LIFE ON THE ROCKS
It’s finally happened.
The winter has gotten to me, I’m bored out of my tree, and I don’t want
to start my usual seed-starting mess in the living room until after
Easter. Hosting a bunch of company with
lively grandkids makes shelves of moist dirt and baby seedlings in the big
front window just seem unwise.
So, I’ve been looking to amuse myself with something
else.
I stare out the window a lot; at first the snow was going
down, and then there was more of it than we’ve had all winter. I’ll provide updates as is necessary.
I’ve taken note that some of my walls could use washing but
I’m not that desperate yet.
I did some baking, but that’s a bad idea unless I can think
of something to make that I don’t like.
(On an unrelated note, did you know that a puffed wheat cake can
disappear in under two days?)
And I spend way too much time on my iPad … doing puzzles or
crosswords or other shape-matching games.
I dream of working outside, planting my garden, enjoying neighborly
conversations on my deck, and hanging clothes out on the line, but meanwhile
all I do is sit inside and scroll through Facebook.
So it was, with my boredom at its peak, that Facebook introduced
the idea of a new way to monopolize my time – both official advertisements for
the Brier and constant comments by my friends who are already curling junkies
started to wear me down. I decided “What
the heck? What could a game or two
hurt?”
And now here I am, so far down the curling rabbit hole I
can’t see the light anymore.
I can’t say it was an unpleasant experience though, perched
on the edge of my chair, holding my breath as yet another shot from Magic Mike
rumbled down the ice to amaze us all. On
the one hand that kind of trepidation makes a person feel fully alive, on the
other hand I think the doctor and I may have chosen the wrong week to keep
track of my blood pressure. I had a lot
of sympathy for Mike’s wife though, her anxiety level was through the roof.
It wasn’t just the fantastic shots or the missed-by-a-hair
mistakes, or the hard-fought wins or the disheartening losses that kept me
watching though, it was the long and winding road down my personal Memory Lane
that I enjoyed the most.
As the games went on the commentators added
behind-the-scenes tid-bits and colour commentary. There was a lot of background of who has won
or lost before, who used to play on other rinks, and who is married to a star
in women’s curling. Being as I am such a
novice in this sphere of high-fallutin’ curling fandom I didn’t pay much
attention to these comments, but when they talked about the idiosyncrasies of
ice perfection it caused me much amusement.
My first curling experience was a 4-H bonspiel in Wauchope circa 1966 on
a sheet of ice that had more humps and hollows in it than you could count. Now
playing on that kind of obstacle course required a certain kind of genius. The commentators chuckled about how it was
the lesser known teams who didn’t get to practice on perfect ice all the time
who just ‘figured out’ each new sheet of ice.
That’s real curling if you ask me: what the top tier teams do on their
perfect ice has the feel of automation to it.
Precision is fascinating, but the ‘figuring it out’ has an element of
adventure.
The other little nugget of nostalgia that surfaced for me
was during Quebec’s televised game.
Naturally, they did all their team talk in French. Man, did that ever take me back. It had never occurred to me that French was
my first language of curling, if there is such a thing, but besides a few
school or 4-H bonspiels while I was growing up I didn’t actually curl much
until I was married – to someone whose first language was French, and we lived
in predominantly French-speaking towns.
The strategy discussions on ice, or draw vs. take-out, or speed were
always in French. It’s funny how the
weirdest things can trigger the happiest memories. I think that was my favourite game of all
even though I couldn’t tell you now who they were playing or which team won.
I will have to watch the brier next year to see if it
happens again.
Meanwhile, I’m told that it’s the World Women’s Championship
next weekend. If I keep following this
rabbit hole I will eventually find my way out, right? If I keep staring at my TV I won’t see how
dirty my walls are, right?
It’s worth a try.