My
dear friend Jami will be pulling on her tough girl pants next week as she
prepares for her husband’s heart surgery. She’s been on my mind a lot lately,
and it got me thinking about toughness.
Mental toughness, physical toughness, emotional toughness. None of these
have historically been my strong suit. I was not born a tough girl. Of course, I was an adventurous child, who
undoubtedly drove my parents wild with dangerous escapades. But the slightest
injury and I was surely a ball of tears on my Dad’s lap.
Even
today, I am still exhilarated by the fresh reward of escaping shenanigans
without injury. I peeshawed Gina and her
watchful parents as they cautioned me against certain death as I insisted on clambering
down the rocky Irish coastal cliff towards the ocean roaring below. I was alive with the excitement of making my
way so close to the wild waves crashing below me – only slightly unnerved by
the increasingly forceful winds blowing against the rocks. It was only later when I viewed the photos
that I fully realized how dangerous my climb actually was. And my sweet husband, who knows how prone I am
to misfortunate accidents, was NOT impressed with the amazing pictures. Weird.
I
guess, I like to pretend I’m tough. I can easily wave off potential injury and
toss caution aside in many (and likely stupid) occasions. But if I actually
happen to injure myself, I can oftentimes be found crumpled and crying like a
child. Just the other night Matt and I were wrestling around and bonked heads
and you would have though the world was ending. Of course, maybe I was tired
and cranky and maybe I had already told him we should stop before someone got
hurt…but regardless I cried. Not a little. Ridiculous.
And
then, last night, we had our second round of softball practice. And while I had
thought that playing catcher was likely the safest spot for me – I was proven
wrong by a lightening-fast, not-so-soft softball straight to the chin. CRACK! (It
was an UGLY sound!) My teeth clenched together and before I knew what happened I
was curled up on the ground just in front of home plate…the runner I was
attempting to get out, safe. It didn’t
take long for a crowd of my teammates to swarm in to check on me – nor did it
take me long to realize I was going to have to pull on my tough girl pants and
suck it up. Convincing myself it wasn’t THAT bad, I accepted a hand up but
waved off the others…and impishly gave Matt a thumbs up so he wouldn’t think I was
dying. Of course there wasn’t anything he could do – he was parked on the
opposite side of the field from where I rested with some of my teammates. I
could see the look of concern on his face as someone ran into the church for
some ice. I knew he was searching my own face and likely wondering to himself
if I might melt into hysterics at any moment. But I didn’t. My sunglasses steamed
over. A few errant tears made their way down my sweaty cheeks. My hands were
shaky as I felt the knot on the end of my chin begin to grow…but I didn’t freak
out. I chuckled at my own stupidity. I made fun of my own feeble attempts to be
a softball player and I let the team think I was tough. Surely I impressed the
teenagers sitting next to me, right? Clearly all the men were wishing their
wives or girlfriends were as tough as me, right? I mean, what other woman out
there could have gotten clocked in the face like that and gotten up with a smile?
I
must admit I feigned toughness last night. That ball to the face hurt like a
you-know-what. I’ve never been punched before, or whacked in the face like
that, nor do I ever want to again. It hurt to sleep last night. It hurts to
smile today. My entire jaw hurts. While I sucked up the pain in that moment – I
am a total whiner today…allowing myself as much Diet Coke as I want to sooth my
aches and pains. Pathetic.
I
guess I realized last night that giving in to the pain in that moment wasn’t
going to do me any good. My teammate who threw the ball already felt awful. My
husband on the sidelines felt helpless to ease my pain. And there wasn’t anyone
to drive me home or put me to bed…it was up to me to take care of myself. Matt
seemed proud of me on the way home – telling me I was tough and did a good job
at not freaking out. I know that if I had completely melted down out there he
would have felt terrible that he couldn’t just swoop in, scoop me up, and make
me feel better. But I wouldn’t be honest if I didn’t admit – I wish he could
have.
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