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Football
as Fertility Rite
Obviously,
Football is a syndrome of religious rites symbolizing the struggle
to preserve the Egg of Life through the rigors of impending winter.
The rites begin at the Autumn Equinox and culminate on the first
day of the New Year, with great festivals identified with bowls
of plenty. The festivals are associated with flowers such as roses;
fruits such as oranges; farm crops such as cotton; and even sun-worship
and appeasement of great reptiles such as alligators.
In these rites, the Egg
of Life is symbolized by what is called "The Oval", an
inflated bladder covered with hog skin. The convention of "The
Oval" is repeated in the architectural oval-shaped design of
the vast outdoor churches in which the services are held every sabbath
in every town and city. Also every Sunday in the greater centers
of population where an advanced priesthood performs. These enormous
churches dominate every college campus; no other edifice compares
in size with them, and they bear witness to the high spiritual development
of the culture that produced them.
Literally millions of
worshipers attend the sabbath services in these open-air churches.
Subconsciously, these hordes are seeking an outlet from sexual frustration
in anticipation of violent masochism and sadism about to be enacted
by a highly trained priesthood of young men. Football obviously
arises out of the Oedipus complex. Love of mother dominates the
entire ritual. (Notre Dame and Football are synonymous).
The rites are preformed
on a green rectangular area orientated to the four directions. The
green area, symbolizing Summer, is striped with ominous white lines
representing the knifing snows of Winter. The white stripes are
repeated in the ceremonial costumes of the four whistling monitors
who control the services through a time period divided into four
quarters, symbolizing the four Seasons. The ceremony begins with
colorful processions of musicians and semi-nude virgins who move
in and out of ritualized patterns. This excites the thousands of
worshipers to rise from their seats, shout frenzied poetry in unison
and chant ecstatic anthems through which runs the Oedipus theme
of willingness to die for the love of mother. The actual rites,
performed by 22 young priests of perfect physique, might appear
to the uninitiated as a chaotic conflict concerned only with hurting
the Oval by kicking it, then endeavoring to rescue and protect the
Egg.
However, the procedure
is highly stylized. On each side there are eleven young men wearing
colorful and protective costumes. The group in so-called "possession"
of the Oval first arrange themselves in an egg-shaped "huddle,"
as it is called, for a moment of prayerful meditation and whispering
of secret numbers to each other. Then they rearrange themselves
with relation to the position of the Egg. In a typical "formation"
there are seven priests "on the line," seven being a mystical
number associated not, as Jung purists might contend, with the "seven
last words" but actually, with sublimation of the "seven
deadly sins" into "the seven cardinal principles of education."
The central priest crouches
over the Egg, protecting it with his hands, while over his back
quarters hovers the "Quarterback." The transposition of
"back quarters" to "quarterback" is easily explained
by the Adler School. To the layman the curious posture assumed by
the "Quarterback," as he hovers over the central priest,
immediately suggests the Cretan origins of Mycenaean animal art,
but this popular view is untenable. Actually, of course, the "quarter-back"
symbolizes the libido, combining two instincts, namely, a) Eros,
which strives for even closer union, and b) the instinct for destruction
of anything which lies in the path of Eros. Moreover, the "pleasure-pain"
excitement of the hysterical worshipers focuses entirely on the
actions of the libido-quarter-back. Behind him are three priests
representing the male triad.
At a given signal, the
Egg is passed by sleight-of-hand to one of the members of the triad
who endeavors to move it by bodily force across the white lines
of Winter. This procedure up and down the enclosure, continues through
the four quarters of the ritual. At the end of the second quarter,
implying the Summer Solstice, the processions of musicians and semi-nude
virgins are resumed. After forming themselves into pictograms representing
alphabetical and animal fetishes, the virgins perform a most curious
rite requiring far more dexterity than the earlier phallic Maypole
rituals from which it seems to be derived. Each of the virgins carries
a wand of shining metal which she spins on her fingertips, tosses
playfully into the air, and with which she interweaves her body
in most intricate gyrations.
The virgins perform another
important function throughout the entire service. This concerns
the mystical rite of "conversion" following success of
one of the young priests in carrying the Oval across the last white
line of Winter. As the moment of "conversion" approaches,
the virgins kneel at the edge of the rectangle, bury their faces
in the earth, then raise their arms to heaven in supplication, praying
that "the uprights will be split." "Conversion"
is indeed a dedicated ceremony.
- Unknown.
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