Why I don't Care about Sports Anymore
This past
year was the first time in memory, recent or otherwise, that I didn’t watch the
Super Bowl. Not because I was trying to win some bet between friends of who could
go the longest without finding out who won (though we did try that once we
realized we had all missed it), but because I felt myself overwhelmed by a
sense of apathy. Super Bowl Sunday is basically a national holiday in the
United States. I should have been interested, but I just wasn’t. It took some
time, but I think I finally figured out why.
Remember those
guys who were jerks in high school? The guys who dated only the most attractive
girls and treated them terribly? The guys who beat up the nerdy kid? The guys
who were constantly cheating on tests and homework? The guys who could do
pretty much whatever they wanted because they were on whatever sports team your
particular high school valued most highly? Professional athletes used to be
those guys. In fact, I would venture to guess that they’re still those guys,
they just have more money now. Money that sports fans gladly give them.
Not only
that, but sports to seem rather frivolous for how seriously people seem to take
them. How many times have we heard that a moment in sports was supposed to go
down as one of the greatest (insert noun) of all time? How many times have we
heard of sports moments that would change the history? How many times has a
newly drafted athlete been labeled the savior of an entire city? How many of
those moments actually made some sort of significant historical impact? None of
that compares to things that actually matter, like congressional elections,
scientific discoveries, and rebellions against tyrannical governments in Arabic
countries. Yet, I would venture to guess that more people could name the
starting quarterback of the local sports team than could name their
congressman, a famous scientist, or find the nation of Syria on a map.
I
understand that sports offer a welcome distraction from the mundane misfortunes
of everyday life. Often, it’s a much needed distraction, especially in manufacturing
towns with high rates of poverty. I understand that sports can bring people
together who otherwise have absolutely nothing in common. There’s a reason there
are so many sports movies where people set aside their differences to rally
around the team. I will even go so far as to concede that it is probably true
that not all athletes were jerks in high school, though I will only do so reluctantly.
Sports don’t have to be important to be enjoyable. They’re no more or less
frivolous than most other hobbies, including ones that I find myself engaging
in a little too often (video games come to mind). However, my points still
stand. Excuse me for not liking sports.
-JR
-JR
1 Comments:
What a stupid generalization. You don't follow sports because according to you, all professional players were jerks in high school? Are you still 14 or what?
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