This blog is my window to communicate with the world outside. This is the space where the Kid in me explores his mind like a Tramp without any definite goal but with infinite hopes somewhat inexplicable even to self. In a nutshell, I live here in my own world of words.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Cricket says it all
Is cricket just a game or an insect? Is it a colonial hangover or a tremendous scope to bet on and earn a few quick bucks?
Many a question has done its round on my mind, and finally I could conclude that cricket is a brilliant lesson for every couple to make their marriage successful forever.
Have I sounded weird? If your answer is affirmative, I acknowledge and appreciate your doubt on my statement.
And since you are doubtful, I guess it’s my responsibility to help you clear your doubt.
Equate your marriage mandap with a cricket pitch. Your marriage is as if you are going to begin and continue your innings with your partner.
There will be plenty of people around. Call them spectators, opponents, team mates, society, family, relatives, friends, colleagues, or anything else, but their prying eyes will always be on you two, so will their said and unsaid expectations for the success or the failure of your partnership or innings.
Amidst all these, you two have to perform, score runs, build up your innings, make centuries, and succeed like anything as a pair.
During your batting, expect not only lollypop half-volleys or full-tosses that you can send over boundary rope all the time but also get ready to receive the snort of deliveries like yorkers, beamers, bouncers, and googlies that certainly can send you or your partner to pavilion at any point of time, forcing you or your partner leave the other midway of your innings.
In cricket, it’s called OUT and in marriage, it’s called DIVORCE.
It’s not like that that in case you are out your partner can’t find a new partner and bat on or if your partner is out you can’t carry on your innings with someone else. But, with every new partner the momentum of the innings suffers a lot because every new partnership needs a new beginning, a new set of game plan and strategy, a new set of understanding, and so on.
Then what to do?
Before you get out or your partner does, make sure you along with your partner – with whom you have started your innings first – have tried to play well within yourselves. In order to guard your respective wickets i.e. your respective positions at the crease.
For that, if your partner is not playing well, you try to play doubly well and if you are not fairing up to the mark, at least hang around there without throwing away your wicket and let your partner build and carry the innings in tandem with you.
Mind you, when boundaries and sixers are hard to come by, you and your partner have to rotate strikes for singles and twos as much as possible. Otherwise, your score won’t move and gradually, rather helplessly, your innings will be exposed to all’s unwanted concern, rebuke, banter, boo, sledging, tips, and what not.
Moreover, feel absolutely free and happy to run even for your partner’s runs, because unless you run hard and seriously for him / her, you won’t really realise why your partner also runs for your runs.
During innings building, this hands-on lesson on sharing the turf together is actually the real and best knowledge, which you can get and exploit in life.
Ultimately, when cricket says it all, why don’t you just play it on, on, and on… together?
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