The Middle School Rules of Jamaal Charles - Sean Jensen - E-Book

The Middle School Rules of Jamaal Charles E-Book

Sean Jensen

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Beschreibung

Five running backs were selected in the first round of the 2008 NFL Draft. Jamaal Charles was not among them. Despite piling up the fourth-most rushing yards at the University of Texas in just three seasons, he waited for eight other running backs to get selected ahead of him. The Middle School Rules of Jamaal Charles features the stories and lessons of Jamaal's childhood, defined by people overlooking him. Young readers will see how Jamaal deals with bullying and endures teasing because of a long undiagnosed learning disability that enabled him to participate in the Special Olympics as a 10-year-old. The gold medals he won at the Special Olympics empowered him, and Jamaal displayed a rare work ethic and determination in everything he did on the field and in the classroom. "I just kept working, just kept fighting," Jamaal says. "If you give up, you will not ever know how far you would have gotten." A state champion hurdler, Jamaal ran for 4,107 yards and 50 touchdowns in his final two seasons at Memorial High School in Port Arthur, Texas. But readers will see how hard Jamaal had to study to earn a high enough mark on a standardized test to qualify for a full athletic scholarship. Dogged by doubts about his size, Jamaal is already the Chiefs' all-time leading rusher, a four-time Pro Bowl selection and has more career rushing yards and total touchdowns than all but two of the eight running backs selected ahead of him in the 2008 NFL Draft. In fact, Jamaal owns a special NFL re- cord: More yards per carry (5.5) than any other running back with at least 1,000 career carries! Jamaal wants his legacy to extend beyond football fields. His Jamaal Charles Youth Matters Family Foundation promotes the development of healthy minds and bodies and reinforces the motto that, "Determination wins." Jamaal inspired millions at the Opening Ceremony of the 2015 Special Olympics in Los Angeles by sharing his story of struggle and triumph. "I was afraid. I was lost. I had trouble reading. I found out I had a learning disability," he said. "People made fun of me. They said I would never go anywhere. But I learned I can fly... the Special Olympics gave me my first chance to discover a talent I did not know I had." 

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BroadStreet Publishing Group LLC

Racine, Wisconsin, USA

broadstreetpublishing.com

Middle School Rules of Jamaal Charles

© 2017 Jamaal Charles and Sean Jensen

ISBN 978-1-4245-5300-6 (hard cover)

ISBN 978-1-4245-5301-3 (e-book)

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

Illustrated by Daniel Smith.

Back cover photo courtesy of The Kansas City Chiefs / Steve Sanders.

All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright ©1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com The “NIV” and “New International Version” are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Biblica, Inc.™

Cover and interior design by Garborg Design Works | garborgdesign.com

Editorial services provided by Ginger Garrett | gingergarrett.com

and Michelle Winger | literallyprecise.com

Printed in China.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

from Jamaal Charles

I want to thank my whole family for helping me put this book together. I want to thank my friends who supported me, my coaches, and my teachers. And, of course, my Port Arthur community.

Also, thank you to Coach Brown and Drew for inspiring me to pursue this goal of writing a book about my childhood.

I couldn’t have done this without my wife Whitney’s support.

from Sean Jensen

I thank God for all he has done in my life.

I thank my wife Erica for her continual support, and my kids, Elijah and Zarah, for inspiring me.

I also want to thank Ted Crews of the Kansas City Chiefs for making the initial connection and Andrew Kessler of Athletes First for passionately working to tell Jamaal’s story in the most authentic way possible.

Lastly, I want to thank Daniel Smith and our team at BroadStreet Publishing for their professionalism and expertise.

INTRODUCTION

Dear Reader,

I want to inspire you, in case any of you are going through what I did.

There is light at the end of the tunnel. Don’t feel that you don’t have a chance in this world.

We need to ask for help so we can get help in every part of our life: education, sports, or anything else you want to do.

There are resources. Don’t be afraid to ask for help from your parents, family members, teachers, or coaches.

There is plenty of help in this world.

I hope you enjoy my story.

Jamaal Charles

FOREWORD

As a native of Port Arthur, I heard rumors of this kid who might be the next superstar from Southeast Texas. I, along with my law partner and our wives, attended Jamaal’s next high school football game. On his first carry from scrimmage, Jamaal ran 65 yards for a touchdown.

The crowd was going crazy and I could see that he was fast—no, really fast! Unfortunately, there was a yellow flag on the field, and his touchdown was negated by a holding penalty. Everyone was upset, and I could tell that Jamaal was really disappointed. Shortly after the penalty, I learned everything I needed to know about Jamaal’s true character.

