Pure Life I

In the world of little-kid sports, "playing your best game" is the only mantra chanted by parents en route to the court or field, right?

Right.

It's not if you win or lose--but, then, why are we keeping score?

Because if you play your best and your best is better than the other team's best, you should win. It's that' simple. The world of sports is the one place where the relationship between cause and effect has not been disfigured by psychology, social work, and other forms of do-gooder confusion. You play well, you win. You do your best but lose and you have the comfort of knowing you tried hard--and the discomfort of knowing someone else's best effort produced better results. So you have to try harder.

I don't get sports, but I do get that, and I like it. Good kids can lose and it's okay. Good kids can lose but try harder and make a come back and win. And it's okay.

In fact, it's wonderful.

And that, finally, is what happened for my daughter's basketball team this week when it won by one point in overtime against the chronically stronger team from the neighboring town. The girls gave it everything they had, and they won.

It was pure magic to watch them interact in a singular way that led to victory. It was exciting to watch them outwit the other team's powerhouse by messing with her expectations--simply not going where she expected them to go--and throwing her off her game. It was fun to watch the biggest girl on Adella's team yank her of the floor and then run with her down the court and do everything right once they got there.

It was fun to watch a coach who expects to win all the time sweat and fret and just barely manage to keep it together to the end. It was fun to watch him looking a little confused as he walked out to his car after the game.

Best of all, though, was watching the joy in my daughter's face because she was part of a team whose brains and girly brawn brought them hard-won, well-deserved victory. It was nice to see her happy to know she and her teammates earned their victory.

(The above image is the water bottle she held during the final minutes of the game.)