Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Sports, by Betsy


As a child I was not involved in any organized sports.  No soccer leagues, no softball for girls, mostly just playtime and as an older child “hanging out.”

We did play sports in school.  I remember kick ball--just like baseball only you kick a soccer-sized rubber ball--then run around the bases. I loved that game.  Also dodge ball was big in elementary grades. 

When I was about ten my father took me out on skis a few times. Not to a ski area, rather cross country.  Being in the lumber business he knew where the old abandoned roads were and I was proud of myself indeed to be out on skis with my Daddy.  For a few years the family would venture up to Old Forge in the Adirondack Mountains, stay in a hotel and ski at the ski area. In those days in NY State a rope tow was the best means of propulsion to the top of the ridge.

I loved skiing, except for getting cold.  Today 70 years later I am still skiing and have no intention of giving it up any time soon.

Also in the winter we had many opportunities for ice skating. We would skate on the nearby lake, in fact, I could skate to school at the other end of the lake.  In New Jersey our lake froze over quite often as I remember. 

On a couple of occasions as a child my Daddy took me to the local horse stables where we could rent a couple of horses and off we would go. Just walking an old nag, Im sure.  But again, I was on top of the world because I was with my Daddy. That was probably the best sports experience of those early days and we probably only went out on horses a couple of times. I was devastated when I had to quit that because I was allergic to horses.

My mother was not athletic and did not like sports except bowling which she participated in weekly for many years.  I do believe it was more of a social activity for her than a competition. However, she always went along on the ski trips and was a good sport about it.

Around age 15 my Daddy taught me to play golf.  He was a avid golfer and quite skilled at the game. In the ensuing year I came to take it quite seriously, playing for fun and in occasional competitive events in high school and college.

As I am writing this, I keep thinking of more and more sports which were introduced to me by my father. He really had been quite an athlete himself in college. I know that because at home in the attic I happened upon some of the medals and certificates awarded to him.

I am also reminded of sporting events my father took me to watch. What I remember best are the hot dogs at Ebbets Field or maybe it was Yankee Stadium.  The game I thought boring to watch, but I enjoyed the yummy hot dogs slathered in mayo, mustard, and pickles.

Also memorable was the time we went to see Babe Didrikson Zaharias* play golf in an LPGA [Ladies Professional Golf Association] tournament in New Orleans. Babe was the greatest woman athlete of her day.  Having competed in the Olympic games in track, she was now a golf champion. I must have been around 16 or 17 at the time of that event since we lived near New Orleans. I will never forget approaching her when she was practicing on the putting green before a match.  She signed my program for me and my heart went thumpity-thump.

Another sport my father taught me was ping pong. We had an enclosed sun porch at the back of our house in New Jersey which housed our ping pong table. Daddy would challenge me to a game and start out by announcing that he would even the playing field, so to speak, by tying his right arm behind him, or spotting me a number of points. As I grew older and more adept, the number of points he spotted me diminished until finally we were even. He could not have been happier, which was a message to me about what is really important in sports.

When I was in high school we were forced to move from New Jersey, a rather progressive place, to Louisiana, the ultimate in conservatism and tradition. We, of course, had to give up the winter sports. After the move in  school my sports participation came to a rather screeching halt. Girls did not do sports in my Louisiana high school.  It might cause a girl to sweat, which is not lady-like.The best I could do was to be a cheer leader and cheer on the boys.

It was then that my father taught me to play golf. It was my saving grace when it comes to sports participation during those three years in Louisiana.

My choice to leave the deep south and go back north to college was probably driven somewhat by my love of sports and particularly winter sports.

When I married and became the mother of three children, I gave up golf and took up tennis.  I found that I could from time to time manage an hour of tennis, but never could I find a half a day for a round of golf. Also money was tight. Public tennis courts are free, not so with the golf course, even public ones.  Also during my years of mothering I coached my girlsrecreational soccer league teams.  When that was over and I was age 40 something I started playing the game until I turned 60. 

I continued playing tennis for the rest of my life, my Patty Berg signature golf clubs gathering dust in the attic. I have been tempted but have not found time to get back into golf.  Im spending too much time and having too much fun on the tennis court.

The sports introduced to me by my father have been very important to me throughout my life and continue to be so. They have opened up doors, brought me closer to friends and family simply by being able to play together. Teaching and participating in sports with each of my three children I know has brought us closer together over the years.

Some of my best friendships have grown out of my interest and participation in sports.  I play regularly with good friends at the Denver Tennis Club, tennis and ping pong. Im happy to say that my lovely Gillian has joined me in ping pong.  She is a formidable player and we have our own table at home.

I still play ping pong, ski cross-country and downhill. I have taught skiing to the disabled for 16 years at the National Sports Center for Disabled, which has been an educational experience, and enlightening.

Did I mention cycling? Like most kids I had a bicycle back in New Jersey as a youngster.  I rode it to school and rode around the area with my friends.  We pedaled our bikes to the movies on Saturdays and to the drug store for sodas.

I took up serious cycling when I retired in 1998.  My ambition upon retirement had been to hike the Colorado Trail.  I had worked as a volunteer building the trail now I wanted to hike the entire length. When the time came, I had to give up the idea because of a chronic back condition. So instead I took up cycling and have had some of the best adventures of my life as a result--the ultimate being the trip from the Pacific to the Atlantic which I pedaled in 2005. 

I am fortunate that I have an aptitude and a proclivity for sports--most sports, and have had the opportunity to learn to play, to practice, and the health to participate in them which is truly the love of my life--well, one of them anyway.


© 13 Nov 2014 

About the Author 


Betsy has been active in the GLBT community including PFLAG, the Denver Women’s Chorus, OLOC (Old Lesbians Organizing for Change), and the GLBT Community Center. She has been retired from the human services field for 20 years. Since her retirement, her major activities have included tennis, camping, traveling, teaching skiing as a volunteer instructor with the National Sports Center for the Disabled, reading, writing, and learning. Betsy came out as a lesbian after 25 years of marriage. She has a close relationship with her three children and four grandchildren. Betsy says her greatest and most meaningful enjoyment comes from sharing her life with her partner of 30 years, Gillian Edwards.

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