From Obsession to Mastery

Chic Callas tells his bridge story (BBO: cgcallas)

In 1974 I enrolled in a pre-med program at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Coming from Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, a small mining town on the edge of Great Slave Lake, I was an immature 18 year old and I was completely unprepared for the extreme competition within the program.

However, within a month I had discovered the game of bridge because there were regular evening games in the common area of my dorm unit. Slowly I worked myself into being a regular at the table. I would play bridge from late afternoon until the wee hours of the morning with whoever was willing to play.

I quit going to classes. To this day I'm not sure why nobody ever came and checked on me to see why I was missing classes, but they didn't so I kept playing bridge or studying bridge. I'd sleep in, get something to eat when I woke up, track down the paper so I could read the Goren bridge column. One of the students had "The Encyclopedia of Bridge" so I'd pour over that in the early afternoon hours. And then play would begin as students returned from their classes.

I'm not proud of that time. Missing classes and being a "failure" at the end of the year is something that I never fully recovered from.

I didn't play for about a decade when I got back to Yellowknife, but then I joined a small group of bridge players and we would play once a week. There was a decision to make it "more interesting" so we played for 1/10th of a penny a point. At least one of the players was an accountant so we kept a ledger of the points won and lost each week.

During that time I got married and then one night at our weekly Wedneday evening game, I got a call from my wife telling me it was time to go to the hospital! I cashed out, receiving money from the other players as everybody owed me for the previous 2 years. I think I ended up with a little over $20. I rushed home in plenty of time to walk my wife to the hospital as it was just behind our house and the next day our first son was born.

I didn't play for 20 years while working and raising a family of three boys. There just isn't the time for bridge in those very busy years and I understand why young folks aren't at the bridge table.

Darkness arrived. I had always suffered from depression though I just didn't know what it was, but when I was forty-two, I crashed at work and I was unable to work for 6 years. It's a crushing illness, that eventually led to a divorce. I was, to put it mildly, a broken man.

In 2005 I moved to another town in northern Canada, Whitehorse Yukon, to be with someone and I started over. My mother had developed dementia and I wanted something to keep my mind active as I gingerly tip-toed into my 50's.

Thankfully there was a local bridge club! So in 2009 I started going out to the local non-sanctioned club and I started playing duplicate bridge for the first time. Things had changed! Apparently we weren't opening 4 card majors anymore as a start!

There was a local Christmas tournament coming up so my partner and I entered. We came in 1st with 10 tables in our first event! I remember thinking that bridge wasn't too hard! How naive of me! I've had lots of failures at the game since then, making countless mistakes along the way. And I've also had some wonderful successes. Through it all, it's a beautiful game for teaching one how to handle triumph and disaster, and as Kipling said: "And treat those two imposters just the same."

I managed to become a Life Master in 2020 living in a place without a sanctioned club. That was no easy feat considering the closest sanctioned club was over 1,000 miles away. But when covid came along and we could earn black points online, I was able to cross that finish line. I followed up with Silver
and Ruby LM and I expect to reach my goal of Gold LM in 2025.

Along the way I was able to take the teaching course with Patty Tucker in 2020 while attending the Penticton Regional and I have been passing on my knowledge and experience since then.

The local club did get sanctioned in 2022 so players can now earn black points here. But the travel to tournaments is still a challenge as it's a 2.5 hour flight to Vancouver, the nearest Regional Tournament.

I've had a good run at the bridge table these many years and I have met a lot of great people along the way, both locally and by attending tournaments. It's another family and I appreciate being one of it's members.

Along the way the game has taught me a lot about friendship, trust, disappointment, joy and sorrow, patience and understanding.

I don't know how many more years I will be able to play. I will cut back my bridge schedule next year but as long as my mental faculties allow, I expect to teach and to play.

It's the best mental exercise game in the world and I'm glad I found it.

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23 comments on “From Obsession to Mastery”

  1. After playing bridge for about 6 years, and learning from a Master,and learnt a lot of bids and play above the basics. I moved to another club and tried to play after trying to find out how they play. I played with a lot of people once, and they would not play with me again, even though I did not point out where they were going wrong. It was very difficult to play with partners for the first time when you are not used to how they play. It wasn't easy to the first time to know hos they played, and some didn't tell me the full story. I was just about ready to give up thinking they were a lot of judgemental snobs. So I went back to lessons hoping that I would relearn how they played, but I could see the errors in their way of teaching the basics. In the end I kept on trying with people who play the basics, but we don't get anywhere. I don't care now if I play or not anymore.

  2. Chic - Your story brought back many memories and the realization that my life somewhat paralleled yours. I "majored" in bridge at Michigan State in the early to mid 60s, playing all night and sleeping through classes. After two divorces and some rocky times I've found a great life partner but don't live close to any sanctioned games. Best I've done is bronze. Thanks for sharing your story.

  3. Bravo for you Chic. In the years we have been at the tables we truly don't really get to know each other. Your story moved me to decide to try be a better "bridge friend" to you and all others at the table. Too often we just see the cards and not the people holding them. Good luck in your quest for Gold LM. See you Tuesday...

  4. Great story Chic, and well written. Particularly interesting to me because I play against you online every week!

    1. Thank you Alan and I look forward to our next encounter. I did NOT title the article and do not consider myself anywhere close to mastery so we'll have some fun at the table.

  5. Thanks for sharing your story of life and bridge.
    You so well observed that
    "Through it all, it's a beautiful game for teaching one how to handle triumph and disaster".

    I wish you many more years in enjoying bridge

  6. Great story Chic. You have taught me a lot over the years t the bridge table. Thanks for all the games!

  7. I enjoy reading your story. Thank you for sharing. It reminds me to get back to playing bridge.

    1. Cards provide some magic. Bridge is a great game to challenge, humble and a community I like belonging too. Your story was excellent. Thanks for sharing!

    1. I agree with you I am a bridge player for over 25 years taking course and playing in club and enjoying my life since Covid-19 stop being in club paling on line but not much fun hardly get good pretender bridge helping me a lat I am 86 years old with excellent Memory

      1. Just goes to show , it’s never to late to start again at 79 I’m going to do it , thanks for writing this 👍👍

      2. I love bridge! I have my 1st card with 1.20 points from my 1st duplicate game on 1-05-1973. Played 15 years of party bridge before that. I have kept all my ACBL cards/slips since 1973 (quite a stack!) usually including partners names on them) and later even the magazine totals for awhile. I have wonderful memories of going to local and other out of town tournaments until I reached LM. Later it was easier to play on OKB & BBO and now I play daily only on BBO. I did attend my local clubs for a long time before that. It is a fantastic game that has been a really large part of my life and like I said "I love it! Ruby Life Master

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