Bingo! Or how the power of intention can make…
I played bingo for the first time.
We used to play bingo when I worked in assisted living. Staff helped residents keep track on their bingo cards, called numbers and awarded prizes. I remember playing in elementary school, too.
But playing in a room of paying adults was a first.
What it’s like to play bingo
The room grew quiet as the numbers were called. The first round was traditional — five across, down or horizontal. The second game was a 2×3 area, anywhere on the card. Then, we tried for blackout in 50 or so calls.
Players sang out, “Bingo!” Cards were checked, and prizes awarded. Bells tinkled occasionally — and always for O69. (You figure it out …)
About the fourth game in, the caller showed a Y shape and announced a $30 prize.
Feeling like a winner
I mentioned to my friend — also a first-time player — that I often win things, such as drawings, prizes or that sort of thing. Sometimes, I know I’m going to win even before they announce they will draw for for prizes. It’s not often I even want the prize, but I know I’m going to win.
My friend agreed. She said it’s the power of intention. If you intend to win, you will.
I said, however, I wasn’t feeling it with bingo. I knew it wasn’t my turn to win, and that was ok.
But when they announced the prize for the Y game, she turned to me and said, “I’m going to win that.”
The power of intention
I actually did better than I had on the other games. On a couple of my cards, I was close to bingo. I began to wonder if maybe I would be lucky, after all. The announcer called a number, and my friend got bingo.
She had intended to win, and she did. We grinned and high-fived each other. Her friends at the next table were not as amused.
So bingo wasn’t a total bust. I learned it’s an experience I don’t need to repeat. She won $30, which paid for her bingo cards, drinks and food, with some left over.
Ah, the power of intention.
Be a Better Writer Tip
I had to look up bingo.
No, it wasn’t that I didn’t know how to spell it, but Word wanted to capitalize it. Webster’s New World Dictionary, however, said it’s a lowercase noun.
I also wanted to make it a verb — as in bingoed — but to meet the dictionary definition, that’s a no-no. Interestingly, high-fived is an acceptable verb.
I rewrote my copy to make it a lowercase noun. Sometimes it’s easier to write around something. While I could have used a word I’ve heard others use, I’d rather be right, in this case. So bingo it is.
4 COMMENTS
Interesting piece! Did you ever watch “Better Call Saul” on TV? We DVD-binged on it recently for the first time (because we don’t get full cable channels) and well into the most reason season, there’s a bingo-meltdown scene that’s pretty incredible. You might be able to see it on YouTube if you search for it. Try “Better Call Saul Bingo Meltdown”. Not sure if that will work, or be as interesting to you when it’s out of context. Peace, my friend!
Hi, Steve! I have not seen it, but I will try to find it online. People who play bingo take it very seriously, which is fun and funny, because it’s a game. But I suppose fans of anything (sports, movies, music) tend to take it seriously. Thank you for reading and commenting!
Bingo. I’ve played it so many boring times, my eyelids twitch whenever I force myself to participate. It was a great story. Some bingo players hold on to a good luck charm– don’t know if it does any good.
Ha ha! Well, it’s not for everyone. I wonder if good luck charms work. Maybe it helps with intention.