Re: The decline of Canadian chess?
It is not about the money. It is about respect.
No chess organizer, tournament director, club official or volunteer gets in it for the money. They all start out with the best of intentions: to support the chess community. Their motivation can range anywhere from wanting to see Canada excel on the world stage to just finding someone else locally to play. What they all experience from the chess community are requests to do more. They have 3 options.
Option 1 – No thanks. “I am doing enough already, how about you do it?”. Many valued long serving chess volunteers have wisely chosen this option.
Option 2 – Okay. “I will do more and more and more, for free”. This option leads to Burnout. This is not a good option.
Option 3 – Okay, but I need to get paid for the extra workload beyond my volunteer comfort level.
One reality we all eventually realize is that the money alone (if any) will never be adequate for the time and effort involved. This is true because there will always be another volunteer willing to choose Option 2.
Whatever option is chosen: the joy of volunteering, the appreciation of the players, fees earned (if any), can all combine as “compensation”. I put this question to the players:
Is it not a sign of disrespect to expect an endless supply of option 2 volunteers?
It is not about the money. It is about respect.
No chess organizer, tournament director, club official or volunteer gets in it for the money. They all start out with the best of intentions: to support the chess community. Their motivation can range anywhere from wanting to see Canada excel on the world stage to just finding someone else locally to play. What they all experience from the chess community are requests to do more. They have 3 options.
Option 1 – No thanks. “I am doing enough already, how about you do it?”. Many valued long serving chess volunteers have wisely chosen this option.
Option 2 – Okay. “I will do more and more and more, for free”. This option leads to Burnout. This is not a good option.
Option 3 – Okay, but I need to get paid for the extra workload beyond my volunteer comfort level.
One reality we all eventually realize is that the money alone (if any) will never be adequate for the time and effort involved. This is true because there will always be another volunteer willing to choose Option 2.
Whatever option is chosen: the joy of volunteering, the appreciation of the players, fees earned (if any), can all combine as “compensation”. I put this question to the players:
Is it not a sign of disrespect to expect an endless supply of option 2 volunteers?
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