General News
12 September, 2025
Smiles with Sally: Playing like a child again
“No white line fever, watch your hamstrings, back, and the rest of your body, and please remember you are playing against little people!”

That was my first comment to a group of parents about to take the field against their children in a football match.
I’ve seen these games before, and I know how they can end with sore bodies, tight hamstrings, and a few regrets the next day.
This is not because the parents don’t know better, but because their minds slip back into being children while their bodies… well, they haven’t quite kept up.
But oh, what a joy it is to watch.
Parents running, laughing, and competing, with their faces lighting up as though the only thing that mattered was chasing the ball.
You can almost see the weight of the world lift from their shoulders.
Their energy shifts, their bodies relax, and smiles spread across the field, contagious and unstoppable.
Being in that environment is something special.
There’s a magic in watching adults forget about work deadlines, bills, and responsibilities, even if only for an hour, and allow themselves to play.
The football itself isn’t really the point. The point is the freedom, the laughter, and the connection.
It made me stop and wonder how often we deny ourselves the simple joy of play.
How often do we tell ourselves we’re “too old” to kick the ball, to dance, to do something silly and fun?
And how often do we let the fear of other people’s opinions stop us before we even try?
Do we really need an arranged parent-child footy game or a community dance to permit ourselves to play, or could we simply step outside and do it for no reason at all?
The truth is, when we let go and allow ourselves to play, something powerful happens.
The childlike joy spills out, and laughter bubbles up.
The freedom we thought we’d lost shows itself again, and the smiles that follow are those wide, genuine, no-holding-back smiles, which are absolutely priceless.
The last few parents versus child football games I’ve been part of didn’t end with long lists of injuries or complaints.
What I did see was parents who looked lighter, children who felt closer, and moments that will be remembered long after the game was over.
And those smiles on both parents' and children’s faces stayed with me for hours afterwards.
Let the weight of the world lift, even for just a while. Let the smiles shine through, because sometimes, the most powerful way to reconnect with yourself, with others, and with life itself, is simply to play.