Saturday, April 19, 2014

Raising ourselves to be warriors: The Water Polo Match


My brain lit up like a roman candle last night at my daughter's water polo game.

Their team got creamed--they expected to get creamed because they are a young, tiny team of about a dozen players from a 2A school that opts up to play at level 3A; the other team, XXX, is the state champ, has about 50 seasoned players and is most definitely a 3A school.

The girls fought hard and their opponents played a really awesome game. This was all to be expected from both sides of the pool. My daughter has played with some of those girls in club tournaments and really likes them. In fact, they are practicing for the Junior Olympics team right now as I write this.

All in all, our team took the beating pretty well, and we had much to discuss on the long drive back home (the opponent's pool is about 1.5 hours away from where we live). There were some bad calls and some unnecessary roughness but, ultimately, our girls accepted the simple reality that they were outmatched. There were churros from Jack in the Box later and lots of music played on the hands free (while I opted for my noise cancelling headphones and back-to-back episodes of Alton Brown's podcast). Eventually they all crashed and had to be woken up at 10:45pm when we finally got home. Ah, sweet youth.

I needed the calm humor of Alton Brown NOT because I was driving noisy teens home from a polo game, but because the winning team's parents were HORRIBLE, and I needed some recovery time and space.

There were about 50 of their fans to our 5 fans. We were SURROUNDED. They mocked our girls relentlessly, in full voice. They repeated some of our girls' field talk, a common form of communication between players, but in condescending voices. They repeated loudly, "Well, this is a ridiculous blow out!" or "We are just kicking their asses to the curb!" with gleeful voices edged in arrogance. They laughed when our goalie could not single-handedly fend off fast breaks that our defense was not fast enough to thwart (and they were trying!).

Yeah, that's right... our 14-year-old goalie, who just learned how to swim and started playing polo officially one month ago, and who is now going to play on a Junior Olympic team this summer, which culminates in a tournament at Stanford this August. Yeah, go ahead, bash the newbie who shows MAJOR promise, why don'tcha?

It was like these people were drunk. (I finally had to look behind me to check. What did I find? Obese, ugly, poorly dressed, toothless White Trash. Parents. Parents behaving badly.)

At one point, I gave one of them the stink eye. She just stared back at me innocently, shrugging "What?" with an evil little glimmer in her eye. Bi-otch.

I texted my husband: "The XXX team parents are shitbags." He texted back: "F them."

I was sitting next to one of the parents from our team, a very calm and collected individual. He was visibly aggravated and even embarrassed, but not by our girls, who were fighting the good fight (they were awesome, actually, we were all of us very proud of them, including the coaches), but embarrassed by how poorly the other team's parents were behaving.

Shitbags, indeed.

Not surprisingly, the worst offenders turned out to be the parents of the toughest girl on the team, who was penalized and ejected several times for drowning, swimming over players, rolling and other brutality offenses. We learned later from the girls and the coaches how she was playing especially dirty and should have been removed from the game.

I am the George Costanza of comebacks (meaning I am useless in this capacity!) and could only sit there and hold my head; I even recited the words "serenity NOW!"--made infamous by George's father, Frank--in a funny voice to myself to try to settle down my brain. All those nerve endings just lit up like sparklers, the strange cellophane-crinkly accompaniment in my ears just barely muting their harsh, voices. This is what happens when I become emotionally stressed. It doesn't hurt, but it's weird and impossible to ignore.

Which, in a way, is a kind of blessing, because it's an immediate message from the universe to "let go." (Hence the Alton Brown podcasts on the long trip home.)

Anyway, as we got up to leave the game (the final score was 15-0), I saw one parent still in the stands from their team who was not part of the bully pulpit behind us. He was not obese, ugly, poorly dressed, toothless White Trash, either. It was obvious he had come straight from work to watch his girl play. He had a soft, nerdy avuncular quality to him that said, "I love my kids and I know you love yours, too." He gave me a sweet, apologetic smile. Right on. There's hope for team XXX after all.

Still, because I'm not nearly as gracious as I ought to be, I shared my text with the head coach; he gave me a conspiratorial wink. Apparently this is the reputation of team XXX. 'Nuff said.

It also helped for me to hear from my daughter that her coach had said to the girls at the end of the game, "There is a reason we don't play like that," in relation to the other team's "dirty pool" moves, and the girls left the game understanding inherently that what he was saying was "integrity matters."

It's always better to keep it classy in water polo, as in life.

