| Wells
College 2001 Athletic Awards Banquet Address
By
Nell Mohn '80
(Please click on photos for an enlarged
version.)
I received Lyn's invitation to speak
here tonight the day after I had just returned from presenting another
talk at Wells about sexual harassment. At first, I chuckled when I saw
Lyn's e-mail. Her request seemed so far a field from the weightier, way
less playful things I usually talk about, like sexual harassment, careers
in the law, your rights as an employee in the workplace. I also had a brief
moment of gut-wrenching panic; it's been over two decades since organized
sports have been in my life. What could I possibly talk about for 20 minutes?
Then, suddenly, myriad thoughts and memories came flooding back about my
incredibly rich years spent playing team sports. And soon I knew that the
problem was not going to be filling 20 minutes, but knowing when to quit.
What kind of story could I tell that would be, I hope, interesting, useful
even, maybe, if I were lucky, inspiring?
So, I thought about this in every spare
second over the last few weeks: while I was out walking my cat at night,
sometimes talking out loud and scaring my neighbors, and while I was daydreaming
out the window at work. What ultimately crystallized for me was an understanding
of the many ways in which my participation in women's athletics has been
important to me over the entire course of my adult life. So what I'd like
to do tonight is present my list of seven items that identify and describe
what women's sports have meant to me:
1. THE GAME. I had the good fortune
to play both field hockey and basketball in high school and at Wells -
at least until the basketball program was discontinued here - and also
to participate in track in high school, in particular the 110 meter hurdles
and long jump. But because it was the one sport I played the longest and
also my connection to Mrs. Maloney that prompted Coach LaBar to invite
me to speak tonight, that I'm going to talk about just field hockey for
a second, at least with respect to the game.
What I want to describe here are the
sensory impressions, the full palate of my own remembered sensations about
field hockey. For those of you who play that sport, I think you'll know
what I'm talking about; for athletes in other sports, I apologize, but
perhaps something similar will strike a chord in you as well.
So for starters, how about the familiar
feeling that returns to your butt when you learn once again every fall
to bend over in that seemingly, oh-so-unnatural position and stretch those
usually sedentary muscles which much prefer sitting down.
How about trundling up that hill, sometimes
before breakfast, coffee mug in one hand, stick in the other for an early
morning practice, the sleep barely out of your eyes.
The sound of cleats on a hard surface,
whether on a newly waxed school floor you weren't supposed to be walking
on or on pavement. When I wore cleats, I felt tall, strong. I played field
hockey, man. Clickety clack, clickety clack. Look out! Parenthetically,
my last pair of cleats somehow mysteriously disappeared from the face of
the earth after my years at Wells. My father, bless his heart, who is not
clued into sports and loves a clean basement, threw them out one day in
a fit of purging the nether regions of the house. When I found out, I felt
weak in the knees. What could he possibly have been thinking? His explanation
was that they had holes in them. Well, of course! What good pair of used
cleats doesn't?! A lot of blood, sweat, and tears went into those holes.
Never more would I have this keep sake of my former glory days to lug around
with me from home to home over the succeeding years until I finally reached
my own golden years where I probably wouldn't even recognize what they
were anymore and throw them out myself. So, I forgave my dad and got over
the melodrama.
What about the sound of field hockey
sticks smacking together - ground-stick-ground-stick-ground-stick - as
you wait breathlessly, nervously for the contest to finally begin.
The solid thump of a well-hit ball
when you know just by the feel and the sound that you have so connected
with the pure center of that hard round object that it's gonna drive the
straightest possible, pre-ordained trajectory across the universe; unless
someone so much as dares to get in the way.
The pain of a stick to your shins when
you don't have your shin guards on, they've fallen down, or another player
has somehow managed to find the one place on your ankle they just don't
cover. Hockey balls to the chest, thighs, midriff, arms; but unless the
injuries are serious, you wear the bruises proudly.
The smell of a field hockey stick.
Am I nuts, or do they still have that wonderful unique smell? I don't know
if it's the wood, the grip material or sometimes the athletic tape you
wrap around it to hold it all together - maybe it's all of those things.
I love that smell; it's alive, physical, and it's so field hockey. I picked
up my stick from high school the other day, which I managed to sort of
borrow eternally after my last hockey game for Iroquois Central, and 25
years later that smell is still there, faint, but there.
