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The Barrister

What we remember from childhood we remember forever - permanent ghosts, stamped, inked, imprinted, eternally seen.  ~ Cynthia Ozick

The past is never dead, it is not even past.  ~ William Faulkner

There's truly something about the start of a Bills season like we've just had - or that we had with that 4-0 start a few years back - that is both terrifying and exciting.  As cynical as we try to be, a badge of both honor and reason for Buffalo sports fans, a hot start has the capacity to act against our better judgment and urge us to daydream about the unanswered "what ifs" of the season yet to unfold. Long ago, I vowed to defer Bills merchandise purchases until the team was solidly entrenched in WNY for the future.  While the dismantling of the Chiefs this past weekend didn't necessarily change that principled stance based in no small part on poverty , I am mighty close to buckling under the pressure. And, despite being hundreds of miles away from home and knowing that many of my fellow cynics may not be quite on board yet, I have the feeling I'm not alone.

Musing on topics of fandom and the devotion we all choose to give our sports teams, as I often do in moments when I find myself giddy with optimism, something occurred to me about where my strongest allegiances truly lie. After all these years of disappointment, after being treated so horrendously by an owner who has avoided investing in his franchise, it is clear that my need to see a Bills team win the Super Bowl is paramount.  After seasons of disinterest, seasons where our Sabres rightly dominated my sports consciousness, one win - one blowout win - has shocked me back into focus.

I need these Bills to succeed.  To undo the wrongs of my childhood and provide a set of memories which might replace those ones so engrained and scarred on the inner workings of my sports fan heart.  And that need for Bills success, which presents itself in moments where I dare to dream and fall in love with this team yet again... it scares me.
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The Bills are the team of my childhood, the team that left a generation of fledgling sports fans with a permanent void where a Super Bowl trophy - or four - should be. Like it or not, the Bills - and not the Sabres, despite the reasonable belief that they have a better shot at success - are the team that could, maybe, turn it around and fix that generation of shattered dreams.  And that's the rub; that's what makes Buffalo a football town for me and so many who were raised on the disappointments of the early 90s  - the scars of the past still sting, and there's only one solution...and it's, sadly, not victory in another sport, however much we all love that sport as well.  While it's no secret that I have little faith in the guiding philosophies of the franchise, vis a vis Ralph Wilson,  I do have growing faith in Chan and Buddy, and don't get me started on how I feel about Ryan Fitzpatrick. *I wish I could quit you, Amish Rifle.*  So, despite the knowledge that I must seem like an utter ass for gushing so profusely after just one game, I can feel myself yearning for that return to dominance - or, at the very least, competitiveness - so that we can all eventually reach the top of the NFL and claim what's ours. 

Some time ago, during CrapTastiCast #12, we were discussing whether Buffalo is "Football Town" or a "Hockey Town."  The general consensus was that the Sabres are the constant in Buffalo sports, and deserve far more credit for giving Buffalo something to collectively rally behind  - reasonably successful for the past 5 years, playoff appearances and, at least recently, a fan experience which makes Ralph & Co. look like absolute jokes Indeed, as we agreed, the Sabres are the team for the younger generation of sports fans who may have missed out on the emotional baggage left behind in the wake of four Super Bowl losses.

But, as Joe (from Buffalo Wins) quipped during that conversation, all it takes is a little bit of a run by the Bills and the rest of us - the ones who need those past wrongs to be resolved - all come crawling back. I didn't want to believe it at the time, but I can't disregard its obvious truth as applied to me as I look ahead to just the second week of the Bills season. Having come to accept that I enjoy hockey much more than football, and having no real desire to support the perennially failing and flailing organization at One Bills Drive, the better part of me would prefer to invest my time and energy into the Sabres. Indeed, as I was musing on these issues of fandom, I made the conscious decision to try to hash out some thoughts on the Sabres - Tyler Myers signed (and what a deal it is!!) and prospects tearing it up at Traverse City.  But, as much as I try, these hockey topics remain on the proverbial back burner, and honestly may remain there so long as there's a Buffalo Bills season which remains viable. 

The logical side of my brain wishes it wasn't like this.  I want to talk about the Big Easy and his good value at the contract terms being bandied about the interwebs today. I want to talk about how the T Pegs Revolution at Seymour Knox Plaza is paying huge dividends for Sabres fans. And, more to the point, I want to put my invest myself emotionally in the new-look Sabres and their quest for a Stanley Cup since, after all, it will likely come sooner than the Bills' elusive Lombardi Trophy.  I want all of these things, and I'm as happy as the next guy that the Sabres franchise is taking significant steps towards making those things real.

But I want a Super Bowl more. I need it.