This is what the coach has said repeatedly across the four-year span of my daughter's career on his team, and the fact is: it's one of the reasons my daughter has been accepted by an NCAA Division I water polo team... because athletics are never about playing dirty. They're about playing smart, and teamwork and strategy, about knowing how to play an entire game without getting relief if that's what you must do. It's about jumping back in no matter how hard you lost because who cares about a mostly losing season anyway?

NCAA water polo coaches acknowledge this can be a violent sport, but they also drive home the message that it must be played with integrity. High school players with a reputation for dirty tricks (scratching, drowning, kicking, unnecessary roughness, swearing, suit grabbing) do find themselves struggling to find a team that wants them at the collegiate level. No decent coach there has the time or energy or inclination to train these bad habits out of future players.

The only thing that matters is that, wherever we are in life, we strive for our own individual and collective excellence; this is the interior battle we fight every day, not just as athletes, but as human beings.

In my mind, our girls took home the win for the night for that reason. They get it.

As for the other team's parents? Not so much. Their loss AND their children's loss.

The message in this for MSers takes a similar vein: you can give in to the dirty pool of MS, the relapses and trips to the hospital, the emotional hijacking and all the other shitty things that MS could deliver to you, without warning, at any given moment in your life. Or you could fight back by taking care of yourself, having a sense of humor, striving to get out of bed the next day to start again, aiming to be the whole person you are as much as you can make that happen. Sometimes it's a day when the score for us is 15-0 and MS has kicked our ass, but we can still honor our own efforts to beat it. TRYING MATTERS. We can still smile and say, "I'm still here, MS. I will live to see another day and then we shall see what the score is then, hmmm?"

I found out later that my daughter, upon hearing how poorly the team's parents had behaved, sent a friendly message to one of her friends on team XXX, which said, roughly... "Hey, it was a tough game last night, but we appreciated the competition and we learned a lot from you guys. Thanks! However, you might need to remind the parents in the stands that sportsmanship counts there, as well." The girl responded very kindly and respectfully and said she would pass on that message.

They are playing polo together on the same team right now, training for JOs. No hard feelings whatsoever.

My daughter has no idea that she shared this bit of insider info with the very daughter of the shitbags who were sitting behind us in the stands last night.

Hear that sound? It's no longer the crinkling roar in my head, it's me laughing at this interest curve in the road, proud that not only am I a warrior who takes stock in integrity, but I have raised one as well.

Sorry MS, but that's 15-0, in my favor, this time around.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Nope. Didn't do it.


So I was all gung-ho to participate in two separate MS Walks this weekend. And didn't do either one.

I'm telling you, fatigue is a sum-bitch.

I got home from my vacation Monday night. Exhausted.

Tuesday I spent trying to catch up on basic post-vacay stuff like shopping, laundry, email, etc. Of course, everything now takes me a lot longer than it used to, and I was wiped out by the prior 14-hour travel day.

So Wednesday rolls around and I'm at the hospital all day with my mom who had major shoulder replacement surgery (she rocked it!).

Then Thursday rolls around and half my day is lost to previous obligations I cannot get out of, though by all rights I should not have been driving a quarter of the water polo team to a venue 2 hours away, especially since I've never been there and I was driving in city traffic. Thank goodness my daughter helped with directions; my brain fog and a migraine pretty much melted my cognition for the day.

Friday rolls around, I'm feeling slightly better. I get a few things done, get my hair done, which is a nice break, then I'm tending to my other daughter's preparations for her weekend of dance recitals. I looked around me, saw all the dirty laundry, the piles of clutter, the fridge without food, and my ridiculously messy office, and I just succumbed to the overarching wave of fatigue that's been holding me in its current all week.

Fugettabotit, there won't be no MS Walk for me this weekend.

Instead, I got up early yesterday, did my grocery shopping before all the rest of the people came, so I could focus on my list, take my time, and not get wiped out by traffic and the general sense of overwhelming I get when I go to the store anymore. Then I ran a couple of errands that were grossly overdue. Then I came home and did laundry and finishing unpacking (did I say I was behind?) and then I took a nap. I overslept from my nap and threw on new clothes, grateful my new hairdo from yesterday was still holding up as well as the day's earlier makeup... I was late for dinner with my MIL and BIL before my daughter's recital! Dag. Went to the recital, which was AWESOME but also EXHAUSTING, especially since my MIL takes so much energy to be around. Very grumpy, demanding, emotionally challenging. I had some problems with speech and doing math in my head when I went to buy flowers for my daughter. I hate that.

