The Ultimate "Team"

The spring sports season started about a week ago, and this year I decided to do crew (rowing). Before this point, I had always been able to distinguish team sports from individual sports, like basketball and soccer from golf and tennis. Nevertheless, I didn't realize until today, that the ultimate team sport is rowing. 

In soccer, the team consists of 11 people, in different positions, responsible for different actions, but the scorer is always credited solo. The team wins, with the help of [insert name here]. Of course, there are people who assist the goal, and people who pass the ball through the defense of the opposing team, but they don't get as much credit as the last person to touch the ball before it flies past the goalie's hands. 

In rowing, the 8 rowers, and the coxswain, all need to be synchronized, focused, and attentive. The rowers don't get individual credit, the glory is shared equally. A rower cannot row faster than the rest of her team to show off her skills, because she would mess up the other rowers, alter the direction of the boat, and cause harm to the equipment. Everyone works together, in the deepest meaning of the term, to reach victory. Everyone, is motivated by each other, and everyone is physically and mentally under the same pressure and responsibility. 

There is no I in TEAM.*
*doesn't apply to school group projects

Lots of almonds,
-Belle


Words of Week 3

QuiescentIn a state or period of inactivity or dormancy
AcquiesceAccept something reluctantly but without protest
PolymathA person of wide-ranging knowledge or learning.
Autophoby: Fear of being egotistical
Brume: Mist or fog
ThalassicOf or relating to the sea
Incarnate Embodied in flesh; in human form
DecadenceMoral or cultural decline, esp. after a peak of achievement
Ambisinister: Clumsy or unskillful with both hands

Sin-ical

The English language amazes me a little more everyday, but lately something I have realized has been haunting me. This rich and wonderful language apparently lacks the word that is the antonym of "sin." Now you might think, well we have the word "deed," but in the dictionary deed means "something that is done, performed, or accomplished; an act." So we say "good deed," but it is so very rare that we use an adjectival phrase instead of a noun. 

We have a word for "a four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage, designed in 1839; has an open seat for the driver in front of the closed cabin for two or four passengers." Brougham. Yes, brougham. I can't help but think this extremely specific word exists, but the simple, and long speculated word for a good deed doesn't. Perhaps, the person who coined the word sin, was having a cynical day, and wasn't in a good mood. Or, maybe he believed in the philosophy of Thomas Hobbes that all men were evil, and only capable of wrongdoing

Who knows, maybe someday in the future we will be using a new word I coined...