I wrote this much for you last night:
“I’ve had an
interesting late-afternoon watching Djokovic beat an unknown American, Kudla,
in straight sets. It was a good deal more interesting than that description
sounds. And the problem now is how to dispose of the feeble remainder of my
time and strength.
Does anyone
remember Kukla, Fran and Ollie? Of whom Mr. Kudla’s name reminds me.
I still need to
support Mr Murray, and send in Italian homework, and read some more Dante. It
can’t all be done. And Wimbledon comes but once a year. “
In the end, I got
none of those things done. I am not very bright in the evening, and must pace
myself accordingly.
2325 steps
yesterday, at the end. 2381 so far today. At least I’m still moving about, within my
limited range.
I’ve had another
good day of Wimbledon today. We go into the second week with Federer and Coco
Gauff still on their feet, and an interesting British teenager called Emma
Raducanu. She said, engagingly, after today’s match, that her mother told her
she was packing too many match outfits – with the result that now, she needs to
get some washing done. She thinks the hotel has laundry facilities..
I love the
ballboys. Ballpeople. I love them all the more for having watched the French
final recently. The ballboys there were perfectly alert and helpful, but
nothing like Wimbledon. Some of you may remember that my eldest grandchild,
Rachel’s elder son, was chosen to be one when he was the appropriate age. (He’s
now ominously near 40.) He had started training when he developed a stomach
problem.
He was born with a
condition called malrotation of the gut, and needed a life-saving operation at
two days old. He came through that in good order. So when this problem cropped
up in his early teen-aged years, Rachel kept asking the doctors whether it
could have anything to do with that had happened to him as a baby, and they all
said, No, no, madam, we don’t know what’s wrong but we’re sure it’s not that.
But it was – Rachel is rarely if ever wrong – and he had another operation to
cure adhesions, or do I mean lesions? And he got better, and Wimbledon took him
back into training, and then he broke his arm playing cricket.
Out of all those
ballpeople, Thomas would of course have been chosen for the men’s singles
final, and the Duke of Kent, who reviews them before presenting the prizes at
the end, would of course have stopped and heaped extra praise upon him. But it
was not to be.
What a run of bad luck for your grandson! I admire the umpires; I used to be made to umpire school tennis matches and hated it.
ReplyDeleteI'm admiring your step count; that's impressive.
oh for the glory that might have been... Good for Rachel for knowing things.
ReplyDeleteYes, by chance I did once see Kukla, Fran and Ollie.
Congratulations on the walk!
Adhesions are what caused his new problem. Basically scar tissue that restricts function wherever it develops.
ReplyDeleteI think you're doing great with your efforts to keep active!
My younger brother was developmentally disabled and watching some tennis with my mother became quite enamored of the Wimbledon ball boys. (as they were then) We would play badminton in the yard and he would crouch by the net, racing after the shuttlecock as though the Duke of Kent were watching!
ReplyDeleteI missed a few days here, but I wanted to say that I do remember Kukla, Fran, & Ollie.
ReplyDelete