Tip the Board

There’s a legend in our family of a certain Grampa who was famous for “accidentally” knocking over the crokinole board when things started to go bad. You could see the twinkle in his eye and a tiny smile he couldn’t hide, and you knew it was only a matter of seconds before his knee would hit the underside of the table and all the pieces would go flying. And everyone would roar with laughter, even the one who was winning.

It was as predictable as sunrise and far more fun than the game itself. When we start talking about Grampa, the crokinole board story is always retold. (In real life, he was renowned for his dogged determination to persevere. Crokinole was his outlet.)

Sometimes in the game of life it’s time to tip the board, if that can be done fair and square. You’re in a dead-end job, or a dead-end relationship, or you’re so far in debt that you’ll never see the light of day in a hundred lifetimes. There are a thousand reasons why sometimes you just need to say, “I’m not going to stay in this place anymore!”

You can’t ask for a re-set every time the going gets a little rough, because you’d never develop character or grow a spine. But sometimes you find yourself in what is essentially a “sunk cost” situation where throwing more time, money, resources, hope, or energy into a bad situation is just feeding a black hole from which nothing ever comes back.

Mostly, the test for whether or not it’s justified to tip the board is whether or not the game is reciprocating what you’re putting in. A cold marriage where one partner carries all the load and the other one rides free could be such a situation. A business partnership where you seem to be the one doing all the work while the others freeload and criticize. A business debt load where the bank makes untimely and unreasonable demands which effectively mean you’re working just to pay interest and carrying charges.

For those of us with high standards, pride, and a can-do spirit, tipping the board often seems galling and humiliating, an admission of failure. But in my thirty-seven years of legal practice, and from very personal experience, what I have seen is that those who cut the chains of an unreasonable bondage get over any remorse when, often for the first time in years, they get to stand out in the sunlight and breathe the clean air. And most of the people whose opinion really matters say, “What took you so long?”

Need to talk about a re-set? Drop me a note.

Similar Posts

  • A Pandemic Christmas

    In the classic Christmas story “The Gift of the Magi”, we are told of a sweet but impoverished young couple, very much in love, each wanting to give the other something extravagant, but not being able to afford anything. They owned only two treasures: Jim’s heirloom pocket watch and Della’s long and gorgeous hair. Of…

  • The Herd. And You.

    Being agreeable and getting along are wonderful traits, but as with everything in life, you can have too much of a good thing. Coming from a guy who celebrates consensus and collaboration, you might think that that’s a bit of heresy, so bear with me. Going with the flow has been bred into us for…

  • Hero

    On August 19, 1942, just over six thousand commandos, mostly Canadian, were dropped off on the beaches at Dieppe, an exploratory raid to test invasion theories. Although the defenses were well known, little had been done to soften up the bunkers and pillboxes glowering down from the cliffs. It was not pretty. Nearly two thirds…