Saturday, February 21, 2015

TEAM WORK


February 21, 2015

Dear Emily,

Snow, ice, freezing rain, and unusually low temperatures have kept most of Tennessee homebound for this entire week.  Schools have been closed all week, state and local offices have not opened on more than one day; even malls and some online stores have had to close their businesses for a period of time because their employees were unable to drive on the dangerously slick roads.  Since the adults in your life are all teachers (except for Pap and he’s retired!), you and Simon have enjoyed lots of parental time:  movies, books, games, and yesterday, you were able to scrape up enough snow to shape a small snowman. Fun times!  Mixed in with all that home time, you have had some BB time as well, and that’s always a good thing!

So, this week I decided to teach you how to play Dominoes – a modified version:  not to make points, but just to match up the dots.  Since my set of dominoes has all black and white tiles, unlike the color set that I played with as a child, you actually had to match the number of dots.   You caught on to the game quickly:  choose five tiles; find the tile with the highest number of double numbers, and start the game.   Our only goal was to see who could “go out” first.  I did not cut you any slack.  I won the first game.  So we played again.  This time, it seemed that I couldn’t get any tiles to match up, and I had to keep drawing tiles from the “bone pile” until I had quite a collection on my side.  You used all of your dominoes in five turns and won the second game!  After I applauded your success, I pointed out that since you had won a game and I had won a game, we were tied, and that we would need to play again to determine the winner.  You thought about that suggestion for just a second and then said “BB, let’s just play as a team and then we both win.”  And that’s just what we did. 

Competition is good.  Competition builds character.  Competition teaches life lessons about how to be thrilled yet gracious when winning, and how to handle the disappointment of losing with dignity and grace.  Frankly, healthy competition makes life more interesting and more fun.  I hope you will be a tough competitor when the time comes, and that you will NEVER be satisfied with losing.  This week, in your three-year-old wisdom, you figured out a way to emerge a winner:  let’s be a team and nobody loses.  It’s not a logic that the world will agree with nor cater to; nor is it realistic.  I’m pretty sure that someday you will beat my socks off at Dominoes – repeatedly.    But this week – we are both winners, and that works for me!

Love, BB