These are just some of the things I
associate with the sound, taste, and feel of field hockey. For each of
you, I imagine you have your own set of textures, impressions, and sensations.
2. The second thing that women's athletics
has meant to me: STRIVING: whether it be to win, for excellence, to improve
yourself. It's a wonderful endeavor to try and get really good at something,
and sports and your youth give you the opportunity to do that. To practice,
practice, practice over and over again. Like endless foul shots at the
end of a long exhausting practice when you can barely lift your arms to
your waist, let alone over your head one more time, and the sweat is dripping
down your face, salt stinging your eyeballs. It's that feeling you have
when you've given your all, when there's nothing left, your whole body
aches and tingles from the reaching, the running, trying and striving.
I remember my last field hockey game at Wells which I knew was my last
field hockey game ever; the fall of 1979. The game was tied at the end
of regulation play, so we went into overtime. Quickly we were able to move
the ball into our adversary's end zone. The Wells forward line was knocking
on the door, including me, and someone took a shot on goal. I watched the
ball blister towards the goal cage, bounce off the goalie's pads, and then,
suddenly sucked of all its momentum, dribble at a snail's pace toward the
goal line like it was moving in slow motion. I lunged, airborne, landing
flat on my stomach, left arm outstretched, the stick extended as much as
possible, and I ended up this far from the ball which by then had rolled
to a stop smack dab in the middle of the goal line. The goalie's stick
came crashing into my left elbow, which immediately grew a golf ball sized
lump right in front of my eyes, and I laid there, completely supine, at
eye level with the hockey ball, just staring at it, as if time now had
completely stopped. I had absolutely no leverage, no way to connect with
that ball, which was only a hair's breadth away. to push it the extra half
inch. I tried willing it across. But in a split second, somebody else tapped
it in. Hooray, we won! I'll admit it, though; I'd be a liar not to. I really
wanted it to be me. But in my heart, I knew I had done everything I could,
that there was nothing more I could have possibly done in that game, or
in that moment.
Carry this over into your life; I'm
sure you're doing it already, in sports, in your academics, your other
pursuits here, in your life outside of Wells. Continue to strive for excellence,
to improve yourself, above all else to be your best. There is never an
end to what we can do to better ourselves.
3. SPORTSMANSHIP. Or sportswomanship,
if you want. I was happy and probably very lucky to play on teams throughout
my eight-year career where sportsmanship mattered, from the top on down.
That's because the coaches I had cared more about being decent and playing
well instead of winning at any cost, especially the sacrifice of your opponent's
(and ultimately your own) dignity. I trust that things are the same at
Wells now 20 years later, that you hold out your hand, not only to the
other side at the end of the game in the obligatory handshake, but that,
during the game, you extend your hand to your opponent when she has fallen
down because it's the right thing to do. This is so much bigger than how
you conduct yourself on the field or on the court or in the pool. It's
a question of who you want to be, who you decide to be.
From where I sit at this point in my
life, I often see blatant incivility in the legal profession and growing
irresponsibility in the world in general, which makes me sad. I want to
know that you guys, your generation, young people, are going to be better.
The choice is yours: be a decent athlete and a decent human being.
4. LOSS. I was fortunate to have been
spared much personal loss in my childhood, and so organized athletics became
an easy way for me to learn what loss is about. I remember a basketball
game in my second year at Wells. We were a very short team, so much so
that I played forward whereas I had always been a guard in high school.
For some reason, we were also stuck in a league where many of the other
schools had money to recruit really good players and teams that were far
better than us. In the beginning of the season, we traveled to Nazareth
College and suffered a rather debilitating loss. Their players towered
over us literally. We didn't win one jump ball, and I can't tell you how
many times I ate the ball that day. We couldn't get the ball down the court,
couldn't get it anywhere near the hoop, and were absolutely ineffective
at stopping them from scoring one basket after another. When all was said
and done, it was Nazareth 108, Wells College 15. I've done the math, it's
a 93 point spread.
There was no way for that loss not
to feel humiliating. The local college radio stations picked it up, and
the score went out over all the airwaves. We were quite the laughing stock
and the butt of many a public, locker room joke. But, (Butt, butt), we
had a second crack at them that season and on our own turf By the next
time we played Nazareth, we had not grown any taller, of course, but we
were better and tougher. We lost again, but not by 93 points, maybe 20
something and, more importantly, we outscored them in the second half.
