where we are thankful for so many things, family,
friends, food, the many blessings we all have, it is important to remember
those not so fortunate.
Like the hungry. The
number of hungry people in the world exceeds the combined populations of the
United States, Canada, and the countries of the European Union.
And the homeless. 33%
of the children in the world don't have adequate shelter.
And those in poverty.
80% of the world's population get by on less than $10 per day. And 3 billion people survive on $2.50 or
less. That's amazing.
So in this holiday season, share of your bounty. Love everyone--we are taught that. Pay It Forward. Hug a stranger. Be thankful not so much for a full belly but
for a full heart.