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SECTION 53 — THE ORGANIZATION SHOULD REDUCE DRAMA, NOT FEED IT

One of the most destructive forces in hockey organizations:

unnecessary emotional drama.

Drama drains:

  • leadership energy
  • volunteer energy
  • coach focus
  • parent trust
  • and player enjoyment

Yet many organizations unintentionally feed drama constantly through:

  • emotional leadership
  • gossip
  • unclear communication
  • political behavior
  • reactive decision-making
  • and lack of structure

Strong organizations understand:
healthy environments feel:

  • calmer
  • clearer
  • more stable
  • and emotionally safer

Not:
constantly tense and emotionally noisy.


WHAT “DRAMA” ACTUALLY LOOKS LIKE

Drama is not:
healthy disagreement.

Drama is:
emotionally amplified instability.

Examples:

  • gossip spreading constantly
  • emotional overreaction
  • social media conflict
  • parent politics
  • emotional leadership reactions
  • hallway speculation
  • emotional alliances
  • public frustration
  • and unnecessary escalation over normal hockey situations

Drama creates:
emotional exhaustion.

It slowly shifts focus away from:
development and culture —
toward:
emotion management.


IN SIMPLE TERMS

Healthy organizations solve problems.

Unhealthy organizations emotionally circulate problems constantly.


THE BIGGEST DRAMA FAILURE IN HOCKEY

Many organizations accidentally reward:
emotionally loud behavior.

Examples:

  • reacting fastest to emotional pressure
  • changing decisions because of panic
  • allowing gossip culture
  • avoiding accountability to avoid conflict
  • or letting emotional personalities control atmosphere

This teaches:
emotion creates influence.

That weakens:
structure and trust immediately.


IMPORTANT REALITY

Drama spreads fastest in environments where:
clarity and structure are weak.


THE ROLE OF COMMUNICATION

Strong communication dramatically reduces:
organizational drama.

Healthy communication is:

  • proactive
  • respectful
  • structured
  • clear
  • and emotionally disciplined

Weak communication creates:

  • assumptions
  • speculation
  • emotional guessing
  • and rumor culture

Strong organizations communicate early enough to prevent:
emotional confusion from spreading.


THE DANGER OF GOSSIP CULTURE

Gossip is one of the fastest ways to damage:

  • trust
  • culture
  • and emotional safety

Gossip culture creates:

  • division
  • suspicion
  • emotional insecurity
  • and political behavior

Strong organizations discourage:

  • hallway speculation
  • side conversations
  • and emotional rumor systems

Leadership must model:
professional discretion consistently.


IN SIMPLE TERMS

People should solve concerns through:
healthy communication.

Not:
through emotional side conversations.


THE ROLE OF LEADERSHIP TONE

Leadership emotional tone shapes:
organizational atmosphere immediately.

If leaders:

  • panic
  • overreact
  • complain publicly
  • gossip
  • or emotionally escalate situations

the organization absorbs:
that instability quickly.

Strong leaders:

  • lower emotional temperature
  • maintain perspective
  • and stabilize situations calmly

This reduces:
organizational drama dramatically.


IMPORTANT REALITY

People emotionally copy:
leadership behavior more than leadership instructions.


THE ROLE OF PROCESS

Drama often grows where:
process is unclear.

Examples:

  • unclear tryout systems
  • undefined complaint pathways
  • inconsistent accountability
  • vague communication
  • and emotional decision-making

Strong organizations reduce drama through:
visible process.

Structure creates:
emotional stability.

Weak structure creates:
emotional speculation.


THE DANGER OF SOCIAL MEDIA CULTURE

Modern hockey organizations must understand:
social media amplifies:

  • emotion
  • conflict
  • gossip
  • and reaction

Strong organizations reinforce:
professional communication expectations both:
online and offline.

Leaders,
coaches,
and families
must understand:
public emotional behavior affects:
organizational trust and culture directly.


THE ROLE OF PARENTS IN DRAMA CULTURE

Parents heavily influence:
organizational emotional atmosphere.

Strong organizations educate parents about:

  • communication pathways
  • emotional discipline
  • perspective
  • and respectful conflict management

Unhealthy parent environments often create:

  • comparison culture
  • emotional speculation
  • and political tension

Strong organizations reduce:
parent drama proactively.


IN SIMPLE TERMS

Emotion spreads quickly in hockey communities.

Leadership must manage:
the emotional environment intentionally.


THE ROLE OF EMOTIONAL MATURITY

Emotionally mature leadership reduces:
drama naturally.

Strong leaders:

  • pause before reacting
  • avoid emotional escalation
  • stay solution-focused
  • and maintain professionalism during pressure

Emotionally immature leadership feeds:
drama constantly through:

  • defensiveness
  • emotional reactions
  • public frustration
  • and impulsive communication

Emotional maturity stabilizes:
organizations.


THE DANGER OF “ENTERTAINMENT CONFLICT”

Some organizations unconsciously become:
addicted to emotional intensity.

