Is sports watching and fandom a kind of sickness?
About two decades ago a youngish (late 20s) couple I knew bought a home and to help with the mortgage rented a bedroom to a friend who also worked at the same big company as did they.
This guy, around 15 or 20 years older than they, was divorced and paying both alimony and child support.
Broke. So what he did was to watch sports, in all his leisure time.
Any kind of sports. The big American ones, to be sure, but also hockey, soccer, auto racing, tennis, golf, you name it.
My friend once said to me, "Tony would watch tiddley-winks if he could." And this friend was also a football and baseball fan himself, so he wasn't mocking all sports watching.
Are you a Tony? How many sports do you follow - avidly? By "avidly" I mean a game a week or more during that sport's season?
If it's more than 3 or 4 is it maybe time you got a (a) girlfriend, or (b) hobby, or (c) gym membership, or (d) a life?
Or (e) all of the above.
About two decades ago a youngish (late 20s) couple I knew bought a home and to help with the mortgage rented a bedroom to a friend who also worked at the same big company as did they.
This guy, around 15 or 20 years older than they, was divorced and paying both alimony and child support.
Broke. So what he did was to watch sports, in all his leisure time.
Any kind of sports. The big American ones, to be sure, but also hockey, soccer, auto racing, tennis, golf, you name it.
My friend once said to me, "Tony would watch tiddley-winks if he could." And this friend was also a football and baseball fan himself, so he wasn't mocking all sports watching.
Are you a Tony? How many sports do you follow - avidly? By "avidly" I mean a game a week or more during that sport's season?
If it's more than 3 or 4 is it maybe time you got a (a) girlfriend, or (b) hobby, or (c) gym membership, or (d) a life?
Or (e) all of the above.