There was a time when I really looked forward to the World
Series.
I’ve been a Braves fan ever since they moved to Atlanta in
1966. From that year until 1990, my team never played in the Series. Oh, they
won their division a couple of times and so had a shot, but they never made it.
It was all right; I didn’t expect them to win the National League championship
and earn a spot in the Fall Classic, so I was never disappointed.
Besides, I was a baseball fan. I watched the World Series
because it was baseball’s pinnacle. Great baseball was always played; high
drama was always provided. I loved baseball, so I loved the World Series.
Then something strange and wonderful happened. The Braves
started winning. They started winning big. They started winning every year.
Beginning with their worst-to-first season in 1991, they won fourteen
consecutive division titles. They played in the World Series five times, winning
it in 1995.
And I became spoiled. I found out what it was like to have
MY team play in the World Series. I experienced the exhilaration and heartbreak
that come from feeling like everything in the universe is riding on every
pitch. When the Braves didn’t make it, the experience wasn’t the same. It wasn’t
as exciting or as fulfilling.
Lately, there have been some years that I’ve hardly watched
the World Series at all.
I’m watching this year. It’s a historic Series; either the
Cubs will win their first one since 1908 or the Indians will win their first
since 1948. I’m pulling for the Cubs, mainly because our daughter-in-law
Michelle and her family, who live in Madison, Wisconsin, are long-time Cubs
fans. Plus, I’m tired of hearing about that Billy goat curse (look it up).
I’d be more excited if the Braves were in it. But hey, it’s
baseball. It’s the World Series. I’m a baseball fan. I need to participate. It’d
be wrong not to.
That brings me to the November 8 election.
Maybe you have a candidate you’re really excited about.
Maybe you can’t wait (or couldn’t wait, if you voted early), to vote for your
gal or guy. Maybe you’ve waited all your life to be able to vote for the person
you’re voting for this year.
Or maybe not.
But hey, it’s an election. It’s important. Our participation
is vital to our democracy and to our way of life.
So vote.
And be very, very glad, that of these two great fall
institutions, the World Series is the one that happens every year.
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