The head football coach was yelling at Jamaal’s teammate for getting the penalty and costing the team a touchdown. But Jamaal approached his teammate, who had his head hanging down, and gave his teammate an encouraging slap on his shoulder pads. I could not tell what Jamaal said to him; however, the once disappointed teammate picked up his head, and they ran back into the huddle together.

The very next play, the coach decided to hand Jamaal the ball again… and he ran 75 yards for a touchdown! Everyone could see that Jamaal was a talented football player. But I could see that Jamaal was an outstanding person.

When Jamaal had to experience very difficult life challenges, he stayed positive, encouraged the people around him, and fought hard to succeed. Privately, Jamaal and I have talked about many of the difficulties he has encountered, both professionally and personally. While most people see Jamaal as a gifted football superstar, I see him as a humble person constantly seeking guidance to become a better person.

I have watched Jamaal mature from a very passive kid to a God-fearing man and devoted father. Although I am not Jamaal’s biological father, I am proud to call him one of my sons. As you read Jamaal’s life story, I hope that you will learn that his football success was not a guarantee. What I hope you discover is that Jamaal’s true success is the person (not the player) he has become.

Before every game throughout his entire NFL career, we have prayed together and given thanks to God for allowing Jamaal to become an overcomer. While I believe Jamaal will one day be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, I hope his off-the-field traits allow others to experience his true “GREATNESS.”

May many blessings come,

Attorney James E. Payne

Port Arthur, Texas

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Chapter 1: The Refrigerator

Chapter 2: Grandma’s House

Chapter 3: Ja-Millie

Chapter 4: Saturday Chores

Chapter 5: Killer Millers

Chapter 6: Making Disciples

Chapter 7: Sunday Dinner

Chapter 8: Acting Out

Chapter 9: Picking Teams

Chapter 10: The Reading Test

Chapter 11: Uncle Karl

Chapter 12: Rae-Rae Runs

Chapter 13: Special Field Trip

Chapter 14: Mourning Grandma

Chapter 15: Ducking and Dodging

Chapter 16: Chicken Runs for Paw Paw

Chapter 17: Ms. Conner

Chapter 18: Classroom Courtroom

Chapter 19: Always Be Respectful

Chapter 20: Beating Danny

Chapter 21: The Shan Dive

Chapter 22: Support Network

Chapter 23: Tithing

Chapter 24: Freshman Football

Chapter 25: Reading with Nanny Arlene

Chapter 26: The Spare Tire

Chapter 27: Perfect Storm

Chapter 28: SAT Testing

Chapter 29: Facing Chopper

Chapter 30: Rising to the Occasion

Chapter 31: Party Time!

Chapter 32: Longhorn Dream

Epilogue

Chapter 1

The Refrigerator

On December 27th, two days after Christmas, on a frigid and foggy day in Port Arthur, Texas, Jamaal RaShaad Charles enters the world. His childhood will be full of surprises, but the first one belongs to his mom.

He’s a boy!

His mom Sharon already has three boys, and she wants a little girl. But Jamaal is a boy, and he’s huge! Weighing 10 pounds at birth, about two-and-a-half pounds heavier than an average baby, Jamaal immediately receives an unflattering nickname.

Relatives jokingly call him Refrigerator. He’s big!

They say everything’s bigger in Texas so he fits right in. Texas is the second-largest state in the United States. When oil boomed in the early 1900s, Port Arthur became one of the mighty state’s biggest little towns. Major oil refineries were built there, taking advantage of access to railroads and a canal from Sabine Lake to the Gulf of Mexico.

Port Arthur is 91 miles east of Houston, near the Louisiana border. The population was 900 people in 1900 and over 50,000 by 1930! By the 1950s, Port Arthur is one of the central points of oil in the entire world plus the birthplace of music legend Janis Joplin, former Texas governor Allan Shivers, Super Bowl and NCAA champion football coach Jimmy Johnson, and arguably one of the greatest female athletes, Babe Zaharias.

Port Arthur produces a lot of oil and plenty of amazing people. But when the oil industry starts to decline so does Port Arthur. Shops close and crime increases. By the 1990s, the town has one of the highest crime rates in the U.S.

Port Arthur has changed a lot in a century. Jamaal likes his hometown, though.

Jamaal’s dad is around, but he does not have a major impact on his life. His brothers, though, are always nearby, and they are all older: Darryl by six years, ShanDerrick by four years, and Kevin by three years. Jamaal’s mom raises him and his brothers with the help of her parents, Mazell and Oscar Miller.

