Friday, May 25, 2012

The worldwide "tennis community?"



You have to know me only a little bit to know that I am really a closeted introvert, even though I have lived much of my public life as a professional extrovert. Credit that to a life as a USPTA tennis teaching professional, active USTA volunteer and tennis club manager. My four amazing children, my infatigable wife and a host of mentors and friends also figure into that mix. I have tried to carry the lessons, disciplines and joys learned as a tennis professional to other parts of my life. Conversely, I have tried to bring the joys of my personal life and faith into my professional career. 

Even though this statement is likely an invitation for psychiatric examination, I tend to trust a newly met person who identifies himself as a tennis player. That person becomes a friend quickly. I tend to be "aggressively friendly" with that guy sitting next to me on the airplane who is wearing a Wilson logoed shirt or the young lady in front of me in the grocery store checkout wearing the red clay stained Nikes. That person becomes part of my community, the tennis community. Equally important, I somehow become some small part of their community.

Is this a universal trait among tennis players? Do we recognize and trust each other quickly? 

Are we mystically connected as tennis players, even though we may have barriers and chasms of language, culture, race, age, religion, politics and interests? Or, is this just another of my lifelong optimistic illusions? 

Those are the central questions I will explore on my slow-paced tennis jaunt through Europe this summer. With hat and racquet in hand, I will knock on the doors of tennis clubs in Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Denmark and Sweden asking for their guidance in getting to know their areas, but really trying to determine if we share the DNA of a worldwide tennis community. 

What are your experiences with the "tennis community?" Does it really exist? Do you tend to trust tennis players more than, heaven forbid, golfers? If you aren't a tennis player, do you recognize similar traits among those in your field or area of interest? Do meeting planners, history teachers, cyclists, runners, marriage and family therapists, physicians, linguists, preachers, bloggers, web designers, postal clerks, contractors and research scientists consider themselves part of a special community that binds them together? 

I would love to get your input prior to the June 9 start of my trip. 

1 comment:

  1. Tennis is such a small world, especially among teachers of the game. I do find common, comfortable ground with the fellow tennis player in almost all locales. The you play, I play, so let's play has always endeared me to the sport even before becoming a teacher. I hope you find that same kinship across Europe. Keep us posted.

    ReplyDelete