[Ansteorra] Story from Crown Tourney

Jay Rudin rudin at peoplepc.com
Mon Jul 12 20:46:22 PDT 2010


Lady Rose wrote:

>The proponents for outdoor fighting makes it sound as though indoor fighting is the worst possible scenario.

Huh?  Nobody's said or implied that.  It's not the worst possible scenario.  Fighting in lightning is worse.  Canceling the tourney is worse.  Fighting in insufficient armor is worse.  Being mischaracterized on the Ansteorra list is worse.  There are a lot of worse scenarios.  

We are saying that it's not the *best* scenario, but nobody has said or implied that it's the worst.

> Well, I've been to plenty of indoor fighting events, and seen even more indoor fighter practices. Do we have any statistics to back up the claim of increased injuries? If so, how to they compare to injuries by heat? Facts are good.

I can't recall anyone claiming increased injuries.  Quite the contrary, I wrote: "As foolish as it is to fight outdoors, it's almost as foolish to fight indoors."  Note the word "almost".  Please don't mischaracterize this as a "claim of increased injuries".

>I *know* that it's perfectly acceptable to fight indoors. Indeed, that was the backup plan for this Crown, if lightning decided to join us. 

That doesn't prove that it's "perfectly acceptable"; it shows that it's minimally acceptable, but not perfectly so.  The back-up plan isn't the ideal; it's what we do when we can't have the ideal.

> (Because it's okay to make accommodations for the worst
>rain, lightning, snow, or any other weather condition: it's apparently
>just heat that makes the macho bone go 'Ting!'.)

Please don't direct sneers like "makes the macho bone go 'Ting!'".  It doesn't add to your point, and will turn away more people than it convinces.

For the record, yes, I've fought in heat, rain, and snow, and I've pulled out of tourneys because of health reasons.  I've also helped set up a listfield indoors when it was decide that the day was too hot.  By contrast, I won't fight in lightning at all.  Do you really believe that choice is driven by macho?

And finally, Sir Tomas wasn't stupidly saying he was going back out to fight in the heat.  When he said this, his lady was telling the Crown and the Prince/ss that they were yielding.  They'd rather lose the final round of Crown, rather than request a special rules change for his immediate benefit.  "If I can't win it under the rules, I won't win it at all" is an honorable statement, not macho posturing.

>Yes, there was a wonderfully air-conditioned hall on-site. But I didn't drive all that way, pay my site fee, and do my share of volunteering to sit inside and read a book, which is what I spent most of Crown Tournament doing. Is that what the fighters are suggesting that we do?

No fighter has suggested this, as far as I can recall, and I don't think it serves any purpose to suggest that "the fighters" are suggesting it.  I certainly didn't and never would.  When I'm in the hall, I'm talking, listening to stories, telling stories, looking at costumes, trading research notes, getting work done.  I'd never suggest using event time to read.

>Robin of Gilwell, your e-mail was wonderfully eloquent. You make it sound as though we should all pick up metal swords and run each other through with them, for maximum glorious stupidity, and anyone who doesn't agree is a coward.

Then it wasn't eloquent, because you got messages that weren't in it, and didn't get the one that was.

I did not say the word coward, did not imply it, did not think it, do not believe it.

I did not suggest running each other through with swords, did not imply it, did not think it, do not believe it.

Please do not make things up and attribute them to me.

>As I'm sure you know, the rules for our hobbies aren't about mitigating *all* risk. They're about working toward *acceptable* risk. I propose that I don't find extreme heat to be acceptable and I'd like my voice to be heard.

Congratulations -- your voice is being heard.  People all over the kingdom are reading your words, many are replying, and nobody is telling you not to speak about how you want events to be run.

Of course, my voice gets to be heard, too.  Or when you ask that your voice be heard, are you also asking that any disagreeing voice be stilled?  The reason I ask is that it seems silly to ask that your voice be heard when it's clear that people are hearing you.

>(I didn't think that people would respond to my simple request to be considered as though I'd suggested that we choose a King by having a chess tournament. :P)

Yes, well, I didn't think my honoring a blow well and graciously called would lead to accusations of macho and calling people cowards, either.  But sometimes we don't get what we expect.

And for the record, nobody claimed you suggested a chess match.  I specifically said that you *didn't* go that far.  "And frankly, you're understating it."  I went on to suggest that miniatures wargames were even safer, but I did not state or imply that you were suggesting it.  I try to write carefully, not imputing falsehoods about the people I'm disagreeing with.

By contrast, you claim that I made it sound like "anyone who doesn't agree is a coward".  Please re-read my post and tell me exactly in what sentence I made *any* characterization about people who disagree.  As I recall, the only characterization I made of you was "based on all rational argument, you're right.  Your logic is valid."  That doesn't mean coward, and claiming it does serves no useful purpose.