Jamaal clings to his mom. Though family is always around, Jamaal never leaves his mom’s side, not when she goes to the store, not when she plays cards, not even when she sleeps.

Another nickname emerges.

“Stop being so attached to your momma!” one cousin yells at Jamaal.

“Let your momma breathe!” another cousin says to him.

“Why are you such a momma’s boy?” a third cousin asks Jamaal.

Jamaal does not answer.

Even when he learns to speak, Jamaal does not have much to say. And though he has more than 50 cousins, Jamaal keeps to himself—and near his mom.

Chapter 2

Grandma’s House

Jamaal moves several times with his mom, but they often end up at the home of his mom’s father Oscar and mother Mazell. They live on the corner of 17th Street and Galveston Avenue.

The house is beige with brown trim and a wooden porch. There’s grass in the back and on each side. But the kids like to play in the grass along Galveston Avenue. Ms. Cora, the neighbor, fusses at them all the time. She dislikes balls banging against the side of her house or one of the cousins eating her kumquats—a small citrus fruit—in the front garden. The grass is a better place to play because no one fusses at them there.

Jamaal and other children call Oscar by his nickname, Paw Paw, and everyone knows Mazell as Grandma.

Grandma’s house has three bedrooms and seven rules.

GRANDMA’S HOUSE RULES

No fighting.

No lying.

No cussing (saying naughty words).

Finish your food.

Be in the house when the street lights come on.

Respect your elders by answering them with “sir” and “ma’am.”

Anything Grandma says is a rule.

Everyone respects the seventh rule.

Paw Paw works as a painter at the shipyard. Grandma works as a custodian at Thomas Jefferson High School. Together they provide for their nine children plus the nephews, nieces, cousins, and neighbors who regularly come into their care.

Grandma is used to being around a lot of family; she is the second-youngest of 16 kids herself.

People flock to Grandma’s house because some say they can feel the warmth and love there. Grandma does not believe in strangers.

Once, a man selling encyclopedias door-to-door stops by her house about a half hour before dinnertime. It’s 90 degrees outside, and he wears a suit. Sweat soaks through his white dress shirt and suit jacket.

Grandma insists he enter her home for a drink of water.

“That sounds like a big inconvenience, ma’am,” the salesman says.

“It is no worry at all,” Grandma says, opening up the door all the way and extending her arms to invite him into the living room.

Grandma quickly shuffles to the kitchen to get the salesman a glass of water with ice, and she asks him where he’s from.

“I’m from Beaumont,” he says, referring to a town about 20 miles away.

“We have family in Beaumont,” Grandma says, as she returns with the glass of water.

The salesman tilts the glass and gulps it all down.

“Oh, my!” Grandma says. “You were very thirsty. I’ll bet you’re hungry, too. Beans are cooking on the stove and pork chops are about to come out of the oven. You must join my family for dinner.”

It isn’t a question.

This sort of thing happens all the time at Grandma’s house.

But Grandma does not tolerate wild children in her house or yard. If you do not listen to her or abide by her seven rules, you are sent away.

One neighbor boy bounces a basketball in the living room after he is told by a grownup to stop. Grandma directs him toward the front door.

“Go home,” she tells him. “You’re not listening to grown folks.”

A few days later, the neighbor boy returns and pulls aside Jamaal’s brother ShanDerrick.

“Can you ask your grandma if I can come back to the house?”

“No, you better ask her yourself!” ShanDerrick replies. “You’re not getting me in trouble with Grandma!”

The neighbor boy slinks toward the living room, where Grandma is reading her Bible full of highlights and folded pages.

“I’m sorry, Ms. Miller,” he says sheepishly. “I promise to listen better.”

She nods and offers a small smile.

Staying at Grandma’s house also means your homework is done before you play outside after school, you are inside when the streetlights come on, and your plate has no food left over—including field peas, which all the kids dislike.

Except for Jamaal.

When Grandma gets up to get a second plate of food, Jamaal’s cousins load their peas on his plate, and Jamaal eats them all up.

There’s one problem in Grandma’s house.

There’s only one bathroom. It’s always a race to reach it first in the morning or else you might have to hold off using it for a long time. After he’s potty-trained, Jamaal often beats his brothers and cousins to the bathroom.

Chapter 3

Ja-Millie

Jamaal is an easy target for his brothers and cousins. He is the youngest so he cannot physically defend himself, and he does not verbally defend himself.

They pick on him for a couple reasons: he cries when he gets mad, and his name is funny.

“Jamaal is a girly name,” Jamaal’s older brother Kevin says. “I’m going to call you Ja-Millie.”

The cousins crack up.