It's hard being a Red Sox fan.
Not that it's not fun, mind you. Especially in the middle of sweeping a third series from the Yankees. Ortiz is hitting, the pitching is good, the Manny move worked out "wicked awesome," Bay and Pedroia are terrific- I could go on and on. And coming back in the eighth inning! Sweet!
But that's why it's hard. No one remembers that it's not supposed to be this way.
See, this is New England. Rock-ribbed. Dour. Tight-lipped. "You can't get there from here" people. Here in New Hampshire the state gem is granite. The state vine is poison ivy. The state bird is flipped in traffic.
It goes way back. Pilgrims and Puritans came here to be able to have less fun than others were having in "Merrie Olde England"- and they succeeded. OK, the Pilgrims first landed at Provincetown, on Cape Cod, but it was December. Ever been in P'town in December and you're not gay? no fun. So after agreeing in the Mayflower Compact that they would democratically enforce the no fun rules, they got back into the ship, even though they were out of beer, and went to Plymouth to survive and make a living.
Doing what? Well, fishing- catching cod in icy waters using hand-cutting nets, then salting the fish (and their hands) to create a culinary delicacy that goes "thunk" when you throw it into the pan. They ate it and they liked it. It suited them. If a people are known by their food, and you think Parisian crepes and Italian spumoni, think Boston brown bread. Boston baked beans. (baked beans on Saturday night, six hours of church on Sunday- you think that was coincidental?)
Or they farmed. In New England. (Remember "Granite State"?) The only thing tougher than the land were the trees that grew from it and the (not NY) Yankees who cut them down. It took 200 years to clear the land; those stone walls are where the farmer said "Screw it- that's far enough." ("Egad- that sufficeth.")
Then they invented (OK, stole) the Industrial Revolution. They let the stone walls slip back into the woods and moved off the cleared land into the new "slums" so they could work in "factories" and get paid "shit". A lot of them stayed behind to raise "sheep," an animal so dumb that if it does what you told it to do, it's because you guessed right. (And not nearly as good company as some would have you think.)
We were a mixed society. Immigrants came and stayed, welcomed by riots and exploitation, and they liked it. Oh, a lot said "This sucks- what's out West?" and sought an easier life in coal mines and on the Plains. But the ones who stayed were a sturdier breed. They bought the New England Creed- "Life is to be endured."
That's why, for oh, God so long, the Red Sox were the perfect New England team. They were to be endured. Their history is full of "to be endured."
They won the World Series in 1918; OK, but what were Bostonians doing in the street that very day? Dying of Spanish Flu, and a lot of people died as a result of the Red Sox attracting that crowd. Not many victorious teams can make that claim.
And then the Curse. Babe goes to New York, "No, No Nannette" goes to Broadway, and Boston goes to pot. But we all know the story.
The Jews were the Chosen People who wandered for forty years; Red Sox fans weren't Chosen- they were Singled Out, and were lost for four score and six. They were the Duchy of Grand Fenwick to New York's New York.
And the losses! It wasn't just losing- it was losing with style. Winning ("tying for") the pennant but losing a playoff in '48 was the "high point" between by dad seeing the 1918 team and me meeting Don Buddin and Bob "he-runs-like-there's-a-safe-on-his-back" Tillman, who was once thrown out at first on a liner to right.
Rally caps? Please. The rallying cry in the Dark Years was to grab the empty seats on either side of you and bang them. The venders sold bread; the drink was vinegar; the Green Monster was envy.
Then success began to come- almost. Victory for the Sox was used as a masochistic tool to amplify the pain.
1967- "The Impossible Dream": win the pennant by sitting in the clubhouse watching two other teams lose more than you, go to the World Series, trail 3 games to 1, then come roaming back to be able to lose game 7.
1975- The Sox win game 6- "The Greatest Game ever Played" on Fisk's home run, just to blow the lead in game 7 in the NINTH INNING! (sorry)
1978- Come roaring back in the last week to tie the Yankees (after blowing a 14-game lead) to force the Yankees into a playoff. Bucky F---ing Dent. (BUCKY DENT???)
1986- The Game 6 collapse, Bill Buckner, when we were ONE STRIKE AWAY!!! (sorry.)
2003- He left Pedro in??!!?? Aaron Boone in extra innings. (AARON BOONE???) And what game? Game 7. What opponent? Yankees.
But then the Sun came out. 2004. Pennant. Series. Victory. (In my case the curse lasted just a bit longer; as Damon was hitting the Grand Slam against the Yankees I got a call that a favorite student was hit by a bus [she's fine, but I haven't completely forgiven her.])
2007. Pennant. Series. Victory.
And tonight the Sox take a ninth straight game from the Yankees.
All that's left of the Way It's Supposed to Be are the seats at Fenway.
It's hard being a Red Sox fan.
But it's fun! (knock on wood.)