While we have a Yahtzee “family,” we’re simply a loose-knit
collection of players.
I didn’t create the family with any great purpose. I did it
simply because I could. I named it after my podcast because I do little
things like that to promote a fledgling podcast I record 10-13 times a year. I invited people I had played against to join the family, and waited for random
people to fill the slots. As I’ve learned how the families benefit us as
players, I’ve taken advantage of that, like many of you have. I have removed
players who haven’t been active, but I never wanted the group to be militant. I
never wanted a high bar for participation. It’s a game, not a lifestyle.
Our Flamingo friend, whose name is Cathy, has been an active
player. Our most active player. She’s been a cheerleader for the group. And as
we know, she was our most prolific Family Feast player. I don’t remember how
she ended up in our group, but she did. We were all fortunate for that.
She won one of our contests, and I sent her the prize. She
seemed to appreciate it. So much so that she collected souvenirs from
Route 66 and sent them to me recently. I never expected anything in return, she simply did that out
of the kindness of her heart.
We chatted periodically by email. I hate writing long
messages on my cellphone. Sometimes our notes were about Yahtzee, sometimes they were about anything else.
She made a reference in the group chat last week about
trading in iTunes gift cards to get more free rolls on Yahtzee for the Family
Feast. That surprised me. I didn’t realize she was that committed to playing. I
assumed her significant contribution to our team score was fueled by hundreds of
free rolls, just as mine was.
Cathy really enjoyed the game, and seemed more motivated to
win than I was. When we were in fourth place, my hope was we could finish in the top 3
and earn the special “chef hat” family emblem. I would have been tickled with
that. She dreamed bigger, and accounted for about 30 percent of our total
points. Without her, there’s no way we would have finished in first place.
She never asked to have any role in the “leadership” of the
team, but offered an occasional suggestion, and provided a second opinion, when
I asked. When I asked for simple help, she went beyond my request.
I figured that if I couldn’t be available for a period of time in the future, she would be a good team leader, which doesn’t actually require you to do much if you don’t want to. I never asked her to be a co-leader, I just anointed her as the co-leader, and she seemed quite honored.
I figured that if I couldn’t be available for a period of time in the future, she would be a good team leader, which doesn’t actually require you to do much if you don’t want to. I never asked her to be a co-leader, I just anointed her as the co-leader, and she seemed quite honored.
Late last week I thought about how to recognize her contribution
to our team. I wondered if I should initiate a small “charity” fundraiser in
celebration of our accomplishment after the Family Feast, and use that to
provide an iTunes gift card to her as thanks, unbeknownst to everyone. I don’t know her financial
situation. For all I know she is independently wealthy. I decided that giving
her a gift card didn’t seem quite right, but I wanted to find a way to
put together a small gift from a bunch of us in recognition of her effort.
Perhaps we still can. I have her address.
I also have a small prize in my collection for the next time
she wins a contest. The prizes I award are cheap, and not specific to any one
person. I have one that I picked up especially for the next contest she wins, which
will be never.
Our family is a simple group of game players. I didn’t
expect that the group would be interacting 10 or 20 years from now. We’ll move
on for one reason or another, or the game will cease one day, and life will go
on without a “family.” I can’t imagine why Cathy went from cheerleading for us
in the final hours of the Family Feast on Monday afternoon and celebrating with
us in the hours after to leaving the family suddenly, without a word to any of
us, and then joining another family.
Understanding people we don’t really know
is a challenge, and sometimes we will never understand why they decide to do
the things they do.
I was tired last night when I typed up my Family Feast recollections
and posted them. I had planned to invite Cathy to share her own recollections
on this blog page, as I thought it would be fun to read some of her thoughts
about the hours she spent helping us win. I guess we can forget about that.
Cathy sent me a collection of Route 66 gifts last week, did
more than anyone else in our group to help us win the Family Feast and then
left us without a word. I can’t explain it, and I may never understand why. And
that’s the way she wants it, evidently.
Im sad to see her go she was a great player and a major part of us winning the feast
ReplyDeleteI hope she comes back !!!
ReplyDeleteThat's a nice thought. But when somebody spends weeks telling you how great your group is, works like crazy to help your group win a big competition, then bails out hours later without a word to anyone, and ignores outreach afterward, via more than one channel, and makes it known that she is alive and well, I'd say that person isn't interested in rekindling those acquaintances.
DeleteI've talked with her and playing several games, she's already in a new family and will not say what made her leave
ReplyDeleteI'm glad she at least acknowledged somebody. I can't imagine what might have prompted her to leave, but it's petty, whatever it is. If she wanted to join a friend's group, or wanted to have a better chance of winning a future Feast (after reading I am not likely to bust my ass again any time soon), that's fair. But why leave hours after you just worked so hard, and shared in the joy of the victory, without saying goodbye? I can imagine no reason why a rational person would leave so abruptly without saying goodbye to people she allegedly cared about. But as I said, you can't assume you'll understand the decisions people make when you really don't know them. You can't assume people you don't know will do something that makes sense. Que sera sera.
DeleteI just wish her the best.
ReplyDeleteI think we all do, despite the fact she didn't care enough to say goodbye.
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