You glow, girls
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Here we are in youth soccer playoffs, in the second shootout in two weeks. If you donât know what a shootout is, let me just say that itâs no place for children. It is a goofy, capricious method for determining an outcome after a tie game. To oversimplify, each team takes five penalty shots; the team that makes the most shots wins. It would be like determining a bitter divorce with pistols at 20 paces. OK, bad example. Some folks would actually enjoy that.
âCome on, letâs pray,â Taylor says before the tiebreaker begins.
âYeah, letâs pray,â says Lindsay.
I donât know what AYSOâs policy is on prayer circles before shootouts. Certainly, they have a rule somewhere. They have rules everywhere. The prayer circle is probably determined by some sort of coin flip. The leader probably has to stand on the north side of the field, facing God.
âOh heavenly father ... â Taylor begins.
I loiter a few yards from the prayer circle because I donât really want the parents, 20 yards away, to get wind that I am allowing the girls to join hands and say a prayer.
I have no problem with what they are doing, of course, but what kind of world would we have if children from all different backgrounds and religions just suddenly joined hands and started praying together for strength, peace and good fortune? Some people might be furious.
âPlease help us be brave and do our best,â Taylor says.
âAnd guide the ball into the net,â says Emily.
âYeah, especially that,â Becca says.
âAmen,â says Lindsay.
When we last checked in on the mighty Glow Chicks, they were just beginning a long season of soccer with the highest of hopes. Their uniforms were bright, almost glowing. Their hair never looked better.
Oh sure, skin care issues arose from time to time, and certainly fashion was important, but for the 12- and 13-year-old Glow Chicks, their hair trumped all other concerns. The way it looked, the way it fell across their eyes, obscuring anything they might do on a soccer field.
âMy bangs, like, just exploded,â one girl said at practice one night.
âExploded?â
âBang!â said someone else.
Which resulted in waves of convulsive, belly-aching laughter. Because in addition to the importance of hair, and the importance of prayer, the Glow Chicks were firm believers -- all of them -- on the therapeutic effects of laughing astoundingly hard on a regular basis.
âThis one time, in science class ... â Kelsey would begin.
âOh-my-god, I remember that!â Lucy would shout, and grunting, glorious fits of laughter would follow.
Sometimes, hair and laughter would come together. On windy days, it was all they could do to keep from suffocating on their own shiny locks, which would blow into their faces when they laughed and ran, no matter how many times theyâd swipe at it.
âForget about your hair, Katie!â Iâd yell from the sidelines during games.
âWhat?â
âYour hair, forget it!â
âOK, coach!â sheâd lie.
Yet, with all these distractions, the Glow Chicks managed to put together a great season and memories that will last months, at least. We won more than we lost. We laughed more than we cried.
A typical game went something like this.
First quarter: We quickly discover that the referee, a good man and devoted volunteer, may be legally blind. Ray Charles blind. Because he is a good man and devoted volunteer, we are reluctant to complain.
Second quarter: We give up a goal that I fail to see because Iâm studying the next quarterâs substitutions. âDid you see that foul?â someone asks. Um, no. And neither did the ref -- a good man, a devoted volunteer.
Third quarter: The game drags on like a Lutheran wedding. I look down at my clipboard and begin to work on my taxes.
Fourth quarter: We finally score, when Kelsey passes to Aimie, who passes to Holly, who passes to Sarah, who is on the other team actually, but mis-kicks it to Carolyn, whose shot starts to go wide but is pulled back into line by one of Earthâs natural magnetic fields.
âThatâs just good coaching,â Iâd point out after any sort of freak goal.
âYou should get a big raise,â some wise guy would say, usually Larry.
Actually. I should get two raises. Because now itâs come down to this: a tense shootout at the end of regulation. Five girls. Five kicks. If we win, we play next week. We lose, weâre done for the season.
âJust do your best,â I tell them.
âYeah, and donât screw up,â says Anna.
âCome on, letâs pray,â Taylor says, and then the prayer circle begins.
As for the final result, letâs just leave it at this: Some things in life donât work out. Sometimes, strong kicks go high over the crossbar, good shots sail wide, even prayers fall short.
But the loud, wild and wonderful Glow Chicks will always remind us of one little thing. A good, gasping laugh is still the best form of exercise, one of Godâs great gifts.
Better even, than soccer itself.
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