Don’t Cry, It’s
Only a Game!
The roar of the crowd of about sixty thousand fans was like
the sound of an ocean in the huge stadium. Crescendos built and waned. They filled the
ears like waves, incoherent background of noise with snatches of voices, cheers
and yells that one could still make out the words clearly. A father sat with
his barely teenaged son in the upper edge of the huge brightly-lit bowl with a
green velvet centre of grass surrounded by successive, elliptical rows from
where countless flashes of light went off as cameras took pictures. The open
winter sky was dark when seen from the ground. From the air, the whole ground
looked like a shimmering, bright emerald jewel adorning the city with thousands
of flashing diamonds surrounding it.
Watching a live Australian Rules footy game was an exciting
pastime that he shared with his son from his tender years, when the little boy
had started to play the game. The game was between his son’s beloved Essendon
Bombers and their passionate rivals the Carlton Blues. He had educated himself
to appreciate this version of football, very different from the street soccer
he had played as a kid growing up in India. The Australian version was fast,
exciting, needing great skills and a treat to watch.
While most eyes were on the ground and loud cheering erupted
as the players from each side ran onto the field, his eyes were on his son,
watching the boy’s face and expressions. He could see the smile of happiness
and look of hope in his son’s eyes as he took in the scene of his team running
on to the field, trying to pick his favourite players. He was glad to bring a
few moments of joy and hope to his son’s world which was falling apart. His
family was breaking up and the children mostly silently bore the brunt of the
bitterness between him and his children’s mother. All the adults and grown-ups
in the world seemed helpless in giving his children what they needed most – a
stable, loving family and a happy home. The boy did not speak too much about
his feelings or his sadness. He seemed to want to avoid that. He had gone
quiet, withdrawn and silent from being exuberant and outgoing. He had noticed
that his son had started to take some extra interest and passion in the
fortunes of his favourite team. They had been down in the ladder of performance
for the past few years after peaking spectacularly just a couple of years
before his son started to play and understand the game. They were legendary
champions that everyone now looked at with sympathy and commiseration towards
their fans. They started to show a little promise recently and had a good
beginning to this season, being unbeaten for a while. The son had become
excited and wanted to go and watch a few matches live. Previously, when they
had lived in Melbourne, it had been easy and they would always watch about
half-a-dozen matches live, each year. It had become a bit difficult since they
had moved away from Melbourne. The game finished about 10pm. It would always
involve a tedious, at least a three hour late night drive back home to
Alexandra. The alternative was to stay in Melbourne overnight. Staying at a
motel was something that was quite expensive and not affordable.
He had managed to get an invitation from a friend in
Melbourne to stay at his place overnight one weekend. The son had started to
talk more about his team’s prospects for this year, wildly hopeful of great
success and this appeared to have assumed importance in his life now. It almost
seemed that to see his team succeed would somehow make up for the son’s own
loss of family and security. It was with eagerness and an aching heart that the
father went about trying to arrange this, if only to give him a few hours of
escape from their private hell. He was glad he finally managed to do so.
As the game progressed that day, it became evident to the
father that even though it was going to be a closely fought match, the Blues
seemed to be the better team in the way they played. However, he was wise
enough not to say it out aloud, because, as they say, hope lives eternal and
optimism ignores reality in children and in lovers. He watched as his son stood
up and cheered, shouted instruction to his players when they were close to the
boundary on his side, high-fived total strangers, in the next row when the
Bombers scored a goal and took the lead after being behind for a while. As the
fourth and final quarter approached, the Bombers were a few points ahead, but
the Blues seemed more motivated to win. The boy’s expression was one of happiness
and anxiety, a prayer that his team could hold the lead through the last
quarter.
It had been many years now since his son had learned to
accept his team’s defeats quietly and gracefully. Even though he often blamed
the umpiring or some unfairness of the opposing team, it was quiet and
tearless. He would be over-the-moon and beaming when his team won and would
rave about the game and specific plays and analyse it in depth. “Did you see
that, Dad?” he would ask. The Dad would often nod and pretend that he had or
that he understood what the son was talking about. Now the son too knew that
his father did not observe everything and was not as much into the game as he
was. When he was much younger, the son would bawl or get angry and upset when
his team lost. The first couple of games that they had gone to see were ones
which the Bombers won and the son, while very young had come to believe that
the Bombers would win all the games they went to. The first game that they went
to and that the Bombers lost was memorable. The little boy had been
inconsolable. One of the first lessons the father had taught his son over many
visits was, “Don’t cry and get upset, Son. It is only a game. I want you to
learn to handle it well when your team loses, OK?” Over the years, the son had
learned to, despite seeing a few grown up men and women acting silly and taking
the game too seriously, swearing and venting, often appearing fanatical and
scary to little children.
