I
am a writer of some literary pretensions as well as aspirations and
know very well that today's recipe for success is intimate
revelations—the more gruesome and salacious the better.
Sadly,
my parents were very nice and loving people, and I have lived a life
almost totally devoid of salace. For intimacy, I'm afraid you're going
to have to make do with a medical update. I am, possibly even as you
read this, lying on a slab in a Boston hospital undergoing an invasive
procedure that is recommended as a preventive precaution for folks of a
certain age.
I am not a stoic about colds or
splinters, and so it has not surprised me—or my wife or anybody else to
whom I've already kvetched—that this experience has not proved to be an
exception. I did try to find some consolation, something beyond the
possibility, of course, that it might save my life. About the only
comforting notion I could come up with was the certainty that I will
not be eating Jell-O again for another five years. After continually
asking myself, "How bad can this be?" I concluded that, at least for
me, it would pretty much be the equivalent of watching a Super Bowl
XLII replay.
Actually,
I am more of a stoic about Super Bowl losses, and Sunday's proved no
exception. I brooded a little into Monday, but nothing too serious. It
wasn't remotely as bad as 1976, when the referee Ben Dreith (I
remember!) called a ridiculous roughing the passer penalty on "Sugar
Bear" Hamilton against the Oakland Raiders on what would have been a
game-ending play, costing the Patriots what I am certain would have
been their first Super Bowl crown. My friend had to hold me back from
kicking in the TV. (It was his TV, so he was motivated.) It certainly
wasn't comparable to the Bucky Dent or Bill Buckner moments of Red Sox
infamy, the latter of which cost me my dad's precious watch (and some
plastering expenses) after I smashed a hole in the living room wall
with my fist. This time there were no real goats, no horrendous gaffes,
no egregious calls. Their guys just kicked our guys' butts—and made all
the plays—in a fashion reminiscent of the Pats' Super Bowl upset of the
Rams six years earlier.
In truth, I've found all
the Patriots' Super Bowl losses relatively easy to take—and I've been
tested three times now—even when my distress is compounded by a
squandered shot at immortality and a champion that goes by the name New
York (not to mention a quarterback that goes by the name Manning).
Super Bowl defeats are, since we have been talking medical matters
here, the equivalent of ripping off a Band-Aid—a flash of intense pain
and then on with your life. World Series losses, by contrast, can be
the equivalent of major surgery, and a bitter end to a seven-game
series can scar for life.
Far worse when it comes
to football fates is losing in the conference championship game, as the
Pats did last year to the Indianapolis Colts. Then you are forced to
endure two weeks of ceaseless hype about a bitter rival. After the
Super Bowl everybody goes home, win or lose. Sure, New York gets a
party, a parade and bragging rights (or, as is the case between our two
cities, the reigning insult). But in Boston our heads and hearts are
already drifting toward Ft. Myers, where pitchers and catchers report
for spring training next week.
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