Helping with my son’s baseball practice, the coach needed some help in the field. Players would take turns hitting. If they swung and missed or hit a pop fly out, they would be out of the game and go to the field. If they got a hit, they could keep batting. Last hitter remaining would win the game.
Soon a ball came to me, a soft liner. I squeezed the ball, then let it drop. I let the kid survive. Seeing my strategy, another dad looked at me with a grin and said, “I would not have been that nice.” Well, maybe not, but I sure felt good and the player smiled knowing that he had been given a second chance.
A few batters later, a high pop fly headed my way. With the ball flying lazily through the air, I camped under the ball. I remembered a lesson that the head coach was trying to teach the kids, call for the ball. In a loud voice and with arms waiving, I shouted, “I got it! I got it!” The ball landed safely in my mitt. Perfect execution. Perfect illustration of how to catch a pop fly. I smiled. I smiled and trotted toward the mound to return the ball. I trotted toward the mound and handed the ball to the pitcher. I handed the ball to the pitcher and remembered that I had forgotten to drop the ball. I had demonstrated how to catch a pop fly, but I had forgotten to give another kid a second chance.
I even forgot to check and see which kid I had accidentally removed from the game. I guessed that it was the kid standing in the field, who looked like he was ready to cry. Second chances, I hoped that I would eventually be eligible. Lesson learned? Sometimes dads forget, even when they remember.