Time
and Space
April 20 2026
You'd
think only physicists
could
play ball.
Could
manage the complexity
of
mass, gravity, trajectory,
account
for resistance and wind
to
hit a moving target
without
breaking stride.
You’d
think just getting it from second to first
would
take a graduate degree
and
several tries.
But
we don’t give throwing a thought.
The
eye needs no intervention,
the
arm can be safely left
to
muscle memory.
Even
kids do it;
self-taught
before
they’ve even heard of Newton’s laws.
Yet
I never tossed a ball with my dad.
Was
it because he saw badly?
Because
in those thick owlish glasses
he
might lose it in the sun?
Or
because he was a serious man
who
couldn’t be bothered with child’s play?
And
anyway, he worked late
and
came home exhausted most days.
While
I was good at arithmetic
but
perhaps too self-conscious
about
being awkward at sports.
So
it takes more to throwing a ball
than
calibrating force, angle, release point.
I
wonder if Einstein ever played catch,
at
least as a child
in
his Munich backyard.
Maybe
not;
after
all, I’m told he wasn’t good at math,
and
who knows about Hermann
his
proper German dad.
But
at least he understood
that
time goes in one direction
and
there’s no going back.
That
trains pass in the night,
and
just how fast
the
space between them grows.
Please
don’t take this as strictly autobiographical. My father and I
weren’t alienated, antagonistic, or distant. Just not particularly
close. He was a typical 50s dad: the breadwinner, who left the
home-front to his wife; the symbol of ultimate authority (“wait
till your father gets home!”j; and more interested in his own
circle of friends than being a good buddy to his kids. Dads back then
weren’t trying to be buddies, weren’t seeking the approval of
their children. Looking back, I might wish he’d had a more engaged
and fun-loving father. But he was a man of his time.
I
recall the strong impression a particular science fiction story made
on me as a kid. Some kind of Tom Swift character was raised in space
(on the airless moon?) and when he came to Earth was amazed —
considering the complexity of the variables — that people here
could so effortlessly and accurately toss a ball. In air and wind, no
less! Reading this was one of those singular things that make you
suddenly realize there are realities that exist outside your familiar
box of assumptions: the hidden dimensions; the different
perspectives; the taken for granted that shouldn’t be. Even the
limits of consciousness: all the work one’s brain does below
the level of awareness; the mysteries of one’s own mind. Almost
every time I watch baseball I think back to this. And since I watch a
lot of baseball, it seemed it might make a good start to a poem.
Here’s
something I took for granted, but apparently had fallen to a common
myth. (I checked only after writing the poem. But left the error in
anyway, claiming the get-out-of-jail-free-card of poetic licence!)
From
my Perplexity app:
“The
idea that Einstein failed math is a persistent myth—he actually
excelled early on, mastering algebra, geometry, and calculus by age
12-15, far ahead of peers.Einstein earned top marks (1s and
2s, where 1 is best) in math at Luitpold Gymnasium and Zurich
Polytechnic. He received his teaching diploma in 1900 and PhD in
1905, though he skipped classes to self-study advanced topics.
One
other thing he was good at was visualizing. It was by imagining
passing trains that he came up with the concept of the
relativity of time and space. I mention this to give some context to
the final stanza.
Herman
Einstein (born 1846)
Here’s
a dad who not only doesn’t look very fun-loving, but also very
ill-suited to any athletic endeavour! A very Victorian gentleman
indeed.