Examples:

  • constant controversy
  • emotional group chats
  • public complaints
  • leadership drama
  • and nonstop speculation

People begin spending more energy:
talking about problems
than solving them.

Strong organizations intentionally reduce:
emotional noise.


IMPORTANT REALITY

Constant drama exhausts:
good people quietly.


THE ROLE OF CLARITY

Clarity reduces:
emotional speculation.

Strong organizations clarify:

  • expectations
  • timelines
  • communication pathways
  • leadership authority
  • and organizational standards

Confused environments create:
emotionally reactive environments.

Clarity creates:
calmer organizations.


THE ROLE OF ACCOUNTABILITY

Strong organizations address:
drama-producing behavior early.

Examples:

  • disrespectful communication
  • gossip
  • emotional outbursts
  • toxic parent behavior
  • leadership instability
  • and public conflict

Weak organizations tolerate:
small unhealthy patterns until:
drama becomes normalized culturally.

Healthy accountability protects:
organizational calmness.


IN SIMPLE TERMS

What leadership tolerates repeatedly eventually becomes:
the emotional personality of the organization.


THE ROLE OF CULTURE

Healthy cultures reinforce:

  • calmness
  • professionalism
  • respect
  • emotional stability
  • and direct communication

Toxic cultures reinforce:

  • gossip
  • politics
  • emotional escalation
  • blame
  • and constant tension

Culture determines:
whether the organization feels:
stable
or
emotionally exhausting.


THE DANGER OF “EVERYTHING IS A CRISIS”

Some organizations emotionally escalate:
every issue.

Examples:

  • minor concerns becoming major battles
  • emotional reactions to normal hockey adversity
  • panic over roster movement
  • emotional leadership meetings
  • and constant urgency

Strong organizations maintain:
perspective.

Not every problem deserves:
maximum emotional intensity.

Perspective protects:
organizational stability.


IMPORTANT REALITY

Calm organizations make:
better decisions.


THE ROLE OF LEADERSHIP UNITY

Drama grows rapidly when leadership:

  • contradicts each other
  • undermines decisions
  • or emotionally divide publicly

Strong leadership groups:

  • align internally
  • discuss disagreements professionally
  • and communicate organizationally with consistency

Leadership unity reduces:
organizational instability dramatically.


THE ROLE OF ENERGY PROTECTION

Drama consumes:
emotional energy.

Strong organizations intentionally protect:
the emotional energy of:

  • players
  • coaches
  • volunteers
  • families
  • and leadership itself

Because energy spent on:
drama and emotional chaos
is energy removed from:
development,
culture,
and organizational growth.


IN SIMPLE TERMS

Strong organizations conserve emotional energy for:
what truly matters.


THE ROLE OF LONG-TERM THINKING

Healthy organizations ask:

  • Are we feeding emotional noise?
  • Are we reacting or leading?
  • Are systems reducing drama?
  • What behavior is creating instability?
  • What communication gaps are fueling speculation?

Strong organizations solve:
root causes —
not just emotional symptoms.


THE MOST IMPORTANT DRAMA QUESTION

Leadership should constantly ask:

“Does this environment emotionally calm people —

or emotionally agitate them?”

That question reveals:
organizational health immediately.


THE HARD TRUTH ABOUT DRAMA IN HOCKEY

Many organizations unintentionally normalize:

  • emotional tension
  • gossip
  • overreaction
  • and constant instability

while believing:
“This is just part of hockey culture.”

No.

That is:
unhealthy organizational leadership.

Strong organizations intentionally create:
calmer,
clearer,
more emotionally mature environments.


HOW STRONG ORGANIZATIONS REDUCE DRAMA

Strong organizations:

  • communicate proactively
  • reinforce professionalism
  • reduce gossip culture
  • maintain emotional discipline
  • align leadership internally
  • address unhealthy behavior early
  • and prioritize clarity over emotional reaction

Over time:
the organization begins feeling:

  • calmer
  • healthier
  • more focused
  • and more emotionally stable

That becomes:
organizational trust and sustainability.


FINAL PRINCIPLE — REDUCE DRAMA

Strong hockey organizations understand:
their responsibility is not:
to create emotional intensity around every issue.

Their responsibility is:

creating stable,

professional,
emotionally mature environments
where:

  • people feel respected
  • communication feels clear
  • leadership feels calm
  • and energy stays focused on:
    development,
    culture,
    community,
    and healthy growth.

Because ultimately:
great organizations are not remembered for:
constant emotional noise.

They are remembered for:
how stable,
healthy,
and emotionally grounded the environment consistently felt over time.

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Larissa created “The Mental Game Academy” as a sports podcast to support athletes and raise awareness of the interpersonal skills that are much needed in sports today.

It takes a village to develop young athletes, parents, coaches, trainers, and even refs, and how they act around them and demonstrate emotions plays a key role in their social development and overall athletic success.

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Mark Hetherman speaks from his 40-plus years of experience.
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