Rugby has given me the best days of my life – Egyptian women’s rugby player Barakat

Rugby has given me the best days of my life- Egypt’s Barakat

a woman kneels, holding a rugby ball
Egypt women’s rugby player Sanaa Barakat. Picture credit: Rugby Africa

JOHANNESBURG, September 28 (ANA) – Egypt national women’s rugby team player Sanaa Barakat on Tuesday revealed how the sport has shaped her life.

Having joined the game, relatively late in life, in her last year of college Barakat found something that ignited her passion.

“Rugby has been different things to me at different times in my life. At times it has been my greatest success, given me the room to be who I am, explore who I could be, feel safe and loved, feel successful and energised and most importantly feel happy and of worth,” said Barakat.

“At other times it has been my worst enemy, breaking my heart, disappointing me and making me doubt myself. But at the end all that comes to my mind is that rugby has been my home, it has been home since I started playing, and I’m not quite sure how do I go on without it.”

Giving so much to the game, Barakat added that it had brought her the best experiences in her life and created the best stories.

“Rugby has given me the best days of my life. It has given me memories that will forever be engraved in my mind and heart. It changed me, shaped me, broke me and in return it taught me lessons that I would’ve never learnt any other way.”

Holding a full-time job and putting in long hours and weekends to ensure that she continues playing rugby at her best, Barakat said that she understood what love is capable of when she started falling in love with the game.

“With all the hassles I went through to make it work, I knew that rugby helped me prosper and achieve more at work, not the opposite. I knew the moment I slipped at one, I would slip at the other because rugby was never a burden.

“It was never time wasted because playing rugby is where I recharge to be able to continue. It has been the time to take care of myself, in order to be able to take care of the rest of my responsibilities.”

Bringing in the values of dedication, commitment and hard work, Barakat, who once saw herself as a pessimist who did not believe that dreams could come true, said that she had learnt about life through the game.

“I’ve learnt that passion can make you capable of a lot more than what you think you are capable of. You can never love something so much and not have it love you back; I’ve loved the game and it loved me back.

“Being in an athletic team is a privilege that not a lot would appreciate until it ends. The game taught me to stay humble because ego only leads to failure. It led me to accept defeat and try to work past it. Success is not measured by the eyes of others, but by your own. My mind could be my worst enemy or my greatest driver. I’ve learned to love even when I don’t like to and give even when I don’t get something in return. I’ve grown a lot from this game.” – African News Agency (ANA), Editing by Michael Sherman