Current:Home > ScamsBurley Garcia|An ode to cribbage, the game that taught me a new (love) language -前500条预览:
Burley Garcia|An ode to cribbage, the game that taught me a new (love) language
TrendPulse Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-11 05:51:35
On Friday nights,Burley Garcia I pray to the cribbage gods.
If you've never heard of cribbage, you're not alone. Until two years ago it was something I'd never played, a game I vaguely associated with my grandparents' felt-covered card table. Growing up in the heyday of Cranium and graduating to Scrabble when I became an English major, I missed the boat on cards and made it to adulthood with just a few childhood games of War under my belt.
When my partner Michael and I moved in together in February 2020, we hadn't had time for many games, cards or otherwise. Our first year of dating was typical of early-thirty-somethings, a happy whirlwind of weekend day trips and long, tipsy evenings at our favorite bars.
We expected living together to be a change, but not a huge one; we'd make coffee together in the mornings and maybe see each other for dinner, but otherwise maintain our busy schedules. Then in March of 2020 we were both sent home from work, and suddenly our lives were confined to 640 square feet.
After the first full week of working from home, we emerged stiffly from our makeshift desks. Bleary from too much screen time and anxious about the escalating pandemic, all I wanted was to relax into our usual Friday happy hour routine.
But it was suddenly clear that our relationship had entered new territory, one where playful spontaneity would be harder to come by. In search of distraction, we headed to our small cement patio and decided to try a game Michael had learned in college: cribbage.
I was an immediate convert. Cribbage has it all: you play with a deck of cards, but there's also a colorful board to track your progress. You gain points using familiar combinations (runs, flushes, three-of-a-kind), but there are also rules that feel whimsical and random, like scoring points when your cards add to the number 15. Play takes about 30 minutes, ideal for pre-dinner drinks — or playing best-of-three if things get competitive.
Where cribbage really hooked me, though, was the jargon. Cribbage has a language all its own, from pegging (tracking your score along the board) to calling Two for His Heels if you flip up a Jack. High-scoring combinations have nicknames (Automatic Eight, Raggedy Ann, Trips), and tallying your hand has a distinct rhythm (15 for two, 15 for four, pair for six and a flush for 10).
There's a well-earned satisfaction to rattling off your score at speed, but going too fast carries a risk — if you miss points in your own hand, your opponent can call Muggins and capture them instead.
After our first game, we developed a routine: on Friday nights we'd log off from work, head to the patio and play cribbage. I'd put on a playlist that mixed jaunty Italian classics with sultry bossa nova, and for the next hour our patio was transformed into something almost luxurious. After flaunting my lead, then scoring three "19 hands" in a row (a cribbage insider's "zero," since scoring 19 isn't possible), we joked that I'd tempted the cribbage gods, who can't resist interrupting a prideful streak.
The rest of the week might be filled with anxiety, but Friday cribbage was our time to be playful, to flirt, to recapture the feeling of our early dating days and set the many small tensions of daily life aside.
I didn't realize what cribbage had become until we changed environments, going to live with my parents for several weeks that summer. One evening when family friends invited us over to grill, Michael and I decided to play a quick game of cribbage on the deck. My parents and their friends gently ribbed us, amused that we played such an old-fashioned game.
But I sensed a wistfulness underneath, and later one of them confided they wished they played cards with their partner. Relationships, especially lived-in ones, don't always offer opportunities to be light and playful with each other, and I realized that what we'd found through cribbage was something important, something more than just a pandemic hobby.
Today, we don't play cribbage every Friday. Sometimes now we actually go out, and sometimes we get lazy and watch a movie. But our commitment to cribbage is, officially, woven into our commitment to each other. Michael and I got married this summer, and in our ceremony we discovered that, without knowing it, we'd each written cribbage into our vows. He vowed to keep me challenged with frequent games. And I vowed to be graceful in defeat when, occasionally, he beats me.
What are you really into? Fill out this form or leave us a voice note at 800-329-4273, and part of your submission may be featured online or on the radio.
veryGood! (31)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Bruce Springsteen jokes about postponed tour during guest appearance on 'Curb Your Enthusiasm'
- 'Home Improvement' star Patricia Richardson says doing a reboot 'would be very weird'
- Watch as helicopter plucks runaway horse from mud after it got stuck near Santa Ana River
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Former Dolphins, Colts player Vontae Davis found dead in his South Florida home at age 35
- 2024 iHeartRadio Music Awards Red Carpet Fashion: See Every Look As the Stars Arrive
- California woman's conviction for murdering her husband overturned after two decades in prison
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Will the Backstreet Boys Rerecord Music Like Taylor Swift? AJ McLean Says…
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Mass shooting outside Indianapolis mall leaves 7 injured, all children and teens, police say
- Family finds body of man who apparently fell while chasing his dog near Kentucky's steepest waterfall
- Tennessee state senator hospitalized after medical emergency during floor session
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Motorists creep along 1 lane after part of California’s iconic Highway 1 collapses
- Mosques in NYC struggle to house and feed an influx of Muslim migrants this Ramadan
- Robots taking on tasks from mundane to dangerous: Police robot dog shot by suspect
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
As US traffic fatalities fall, distracted drivers told to 'put the phone away or pay'
Barbara Rush, actor who co-starred with Frank Sinatra and Paul Newman among others, dies at 97
A Kansas paper and its publisher are suing over police raids. They say damages exceed $10M
Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
Hey, Gen X, Z and millennials: the great wealth transfer could go to health care, not you
Mississippi Republicans to choose opponent for longtime Democratic congressman
Brave until the end: University of Kentucky dancer Kate Kaufling dies at 20 from cancer