When clay makes a good potter...
Vishnu Suresh
The celebratory scenes at the Court Philippe Chatrier, the crowd pompously cheering for Rafael Nadal as he hoisted the La Coupe des Mousquetaires in the recently concluded French Open 2018, kindled me to re-imagine the parable of ‘Clay and the potter’, where a tea-pot narrates to its admirers, its transformation from being a lump of clay to a beautiful tea-cup.
‘You don’t understand’, I said with tears of joy. ‘I have not always been at the podium winning grand slams. When I started Tennis, I was just like a lump of red clay. A racquet in hand to fight the millions of balls that came charging at me with unrelenting speed, I hit some and most hit me...the balls pounded and patted me over and over, and I yelled ‘I don’t want any of it, let me alone’ but the voice inside me only smiled and said ‘Not yet!’
‘Then, BANG!! started physical training - running miles and miles, lifting weights after weights, stretching my physical limits to a point where I thought I would collapse, utterly exhausted and profusely perspiring I pleaded ‘Stop it! I can’t endure a minute more’, the voice inside me only nodded and said, firmly: ‘Not yet!!’
By the time I hit my teenage, my Tennis career was poked, prodded and bent out of shape with a chronic foot problem that caused agonizing pain and swelling during regular practice sessions. I cried ‘I can’t bear this intense pain anymore. Take me out of here’, my inner voice soothingly said ‘Not yet!!’
The searing pain in the feet was well addressed with a custom-made shoe and just when I pleasantly thought ‘Ahh this feels much better’, knocked the knee problem, a consequence of the custom-made shoe, as its pressure on my knees to relieve my foot problem. The pain was so intense with burning sensations that I felt I was in a hot oven. I decided to halt and not walk a step further when my inner voice looked at me in the eyes and said ‘Not yet!’
Like the many injuries that plague tennis players, I too have experienced my fair share – torn wrist, abdominal tears, tendonitis, lower back problems, boils and blisters that have forced me out of the competition in times as crucial as finals of grand slams. Whenever the fumes of injury burn me and I lower my arms, dejected, thinking that the doors are closed, a determined voice in me echoes ‘Not yet!’ and magically the doors open...somebody hands me a mirror and says ‘Now, look at yourself!’
‘This can’t be me, it all looks so beautiful ’, I say looking at the mirror filled with images of me clutching the French Open in reverence and the audience applauding the moment. Some say this is the eleventh time I have done it on clay and seventeen times in total, but to me, every experience is as sacred, reverent and distinct as it gets.
Breaking my reverie, the voice quietly whispers ‘I want you to remember this – I know it hurts to be pounded and patted, but if I had let you alone, you would have dried up. I know it was physically draining in the gym but if I had stopped you, then you would have crumbled. I know it was tormenting to bear with the swollen feet and burning knees every day but had I pulled out of the heat, you would have cracked. I know the flames of injury left you despondent but had I allowed you to drop your arms, then you wouldn’t be the fighter who never gives up! This game, the clay, the grass, the toil and your efforts to defeat the obstacles along the way, is what shapes you and keeps you going’
This article is a figment of the author's imagination and does not represent any excerpts or comments of the athletes from the actual scenario, however, the injuries to Nadal as mentioned in the article are factual.
This article was first published on www.athletales.com
The celebratory scenes at the Court Philippe Chatrier, the crowd pompously cheering for Rafael Nadal as he hoisted the La Coupe des Mousquetaires in the recently concluded French Open 2018, kindled me to re-imagine the parable of ‘Clay and the potter’, where a tea-pot narrates to its admirers, its transformation from being a lump of clay to a beautiful tea-cup.
Image Source: Zimbio
‘You don’t understand’, I said with tears of joy. ‘I have not always been at the podium winning grand slams. When I started Tennis, I was just like a lump of red clay. A racquet in hand to fight the millions of balls that came charging at me with unrelenting speed, I hit some and most hit me...the balls pounded and patted me over and over, and I yelled ‘I don’t want any of it, let me alone’ but the voice inside me only smiled and said ‘Not yet!’
‘Then, BANG!! started physical training - running miles and miles, lifting weights after weights, stretching my physical limits to a point where I thought I would collapse, utterly exhausted and profusely perspiring I pleaded ‘Stop it! I can’t endure a minute more’, the voice inside me only nodded and said, firmly: ‘Not yet!!’
By the time I hit my teenage, my Tennis career was poked, prodded and bent out of shape with a chronic foot problem that caused agonizing pain and swelling during regular practice sessions. I cried ‘I can’t bear this intense pain anymore. Take me out of here’, my inner voice soothingly said ‘Not yet!!’
The searing pain in the feet was well addressed with a custom-made shoe and just when I pleasantly thought ‘Ahh this feels much better’, knocked the knee problem, a consequence of the custom-made shoe, as its pressure on my knees to relieve my foot problem. The pain was so intense with burning sensations that I felt I was in a hot oven. I decided to halt and not walk a step further when my inner voice looked at me in the eyes and said ‘Not yet!’
Image Source: Flickr
Like the many injuries that plague tennis players, I too have experienced my fair share – torn wrist, abdominal tears, tendonitis, lower back problems, boils and blisters that have forced me out of the competition in times as crucial as finals of grand slams. Whenever the fumes of injury burn me and I lower my arms, dejected, thinking that the doors are closed, a determined voice in me echoes ‘Not yet!’ and magically the doors open...somebody hands me a mirror and says ‘Now, look at yourself!’
Image Source: Flickr
‘This can’t be me, it all looks so beautiful ’, I say looking at the mirror filled with images of me clutching the French Open in reverence and the audience applauding the moment. Some say this is the eleventh time I have done it on clay and seventeen times in total, but to me, every experience is as sacred, reverent and distinct as it gets.
Breaking my reverie, the voice quietly whispers ‘I want you to remember this – I know it hurts to be pounded and patted, but if I had let you alone, you would have dried up. I know it was physically draining in the gym but if I had stopped you, then you would have crumbled. I know it was tormenting to bear with the swollen feet and burning knees every day but had I pulled out of the heat, you would have cracked. I know the flames of injury left you despondent but had I allowed you to drop your arms, then you wouldn’t be the fighter who never gives up! This game, the clay, the grass, the toil and your efforts to defeat the obstacles along the way, is what shapes you and keeps you going’
This article is a figment of the author's imagination and does not represent any excerpts or comments of the athletes from the actual scenario, however, the injuries to Nadal as mentioned in the article are factual.
This article was first published on www.athletales.com
About the author
An ardent believer in storytelling and sport as ways of life. Jack of some sports, but an athlete of none! A persistent gully-sportsman who actively cycles, plays cricket and table tennis and believes in sport more as a discipline than entertainment.
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