Ball is in your court
Listeners, when we say the ball is in your court, we’re talking about a moment when everything stops until you decide what happens next. Cambridge Dictionary explains it as the time when it’s someone’s turn to deal with a problem or make a decision, because others have done all they can. Dictionary.com adds that it means the responsibility is now yours; it’s up to you. The phrase comes from tennis. Once the ball lands on your side, you either hit it back or you let the point go. Grammar Monster notes that the ball becomes a metaphor for the need to act. Doing nothing is still a choice; in tennis, if you just watch the ball bounce, you lose the point by default. Think about a software engineer offered a promotion that requires relocation. Friends have given advice, the company has made its offer. At some point, the emails stop, the calls go quiet. The ball is in their court. What happens next depends on how they weigh fear of change against the opportunity for growth, how much they trust their abilities, and what they value more: stability or possibility. Or consider a whistleblower in a big organization, sitting on evidence of wrongdoing. Journalists have explained protections, lawyers have laid out the risks. No one else can move the story forward. The ball is in their court. Their decision will be shaped by personal ethics, family responsibilities, financial security, and how much injustice they’re willing to live with. Silence is safer in the short term, but it can haunt them for years. According to the Ludwig language blog, the idiom really took hold in the mid‑20th century, especially in American English, as a way to mark these exact turning points in negotiations and conversations. It captured a cultural shift toward personal agency and accountability. When the ball is in your court, it’s an invitation and a warning. You may not control when the ball comes your way, but you control whether you swing. Responsibility, in the end, is accepting that if you don’t play the shot, you’re still shaping the game.
75 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Ball is in your court!