** High Priority ** It is just simply one of those fun things--no sense in deconstructing.
=============================== Michael J. Lavin | 716-375-2488 Department of Psychology St. Bonaventure University 14778 [EMAIL PROTECTED] | Fax: 716-375-7618 http://web.sbu.edu/psychology/lavin/ Listen to: http://www.pagoo.com/signature/mlavin =============================== >>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 10:58:17 AM >>> I don't pretend to be speaking for all sports-obsessed persons (heretofore referred to as "sops"), but as a rabid (complete with foaming mouth at a bad official's call or boneheaded play by someone I'm rooting for) sports fan, I can explain why I spend so much time watching Sportscenter and checking out ESPN.com. For me, there's an identification with the competitive spirit of athletics. The drive to "win" even through a substitute ("Yay! We won!" even while I sat on my fat rear watching TV) is compelling. I can complain when "we" play poorly, and I can feel superior when "we" win. Vicarious experiences can be very powerful. Or maybe I'm pathetic. Either way, the emotional highs and lows of following sports are likely no different than individuals who identify (overidentify? if sops are guilty of same) with tv shows (Survivor is a great example) or movies, or even books. We lose ourselves in a compelling story, and sports provide stories with every game, and even between them. I gotta go check ESPN.com to see if Bill Parcells (former NY Giants -- "my team"-- coach) was hired yet by Tampa Bay. David W. At 10:43 AM 1/15/2002 -0500, you wrote: >Can someone please explain to me why/how presumably intelligent people >become so obsessed with the activities of a professional sports team with >whom their only connection is that the team plays 1/2 of its games in a city >close to where you live or have lived. I just don't get it. And don't tell >me about how much you appreciate the athletic ballet, etc. because the fact >of the matter is you are happy when your team wins and miserable when they >lose, regardless of how ugly was the quality of the play. Help me out here. > >Ed > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >Edward I. Pollak, Ph.D. >Graduate Coordinator, Holocaust and Genocide Studies >Department of Psychology, >West Chester Univ. of Pennsylvania >Office: 610-436-3151; Home: 610-363-1939; Fax: 610-436-2846 >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >Husband, father, grandfather, biopsychologist, bluegrass fiddler and >herpetoculturist ( http://www.adcham.com) >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >Shameless self promotion: The Mill Creek Bluegrass Band performs every >Tuesday night at Dugal's Inn, Mortonville, 8 miles west of West Chester, PA. >Call 610- 486-0953 for directions. >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > >--- >You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] David T. Wasieleski, Ph.D. Associate Professor Department of Psychology and Counseling Valdosta State University 229-333-5620 http://chiron.valdosta.edu/dtwasieleski "This is a song about the everyday occurrences that make me feel like letting go Yes I'd say we've got a problem So much for the afterglow..." --Everclear "So Much for the Afterglow" --- You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] --- You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
