Apodaca: The unwritten rules of baseball
Spring is fast upon us, which in my house means one thing: Itâs baseball season again.
All around Newport-Mesa, baseball fields are bustling, with the littlest Little Leaguers to brawny high school players hoping for fleeting moments of glory that make the long hours of practice worthwhile.
As they rehearse, I do my own prep work. When a new season arrives, I do a mental inventory to remind myself of the guidelines Iâve established for my own behavior.
I freely admit that my code of conduct might not jibe with othersâ ideas of good parenting. But I believe I would have adopted a similar approach no matter which sport my sons had chosen to pursue.
For what itâs worth, I humbly offer my Rules for Staying Sane During Baseball Season:
1.) Keep my mouth shut.
Over the years, Iâve learned the hard way that itâs best to stifle any impulse to go beyond generic âGo team!ââtype cheers during games, and empathetic nods and âhmmsâ afterwards.
Anything else doesnât help and sometimes makes matters worse, whether itâs pointless directives (âGet a hit!â), post-game platitudes (âYou tried your hardest, and thatâs all that mattersâ), or other useless suggestions (âVisualize success!â).
Iâve managed to minimize my role as my kidsâ biggest fan to maintaining a quiet, patient presence. I offer a supportive shoulder squeeze here, a hair tousle there, but I otherwise can the unnecessary commentary. In other words, I let them figure it out.
2.) Donât criticize or make excuses.
The players get plenty of critiquing from coaches and other players. By the time they get home, they know what they did wrong â or right. They might want to talk about it; they might not. Either way, I refer back to Rule No. 1: Keep it zipped.
Even parents who know baseball backwards and forwards trip up on this one. I offer one exchange from years ago between my sports-fanatic husband and oldest son as a case in point:
Dad: âYou know what your first mistake was?â
Son: Silence.
Dad: âYou should never walk the lead-off batter.â
Son: âYou think I tried to walk him? Like that was a strategy?â
Dad: âNo, but that was your first mistake.â
Son: âHow does that help?â
Exactly.
Making excuses was my bit. Itâs tempting to unfairly malign umpires and coaches, but I realized long ago that my rationalizing set a lousy example, and I had no idea what I was talking about, anyway. Which brings me toâŚ
3.) I donât know anything.
Sure, Iâve picked up a thing or two about baseball over the years. I can tell the difference between fastballs and curveballs, and I know what squeeze plays and pickoffs are. Iâve even tried my hand at the score sheets, which make Sudoku look simple.
But Iâve never played baseball, and my knowledge of other sports is seldom relevant. I canât put myself in my sonâs cleats, so I should stick to the areas where I can help.
4.) Thereâs nothing so bad â or good â that food canât make better.
Now hereâs where I can make a difference. Itâs hard to aptly describe the ravenous desperation of a group of hungry boys, but a pack of caged wolves thatâs been starved for days with a hunk of red meat hanging just out of reach might come close.
I might be an ignoramus about baseball, but I do know food, so I throw myself into my role as provider of all things edible. Iâve prepared team meals as if they carry the import of a White House state dinner. I keep the pantry stocked with sports drinks and snacks, the freezer stuffed with pizzas. I should probably look into investing in sunflower seed futures to help pay off my grocery bill.
5.) Layer, layer, layer.
Baseball fields have their own microclimates. They can go from blistering heat to subarctic conditions when the sun begins to dip. So I come prepared.
During the season, the back of my car holds the following items: two blankets, a ski jacket, gloves, a wool cap, a sun hat, sunscreen, an umbrella and a seat cushion. My vast collection of scarves gets ample use. I sometimes resemble a giant ball of yarn with legs, but if that gets me through a game itâs well worth the cost to my dignity.
6.) Appreciate every moment.
My youngest son is a sophomore in high school, thus my days as a baseball parent are numbered. Iâm lucky to have a flexible schedule, so I show up at every game, even if my boy doesnât play.
Soon, though, Iâll have to develop a new set of rules to keep from going crazy longing for days past. I might be seen haunting strangersâ T-ball games just so I can relive the wild throws, wrong-way base running and between-the-legs base hits.
Perhaps someday Iâll be fortunate enough to have grandchildren who play the game. If so, you can bet your backstop that Iâll be there. It wonât be hard to find me: Iâll be the little old lady swaddled in blankets up in the stands, keeping my mouth shut.
PATRICE APODACA is a Newport-Mesa public school parent and former Los Angeles Times staff writer. She is also a regular contributor to Orange Coast magazine. She lives in Newport Beach.
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