Pickleball Magazine 4-5 WD | Page 64

A Great Gift for you or your favorite pickleballer! High quality fine jewelry designs handmade in Sterling Silver and Gold. Necklaces, earrings, bracelets, charms and key fobs. I understand the desire not to play down. I’ve played tennis for 45 years and competed at USTA Nationals in 4.0 Singles at the ripe old age of 53. I understand levels and the need for them for good competition and everyone’s enjoyment. But what I’ve learned after playing pickleball for the past eight years is you can’t judge a player by appearance. The rotund player across the net can have the reflexes of a cheetah, while the bodybuilder with rippled muscles can have the hand-eye coordination of an elephant. You never know until the game begins. And even if it’s a lousy game, it’s over very quickly and weaker players are readily exposed. I began playing pickleball after arthritis settled in my right wrist after Nationals, making tennis impossible. I enjoyed the fact that the paddle was almost weightless and I could still play a racquet sport without pain. And the game combined my love of tennis with ping-pong, which I played almost nightly against my dad in our basement when I was a teenager. Pickleball was just starting up at my tennis club, and I was soon playing about two to three times a week. An added bonus—my tennis buddy Wendy, who’d recently been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, could play too. It was wonderful seeing her across the net again. I love the game because it’s everything tennis is not. Rather than form, it relies mostly on reflexes. You’re forced to play each point and then move on to the next. You can’t beat yourself up over missed shots, a plus for someone with a tendency to overthink things. But what I love most about pickleball is how it makes me feel. I feel like a kid again on the playground, having fun and laughing with opponents, many of whom are now my friends. It’s about as close to being a kid as you’re going to get when you’re 60. It’s a great time—even when you lose—and if you don't laugh, something’s wrong. I thought everyone felt the same way until I met these guys. I guess they still need to learn the most important rule of the game. • 62 TO SUBSCRIBE CALL 888.308.3720 OR GO TO THEPICKLEBALLMAG.COM PICKLEBALL AND JEWELRY pickleballandjewelry.com 419-699-0921