I'm not so clueless to ignore the silliness and likely stupidity of being so lifted by optimism that I disregard the likelihood that this season, like all others, will be nothing more than a build-up to a let down, with the only unknown being how long that build-up lasts. I get that, as with every other year of recent memory, it makes a lot more sense to vest my faith in our Sabres and to ignore our Bills. With past experiences and failures as our guide, the elation of hope for the Bills is rarely an untainted source of joy.  That feeling of hope in such a team as the Bills, with such a history, more often that not feels like you're sinking deeper into quicksand, always ready for the other shoe to drop.

This is why, looking ahead to the weekend and trying to get a handle on the matchup with the Raiders, I feel little else other than fear at which might come to pass this weekend. Not fear of loss, though, but fear of victory and that burdensome hope that comes along with it.  The fear of being hurt by this team once again after allowing myself to love them too much.

As if fear is going to stop me, though. Eff that. I'm a Bills fan. I thrive in neuroses.

Let's go Buffalo.

[Disclaimer, nunc pro tunc: This post will likely appear to some as a self-indulgent ramble of mixed metaphors, mostly for my own benefit. I'm perfectly happy with that characterization and rather agree with it. But, seeing as I don't keep a diary in which I can unload emotional baggage, and seeing as I have the inkling that these thoughts may ring true with some of my Buffalo brethren, I just couldn't help myself. Such as it is, I hope at least some of you enjoyed.]

 


Comments

Grandfather
09/15/2011 15:52

I have the perfect video/song for this post. Fuck the video itself and listen to the lyrics. It's Tonics - "If You Can Only See..."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=igYSL5osIZM

Loving the Bills is like being in a physically and mentally abusive relationship. On the good days (like last Sunday) you say "Look how good this is. I'm in heaven." And then without warning they lose and it like you left the porkchop in the oven for a little too long and you get a backhand across the lip and a lit cigarette to the armpit.
But hey, before you know it....its a win again and Daddy's buying you the Prada Sunglasses. All is right with the world and you forget about scars.

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CDR
09/15/2011 18:18

I know you don't get much out of comments that just say, "this is exactly how I feel," but, this is exactly how I feel. You can call it cynical but it's probably just being realistic to admit that this moment right now might be the happiest moment for us as Buffalo sports fans, with the Bills coming off their record-skipping blowout and the Sabres winning the prospects tourney and locking up Myers, everything is gravy right now. But the reality is the Sabres probably aren't going to win the cup this year and the Bills are almost certainly not that good, so things are almost inevitably going to go bad at some point. I wish I could be one of those people to just "enjoy the ride" (if those people actually exist), but I too grew up in the 80's/90's so I too can't help myself...oh well, that's why they invented coping mechanisms, right?

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09/15/2011 21:09

@Gramps - Great choice. I was trying to think on appropriate music for the theme, but was coming up empty. Too much hipster bluegrass of late, I guess.

@CDR - thanks for the comment. You touched upon two of the main reasons I felt compelled to write this: (1) I felt like I wanted to connect with some fellow fans who might feel similarly, and (2) I was scared that if I waited until after Week 2, or even later, the Bills would be bad again and the moment to share these things would be lost. I do really appreciate it

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@DEScof
09/17/2011 14:39

Every Sunday the last few years, I sit in one room of the house while my SteelersFan GF sits in the other and we watch our teams play. Paradoxically, it was I that was playing Scrabble on my IThingy during the fourth quarter while GF mopped her tears with her Terrible Towel. I do some of my best thinking in the back of my mind while trying to think of an anagram for Yxlptzi; the thought occurred, what if the Bills were to actually win the Lombardi? What would that be like?
After the Steelers lost the Superbowl, GF was philosophical, "Green Bay deserves it". WHAT? Is that what happens? I asked her, what if the Steelers never get back to the Superbowl and that was the last time you will ever see it? She could not understand this concept. Of course the Steelers will get back to the Superbowl, and they will win some of them. I cannot imagine feeling this way, and I can not imagine what my mental construct would be if the Bills did win. Would my life be complete and I would live in a state of eternal bliss? Would I hunger for more Superbowls like an addict? Would I no longer care if the Bills lost future big games? I know Red Sox fans that endured generations of almost, they can describe what it is like, but I cannot fully grasp what they are feeling. It is in their minds, it is not my emptiness that is fulfilled, my sense of empathy does not translate to my own emptiness.

Caveat: Yes I understand that this is only sports, and real people including myself and many I am close to have real problems that far exceed the Bills not winning the Superbowl. Sports and fandom are a metaphor not a reality unless your career is directly tied into it.

Post Script: The phrase is "couldn't care less" NOT "could care less" If you could care less, why worry?

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