He asked his son to use the toilets during the break before
the last quarter and come back. He then went to use the toilets while his son
kept his backpack. There would be a rush to catch the trains right after the
match and not much time to lose. So, it was better to use the toilets before
the end of the game. There were long lines at the toilets. By the time he had got
back, the last quarter had begun. He washed his hands and made his way back to
the seats.
As he entered the arena near the exits, the crowd was on its
feet, people shouted and cheered loudly and excited, stopped where they were
and all eyes were on the ground. He could sense that the Blues had made it
close to their goal and if they managed to score this one, they would be ahead.
He could not see his son among all the people standing. As he edged closer to
his row of seats he managed to catch a glimpse of his son’s face, watching the
match intently. The sudden cheers of the Bomber’s fans and the groans and
booing of the Blue’s fans indicated that the Blues must have missed the
opportunity to take the lead. He saw the flash of joy, happiness and cheer on
his son’s face from afar as he leapt up in joy, raised his fist in salute and
cheered a spectacular save by a Bomber player. It was worth it! Just to see his
son enjoy the moment, be lost in it, to be happy. The irony of it struck him.
“This is all the happiness I can give him,” he thought.
He went up to his seat and sat next to his son. The Bombers
pulled ahead and the Blues kept within striking distance all the while. The
game was poised for a close finish.
The son was still excited, smiling and hopeful of a Bombers
victory. He asked the boy if he wanted
something to eat. He had brought along some snacks and they had eaten them
after the first quarter break. The boy was a nervous wreck and did not want to
eat or drink. He knew they would be hungry after the game and then they would
have to hurry to catch the local train to get to the friend’s place in time.
They would have no time to eat then. So, he pressed on and suggested they eat
something. The boy wanted a tub of hot potato chips that they usually had at
the game. So, he went to get it. He walked down the steep, staircase of the
aisle to the exit near the food stalls. There were TV screens all around the
stadium and near the food stalls too. He saw that the Blues had come back
strongly and had scored to narrow the lead. He made his way up to the stairs,
carrying the little tub of chips and a drink in two hands carefully, avoiding
bumping into someone even as he picked his way through the crowd.
As he approached the entrance to the arena, the roar was
deafening. It was getting impossible to tell what exactly was happening, but it
must have been something important enough and the one possibility was that the
Blues were close to scoring and that would put them ahead. The crowd was on its
feet. Most were standing up near him and cheering loudly. Many were yelling out
player’s names, urging them to pass the ball to one near the goal and suddenly the
loudest roar went up. Someone had scored. He was near his row of seats and
suddenly through a gap between two standing fans, he caught a glimpse of his
son – disappointment written all over, an expression of agony and pain flashed
across his tender face for a second. The boy smashed his fist into his palm and
sat down, almost in tears. He looked lonely and lost in the middle of this
crowd.
The father sat down with his bucket of chips and drink,
right at the steps in the aisle for a moment. His face must have showed the
pain and a tear made its way down his eyes, even as he averted his gaze
downwards. Suddenly, he felt a consoling pat on his back as he heard a voice
close to him, from a seat adjoining the aisle, “Don’t cry! Don’t feel bad. It’s
only a game!”
He turned to see a little girl in the Bombers colours of red
and black, looking concerned at him but smiling to cheer him up. Her
grandmother sat next to her. She looked at him with a mature, wise smile of one
who had seen a lot in life. She turned to her grandchild and said softly to her,
“That’s OK, he’ll be alright, darling!”
He could not help laughing even as set down his food and
drink, wiped his eyes dry and composed himself. He picked up the food and made
his way to his son. The boy quietly went for the chips, not saying much. He ate
quietly as the game wound down and the Blues held on to the lead and sealed
their victory. He ranted about the bad decision of the umpires to award a free
kick to one Carlton player as the key to the loss. As they started to leave the
stadium, he looked at his father’s face. It looked a bit sad and depressed even
as he smiled widely and talked cheerfully. Lately, he had seen his father’s
expression thus often. Usually, the boy knew he could not say anything or do
much to cheer him up. He reckoned this time it must be because of his
disappointment over the Bombers’ loss today. He decided to be grown up and mature.
“Aw, that’s the first loss this season and the Bombers are
certain to win the next game, Dad,” said the boy trying to sound casual but
with a fierce expression, willing it deeply from the heart.
In the loud celebrations of the crowd no one could hear the
father’s heart break even as it swelled with pride.
Copyright (c) Kannan Narayanamurthy 2013
All rights reserved
Copyright (c) Kannan Narayanamurthy 2013
All rights reserved