I was a good kid, worked my ass off to play this game late nights after chores, lifting in the hay loft until bedtime.
After a long day on the field bailing hay I ran into the dark to make sure I got my cardio in.
Worked for, at times, 5 different farmers in the fields to make extra cash to attend various football camps around the Midwest to make sure I exposed myself to different concepts and coaches... and to make sure I got noticed as well.
Sure I got in a couple teenage fisticuffs or mischief, but always made sure that my nose was clean, grades were up and classes fit to the college grind.
But I got hurt and I had to face the fact that my career, what I literally put thousands of hours into was done.
No one offered a scholarship nor a contract because I had worked hard and was a good kid.
Instead they pulled the scholarship offers because I couldn't perform upon the field anymore. It might seem cold that the recruiting letters stopped and a couple coaches no longer returned my calls or my interest in their programs.
And this is a high school kid at the next level.. college. But the fairytale that playing ball is a game is lost on most.. at the root of it all is that it is a business. A cold business at that.
As a player your play is your only asset and if year after year you prove you can't play because you can't stay on the field, sooner or later you have to realize that your dream has closed.
Sure you can continue to try to play, but you also have to think about the future and your quality of life beyond the game. Is it worth it to mortgage your future health for today's glory?
Justin has been a lot more fortunate than most that eventually come to that crossroads.. he has a bank account built that should secure his financial future.
Personally, I hope he makes the right decision after consulting the doctors looking over his history of injuries. That will be his crossroad choice of a lifetime and it would be foolish for me to give advice without intimate knowledge of the facts.
I just hope that if he takes that path without football, that he has the mental strength to accept it cleanly or he has a support system in place to help him close that door.
Because even though to most this is a business, at times a cruel business.. to you as a player, it is your dream since childhood and one tough fate to accept it has passed.
Once again.. Gods speed Justin for the road ahead, no matter the destination.
That said.. the Packers have to do what is the best interest of the Packers.. and that more than likely doesn't include Justin as a part of the roster. That is just part of the business, this cold cruel business at times.
"The oranges are dry; the apples are mealy; and the papayas... I don't know what's going on with the papayas!"