Dr Madhav Ghate, practising Psychiatrist, Pune writes on:
Why Tennis is so much more than a game!
I have been playing tennis for more than 55 years. Played it at the school, college, university level and even up to national and international levels.
I have also played many other games like Cricket, Table tennis, water polo, Athletics and so on. But gradually Tennis became my first passion. So much so that my wife used to say that it’s your first wife. Now after seventy years of life, looking back, I have realized that Tennis
has given me a lot of things beyond just the pleasure of playing the game. Without a doubt I can say that I ENJOY life. Every day ! Being a psychiatrist, I have a habit of analyzing things. You see, WHY is an extremely important question not just in psychiatry but in medicine in
general and even to a great extent in life also. So I started asking myself “why do I enjoy life’s intricacies, its twists and turns, even the adversities ?” Why is it that I enjoy trying to find out the solutions to the mental mess that the patients embroil themselves into ?
I gradually realized the role Tennis has played in shaping me up. It has been a long journey. Didn’t happen overnight. But I seem to have learnt a lot of ways of dealing with problems without being stressed out. How did it happen ?
Let’s take a look.
Tennis taught me a lot. It taught me that the Basics is always important, it educated me about Winning and Losing, gave me the idea that I should try to simplify things, gave me the determination that I lacked, instilled dedication with that and told me to try and
make a 120% effort when something important came up. Tennis also gave me self confidence and conviction about myself. And with all this , I learned to Enjoy life .
My Guru , my coach in my early tennis days , made me realize that however superior your game may be , the basics
is always what you come back to. If the basics is sound , you can play in any conditions , environ-mental as well as mental. If you are serving for the match , the title , even if you feel the tension , take a deep breath and serve the serve that you have practiced so many times
the basic sound serve that you have learned. In life I frequently go to the basics eg. in a difficult patient , not responding to my efforts , I go to the basics – I keep all my assumptions aside and take a fresh history. You will be surprised how many times that actually works.
You find something new or overlooked and that helps.
I think one of the most important lessons from Tennis has been about Winning and Losing. I realized that these two are not the end of the road. Not by any chance. Gradually I learned to take them in my stride.
If I win, I am extremely happy. BUT I learned not to gloat. Because Tennis taught me that there might be a loss around the corner – and the reasons thereof can arise out of a myriad of problems , both big and small. I learned to be humble about my success. Losing , I definitely
have a much bigger experience of that than winning. But again , I realized that I can be sad , it’s alright , BUT I should not become depressed. Learned not to give up. Tennis gave me the lesson that if you lose, you decide in your mind that I will do better next time and not
just decide but make the extra efforts before next time , so that you are well prepared. All of this applies to life. What I have gathered from this is that confidence, caution, risk taking, going beyond your so called limitations – one has to apply all this in life to achieve
satisfaction and happiness.
Tennis gave me the idea of simplifying everything in life. Right from the studies to Psychiatry to solving any problems that occur on and off the courts. For that I started thinking in my own words, not the ones given in books or the ones drilled
into me from time to time. If the opponent is playing too well, simplify the matter by keeping yourself in the game, bidding for time, waiting for him to come back to normality. Works well. Also DON’T CHANGE anything if you are winning but make a CHANGE or try to change the game
when you are not doing well. So simple. But one has to remember that instead of getting nervous or bogged down. See, all this applies to life problems also. A successful businessman forgets this principle, tries to change the successful ways and lo, a disaster looms ahead.
If another doctor has prescribed a medicine, and it is working well, I don’t change it. Instead I think about what can I add to it. Again it works well with almost all the patients. But if the patient or the relatives say the earlier medicines are not working ,
I take a different approach.
It was Tennis that gave me determination, dedication and trying more than 100%. I played at the national and international level as a veteran. In young age, studying medicine didn’t allow to play competitive tennis. But in the studies I used the
same principles, studied extremely hard and I was the topper in both medical entrance (a university exam at my time) and in the final MBBS exams. I am not boasting but these are the facts and I think Tennis was responsible for my success in the studies. At the veteran stage,
it was about my physical fitness. Again I worked hard for that, got some success which pleases me to no end. Actually what Tennis teaches you is that THERE IS NO SHORTCUT. You want to achieve anything in life , effort is the key, no matter how talented you are.
Tennis , the game , starts giving you confidence in yourself. You start believing in yourself , your abilities , capacities and most important of all , you start getting a conviction about your own potential. That can work fantastically well in your life in general. One must
realize that you don’t have to prove anything to anybody. Actually you have to prove yourself to yourself. If that happens the words which torment millions of people – “What people will say” – just fade away not to bother you again.
I started enjoying a lot of things , big and
small , in life because of playing Tennis. I remember I have enjoyed even some of my losses in the matches. When I was a junior I was playing an open tournament. I had a match against an upcoming star in tennis. Everybody thought that the match would be over in no time.
And suddenly I won the first set. I was in my zone. There gathered a huge crowd around us. I lost that match in a hard fought third set , but that loss still gives me a lot of pleasure. I gained a lot of conviction and confidence about myself. Didn’t matter that I was short on
match practice and fitness , but I enjoyed that loss. Because of Tennis , I started enjoying things. I enjoyed my studies, my friends, even working in Psychiatry. Because of this attitude that Tennis has given me , I have been enjoying my family, playing and horsing around with
my children and now the grand children. Enjoying the veterans tennis tournaments have given me friends all over India. From Delhi to Vishakhapatanam , anywhere I go , there will be a friend or two who will offer me tennis and dinner. What more does anyone want ?
My 2658956th post on why you should see a dentist on time!
This patient had been advised to get her wisdom tooth removed on time. Out of fear, she never got it done!
I removed another tooth for her on the other side and she had no issues at all!
So she knew it won’t hurt!
She finally called 2 days ago saying she is in a lot of pain and needs the tooth extracted!
The issue was that the tooth was very close to the nerve and there was a chance of permanent nerve numbness if it were to get damaged during extraction.
You might say then why take it
out?
Because it was decayed and there was a bigger chance of nerve numbness if the tooth got infected and it spread into the nerve!
That’s exactly what happened!
The right half of her chin and lip was “tingling” when she came in today!
GREAT discussion on "Destiny and Hardwork" in @SandeepMall space right now.
Writing a short thread to share my thoughts on the same.
As @onemanush said, your destiny starts right at birth.
If you are born in a small village in Africa versus a wealthy family in Mumbai,
your life path starts at a very different note.
The overall sentiment seems to be that you write your own destiny. Which is directly contradictory to the the sentiment that your destiny is pre written.
Your destiny is pre written when it comes to life and death!
What happens
between those two points in life is a combination of fortune, very different from destiny, and hard work.
A perfect example where HARD WORK was the only difference in the end point of two individuals is the age old Sachin versus Kambli discussion.