Monday, October 27, 2008

I Hate Sports












I hated sports when I was growing up in sports-mad Philadelphia. Much of civic life and conversation revolved around the Phillies, Eagles, Big 5 College Basketball, and the 76ers. Oh, let me not forget hockey and the Flyers, the "Broad Street Bullies." It seemed to me that all this running around and incomprehensible rules was a waste of time. Worse than that, it was an ENFORCED waste of time. Kid life was like one protracted WWII movie in which knowing baseball facts meant you were "one of us," and being clueless about 'balls' & 'strikes' marked one as a social outcast. My 'sports dyslexia' did gave me lots of time to read, and is probably the Genesis of my literacy appetites and pretensions. "You throw like a girl!" was the huge schoolyard taunt. Gym class, and conversations about pitching or open field running (in which kids repeated what they heard their sports-fanatics parents say) were a gauntlet to run. "How about those Phils?!" was usually safe . . . unless it was basketball season. What a colossal bore! Fortunately, one inning 'out in left field' usually exempted me from further play. "Where's that Kool Aid?





Of course, the sound of By Sahm calling a Phillies game on a tinny am radio became the sound of summer by osmosis, and to this day hearing a baseball game on a radio makes me feel that my grandfather, passed these many years, is sitting nearby groaning about a botched play. And I have one brilliant memory of being taken to see the Phils at the old Connie Mack Stadium. (Pre-Veteran's Stadium, pre-Citizens Bank Field). My father drove us into the very heart of the crowded, red-brick city. Cobblestone streets, trolley tracks and tall buildings didn't say "baseball" to me, and when we entered the stadium, it resembled nothing so much as a factory. Bare girders, and cement floors felt more like the subway than a place for games. Then we topped the aisle and suddenly were looking down at a perfect, GREEN field in the middle of the city. I can still see that GREEN in my mind's eye, bright & iconic as only certain disconnected childhood memories are. But for young me, sports was one of the main things to rebel against. No, I didn't want to go to 'the game.' I'd rather moon about the Philadelphia Museum of Art, visit the University of Pennsylvania's mummys, or read indoors, thank you very much. "Bye now."





After puberty I realized that I'd better act more like a normal person if I wanted to have a 'normal' life. My guy-friend Jim Labig was a Cincinnati Reds fan, and so we went to the "Vet" whenever they were in town. I actually enjoyed being with Jim, the only person I could stand to be around or talk to sometimes. I enjoyed the crowd, the smells, and (strangely) the fact that I couldn't really follow the intricacies of the game made for a relaxing interlude. In those days before cell/mobile phones no one could reach you out at the ball park either.

Fast forward to 1980. I'm on the roof of a building with my schoolmates, overlooking Broad Street. The whole Philadelphia region is buzzing with uncontained glee and relief : the Phillies have won the world series at last, and in a moment they will parade below us! "If only Grandpa could've lived to see this!" we all thought as one.

And now, like Alexander Joy Cartwright, founder of the first professional Baseball Club, the 'Knickerbockers' and acknowledged 'Father of Baseball,' I live in Honolulu. It's my home (and he's buried here). Through a Hawaii player I am again rooting for the Phils. Memories arise....After a Fall day roaring around upstate New York on motorcycles with my pal Frank, head full of fresh wind and foliage vistas, we entered the City around dusk. Suddenly iconic Yankee Stadium, all lit up, rose into view under an Autumn moon. A New York City Saturday night was ahead of me as I thought: 'Remember this moment!" and I know that I always will. . .

Today the Phillies and Maui boy Shane "Flyin Hawaiian" Victorino could win the World Series. Much will play in my head as I watch that game: Philadelphia small kid times, Hawaii Pride, and friends who have passed on too early. But I know too that they live on in the crack of the bat; Once again Grandpa is sitting behind me (I know he's there!) and Jim is beside me on a sunny endless day . . . when I'm at the ball park. . . Because I hate sports. . . Aloha! Cloudia







7 comments:

  1. I hate sports exactly the same way you do. For many of the same reasons.

    But somehow, I did develop a slight heart warming for football.

    Stupid Phillies. They better win.


    This post really made me smile. On many levels.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Growing up, I hated PE, my worst subject. I preferred to be a bookworm!

    I am now a Hawaii Warrior fan. How did that happen? Via osmosis from my husband, who is a sports enthusiast.

    I am still a sedentary non-athlete, though. Some things never change...

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hated sports in school, being an over-tell fatty foureyes. Married a man who hated team sports. Eldest daughter became a rabid hockey fan. Where did I go wrong?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Cool photos, Cloudia! Welcome back!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Try playing in a high school pep band, with a shrieking flautist right behind you, since you and your fellow trombonists sit in the front row. In Aloha Stadium, while the BuffnBlues took on whatever the Pac5 called their team, which was most memorable for the bands since we both played "Oahu'a," which "borrows" the tune of "O, Tannenbaum."

    So, these days, I couldn't on Sunday night practically go visit my friend in Collingswood, NJ, from home in the far-out Philly burb Media, since the highways and trains between here and there were clogged by an Eagles game followed by a World Series game and a concert by The Who.

    It's always something.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Wife and I went to teacher training as mature students - sports gut there asked me what I liked. I said I enjoyed tennis in my teens and that I was a motorcyclist who loved following the racing. He gave me a withering look and said, with utmost distain 'Oh, indivual sports'.
    Guess that says it all, I loath team games.
    Dragonstar is the wife in question.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Aloha!
    bubblewench= you already Know that we're in sync on a lot of this herd instinct jollity, don't ya?

    gigi= the MOST rabid UH fan! I can't picture you in pe since you are such delicate beautiful Korean girl- musician, you!

    todd= you are a two-fer like me!!
    You are a Honolulu local who knows what it's like to live in eastern pennsylvania! You're having lovely flakes of snow. I have Tongan tree-men bringing down cocoanuts. WELCOME home! bubblewench is one of us Penn/People too!

    DrangonStar & Aileni= ah now we see: partners in crime, double-teaming the blogosphere (and I thought you didn't DO team sports ;-)
    I too adore motorcycles (faster getaways!) as my 1973 bmw demonstrates - when I find time to ride that is... People forget that motorcycling is a wonderful sport!

    As todd says: it's always something. Thank you ALL for sharing!!

    ReplyDelete

Thank You for Sharing.
SOME Comments are going
to Moderation. Fear Not! We
See & Publish them ALL Happily!