Showing posts with label Friend zone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friend zone. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Lions put me in the friend zone

It’s taken me a long time to come to terms with this, I am now at the point where I can recognise the problem but can’t do anything about it. You see, I fell in love as a young girl with a team one cold night at Ellis Park. Rain was falling, muddying up the white and red jerseys of the Transvaal team, I didn’t know the rules but I wanted to learn them, such passion was on display and I had to know more about it. I asked every question I could think to ask of my long suffering father who was just glad that someone cared about his Lions. I learned about rucks and scrums and players and teams, what the refs hand signals meant and when to shout. My eyes sparkled with delight and I knew it was love.
The honeymoon phase went on for a long time as we made finals and won some trophies in the next few years (it was the early 90’s, we won, I promise). Then there was a slump, I was devastated, had I done something wrong? Was the end of this blissful affair near? I couldn’t give up, not after the great time we’d had. So I clung on. I stuck by them and they leaned on me when they were down because they knew that I would always be there.
Our relationship was platonic without me even realising it and I wanted romance.  I was the trusted and loyal supporter and they kept me on starved of reciprocated feelings. Every week I would get all dressed up, hoping they’d pass a nice comment or come away with a win and almost every week I would have my heart broken. There were fleeting moments when a win would happen and I would have renewed vigour, but those were few and far between.
The blow came last year at the Currie Cup final, we got drunk and fell into bed together and I thought that they loved me too, we would be happy forever. But, I see now that I was in the friend zone all the time. My passion was not shared and that one emotional night that we had together meant nothing to them.
Like a battered wife I go back every time, they seem so sincere in their losses and so elated in their victories, I have to forgive them, they need me.  The bruises fade and I wait, full of hope, for the next weekend to come where they will run away into the sunset with me.
Recently I rebelled, I picked both the Stormers and Crusaders for the wins at Ellis Park and got the points, but the guilt has sat with me all week and I just couldn’t do it again. A psychologist would call it Stockholm Syndrome, a psychological phenomenon in which hostages express empathy and have positive feelings towards their captors. I have passed the point of no return and I’m stuck with the Lions for life. I do really love them, and if they can’t love me back then so be it.