I have come to the conclusion that I am not emotionally equipped to be a sports fan.
People think watching a basketball game is relaxing. Those people have clearly never spent three hours pacing their living room while their team is down by 18 points with six minutes left in the fourth quarter.
I don’t watch Thunder games.
At least that’s what I tell myself.
What I actually do is sit in another room pretending I’m not watching the game while constantly checking my phone every thirty-seven seconds.
“How are they doing?”
“Who’s ahead?”
“How much time is left?”
“Why did I look?”
My husband will be sitting in the living room watching the game while I’m wandering around the house like a nervous hostage negotiator.
Sometimes I’ll turn the TV on. Then the other team immediately goes on an 8-0 run.
Obviously that’s my fault.
So I turn it off.
Then the Thunder score six straight points.
You’re welcome, Oklahoma City.
By playoff season, my anxiety reaches levels that should probably require medical supervision.
Every possession feels life-changing. Every missed free throw feels personal.
Every review by the referees takes approximately seventeen years off my life expectancy.
And don’t even get me started on Game 7.
Game 7 isn’t a basketball game.
Game 7 is a three-hour cardiac stress test disguised as entertainment.
The players look calm.
The coaches look focused.
Meanwhile, I’m over here stress-eating snacks I wasn’t even hungry for and considering whether I should just go to bed and find out the score tomorrow.
I never do.
Because what if they win? Then I miss it.
What if they lose? Then I have to suffer through it in real time with everyone else.
It’s a lose-lose situation.
The worst part is that I know this happens every single year. Every year I tell myself I’m going to be more relaxed. I’m going to enjoy the game. I’m going to remember it’s just basketball.
Then tip-off happens and suddenly I’m one bad possession away from updating my will.
The funny thing is, if the Thunder actually win the championship, I’ll celebrate like I contributed. As if Coach called me personally and said, “Raven, we couldn’t have done this without your pacing, nervous snacking, and refusal to watch the fourth quarter.”
So tonight I’ll be doing what I always do.
Pretending I’m not watching.
Checking the score every thirty-seven seconds.
Blaming myself for every turnover.
Taking credit for every comeback.
And reminding myself that sports are supposed to be fun.
At least that’s what I’ve heard.
