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Scheduled 'fits' can help on and off the football field
Standing on the football field watching the university team stretch
and warm up, my father saw the players do something he'd never seen
before.
At a given signal, they started jumping, hollering and flinging
themselves around on the ground. The exercise had no uniformity,
symmetry or unity to it. Every guy did his own thing. Some looked
joyful. Some looked angry. Some looked relieved to finally erupt.
When the assistant coach's whistle sounded and the unorthodox
activity stopped, a more traditional workout program followed.
"What in the world was that all about?" my father asked the head
coach.
"That's a 20-second fit," the coach replied, laughing, and told
his assistant to do it again for my father's benefit. The players
seemed delighted for another "20-second fit" explosion.
A 20-second fit -- what a concept. And what a dramatic method to
relieve tension.
I wonder what would happen in tension-filled offices if coffee
breaks were replaced with a daily e-mail from the company CEO
announcing, "It's time for a 20-second fit!"
Perhaps we'd see secretaries pounding computer keyboards with
their feet, clerks slamming file cabinets and senior executives
launching their cell phones into makeshift trash can basketball
hoops. And maybe the CEO himself (herself) would bang those
walnut-paneled walls, jarring pictures crooked and sending tremors
throughout the corporate structure.
Meanwhile, back at home, families would pause throughout the day
for their 20-second fits. Parents would jump up and down on unmade
beds while their children ran circles around the house, waving their
arms and yelling.
The point is simply this: when tension builds, we do pitch fits
-- one way or another. And such fits are often destructive. People
get hurt. Innocent bystanders are injured.
But what if we had these "organized fits?" That might be the
answer. Then everyone would know what was happening. In our
unorganized and unscheduled fits, we leave people guessing, unsure
if our behaviors are provoked or just circumstantial. But if others
know what we are doing, they can not only understand what's
happening, but also join us.
What would we address in our 20-second fits? What tensions would
we relieve? The injustices we've endured? Our regrets? Our sorrows?
Our frustrations? Maybe we have stressed ourselves, for unkind words
spoken, never to be taken back. Or that criticism that would have
best been left unsaid. Or a delayed conversation that is now too
late to deliver.
Although my father's sideline experience was almost 30 years ago,
that coaching wisdom holds true today. Back on the gridiron, perhaps
a few 20-second fits could help refocus the Super Bowl contenders,
allowing them to tantrum-out all their nerve-racking thoughts -- the
fumbles, interceptions, missed tackles -- to make room in their
mental preparation for intensity necessary for the game ahead.
On and off the field, we can jump, holler, fling and fall until
our energy expenditure wrings out that spirit-dampening stress. And
when we purposefully discard that worrisome unfinished business,
clear thinking and focused pursuits can prevail.
Have you had your 20-second fit today?
This column was co-authored and edited by Rebecca
Faye Smith Galli, daughter of the late Dr. R.F. Smith Jr., a
longtime columnist for The Herald-Dispatch.


01/31/2010
The Herald-Dispatch
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