I was ten. I gurgled to the end of a 25m pool during a 50m race and, after
weighing up the embarrassment of aborting the race against the shame of dying
from exhaustion in front of the whole school, I heaved myself out and sauntered
to the spectators as though it were beneath my dignity to swim more than half
the race.
The rich storehouse in my subconscious of hapless
exercise experiences has made me somewhat grumpy about sport. Every semester, a fat “C” for Physical
Education would mar the otherwise perfect row of A’s on my report card. My halcyon high school memories were
tainted by hurdle mishaps and high-velocity volleyball assaults on my face.
So, when the Olympics loom every few years, I wonder
why everyone gets excited about watching people run quickly (either on their
own or after balls), jump high, swim fast or toss ribbons in the air while
wearing a shimmering leotard.
When the new boyfriend started coaching a team of
teenage boys, I went to the games as a show of gratitude for the times he had endured
subtitled art-house films and my impromptu readings of Philip Larkin poems in
the car. I learned the guys’ names
and cheered with their parents. If
a boy made a shot after a hailstorm of air balls, I found myself infused with pride
and laughing at his own surprise. During
a game at a stadium in the Kalamunda hills, I spoke to a woman who fostered
five children from a remote community up north. As she peeled a banana for a 6-year-old boy in footy shorts
and striped socks, she told me that sport had taught her kids discipline and given
them focus and a sense of belonging and achievement. She was happy to fritter away weekends chauffeuring kids to
games and training because they loved it and it kept them out of trouble.
Although I’m still appalled by cost of the London
Olympics ($37,000,000,000, according to an independent study – it’s a number
with so many zeros that I don’t know how to say it), disgusted by the
misogynistic antics of the cretins on The Footy Show and bored by continuous
footage of swimmers doing tumble turns, I’ve realised that my blanket aversion to
sport is unfair.
Watching the Olympics brings the pleasure of witnessing
someone doing what they do best, which I understand. I feel thrilled watching a barrister entangle a witness with
deft questions; a bartender balancing six espresso martinis on his tray; the
redheaded vet speaking gently to my trembling dog. I’m sure there were days of agonising, scratched out words,
scrunched up paper and bottles of Scotch before Byron wrote, “She walks in
beauty, like the night”.
Similarly, behind every slam-dunk, there are chauffeuring parents, hours
of lonely shots at a backyard hoop and team managers who fill countless water
bottles.
Of course, none of that changes the fact that I’d prefer to watch a two-week broadcast of an international literary festival.
1 comment:
Love it Cheebs!
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