It felt like a huge victory.
Learn from your mistakes, don't give
up the game without trying some more. Use your experiences in sports to
feel what loss is. Learn how to manage it, be taught by it, accept it gracefully
and move on. Because it is, after all, only a game. You will suffer much
deeper losses in life, I guarantee it. So be prepared. Start teaching yourselves
now how to cope with the loss of a game, a fair-to middling season, or
a personal bad day, and I also guarantee you will deal with loss better
further down the road.
5. GENDER POLITICS. I grew up in my
neighborhood playing softball, kickball, football, baseball, and basketball
97 with girls and boys. There were no gender distinctions. I had no reason
to think I was any different than, more importantly, any less worthy than,
my buddies Dale, George, Phil, and Dave.
That changed when I got to high school and started playing team sports.
This was the early 1970s. Title IX, which was intended to equalize academic
and athletic programs across gender lines, had only just been enacted.
The field hockey team in my high school, between 1972-1976, had one field
and one field only on which to practice and to play games. The various
boys' football teams had several fields: their practice fields could get
all chewed up and they'd still have a really fine field for game day.
My school district encompassed three
towns. On the days when the boys' varsity basketball team had a game, the
high school, regulation size, fancy gym was reserved for them. The remaining
gyms in the district's schools were then parceled out in a certain hierarchical
fashion with the girls being on the bottom. So, on those days, in order
to practice, the varsity and junior varsity girls' teams got on a bus and
drove to the next town several miles away, eating up precious practice
time, to play in an undersized, ill equipped, not well lit elementary school
gym.
One day during track season, my hurdle
mates and I had just finished meticulously setting up the hurdles when
the boys' team came out onto the field and a number of them, for whatever
reasons, knocked down each and every one of the hurdles, just as we were
preparing to start running them. Our female coach stood by and laughed,
somewhat sheepishly, somewhat in complicity, as if it would be unfeminine
to make them stop. They were not made to put the hurdles back up, and no
one had the courage or insight to let them know that this was not acceptable
behavior.
I know, in the catalog of gross injustices
that have been perpetrated against peoples of the world for their differences
- their skin color, religion, age, disability, gender, and sexual orientation
- that these things were minor, minor ills. But it was my first awakening
to discrimination and inequality based on sex, my sex. I went home after
track practice that day and balled my eyes out. I felt so devalued and
hurt. I had no idea until then that because I was a girl, I wasn't worthy
of respect.
But when I was done crying, I got mad
and so did my girl teammates. We had very few role models, though. Things
then weren't like they are today. You couldn't turn on the television and
find women's competition on ESPN or the LPGA on one of the major networks.
And I'm sure before my time, things were even worse. The only way I knew
who past women athletes were was by ordering a paperback book from the
Scholastic Book Service that, thankfully, among all the paeans to male
heroics on the field, told the stories of a few female athletes as well,
like Babe Didrikson, Althea Gibson, and Wilma Rudolph. My generation had
Billy Jean King and Chris Evert occasionally in the public eye, but that
was it.
As a consequence, my friends and I
donned the personas of ground breaking, radical women who were redefining
gender roles in the political arena. My nickname became Jane Fonda, who
spoke out against the Viet Nam war then and became the aggressive bitch
everyone loved to hate. There was a no-jewelry rule in basketball games
in those days, maybe still today. Bracelets, necklaces or other metal jewelry
weren't allowed so players wouldn't be inadvertently cut by a sharp edge.
I had a Prisoner of War bracelet, though, and a superstitious feeling that
if I ever took it off, Commander W. D. Clower wouldn't make it home. So
I wore it into a game once, unbeknownst to my coach. When the ref saw it,
he stopped the game and asked me to remove it. I refused and sat on the
bench for the rest of the game. I was 14, and it was my first scary act
of civil disobedience.
Another friend became Angela Davis
whose proudly raised fist and bold Afro became symbols of not only the
gender inequality but the invidious racism that she and others have to
battle in this country. Yet another friend was Gloria Steinem. And so on.
We appropriated the identities of those
on-the-fringe women because we felt like them; we felt like pioneers ourselves
in our own little, very rural high school world. We usurped the term "jock,"
which was usually used pejoratively and always referred to males, and turned
it back on ourselves making it our own. We were jocks, not girl jocks,
jocks, good athletes, and proud of it.
