Fear, Play, and Precision: A Personal Reflection
My earliest encounters with sport came not in structured environments, but in the streets of Pakistan, where cricket was less a formal game and more a shared language of childhood. We played wherever space allowed - narrow lanes, dusty open grounds or uneven concrete surfaces. Equipment was improvised, rules flexible, and enthusiasm absolute. At that time, tennis balls were not as common. Most of us played with cheap hard balls, often unpredictable in bounce and unforgiving on impact. What should have been simple recreation carried an undercurrent of physical risk. For many children, this risk was part of the excitement. But for me, it was different. I was acutely aware of the possibility of injury. That awareness never fully disappeared into the background noise of play; it stayed present, shaping every decision at the crease or in the field. Where others instinctively committed to the ball, I hesitated. Where they saw rhythm, I saw consequence. Over time, that difference became socia...