So today I'm up at a regular time, have done some laundry, revised my To Do List and have been tackling little this and thats all morning. Already I need a nap and it's not quite 11am. But had I gone to the MS Walk today, I would have been WIPED OUT before I even got there. At least my migraine is gone and I am feeling like my marbles aren't rolling out of my skull today, but the exhaustion is still leadening: my arms, legs, even the top of my head weigh about 100 pounds each, it seems. But I feel lighter knowing I made the right choice.

Thanks to my friends and family for donating and/or walking in my stead today. I guess I have to be fine with being the recipient and not the giver, something I don't always do so graciously or willingly. But this weekend was good practice in putting my health first and following my gut, and though I wish I could have seen friends out there on the path this weekend, I'm glad my day is wide open to a little bit of this and that.

Maybe related? A very well-meaning, lovely friend of mine revealed to me that she knew someone with MS, and that person worked out every day and did just great! Part of me is like, yeah, good for them. Sincerely. And part of me is like, hmm, I bet they didn't have mobility issues and this chronic fatigue that I have. And part of me is like, yeah, right, working out everyday is NOT the cure for MS, people.

This is why we need MS awareness across the masses. MS is not a muscular disease, nor is it a metabolic disease. Exercise and eating right make anybody feel better, but they won't cure MS, and for many with MS, what MS Unplugged hostess Deanna Kirkpatrick calls "the snowflake disease" because of its widely varied presentations, the idea of exercise at all is next to impossible. Even eating at all can be problematic for those with swallowing dysfunctions.

How is this related? Because we need to have more dialog with nonMSers to drive home these points. We need to have practice as MSers in educating people through these mischaracterizations of the disease.

I didn't really say anything in response because, guess what? I was too frickin' tired.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Join me for the SEATTLE AND/OR BAINBRIDGE MS WALKS THIS COMING WEEKEND!

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND MS WALK (TEAM || ROCK WALKERS)
Date: Saturday, April 12, 2014
Location: Starts at BHS and going through Winslow, as I recall (map online is not working)
Address: 9330 NE High School Rd, Bainbridge Island, Washington (BHS)
Site Opens: 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Opening Ceremony: 9:45 a.m.
Route: 2.5 miles

SEATTLE MS WALK (TEAM || BENAROYA RESEARCH INSTITUTE)
Date: Sunday, April 13, 2014
Location: University of Washington campus, Burke-Gilman Trail
Address: 3870 Montlake Blvd NE, Seattle, Washington
Opening Ceremony: 9:45 a.m.
Route: 4 miles

Links
Here's the link to the local team, the Rock Walkers. Go there, read the stuff there, click on Join Our Team or Donate to Walk MS. And here's the link to the Seattle Benaroya Institute Team. OR... you could go to my local personal page or to my Seattle Walk page to read what I have to say about the local MS Walk here and either Donate To Me or Join My Team.

I hope to nab a few friends to put in some time walking. It's so much fun and the weather is always nice. Donate or not at your discretion. I'm less about fundraising this year and more about teambuilding and building my support network. And heck, the more the merrier! So please consider helping a friend out so she doesn't have to walk alone, with the fire.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Walk with ME! An invitation for YOU, to join ME, in the battle against MS... it will be fun, I promise!


BAINBRIDGE ISLAND MS WALK (TEAM || ROCK WALKERS)
Date: Saturday, April 12, 2014
Location: Starts at BHS and going through Winslow, as I recall (map online is not working)
Address: 9330 NE High School Rd, Bainbridge Island, Washington (BHS)
Site Opens: 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Opening Ceremony: 9:45 a.m.
Route: 2.5 miles

SEATTLE MS WALK (TEAM || BENAROYA RESEARCH INSTITUTE)
Date: Sunday, April 13, 2014
Location: University of Washington campus, Burke-Gilman Trail
Address: 3870 Montlake Blvd NE, Seattle, Washington
Opening Ceremony: 9:45 a.m.
Route: 4 miles

Links
Here's the link to the local team, the Rock Walkers. Go there, read the stuff there, click on Join Our Team or Donate to Walk MS. And here's the link to the Seattle Benaroya Institute Team. OR... you could go to my local personal page or to my Seattle Walk page to read what I have to say about the local MS Walk here and either Donate To Me or Join My Team.

I hope to nab a few friends to put in some time walking. It's so much fun and the weather is always nice. Donate or not at your discretion. I'm less about fundraising this year and more about teambuilding and building my support network. And heck, the more the merrier! So please consider helping a friend out so she doesn't have to walk alone, with the fire.