In DS's case, the purpose playing D3 (other than loving the game itself) will serve is that it actually will be beneficial to him to play because he really wants to pursue college coaching as a career. He isn't blind to the fact that it is a tough gig, and will be going to school for PT, but he would like to at least give it a shot. As long as he has a backup plan, I'm not going to discourage it....so many people hate their jobs, so why tell a 16 year old kid, who has unlimited opportunity right now to pursue whatever he wants to, that a par is unobtainable? He'll figure out the path he needs to take eventually.....I'll let him keep his dream for a while longer.
He is not the party-boy type, meaning I am not afraid he will be stupid and get drunk and high every weekend if we are not there to monitor him, and he is serious about his training so between school and football he is booked pretty much all day, every day, and spends a lot of the weekend catching up on homework so he it often tired and not wanting to go out and party till 3am. None of that means he is anti-social or shy. He is very outgoing and charismatic - he has no trouble speaking up for himself, making phone calls, or talking to people. He spends *enough* time with friends....and you have to remember that he spends upwards of 25 hours a week with 60 other boys his age outside of school hours, so by the time he gets home, he has had enough of teenagers! He has just started driving, so he wasn't really dating yet, but he did just ask a girl out to the movies right before Christmas break. So I think he's fine socially.
DS plays to play, not to play for other people. He has always said that he would be perfectly fine to play with nobody in the stands watching because he is focused on what he is doing, not the glory. As a lineman, there really isn't a lot of glory outside of getting a sack or a big tackle at a key moment. He plays to play, because it is a part of him. He missed it desperately when he was out and worked very hard to get back. He missed his sophomore season, and came back to play the last 5 games of his Junior year. There are high expectations on his shoulders (LOL, literally and figuratively!) for his senior year. Not from DH and I, but from his coaching staff and the local/conference world.
He has said, however, if he gets injured again, he will not play. He also will not play if he doesn't get recruited with an offer of an (academic) scholarship to play at a D3 school - he would go to his #1 school then instead. He is a realist and as much as he would love to live every boys dream of playing a sport the rest of his life, he knows it's not reality. He's not even thinking about D1 or even D2 colleges (as a player, I mean. As a student, his first choice is a D1 school) - he just wants to get some college experience as a player so he can have the experience and exposure to open doors for coaching. If that doesn't work out...he goes to first choice school and becomes a physical therapist.
I was not implying that he had any social issues but just saying that if most of his time outside of school is spent at home then it may be harder than expected if the
Home vibe is drastically different- no Mom, dad, siblings but a young family with a newborn.
I'm not suggesting that a parent crush dreams but I think it's at times necessary to help a kid manage expectations. If he isn't being recruited to a strong academic D3, I would be guiding him to the first choice school you mentioned.
The other two are involved in sports, clubs, and activities as well, although not to the extend DS16 is. More like "normal" levels for a typical kid that age. They do their things for fun and exercise like they should. If they were taken out of them tomorrow, it wouldn't kill them, just as it wouldn't have for DS16 at that age. (although he was showing the intensity for it even then and we didn't pick up on it until in hindsight) But there are the same opportunities wherever we go with the younger two's interests, so I'm not worried that they will find a new normal. They don't have the same sense of urgency as DS does with this - this is literally his ONE shot for this, ever. Once it's gone or missed, it's gone forever. Life will carry on, of course, but still....