Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Dear Future Husband: An Open Letter

Hello handsome,

     First of all, thank you for completely changing my perspective on what a marriage should be. "True" love was never something I could believe in. I used to tell my girlfriends that love was just a chemical reaction in the brain that would slowly fade over time. After all, about 30% of marriages that began in the 1990s won't reach a 15 year anniversary, and although the feminist movement is making that percentage drop, it wasn't enough for me to feel secure about a long-term relationship. In 2014, the divorce rate was 46.37%  of the marriage rate. All in all, the odds were not in my favor. I've believed this for so long, so for me to commit to you, for me to say, "Yes, I do want to spend the rest of my life with you," - sleeping next to the same person every night, waking up to see the same face every morning with the possibility of you breaking me - is a big deal. You've opened my eyes to the person everyone but me knew I would become. You've made me feel secure.

     Thank you for respecting me and supporting every decision I've made regardless if you agree with it or not. Had you not done either one of these things, you would have lost me a long time ago. It takes a special type of person to resist transforming based on the group of people you're with at the time. And regardless if we are with your friends, your family, my friends, my family, your coworkers, or just by ourselves, you never speak poorly of me or our relationship. You never have an insidious agenda or lie or pretend to be anything besides who you truly are, which makes me want to do the same.

     Thank you for not just being a feminist but also a humanist. Thank you for standing up for me, and in turn, every other woman and man that hasn't reach 100% equality because society won't let us. You may have not noticed, but I saw you give up your seat in the waiting room for the elderly man who walked in with a cane; I saw you open the handicap doors that were broken for the woman in a wheelchair; I saw you tell that man at the bar to stop disrespecting and degrading the bartender just because she was black and a woman (because we both know that man wouldn't say the same things to another white man); I saw you stick up to your conservative grandparents while they talked about immigrants and homosexuals. You thought I didn't notice, but I did.

     Thank you for rushing home from work to deliver tissues imbedded with lotion because I was sick and you know that's the kind I like. You also never judged me for being a writer and never degraded my degree because others told you it wasn't "practical." You know I love doing what I do, and you support me unconditionally.

     Thank you for never making me question your moral or ethical standards. This way, I know I'll never have to worry about you thinking about another woman or wondering what you're doing while you are out with your friends. I never feel the need to look at your phone because you are so transparent and true. You tell me you love me and that I'm beautiful almost every day. I know it's true; I can feel it when you hold my hand or brush my hair from my face or when you rub my back as I'm falling asleep or my shoulders as I'm trying to wrack my brain for some new content.

     But most of all, thank you for loving me for the person that I am, not the person everyone else has created in their heads. I know that it's hard when I do something to let you down. I want you to know that it's never on purpose; disappointing you is one of the worst feelings. Yet, you forgive me, because you know this is just who I am and you love me more for it.
     Thank you.

     Forever yours,
     The woman you married


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/02/divorce-rate-declining-_n_6256956.html

http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/marriage_divorce_tables.htm

Monday, February 1, 2016

How to Live the Life of a Non-Athlete

When we look back on specific moments in our lives, we are able to remember them due to the significant impact they had on us. Usually, they are moments that are milestones, regardless of how large or small, that change our foundations.

Thursday, January 28, 2016.

I will always remember this day.

An athlete is "a person trained or gifted in exercises or contests involving physical agility, stamina, and strength." (Thanks, Dictionary.com) An athlete is versatile and malleable. An athlete is determined and never satisfied.

On January 28, I gave up being an athlete for the first time in my life.

I was a dabbler until I found rugby. I tried basketball, soccer, tap, jazz, and ballroom dancing, cheerleading, swimming, volleyball, cross-country, horseback riding, track & field, and even joined a walking club once in an attempt to find a group of athletes that meshed well with me. My brother was the star football player at our high school. He received a scholarship from Kutztown University to play for the Golden Bears. Shortly after his arrival, he decided to give up his football career. He transferred to Shippensburg where he joined a fraternity.
I will ashamedly admit, that I crucified him for this decision. I'd lived 12 long years in the athletic shadow of my brother. I was bitter that my family seemed to attend each of his football games yet rarely showed face at any of my athletic events. And here he was, after years of dedication to a sport that he could have excelled in even further, giving up his career as an athlete.
And in some ways, I was angry that I wouldn't have anyone to compete against anymore.
I applied and was accepted to Kutztown University two years later. I still tell people I came to Kutztown because of its gym, but I didn't. Some part of me, a selfish, stubborn part, still wanted to compete with my brother. I wanted to prove that I could be the athlete that he couldn't be.
I joined the Kutztown Women's Rugby Team after my brother recommended it to me. After all, rugby would probably be the closest I could get to his football.
I was there for the wrong reasons, and many of my teammates could tell. I wanted to be the best athlete, but didn't want to bond and conform to my team to do it. I think at one point, I even said to one of my teammates, "I'm here to be an athlete, not to make friends."
It wasn't until the end of my freshman year, two semesters into my collegiate rugby career, that I realized I'd stopped competing with my brother and had fallen in love with the sport and my team. I dedicated myself to rugby, training in the off-season harder than I had in the past. I watched game film, held white board meetings at my house, would pass at a wall in the rec center, would arrive early to practice and stay after just to practice on ball-handling skills and to understand why we did what we were doing on the field instead of just following my coach's commands blindly. Rugby consumed me.
Sometimes, a little too much because my big mouth would get me in trouble. In some ways, I was told it was even intimidating. I went through pulled hamstrings and quads, an elbow dislocation, and a torn ACL and meniscus. Not once, did I think about giving up rugby regardless of what my friends and family said about how my body was falling apart and how I would feel every tackle as I got older.

Then, my senior year came.

I had numerous nominations as an All-Star throughout my career and eventually was invited to the National All-Star Competition in December 2015. I went. I had fun. Yet, the passion was gone. I enjoyed being challenged on a new level, but the physical price of the camp was too much. I wouldn't be able to afford attending multiple. So, what was the point in continuing my rugby career when reality settled in and made it perfectly clear that I would have to sacrifice more than my body and money to continue playing rugby.
I would have to sacrifice my time and my happiness. Because as of Thanksgiving 2015, I realized I didn't want to play rugby anymore. I still enjoyed the sport, but I found myself focusing on other things, such as my writing and school, my boyfriend and family, my pending graduation and a career search. Rugby consumed less and less of my time until I realized that I was more than rugby. Rugby did not define me like I had let it for so many years. I was still trying to force myself to continue with something that I felt more stress than passion playing.
My health would eventually pay the price and in March 2016, I'll have a surgery that will make it impossible to recover and outrun and overpower my competition by the end of my senior year.

On Thursday, January 28, 2016, I gave up rugby.

And, I freaked, because now I wasn't an athlete. I'd defined myself as that one word, and I'd just given it all up. Yet, I still haven't regretted my decision. It's because I will grow from this. For so long, I let one aspect of my life define me. It was time for that to give way to allow my other talents to grow.
I also realized that I didn't become a non-athlete in the moment I gave up rugby. My body didn't change and neither did my mind set. I'm still determined and hungry. Now, I'm just faced with new challenges and the opportunity to conquer them. I'm in the process of finding my new confidence. Like so many collegiate athletes before me, I've learned that although I'm a non-athlete because I'm independent from a sport, I can still be athletic.
Rugby has taught me so much, but most importantly, it taught me that with every struggle there is a reward. And, I'm happy being labeled as the athletic non-athlete.