04/10/2026
Say it louder for the girls in the back—We are not here to raise “small,” “quiet,” or “just enough” female athletes. We are raising girls who take up space, who hit hard, throw harder, and don’t apologize for the body it takes to do it. And yeah… that body might not look like everyone else at school. Her legs might be thicker. Her shoulders might be broader. Her hands might be rough from the grind. Good. That’s not a flaw—that’s proof.
Proof she shows up. Proof she’s doing the hard s**t. Proof she’s building something most people don’t have the guts to chase. But here’s where it gets real—if YOU don’t reinforce that confidence, the world will try to tear it down real fast. They’ll call her “too much.” Too big. Too strong. Too intense. So don’t you dare stay quiet.
You tell her she’s powerful. You tell her she’s beautiful because she’s strong. You tell her those muscles are earned through sweat, failure, and getting back up when it would’ve been easier to fold. Because there’s a window—when she’s young, figuring it out, comparing herself, questioning everything—and in that window, your words either build her… or the silence breaks her.
So be in her back pocket. Be the voice she hears when doubt creeps in. Your body is built for this. Your strength is your advantage. You don’t need to look like anyone else to dominate. And if you stay on that message, if you keep pouring into her when she doesn’t believe it yet, you’re not just shaping an athlete—you’re building a woman who owns every damn inch of who she is.
And that? That’s dangerous—in the best way.