For as long as I can remember, fall has always been a favorite season of mine. the leaves are changing, the weather is just cold enough that you can wear hoodies, and sweaters, but still warm enough that you can wear basketball shorts and flipflops..LOVE!!
It is also the beginning of school. I have always been one of those nerds who loved school, and couldn't wait for those last couple weeks of summer to end, so that school would start. So many good memories attached to this time of year: Hot chocolate, family pictures, raking leaves into a giant pile before jumping into them, Sunday drives through the canyon (there is also a lot of nausea attached to that particular memory.)
There is another reason That I have come to love this time of year. RUGBY!! pretty much the greatest sport ever invented. This may sound crazy, but I have a very special place in my heart that is cordoned off with velvet rope, and a metal sign that "reserved for rugby". The reason for this goes deeper than a borderline obsession.
Picture this: the time: August 2009. The Place: Logan, Utah (Utah State University) The person: Me of course. I had just returned to Utah in April 2009 from an 18 month mission for my church In Maryland. I spent an awesome summer working at Camp Wyman in Eureka Missouri, and two weeks after that I had my new Hyundai Elantra loaded to the brim with my belongings. I was going to Utah State to Start My junior year in Psychology. I had been tossed from one adventure to another for the last 4 months and I was glad to start school and get some stability in my life. My apartment was almost literally the size of a shoe box. I unloaded my car, and 5 minutes later was putting half of it back in my car, because of my shoebox of an apartment I shared with one other person I had never met before. I was terrified, and ready to get back into the "Normal life". The past 18 months had been full of selfless service, knocking on doors and studying. The only thing I had to worry about was not killing my companion; but now I was thrown back into the world of class schedules, car payments, and television...scary. I was looking for something besides classes and a job that would let be a part of something and feel the same sense of purpose I had felt for the previous 18 months.
On my second day of school I was drawn to the Quad by throngs of people crowded around various booths. All of the clubs had gathered to give information, and recruit fresh meat for the upcoming year. As I was walking around the quad imagining all the good I could do in service clubs I saw a tall brown girl handling a curious ball that looked like a bloated football; The first words out of her mouth were "wanna play rugby?" to which I replied "is that the sport where you get to hit people?...I'm in". She told me when the practices were, and for the next two days it was all I could think about.
There were a lot of things I had to get used to when I started playing rugby. there was a lot of swearing, lots of talking about sex, and a lot of playful but sometimes stinging insults. I say again that I had spent the last 18 months of my life as a missionary, I wasn't distracted by t.v., radio, or news, I was pretty much like Bambi: doe eyed, innocent, and naive. The two other things I had two get used were the shortie shorts, that were my uniform, and the running...lots and lots of running...so much running, that when we got tired of running, we did some running for fun. I wanted to die after my first couple of practices, but as much pain as my body was in, and as much as I hated the running, I couldn't let myself quit. I was home.
I had played sports in a city league as a kid, but I had never been involved with a competitive team sport at the collegiate level, surrounded by teammates and a coach that despite, my turtle pace, and a first quiet demeanor, wanted me to succeed, and were always willing to answer my questions and help me in any way they could. I wasn't very good at first, the only thing I had going for me was tackling. I had so much pent up aggression bottled up for 22 years that I could give and take a hit. That was my favorite part. I loved tackling drills. I wore my first bloody nose as a badge of honor. I almost didn't wash my shirt because I wanted the blood to remain a reminder of how hardcore I had become since playing rugby.
I played rugby for 2 seasons. I scored 4 tries(touchdowns)in those 2 seasons, and actually became an okay rugby player. I was still the slowest runner on the team, but I could turn on the jet packs when it was important; more importantly I was finally part of a team, and seen as an important part of that team.
I've thought a lot about rugby in the last couple of weeks. I always get jealous when my friends start practices and games. I feel a little sad because I love the sport so much, and also a little envious that I have a stupid shoulder that makes it impossible for me to play. It was actually because of rugby that I hurt my shoulder.
I was thinking today what would have happened if I had never met Shannon on the quad, and if I had never played rugby. My shoulder wouldn't be hurt, and a couple other aspects of my life would be drastically different. But I also started thinking about the things I would have missed out on. I woudn't have had that feeling of camaraderie and accomplishment that comes from being part of a team; I also wouldn't have lost 35 pounds, and gotten into awesome shape.. I looked Smokin' Hot!.
Sure I might have saved myself a lot of pain, not playing rugby, but the things I gained mean so much more to me than a stupid lifeless limb.
And so my friends in honor of my lady Aggies, I share with you tonight a couple of rugby poems. I recited each one before different games, to get my team pumped up and ready for war.
Stay classy my well rested friends
Give it a Try
When the kit goes on
The switch is flipped
The match comes into
play
And everything else
goes away
The perfect tackle,
the perfect scrum
Watching for the kick
to come
This could be the
last time
The last ruck, the
last try
So go all out
Until you feel like
you’re going to die
Let your legs burn
and your breath go shallow
The sir, the fans and
your team could be gone in a blink
You don’t have time
to think
Be the game
Be the ball
Be the tackle and hit
the deck like a bomb is coming
Make a try like its
laden with gold
The fight isn’t
against the other team
Its against yourself
So shut yourself up,
and play the game
that your aches and
bruises know how to play
Play with heart until
it wants to come out of your chest
Play with heart or
don’t play at all
Give it your all or
keep your hands off my ball
Saturday’s a Rugby
Day
“Saturday’s a rugby
day”
That’s not what
you’re going to say when you get in my way
Your words will be
similar to
“I don’t want to die”
As I bust out the
Tongan shield and blow on by
You think you came to
play rugby
But you came to feel
pain
When I step on the
field with my rampages
I just go insane
Just watch what
happens when I get you in a scrum
The way I drive you
all day
Will make you feel
dumb
What are you going to
do when we get another try?
Are you going to get
MAD?
POUT? Or even CRY?
Attempt to push us
around
But won’t you be sad
When you keep falling
to the ground
Tell me again what
today is?
A day of pain, of
reckoning, a day to be defeated?
When you walk on my
pitch
You better come
prepared
Because at the end of
2 halves
You’ll be living in
despair
Saturday’s a rugby
day all right…for my pack and me
For you it’s day you
wish you could take back