Showing posts with label Skating After All These Years. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Skating After All These Years. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Well...I Could Skate Back In The Day


I heard the youth in our ward/congregation were going ice skating tonight. My youngest is in that age group, and I thought I remembered him liking to skate. We asked him if he'd like to go. He said he would. I asked if I could tag along and was told that would be okay.


I was excited. I don't know how often I skated as a kid, but I remembered being able to skate--not amazingly well--but good enough to glide across the ice, skate backwards, even go fast. I remember a few years back I returned to the slopes after not having skied in over a decade. I was worried then I'd have forgotten how to ski. On the first run it all came back and I had a blast, even after all those years.

I thought ice skating would be the same.

I was wrong.


I went with my thirteen-year old son. He's only been a few times. He started out and hugged the edge of the rink to get going. I took one step on the ice and realized immediately, unlike skiing, this particular skill was not going to return quite so quickly. 

There's a few reasons for this. First--I think it's been even longer since I strapped on a pair of ice skates and ventured out on a sheet of frozen water. It might have been twenty years or more. Second--the likelihood of getting seriously injured by falling down has increased exponentially as I've gotten older. I envisioned me breaking a wrist or a hip or a back if I fell. I watched kids practically fall down at will, fearing nothing. Me...well, I did not want to find out just how bad it could be if I were to hit the ice. Third--it wasn't as easy to remain upright. I think my balancing ability has slipped through the years. And fourth--I weigh a lot more than I did a few decades ago.


When I first stepped onto the ice, I struggled to get move. When I'd traveled around half the rink, I sat in the penalty box and tightened up my laces. That helped. I went back out there and took my time, got used to how it felt to have two thin metal blades separating my body from a rock-hard sheet of ice and push myself forward.

It took a while, but I was able to circle the rink without the assistance of the sides. I admit, by the end of tonight's adventure, some of what I could do way back when returned. I think if I went to the rink a couple of times a week, those long-lost skills might come back--not to where they were, but maybe close. Yes, when I returned to a mountain on two skis, it came back quickly. Tonight, not so much. That's okay--I had a blast anyway.