>I may not be a fighter, but I've been in armor before, and I understand everything that Lady Helene mentioned except the desire to fight in extreme heat. There are fighters that don't understand it, either. And we are asking to be heard. Is that such a crazy thing?

No, it's not a crazy thing to want to be heard.  It's a little crazy to ask to be heard in the middle of a kingdom-wide conversation being driven by people hearing you, though.

>I've repeatedly stated that I understand that most of the fighters want to fight outside in the worst heat.

I know you have, but it isn't true.  Speaking only for myself, I don't particularly want to fight in the worst heat.  I want to fight outdoors, on the grass, under the sky.  Sometimes this means it will be cold, or hot, but that's not the goal.  The goal is to fight in an arena in which I find it easiest to stay in persona, focus on heroism, and believe it's more than a game with sticks or thin metal.  To get this goal, I sometimes have to put up with the heat, just like I have to put up with uncomfortable armor.  But the goal is a mindset, which is somewhat hindered by the fighting indoors.  Yes, the heat is uncomfortable, but I'll put up with a lot of discomfort to fight on a beautiful field, or to perform on the Curtain theater at Castleton.

> So statements saying that fighters want to fight outside, fighters should just condition themselves, fighters should just learn to listen to their bodies, and accept that they may get heat stroke, anyway, don't carry any water.
>
>It's not about risk, it's not about telling fighters where and when they should fight, and my request for consideration isn't even about the damned fighters at all. (Whom I love and am proud of.) We get it. You want to be macho. That's fine.

The "macho" sneer isn't helping you make your point.

>But fighters who want to fight outside in the worst heat, no matter what, are asking the *entire populace* to condition themselves, to stay out in the worst heat, and to listen to their bodies. You are asking this of everyone from toddlers to the elderly. Quite of few of us are replying:
>
>We don't want to.

Then don't.  Nobody goes to all events.  We pick and choose based on our own individual situations.  Right now I'm only working part-time, and I have Laurel duties at the arts events, White Scarf duties at the fencing events, Centurion and Pelican duties at still other events.  Crown has been low priority for me for the last few years.

>And if we can talk about staying staying outdoors in the worst heat because some parts of our populace wants to, then we should be able to talk about making accommodations in the worst heat because some of our populace wants to.

Of course you can!  And you're doing so.  So why maintain otherwise?

>I mean, there are historical arguments for and against, there are health arguments for and against, there are moral arguments for and against, and all it comes down the fact that alot of us want indoor fighting during the worst heat, and alot of us don't want that.
>
>Are the fighters going to insist that we keep doing this
>exactly as we have been, and to hell with the rest of us?

No, they aren't.  No fighter in this thread has insisted that all tourneys fight exactly as we have been, and I doubt that no fighter ever would.  I particularly like the innovations at Lysts at Castleton.

Speaking for myself, I prefer an outdoors tourney, and I'll put up with a lot to get it.  If there's only one tourney available, and it's indoors, I'll go fight in it - and enjoy myself.  If there are two tourneys, equal in all other aspects, but one is inside and one is outside, I will go to the outdoor one.  I've certainly never insisted that an event steward couldn't put the list indoors.  

And by the way, "the fighters" couldn't agree when to have lunch.  There is no great monolith called "the fighters".  

> Or is it
>possible that the resourceful minds of our gloriously brilliant
>Kingdom can come up with a happy medium?

OK -- here is a proposed happy medium.  I propose that events be run by individuals who volunteer to run them.  That these volunteers keep coming up with their ideas about what would make the event most rewarding.  That we never try to find the one true answer, so that anybody can come up with new ideas.  That we set up an Ansteorra e-list where anybody can speak and any voice can be heard.  That the kingdom calendar have lots of different kinds of events, in all kinds of conditions.  That people go to the events they want to go to.  That we not mischaracterize people just because we disagree with them.

>This discussion makes it seem as though it would be disloyal to our warriors to even try to make everyone happy, or to even put forward a solution. And that's sad.

Beware of indirect subjects.  "This discussion makes it seem as though," followed by something nobody has said, nobody has implied, nobody believes.

And the result is that we are talking about these mischaracterizations, instead about how you want to run events.

I have called nobody coward, or disloyal.  I don't do so now.  I specifically urge everyone to listen to Lady Rose, and to consider what she has to say.  If I were an event steward right now, I'd be doing less talking and more listening, and I hope event stewards are doing so.  But I hope they are listening to all of us.

Robin of Gilwell / Jay Rudin

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