I like to play Spider Solitaire, though I don’t let myself play for long periods of time. Still, I start a game –always it’s at the most difficult level rather than one of the simpler versions with two suits or even one. No, I dive right in to the game at its hardest.
The other day my son, 14, observed me playing and asked “How many times have you beaten it?” I told him that in 5 years of playing, probably two or three games a day, I’d won perhaps 15 times. “Why don’t you do it at an easier level? Why on earth would you want to loose all the time?” – I don’t want to play the easier levels. I’m really not in it to win, I explain slowly.
He looks at me with the look I see so often anymore. He’s sure his mother is certifiably mad, but he’s not going to say anything, just keep a close eye on things and see how it develops. Perhaps this will motivate him to eventually learn to cook dinner or do his own laundry?
But I digress…
Over time I have come to see that it is not “beating the game” which matters to me, but rather, I’m fascinated by how the facts of one round have impact on the many rounds (dealing of cards) that follow. A small bump, putting a 6 of hearts atop a 7 of spades in the first round, will become an enormous problem by the fourth round when you need the 7 of spades to join the three spade runs you have sitting there, which you’ve worked so hard to achieve, hopeful that another the missing 7 would turn up in the cards to come, or that a 7 of hearts would show up elsewhere and allow you to free that languishing 6 of hearts.
But these efforts seldom come to fruition, and by the 6th or 7th round, you’ve made a pigs pie of the whole effort. There are jacks carelessly strewn over 3’s and 8’s thrown away beneath unmovable Kings. The disaster happens as if in slow motion, and while it’s mildly reversible—one can always hit “ to undo a move, or all the moves of a round – the hard facts of the previous rounds are now written in stone. There is no reversing the work of the previous round.
To see the historical nature of the disaster seems to settle something in my middle-aged brain. Spider Solitaire is beginning to give me some perspective on the playing field of life. Things happen, some are reversible, some are fixed and unchanging. We work around them, trying our best for a good outcome—but the results are usually less than stellar, generally half-baked at best.
As if I’m watching the possibilities of my own life fade away, I see the dazzling potential of a three card same suit run get lost beneath the rubble of subsequent rounds. The potential is there, but how to bring it to fruition? And so many past mis-steps are irreversible. Just as in friendships and work relationships, the harsh words and angry blow ups continue to reverberate, long after words of apology have been spoken.
And can a good end be achieved out of this mess of a hand I’ve created for myself? By all probability the chances are unfavorable, but still I will try. Who knows, perhaps the dazzling fireworks display might still be mine at the end of the day. My hope now is to make the best of whichever new cards come my way, and to make peace with the missteps I’ve made along the way.
Shalom.