I am a teacher of history for a living. And at times my focus has been the history of baseball. I became a baseball fan at an early age, and growing up in Warminster, PA (a suburb of Philadelphia), I became a Phillies fan.
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And then the bottom fell out. As the Phillies plunged into basically two decades of sub-mediocrity (except for the brilliant, blazing comet of the 1993 pennant winners) I learned a disturbing truth: the Phillies have basically ALWAYS been BAD. The first team in professional sports to lose 10,000 games has, it turns out, enjoyed nearly all of its success during my lifetime. In fact, it was learning the truth about the Phillies that led me to the study of history as a vocation.
I am still a passionate baseball fan, and the wonders of the internet have given a whole new thrill to my fandom. During important Phillies games, friends of mine from as far back as first grade from all over America gather on Facebook to collectively expound about the game at hand. In most cases I haven't seen these people since 1988, but we unite as one behind the team we grew up following.
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I often wonder if people have recognized that they are living in a special era. I imagine, for instance, that many Americans were conscious of a "Golden Age" of sorts in the four years between the end of WWII and the detonation of the Soviet Union's first atomic bomb. During that time, as the United States bestrode the world like a colossus, recovered its financial footing while the rest of the planet was in a shambles, and saw the rise of new arts and technologies, it must have been hard to imagine that there could be a better time or place to live (at least for middle-class, white Americans). But on the other hand, after the turmoil of the Depression followed by the terror of the War, the time of peace might have been treated with more of a weary distrust, especially with a Cold War looming in the wings. Similarly, did the people of Greece in the age of Pericles know that they would be known as the "Golden Age" for the rest of time? All I know is that I want to savor every moment of the Phillies success. Because if history teaches us anything, it is that success it fleeting, Golden Ages turn into long epochs of, at best, tarnished brass, and that it is important to have memories of the fruitful harvest during fallow years.
So I salute the Phillies, applaud their success on the diamond in 2010, and look forward to the chance to watch them continue to succeed in the future.