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How much does sports success & failure affect your life?


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Just curious to see if I'm a deranged loser, or if my own experience is normal for sports fans.

 

My main teams are the Bills and Knicks.  I started liking the baseball & the Yankees about 7-8 years ago, and don't watch hockey.  I don't count any Yankees past championships as "mine," so I've never seen one of my teams win it all.

 

I'm in my late '50s, and particularly w/ the Bills, the longer I'm in it, the more it all affects me.  I definitely feel like I've invested so much time at this point, I'm just all in until we get one.  I would say without feeling embarrassed that I don't think my life will feel complete until the Bills win a title, and each failure gets worse for me. I'm still dealing w/ the Cincy loss, and will be for at least a few more weeks, if not longer.  It's all a bit of an obsession.

 

My younger self would have thought that I'm pathetic today.  I would have been like "get a hobby...get a life."  I have hobbies, and a great life, with a family I adore, lots of interests, and a job that I really enjoy.

 

Anyone else?  Or do I need professional help?

 

 

 

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“How much does sports success & failure affect your life?”

 

None.

 

3 hours ago, Success said:

Just curious to see if I'm a deranged loser, or if my own experience is normal for sports fans.

 

Anyone else?  Or do I need professional help?

Not for this.

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It doesn't affect my life. There are more important things like family, health, job. Although I will admit it is frustrating that the Bills can't get over the hump and win a Super Bowl. I just want to see one in my lifetime. As for my other teams (Yankees, Islanders) I have seen both win especially the Yankees. Although it has been a while since they won a WS. George is probably turning over in his grave.

Edited by Gregg
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Win or lose, my contribution was sitting on the couch drinking a Bloody Mary, so I take no credit when the Bills win and I feel no shame when they lose.

 

Don't get me wrong - I'd be elated if the Bills won the Super Bowl, but there are so many more important things happening in the world, and in my life, that I can't let sports affect me that much.

 

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I only closely follow the Bills and Mets.

 

As I've gotten older (I'm 52), the losses bother me much less.

 

A lot of it is just having realistic expectations.  For the Mets, last season was the only season since the 80s that I felt like they SHOULD go to the World Series.  It was a great ride and I actually had the pleasure of watching their season end vs. the Padres with @Beerball and his family, as we were all in Buffalo for that week's Bills game.  At that point, I really didn't expect the Mets to make a run because of all of their injuries, so the loss/end of season didn't really hurt much.

 

 For the Bills, the drought years pretty much conditioned me to expect very little.  The Rex Ryan/Tyrod Taylor era was easily the worst for me.  I really thought the Rex hire and his pursuit of Taylor set the team back years and it was frustrating to watch it all unfold.

 

It was the closest I've ever come to saying f*ck it and just taking a hiatus.  But I didn't.  I continued to watch the games, but I was numb.  

 

Then came McDermott, Beane and Josh.

 

For the 2018, 19 and 20 seasons, nothing could get me down about this team.  I enjoyed all of the good stuff that happened and the majority of the bad stuff affected me very little.

 

With success comes higher expectations (for me, anyway).  The last two seasons have been full of ups in the regular season and painful losses in the postseason.  

 

I'm less optimistic about our chances of winning a Super Bowl with Josh and it's not a great feeling.  But it's nothing that affects my life in any way, shape or form.  Going into next season, my expectations will be more realistic than they've been for the past two seasons.  I've gotten to the point where I feel that as long as the current coaching staff is in place, there is no chance at winning a Super Bowl.  So next season, I'll enjoy the regular season and expect to win (maybe) one playoff game before getting bounced the following week.

 

And then I'll set my sights on baseball season, like I always do.

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16 hours ago, Success said:

Just curious to see if I'm a deranged loser, or if my own experience is normal for sports fans.

 

My main teams are the Bills and Knicks.  I started liking the baseball & the Yankees about 7-8 years ago, and don't watch hockey.  I don't count any Yankees past championships as "mine," so I've never seen one of my teams win it all.

 

I'm in my late '50s, and particularly w/ the Bills, the longer I'm in it, the more it all affects me.  I definitely feel like I've invested so much time at this point, I'm just all in until we get one.  I would say without feeling embarrassed that I don't think my life will feel complete until the Bills win a title, and each failure gets worse for me. I'm still dealing w/ the Cincy loss, and will be for at least a few more weeks, if not longer.  It's all a bit of an obsession.

 

My younger self would have thought that I'm pathetic today.  I would have been like "get a hobby...get a life."  I have hobbies, and a great life, with a family I adore, lots of interests, and a job that I really enjoy.

 

Anyone else?  Or do I need professional help?

 

 

 

I'm kind of the reverse of you.  The older I get (early 50s now), the less I care about any of it.

