Date: Tue, 15 Apr 2014 12:19:25 -0700 (PDT) From: - - Subject: Coach and Shy Kid - Part 1 I was sitting on the grass doing nothing. The baseball team was on the field, practicing, and a ball came all the way out by me and rolled a couple of feet away from me. At first, I didn't do anything. I was pretty shy. The team's coach was out in the field with all the kids, and he yelled over to me, "Hey! Little help?!" He was the closest to me, out by right field. I picked up the ball, kind of worried that everybody was looking at me, and threw it at him. It was pretty far, but I got it all the way to him. Actually, I guess I threw it kind of hard, because he looked kind of surprised and looked at me. I wanted to yell "Sorry" but I just stared back. He nodded a thank you and walked back, looking back over his shoulder at me. After maybe 20 minutes, they all ran in and gathered all their stuff together and left. I walked over to the soda machines. This field is next to the school, but it's also kind of like a park with a playground and a parking lot where some guys skateboard. There's a path through the woods to my house, so I hang out there a lot. Anyway, as I'm walking over to get a soda, that coach is still there. "Hey kid! Catch!" he yells, and he throws me a ball. I catch it, and he comes over next to me. I toss it back to him, and he says thanks. "You play ball?" he asks. I shake my head no. I drop in some coins and push a button for a soda. He starts to do the same. It's quiet for a minute. "You play any sports?" he asks. I shake my head no. "What's your name, kid?" he asks. I mumble, "Tom." "Hey Tom," he says and he holds out his hand. "Everybody just calls me Coach." I look at his hand and then up at him. I reach out and look away while giving him a weak handshake while he squeezes mine. "I think you've got a good arm, Tom," he says. "You should think about playing baseball. We could really use some more good players on the team." I just stand there. I don't say anything. We both silently drink our sodas. He's dressed in a uniform like coaches and managers do for baseball teams. I watch baseball on TV sometime, so it's not so weird to me. I'm wearing a T-shirt and jeans, both kind of big on me. We end up sitting side-by-side on a bench by the backstop. "You want to play a little catch?" he asks, holding up a glove for me. I shrug my shoulders and mutter "okay." We toss the ball back and forth to each other for a while, and then he starts making conversation. "You live nearby, or did you ride your bike?" "I just walked. I live back through there," I say and point to the path. He nods his head like he knows it. "Yeah, I think I've seen you walking around before! My house is right there!" he says, pointing to a row of houses across the street from the park. A minute goes by of just playing catch. "We could use you on the team," he says. "There's still a week before the deadline to sign up. Do you like baseball?" I shrug my shoulders and yell, "It's okay I guess." I look around, kind of nervously. "You have somewhere you need to be?" he asks. I had absolutely nothing else to do that day. I shake my head no. He catches the ball and runs over to me. "Let me show you a trick, Tom," he says. "Just before you let the ball go, flick your wrist." He demonstrates a little wrist action a few times, and I copy it. "Good, just like that," he says. Then we just stand there for a second next to each other, and he looks at me, and I look back at him. He flips the ball over at me. "So you don't like sports?" he asks. "Not really," I say. He asks why. "Well, if you play sports, then you have to always be playing sports all the time, right? You have to get really into it," I say. He nods his head a bit and says, "You have other stuff you'd rather be doing? What are you into?" I shrug my shoulders. I don't say anything. Then I say, "nothing much." "Why do you really not want to play sports?" he asks. "Well, I'm kind of shy," I say. "And when you play sports you have to get changed with other guys and shower with other guys." "Well you can't let that stop you," he says. "And don't you do that for gym class anyway?" "No," I say. "Nobody showers after gym. It's only a half-hour, and you don't really do anything. I usually just wear sweats on the days that I have gym, or sometimes I'll change really quick after everybody else has." He says, "You know, in the locker room, sometimes the most you'd have off is your shirt, and you've had your shirt off at the beach or in the pool, right?" he says. I stand there and don't say anything for a minute. "No, I don't usually take my shirt off. I used to be kind of heavy, and the other guys would tease me sometimes." He looks at me. "A lot of guys are shy about stuff like that," he says. "Is that all?" "Well, you have to get a physical too, right? I don't really like doctors." He nods and waits. "And you guys are always hitting each other on the butt. I just don't think I'd be comfortable." "Okay, so you're shy. That's okay," he says. "Maybe you'll get more comfortable and want to join the team. I know lots of guys who are shy about their bodies and don't like to get undressed for the doctor or to pee next to another guy, stuff like that." I say okay and that I guess I'll be going. He says, "See you around!" As I walked away, I figured that was it. Years later, I found out that Coach decided then and there to get me comfortable enough with nudity to join the team. Part 2 to come