We squawked about the ridiculously
less money that was spent on the girls' athletic programs, the rotten uniforms,
no access to the weight room, the lack of assistant coaches, trainers and
managers, the scheduling of gyms, the absolute absence of publicity for
the girls' efforts, and the fact that the cheer leaders never cheered for
us. And, you know what was really ironic, the girls' teams were way better
than the boys' teams. We won consistently; they lost constantly. It was
insult on top of injury. But I don't regret it for one second. It taught
me about the balance of power in the world and helped make me a political
animal.
Don't forget, you're women. You probably
haven't had to deal with gender inequalities in terms of your experience
here, although Coach LaBar tells me that Title IX still needs to have some
teeth. But you might face these inequities in your lifetime outside these
walls; and I tell you, the battle isn't over yet.
6. FRIENDSHIP. There probably isn't
enough I could say about the friendships I have gained playing women's
sports. The solidarity among my girl classmates in high school as we forged
both our individual identities and a class consciousness of ourselves as
young women is invaluable. We sang together as a team boisterously, changing
the lyrics of popular tunes to fit the travails of grueling field hockey
practices and the idiosyncrasies of our drill-sergeant coach. We listened
to Janis Joplin in the locker room before games, cranking up the volume
as high as an old phonograph with a vinyl record and one speaker could
possibly go. After an especially difficult playoff game which we had won,
we were so out of our minds with glee that our coach in the front seat
of the bus turned a blind eye and ear to what we were doing and let us
cram as many people in the back two seats of the bus as we could for the
sake of establishing what we hoped would be some goofy world's record.
I think we managed 19.
When I first arrived at Wells as a neophyte freshman, I joined other scared
newcomers on the hockey field for an introduction to the athletics program
at the college. One girl with whom I had spoken a few times and hit it
off a little bit started pulling out clumps of grass in the middle of the
presentation and throwing them at me on the sly, just as if we were back
in grade school misbehaving behind the teacher's back. I knew at that point
that I had somehow arrived. That someone already cared enough to chance
being my pal by behaving like a total ass. Sue Rogers and I became fast
friends, roommates for two years, and teammates on the basketball team.
When we went to away games, we used to snitch towels from the locker room
of the other team so that, by season's end, we each had our own personal
collection of completely nonabsorbent, ubiquitous white college towels
stamped with names the likes of William Smith, Oswego, and Kirkland. Nazareth
College, of course, was the prize.
In winter, when the college still had
January term, Sue and I would sled down the student union hill on dining
hall trays crashing into Dodge at the bottom. We then performed the traditional
Olympic ceremony, mumbling through the words of the national anthem, presenting
each other with pretend gold medals in the downhill competition. The memories
are legion. We have remained close, close friends over the years through
many ups and downs, personal challenges and a one-time unfortunate rift
in our friendship.
Another good friend, Renee Forgensi,
and I started our college hockey career together here and ended it together
at that last overtime game. I called her "Forgetsi" or "Forgetsi-Not."
She called me "Mohner." We have served in the Alumnae Association for the
last few years, and I am continually impressed by the seeming unending
dedication and energy of my peer.
One last memory: the sheer delight
of being invited to an end-of- the-year hockey party at Mrs. Maloney's
house where, like Queens, we dipped delectable fruits and cheeses into
yummy dark chocolate fondue sauce, laughing and hugging each other all
night long about the shared experiences of the season.
These friendships and many others gained
through sports will last me to the end of my life, I bet. Each of you and
your teammates will grow and change, but if that common bond is there,
that original shared experience, the love will continue forever. Take good
care of your friends. They will abide by you way longer than the memory
of a bad game, a missed shot or an unsaved goal.
7. Finally - and this is really a culmination
of the foregoing - what my participation in women's athletics gave me was
an identity. My involvement in team sports happened during some of the
formative years of a young person's life, between ages 14 and 21. And who
I am today was shaped by each of the other six things I have talked about
here.
When I think about field hockey or
basketball or track, it never means just the game. It's all these other
important facets of not just competition, but of life that have melded
together to make me the person you see now. I wouldn't give that up for
anything in the world.
And I imagine if you are lucky as I
was and am, it will be the same for you. Play your hearts out, cherish
your time at Wells, both on and off the playing surface, and it will hold
you in great, long- lasting stead.
Delivered May 6, 2001 at Wells College.
Last updated 1/22/2002
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