There's nothing like a postponed game to make you realise how empty your life is. It thrusts you right back into the world of "normal people" who spend their time on a Saturday in a world of retail, family visits and getting the garden done/car washed/attending to their well rounded range of interests. You feel strange there. A fish out of water. An alien on an unfamiliar planet. What do these 'normal' people do? How are you supposed to fill your time? How are you supposed to pretend to be one them with so little notice? It's ok in summer because by then, you've had enough of football and you've got enough warning to think up phrases like 'shall we go to the garden centre?' and 'I could do with going to the tip' and 'maybe we should pop round and see your mum soon?' in order to disguise yourself as one of the natives of this strange football free world.
As a football supporter, by definition, we don't have well rounded and varied interests (at least not Saturday/Tuesday based ones anyway). Most 'normal' people (whilst lots of humans go to the football on any given week, numbers tell you that about 98% of the population don't so, whilst we're a large group, we're the aberrant ones in the equation) have interests that they grow out of. They change as they get bored. They find new things to do. We don't. It's like there's something a bit stunted emotionally or intellectually about us. Why do we live in some kind of mundane groundhog day world, living the same experience over and over?
I woke up early this morning (because being well rested and having good 'sleep hygiene' is so not a thing to any one with an actual real life) and instead of doing a wellbeing boosting meditation routine and making myself a chia seed based organic smoothie and baking some fresh fibre filled cranberry and outmeal breakfast biscuits and then reading some improving European literature, I had a brew, a piece of white toast and scrolled mindlessly on my phone for an hour. I ended up on a weird Twitter rabbit hole, drawn into the strange world of obsessive middle aged fans of a particular 90s boy band. 'How odd!' I thought. 'Those people haven't moved on in their interests since their pre-teenage days.' Then I remembered I run a blog named after a footballer from 1991 who I first saw when I was 11 and whilst I'm not sure if I'm the pot or the kettle in the famous saying, that particular image seemed apt.
The bizarre thing is, up to the point that the game was called off, I wasn't arsed about it. I've got a lot to do, the boy isn't very well, generally I really could do with getting in with the bits of life that are 'grown up stuff' and actually important and not the kind of pseudo important important status that football applies to itself. Rationally, I should see this postponement as a chance for a break in the routine. A chance to get the real life things out of the way but football isn't a rational thing.
Now it's actually been confirmed... I feel bereft.
It's not as if I was expecting us to win. We're not particularly any good this season and Rotherham are one of those teams. Exactly the kind of sharp elbowed, broken nose, rugged bunch of hard workers that come and push you over and score three goals that are as ugly as they are painful and their fans are all a bit leery afterwards and you leave with a general sense of resentment at how you've wasted another afternoon on the fucking lost cause joke of a shit football team your dad lumbered you with because he thought you'd 'enjoy it' - Look at this Dad. I'm literally fed up as fuck with them. Call that 'enjoyment?' - Fuick's sake Pool. Sick of it!
The football is something else though. It's not the win or the loss. It's the routine, the connection. The sharing of the experience. It's the nods and the quick chats, it's the mulling it over at half time and the different perspectives at the end.
I'm sat, right now in a pub. I've nipped to town to get some stuff in an attempt to complete some of the real life stuff and got bored. I'm watching the people round me. None of them seem to be displaying any particular emotion. There's no extremes on display. It's just calm all round. That's great I suppose, because I'm not sure I want either a rage fuelled glassing incident or an MDMA inspired ecstatic spontaneous naked love in to break out around me but then, I feel that's kind of what the football is (only generally clothed). What I mean is - It's a chance to feel something outside of the bounds of the usual.
It might be stupid, it might be immature, it might be an addiction or an OCD-like compulsion to stick to routine but somehow, the prospect of watching mediocre footballers playing a game of football that the wind would likely render as aesthetically pleasing as a genuine clown car crash (i.e. not a well choreographed routine where the clowns deliberately crash and spring from the wreckage with a choreographed slapstick grace, but one where the clowns actually crash and end up stumbling about slightly concussed and limping and dropping bucket of confetti with leaking comedy squirty flowers) was the one thing I was actually looking forward to.