 

I was in my sports viewing prime (undergrad years) when we lost 4 Super Bowls in a row.  I have to say, that genuinely had a negative impact on me.  

 

Now, I just don't care enough to really be bothered by any of this.  I was pretty good with our loss to the Bengals about an hour after it happened.

 

At this point, I just want to see a Bills SB win, and a Sabres Cup win before I die.  Actually, I'd take one or the other at this point.

 

I am also a lifelong Red Sox fan, so I've made it to the top of the mountain there, after years of suffering.  

 

All it takes is 1 championship to forever change you as a fan.

 

 

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17 hours ago, Success said:

Just curious to see if I'm a deranged loser, or if my own experience is normal for sports fans.

 

My main teams are the Bills and Knicks.  I started liking the baseball & the Yankees about 7-8 years ago, and don't watch hockey.  I don't count any Yankees past championships as "mine," so I've never seen one of my teams win it all.

 

I'm in my late '50s, and particularly w/ the Bills, the longer I'm in it, the more it all affects me.  I definitely feel like I've invested so much time at this point, I'm just all in until we get one.  I would say without feeling embarrassed that I don't think my life will feel complete until the Bills win a title, and each failure gets worse for me. I'm still dealing w/ the Cincy loss, and will be for at least a few more weeks, if not longer.  It's all a bit of an obsession.

 

My younger self would have thought that I'm pathetic today.  I would have been like "get a hobby...get a life."  I have hobbies, and a great life, with a family I adore, lots of interests, and a job that I really enjoy.

 

Anyone else?  Or do I need professional help?

 

 

 

I’m in my late 30s and don’t really care much anymore.  I was a Knicks fan as well up until the point Oakley and Starks got traded.  Idk I never fully warmed up to them after that.  But as a kid I hated the Bulls with a passion.  At my age now I look back with appreciation on what those Chicago teams accomplished 

 

 

In my 20s even during the Drought, losses would linger on for weeks with me.  The Dallas 07 loss was terrible as was 09 opening night.  Even the Stevie drop game in 2010 against the Steelers I took hard.  But I grew up and all those 3 games I took harder than 13 seconds.  The Bengals game I was over it 20 minutes later.  I mean it was sad the team didn’t meet their goals but c’est la vie.  I’ve seen and been through things a lot worse than that in life 

 

Im older.  I see it all as a big business sports.  But in general sports doesn’t have the same effect on me as a kid.  I can’t say I love sports anymore 

Edited by Another Fan
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absolutely none.  i enjoy sports, but i refuse to let them mold my mood in any way.  not that i haven't been annoyed by the bills before, but come on.  that's why i never understand the sheer anger after losses.  i get being disappointed, but some posters let it go on for months.  sack up and move on with life already.

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I truly appreciate the responses. Things weren't getting to me as much until the past couple of years. I think 13 seconds sent me into a whole new realm of questioning how I feel about this whole thing. 

 

I realize on the surface that letting it affect me beyond game day is completely irrational, and kind of immature.  I'm working on it.

 

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To some degree, I have always felt the same as you. That the Bills have been an absolutely enormous part of my life, have taken up countless hours and dollars, and that I'd give just about anything to see the Bills just win one title. That life somehow won't feel complete until it happens. Losses, particularly really BAD losses, would upset me for an inordinately long amount of time afterwards, negatively affecting the rest of my week until the next Bills game.

Last year I was diagnosed with a potentially fatal illness. I beat it, for now. I'll be damned if it didn't put something as small as football -- and my obsession with it -- into perspective. Life is incredibly short. Too short to be so negatively affected or absorbed by something like a sport. To think that I'd waste even one moment that I could be enjoying a fall evening or having a laugh with my wife, simply because the team I like to watch lost a game...it's not worth it. 

Like Von Miller said: Don't let the game beat you twice. That is, the first loss is the game itself, and the second loss is that it takes away from your day-to-day after the fact. Don't get beat twice. After a loss, go take a walk, reflect on the things in your life for which you're thankful, watch a funny movie, listen to some music you love, hug your wife, pet your dog...It's easier said than done, but life is short, and it's just a game.

 

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sports success and failure effects my life that same day. Maybe  into the next day if it was particularly ugly a game. Or if I'm hungover. That just makes it feel worse.

 

I think I've wised up in my elder age and keep things in Perspective.  I have learned that physical and emotional health is a worthy goal to put ahead of sports. It is unwise to place ANYTHING you have so little control over at such a high priority in our lives.

 

one of my fail safes is spending time Outside.  I also vowed to dance more this offseason. That's just me though. I'll always be a diehard and my Hopes are every spring eternal.  But Im living every day until I die. I have no time for undue suffering and undue baloney. It is a Choice we can make to keep it moving in as happy a fashion as possible.

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