I won’t be watching the Super Bowl today. I doubt Grumpy Cat will be watching, either, despite someone decking him out in a Seattle logo here. I figure he wants both teams to lose.
I enjoy football, but I’m a college football fan. The pro game bores me. I don’t have an attachment to any of the professional teams, so I just don’t care one way or the other who wins.
I get tired of the rabid obsession that seems to descend upon the United States on the day of this game. It seems excessive to me, and I’m sure it’s easier for me to see it that way since I’m outside of the mass of participants.
But despite my disinterest and my discomfort at the obsession, I’m getting increasingly uncomfortable with the backlash against it. I’m afraid that those of us who don’t care about the game have become a bit elitist and arrogant.
I see non-football fans competing with each other to see who can care the least about the game. I see people condescendingly saying that if others would just care about the things they care about — whatever they happen to be — the world’s problems would be fixed. I see people looking down their noses at others simply because they enjoy a game that doesn’t matter to the first group.
In a lot of ways, it’s just another manifestation of something that keeps troubling me. It’s just another form of people saying, “Why aren’t you people more like me?”
Do great dreams really come true or do they just serve to haunt us?
Why do we often attract the folks who are most destructive for us?
I don’t really hate you, honest; I’m just afraid you may hurt me
Effort to boot unethical congressman laudable, but will it really help?
Suppressing speech you don’t like is a lousy way to encourage tolerance
What if biggest risk to our lives comes from our own unhappiness?
Being treated with respect changed black teen’s racial beliefs in 1974
A year later, my father’s death looms large, but I have no regrets
Dear FBI, NSA and all three-letter agencies: ‘We don’t trust you guys’