Sometimes I leave raging. Sometimes I leave frustrated. Sometimes I leave walking on air, feeling as if life is the most beautiful gift and the very air around me is the scent of heaven itself because for a few rare moments, the dream of boys in tangerine overcoming the cynical weight of limited expectation and rekindling the glory days of cup wins and Ballon D'ors seems to come true. For better or worse I almost never feel 'nothing'
I go through a lot of my life feeling very little. How can you really? The world is shit and if you let yourself think about it all too much, it would break your pathetic little heart in two. I'm a stoic, inured against reality, insulated from emotion. Nothing really gets through*. Football is when I both escape but also when I let myself feel something.
Today feels empty. I should get over it I suppose. Grow up a bit. Do something useful. Contribute something other than self indulgent shite blogs that add nothing to the world other than more shite on a server using up energy for no reason other than to feed the pathetic ego of the twat that writes them. It's a joke really. A middle aged man who hasn't moved on from being 11. Embrace real life for fucks sake. It'll be rearranged. There's always next week. Always next season. We will win the cup again and we will have another Ballon D'or winner.
It's inevitable.
We're tangerine after all.
I'll always be 11. I'll always believe that glory is just around the corner and that this is the day, the season it arrives. I don't give a shit. It's better than accepting real life by a factor of about 1953%
It's inevitable.
We're tangerine after all.
I'll always be 11. I'll always believe that glory is just around the corner and that this is the day, the season it arrives. I don't give a shit. It's better than accepting real life by a factor of about 1953%
Onward.
*Nothing get through except brass bands in town squares playing the old fashioned Christmas Carols from the Victorian era, the sparse and crisp poetry of the first world war poets, TV dramas about the murder of kids that I can't watch because it's just too horrifying to think of and call 'entertainment', the memory of holding my last (beautiful, wise and kind) cat's head as she was put down and the moment she relaxed and was gone and I felt an emptiness and sobbed in the car park of the vets, that Limmy video where he tries to buy a ferry ticket back to his own youth, the power of music in general to express things that go beyond words, whether it's the intangible but very real sense of England evoked by Vaughn Williams, a very different but equally real England evoked by Mark E Smith or the weird way that a repetitive beat such as some great Detroit Techno can be transcendent and take you a plain of being that is painless and light and heavy and real all at once, the beautiful juxtaposition of industry and wilderness of weeds coming into flower on a semi wasteland of a half demolished factory that has plain dormant, the clockwork geometry and unknowable wisdom of the flight paths of migrating birds, the melancholic holler of James Dean Bradfield in full voice, giving sound to his tragic and beautiful words of his tragic and beautiful childhood friend, the plaintiff and beyond possible consolation sound of the tears of a kid after dropping an ice cream and the undeniable sadness of knowing, as an adult that dropping an ice cream is literally nothing on the scale of 'possible sadness you can feel' and you know that that kid is almost certainly going to feel those sadnesses someday and yet will never be as free to express what' thy're feeling as they are right now and how that kind of catches something deep inside and you want to cry along with them and let everything out, but you can't because you can't and then the kids dad sweeps them up in their arms and soothes the tears and you think that you'll never be so small and feel as safe as that kid does right now ever again and there's people you will never be hugged by again who once hugged you like that in some long ago era who now only exist in faded packets of photos printed at places that also no longer exist and that's exactly the pain and sadness you are thinking about that the kid doesn't know yet and you have to draw a breath and go on because fuck it, it's the same for everyone this shit and who the fuck do you think you are anyway, thinking your hurt is any different to the shit everyone else carries with them and if you let go, you're turning into exactly the kind of self indulgent melt that thinks they are some special and unique flower when really, we're just nothing in the grand scheme of time and actually, that vastness is quite a comforting thing really, the moment when someone you love forgives you for something you've done or said to hurt them and it all drops away and you look at them and they look more beautiful than they ever have done and anyone else ever has done for a few fleeting seconds and a feeling of childlike giddy excitement at the moment when your last day at work before a holiday is coming to an end very soon and freedom lies before you with all the mystique and wonder of a great cross continental American road trip in a pick up truck even if all you're doing is not going to work for a bit)
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