Humility is only worth 16 points
Should I admit that the dictionary is on the list of my top five
favorite books? (Webster’s New Universal Unabridged, in case you
wondered. It weighs at least 10 pounds and even includes swear
words.) I have a T-shirt that says “word nerd.” And I nearly always
beat everyone at Scrabble.
So imagine my chagrin when my foray into the world of official
Scrabble clubs began with four straight losses. No applause, no awed
fellow players asking eagerly where I learned words like “teiid” and
“qanat,” while I modestly shrug or knowingly tap my finger to my
temple.
I normally keep a distance from what I’m writing about, ostensibly
to maintain my objectivity, but also perhaps because it’s easier for
people to be cynical when they’re not involved, and a cynic is one of
the easiest things to be. But I wanted to play Scrabble with the
pros, so I could really know what it’s like and thus write a better
story. Plus, I thought I might be able to win.
The secret ambition that began budding within me from my first
night with the club was to beat Gary, the club’s organizer, who plays
quickly and seems to win every game.
So far, it hasn’t happened. One week, when an odd number of
players showed up, Gary played me and another player at the same time
and still bested me by more than 200 points. Ouch.
He also won the other game. But that’s not the extent of his
prowess. The most games Gary has ever played simultaneously? Five.
Later that night, I came close to beating Bob, an older gentleman
who’s a little hard of hearing but who lays down seven-letter words
like a machine. I got excited about playing the word “samovar,”
because I know this is a Russian tea urn, and it was worth a lot of
points (97). But somehow Bob earned 50 points for some piddling
little word, and I couldn’t recover after that. In two of my games
that night I got completely slaughtered.
And that’s pretty much been my career: Out of 12 games, I’m 1-11
-- and disproportionately proud of that one win, I admit.
I’ve already embraced my nerdy side, so it was a new experience to
not be the nerdiest one in the room. And to lose repeatedly.
But my fellow players comforted me that nearly everyone goes
through that transition. They reminded me that you do learn by
playing better opponents.
I know I won’t become a Scrabble champion, because I’ll never
command the huge lists of words some of my opponents know -- although
the mnemonic “Gloria has not kissed Michael since the wedding” is now
stuck in my head, possibly for all time. (The first letter of each
word can be played in front of AE to make other words.) And I have
started memorizing the legal two-letter words.
So now I can go confidently into competitive Scrabble play, armed
with the knowledge that I’ll probably lose. But I’ve re-learned a
lesson that should have been engrained by now from reporting: Don’t
assume other people know more than you, and don’t be afraid to ask
questions.
One opponent who thrashed me started the game with a word that
looked funny to me, but I figured he knew more and I didn’t say
anything. After he won the game, he admitted he wasn’t sure it was a
legal word. It wasn’t.
Had I challenged it, the most I would have lost was one turn, if I
was wrong. But in this case, I wouldn’t have started the game about
70 points behind.
So at least I learned that. And even if I never play in a Scrabble
club again, when I go home for the holidays, everyone in my family is
toast.
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