Guest guest Posted July 2, 1999 Report Share Posted July 2, 1999 > > > The association (ie, LIVING with them) and presence in this world of empowered > and high-class Vaisnavas makes a tremendous difference. > > What do you think? > > > Srila dasa It makes a great difference and is essential. Srila Prabhupada has said that this is a natural process, not an artificial imposition on the senses. So we should be able to just look around us and see how it is that the world actually works. I coached under 12 soccer(that is American for football) this spring. I am not an uttama coach, nor even a madhyama. At best, I am a kanistha soccer coach(yes, I know I am misusing the terms). But for a new player just starting, I am the authorised representative of the sampradaya of the local soccer club. He can play soccer without me, but if he wants to play in authorised games, he needs to be approved by me. I am like the diksa. There are soccer camps available where he can learn to play, taught by much better coaches than me, he can hire individual tutors to teach him better than me, but to play authorised game, I have to be the one to insert him in the lineup. He can read books by Pele, or by the greatest coaches in the world. All techniques can be described in those books, all tactics can be explained. He can watch Manchester United score 2 goals in injury time to win the European Cup, but unless I show him hands on how to kick, trap, shoot and defend, he will have a very difficult time to learn how to play. Of course, if I study those books, i am a better coach, and can help him even more - asa a matter of fact, without those books I will be almost useless as a coach. But if he just tries to learn the game with just the books of even the greatest playeers and coaches,, without the physical presence of someone to show him how to actually kick, he will never be very good. Anyway, we could play around with this example, and if I wasn't rushed by summer work, I would, but you get the idea. When I starting coaching, I read books, watched tapes, but really the way I learned the most was by joining an adult league and actually going out and playing the game with guys who had been playing for many years ( I played 3 years as a teenager but then never touched a ball for 30 years so really was like starting from scratch). That is like associating with the sadhus. To just kick a ball against a wall and read a soccer book, I never would have learned as much. Eventually, I took a couple coaching classes and am now a level E coach(which isn't very much - lowest is F, highest is A). I have been certified as a bona fide coach in the sampradaya. Players I coach would do well to continue to hunt for an utama coach, but I am better than nothing. Incidentally, we started slow, but my team ended the season 4-2-1, so I must be learning. So even a kanistha or madhyama guru has a chance to improve. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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