As the saying goes, if you can see it, you can be it, and that's worked both directions for Ebony and Essence. Two of the faces they've been able to recognize and follow as role models have been standout women's player Saroya Tinker and Columbus native Ayo Adeniye.
Tinker is a Yale and Team Canada alumna who plays for Toronto of the professional Premier Hockey Federation, and she serves as a mentor for a host of young BIPOC women hoping to make it in sports. Adeniye, meanwhile, is a CIHC and AAA Blue Jackets alum who currently plays college hockey at Adrian University in Michigan.
"We'd joke around, have fun and talk about different things that we were experiencing or just ask him questions," Essence said of Adeniye. "He's only a few years older than us, too. It's just fun to hang out with him."
As for Tinker, they're able to chat more in the summer when everyone has more time, but the professional player is a valuable resource as well. And as Ebony said, "When she followed us on Instagram, we all freaked out."
On the other side of things, the Wyse twins are starting to see the impact they can have inspiring the next generations. Giving back is an important part of working with the CIHC, with kids who go through the program and stick with it expected to become mentors and teachers for the next generation. This past summer, Ebony and Essence worked with kids in the summer, teaching them skills on the street hockey rink in the morning and then helping teach them how to ice skate in the afternoons.
Spending time working with kids is one of the reasons the twins were chosen as winners of scholarships from the Black Girl Hockey Club last summer. Those scholarships are given out by the club, which works to inspire and sustain passion for the game of hockey within the Black community, each year to young female players anywhere in the world who love the game and also work to make it a better place.
Experiences such as those can only help immeasurably for those who hope to follow in the twins' footsteps, as Ebony and Essence have learned over the years.
"We did a girls clinic (one time), and afterward I went to a farmers market with them," Ebony said. "There was this little girl who was at the clinic before and she was at the farmers market and she was like, 'You were so cool.' It felt good."
"I think it's cool when you get to the ice rink and you see the little kids running around and you hear like, 'It's a girl goalie. That's a girl player,'" Essence added. "When we played in New Albany a few weeks ago, I heard someone say, 'It's a girl goalie.' Hearing something like that, it puts a smile on your face."
As Joe admits, far too often it's easy for him to pick out his daughters on the ice simply because of their skin color or gender. To this day, Ebony and Essence said they will text their parents with excitement if they see an African-American player on an opposing team, and time shared in the locker room with other female players always seems to turn into a quick bonding experience whenever it happens.
But as time goes by, there will be a lot more faces like Ebony and Essence Wyse in the sport of hockey. On a night where Hockey Is For Everyone has celebrated, the Wyse twins remind everyone of what can happen when the love for the sport is allowed to flourish.
"I know it hasn't always been a smooth road," LaKesha said. "That song 'Be Alive' from King Richard, there's a verse that says the road was never paved with gold, and it hasn't been. They've had their challenges, they've had their tears..."
"A lot of tears," Ebony said.
"But they've definitely grown from it," LaKesha said. "We've grown in having to counsel them through experiences we didn't experience growing up, that feeling of being excluded. It's been a learning experience for all of us, but they've definitely come out on top. It didn't hold them down, it didn't keep them from going forward."