Hundreds of girls cheered for Sylvia Arnold over the last 20 years, but only one called her Mom at home.
Courtney Arnold has a unique perspective, and I thank her for being willing to offer it. Her thoughts on the woman who brought her into the world and taught her the power of cheer:
Cheering for my mom was one of the most rewarding experiences in high school because I got to witness, first hand, the consistency of her faith, morals and characters in all that she does.
Champions commit.
The phrase came to life during my junior and senior year on the team, but has always been a theme to her coaching.
Though my mom emphasized this in the competitive arena of cheerleading, especially when competitive cheerleading meant waking up for 6 AM practices, it carried over into the academic and social lives of all the cheerleaders.
My mom believes that champions commit to their studies, they commit to their community, they commit to their relationships – they commit to being the best in all facets of life.
My mom also taught the team that it doesn’t matter how many trophies you bring home to the show cases if you are not smart, kind, and respectable young women.
I do not think that I could ever fully express how much my mom has impacted the school through her involvement as a cheer coach.
Her impact is written on the stories of the cheerleaders’ and students’ lives she has touched with her words and actions.
She has loved more than just her cheer team; she has loved the entire school and community by the hours upon hours she has poured into behind the scenes work that often goes unnoticed.
She hardly ever takes credit for what she does and instead deflects the glory onto the beautiful girls she coaches and the school in its entirety.
There are too many moments that are special to me to just pick one.
Some of my favorite have been singing the national anthem with her at football games or watching her make a fool of herself in front of the junior cheer girls simply to bring them joy through laughter.
Over this last year it would have been easy for my mom to give up on coaching.
I know that in many ways she was physically absent from the cheer team during all that was going on, but I know that her heart never left the program or the girls.
In returning to coach this last year of cheerleading, she showed the high school and community what she stands for: commitment. Champions commit.
My mom is a champion, in every sense of the word.
She is continually committed to God, she is committed to her husband and family, and she has been committed to her role as a cheer coach for many years.
But now, that time is coming to an end.
It is hard to see her leave the sidelines, but I know that the heart and soul she has poured into the cheer program, the school, and the community will overflow into the years to come.
Her legacy will live on through the testimonies and stories of those she has coached, taught, and simply lived life with.
If I could say anything to conclude, it would be thank you.
Thank you for the countless hours you have put in without anyone knowing, thank you for challenging the stigma of cheerleading, thank you for pushing girls to be more than talented athletes but to also be respectable and smart young women, thank you for your constant smiles through the hardest of times, and thank you for modeling what it truly means to be a champion.
Mom, thank you.
Know that you are valued, loved, and appreciated.


















































