Buy My Mom a House Syndrome
Buy Dejon Jernagin, Author of When The Cheers Stop: How to Help Athletes Deal with Depression āI gotta make it.ā āIām the one.ā āIām the ticket out.ā For many young athletesāespecially Black athletesāthose phrases arenāt just motivation; theyāre a heavy burden. They grow up hearing, āYouāre going to buy your momma a house,ā and from that moment forward, their purpose becomes performance. Their identity is tied to potential. Their value measured by victories. This is what I call āBuy My Mom a House Syndrome.ā Itās the deeply embedded belief that success in sports is the only acceptable path out of struggle, not just for yourselfābut for your entire family, and sometimes an entire community. While it may start as a noble ambition, it can also become a dangerous mindset that fosters overwhelming pressure, internalized fear of failure, and eventually, depression if the dream doesnāt pan out. As the author of When The Cheers Stop: How to Help Athletes Deal with Depression, Iāve walked alongside countless young men and women whose dreams collided with reality. When the path to the pros closesāand for most, it doesāwhatās left behind is often silence, shame, and a sense of deep personal failure. But hereās the truth that we must all embrace: Your worth is not determined by your wins.