Re: The Month of Hell begins
Posted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 3:43 am
Hi Jerry,
(Warning: there may be some levity in this post, but it is meant to brighten your mood.)
First off, let me apologize for posting tonight about something as stupid as which hobbit people here liked the best (in the Games forum) while your conversation was taking place in this forum. That probably looked pretty callous of me, but I swear I did not know about this thread, nor did I know that anyone had responded to Fat Man's post about "baseball." I was wilfully ignoring Fat Man's "baseball" thread, because I do not feel that people who are making minimum wage should be treated like that.
Hopefully you haven't left the forum yet but are able to read this ... and even reply?
To answer some remarks you made on Monday night:
I mean, look, clearly you have some real passion for changing things, right? Otherwise, why are you trying so hard right now to change our minds about sports?
Sincerely,
recovering_fan
PS--I understand how someone, like yourself, can watch sports and not be an addict. Watching one game on Thursday night and another on Saturday night is cool. Sure. But sometimes I would lose entire Saturdays to college football. Some people just cannot watch TV responsibly, so now I don't watch TV at all.
(Warning: there may be some levity in this post, but it is meant to brighten your mood.)
First off, let me apologize for posting tonight about something as stupid as which hobbit people here liked the best (in the Games forum) while your conversation was taking place in this forum. That probably looked pretty callous of me, but I swear I did not know about this thread, nor did I know that anyone had responded to Fat Man's post about "baseball." I was wilfully ignoring Fat Man's "baseball" thread, because I do not feel that people who are making minimum wage should be treated like that.
Hopefully you haven't left the forum yet but are able to read this ... and even reply?
To answer some remarks you made on Monday night:
I have to ask you one thing, man: do you respect the football player because he plays football, or is it because of his charity work? If it's because of the guy's charity work, then I have to admit that you are right to admire him. But if that's how you feel, then why do you care about whether his sports team wins in the football game or not? Wouldn't it make more sense to cheer for his charitable cause? If you cheered for that team you could actually join his team instead of just watching it. Then, like that football player, you would be one of the "remarkable" people.Jerry McGuire wrote: ...some of you people even tried to poke holes in a football player's attempts at charity to underprivileged people living with AIDS in Africa! I have no story like that, no interesting tidbit; I'm simply a nerdy college student who likes to watch sports, I'm completely unremarkable in every way imaginable.
I mean, look, clearly you have some real passion for changing things, right? Otherwise, why are you trying so hard right now to change our minds about sports?
Please understand that many of us at this forum are constantly hearing, wherever we go, about how professional athletes are better than we are. We get tired of it. We hear what people are saying, and yet we still disagree. If we heard it a million times we would not agree. Sorry.I fear unfortunately that that means my voice is effectively silenced before I can even speak. I must say, it is rather hypocritical of many of you to be alienated by sports, bullied, or harassed, yet be equally as closed minded when it comes to talking about your fellow man.
No!I'll take your advice and "suck on a hockey puck".
Sincerely,
recovering_fan
PS--I understand how someone, like yourself, can watch sports and not be an addict. Watching one game on Thursday night and another on Saturday night is cool. Sure. But sometimes I would lose entire Saturdays to college football. Some people just cannot watch TV responsibly, so now I don't watch TV at all.