Nothing Beautiful About that Game

“Check mate, ye flamin’ donkey!”
“Aw c’mon, you Russkie arsepiece!”


Meeester and I try to have one evening a week where we do something all together with the kids that doesn’t involve computer games or telly (“Just one, Misssy?” “Yes just one, I’m not Mary flippin’ Poppins here!”)


The telly is switched off and each week it is someone’s turn to choose what we do. Last night it was Junior Misssy’s turn and she simply chose for us to go to the school playground with bikes and balls and stuff. Nice choice Junior, nice cheap choice. I like that.

Indy likes basketball, so at one point Meeester and I are playing against Indy and his mate, Socks ( that is to be his Misssives moniker, as he once wore five pairs of socks to come across to our house from his as he couldn’t find his shoes). After we sorted out vandalised bent hoops by means of Misssy getting a “shouldery*” from Meeester and displaying her superhuman iron-straightening prowess, we had a blast of a game.

Meanwhile, outside the basketball court, there was football practice going on with boys around the same age as Indy and Socks. At one lull in the pathetically competitive efforts of Meeester and Misssy to whip Socks and Indy’s asses in our game, we heard one footballing boy shout to his mate, “If you can’t get that goal then that makes you gay, right?!”

Sheesh! What? Whaaaat????

Trouble is that kind of abusive (not to mention homophobic) nonsense isn’t just for ten year olds. Not where football’s concerned.

Meeester plays football every week after work with nine or ten other professional and decent men who should really know better.

Each week he comes back with injuries to both pride and ligaments. Each week, arguments have erupted, spirits have been crushed and names have been called. Each week someone takes the huff and quits. Abuse is casually whirled around the hall like they are actually in a prison yard rather than a polite local community centre.

Years ago, my Uncle also used to play football with his workmates but eventually they had to disband the team as people were starting to get quite badly injured and their work-based friendships were beginning to be sorely tested. It was too competitive and had started to turn nasty.

What IS it about football? I mean you don’t see bowls players shouting, “Right Robbie, you’re a poof if you don’t get that lie”

Scrabble players don’t heckle someone “Ha! You missed out on that Bingo, ye Donkey!”

Golfers hardly ever casually shout the word “C**T!” at one another as one chips in a jammy shot right onto the green from a bunker.

And then in the professional football sphere, it doesn’t get much better. It is de rigeur for footballers to verbally abuse one another on and off the park. You just don’t hear it much in big games because they are drowned out by the noise of the spectators hurling abuse and singing sweary made up songs to the tunes of popular chart hits.

One of the things I remember about my childhood in Clydebank was my late Papa taking me and my brother to watch Clydebank play at home. Being a small team with a small crowd, you could hear the players screaming at one another. My Papa was a little dismayed that instead of being all fired up about the game, the only thing me and my brother could talk about on the way home was how the players were constantly swearing and shouting at one another. I can’t remember exactly everything that was said, but when I delve deep in my subconscious there is the phrase,

“If you cannae get that penalty, that makes ye a poof, right?”


* Haven’t had a shouldery in YEARS. It’s my top recommedation of the week- go on, get someone to give you one this weekend. Or at the very least a coalie bag. In fact, invite two mates and have a joust on coalie bags. You’ll thank me (from your hospital beds…)



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September 12, 2008. abuse, being a kid, football, sportsmanship, swearing. Leave a comment.

Give me the child and I’ll show you the man

Misssy at 8 (far left)

Junior Misssy went to visit her school today. She starts proper in August.

Me? I hated Primary School. I think that’s maybe because I went to a total of four different schools in the course of the seven years. Just as I stopped being the new girl, I went to another one and was the new girl again. I would love to say that this was because my Dad was wanted for political activism like Judd Hirsch in the film, “Running on Empty” and we had to move about to avoid the Feds. But, disappointingly, that was not the case.

Card carrying Scottish Nationalists might have to put up with a bit of slagging in the 1970s but to my knowledge none of them ever had to have face-changing surgery, identity reassignments or go on the run. They just had to embarrass their kids on polling day by driving them to school in a car covered in flags, rosettes, posters and loud speakers so that their kids wanted to go on a witness relocation programme afterwards. (But that’s a whole other post).

Another reason I probably hated primary school was that I was chronically shy as a kid. This is something that people who know me now laugh about, as I’m a bit shouty and “let’s do the show right here” these days. Back then, I was more whispery and “Oh don’t look at me, there’s someone else doing a show over there”.
Looking at old school report cards, the key words are “quiet” and “conscientious” , which is teacher talk for “I can’t remember who the blazes this kid is, but they can’t be any trouble or else I would at least know who they are.”
Meeester has similar reports, yet he is Foghorn Leghorn these days.
All this is certainly putting paid to that old quote: “give me the child until seven and I’ll show you the man”
If I were to be like the seven year old Misssy now, I would not be telling you all this, as I would be firmly behind my Mum’s skirt pretending you weren’t there. You might try to coax me out with sweets, but I can assure you, I would be having none of it.
So as Junior Misssy’s first day at school grows closer I wonder what’s in store for
her. She’s vastly different from me, so the next seven years should go fine. I am even looking forward to getting a couple of notes home saying that she was caught setting fire to something or was setting up illegal poker games.
Indy, however, was built from the same blueprint as me, but when teachers tell me he’s conscientious and quiet, it doesn’t bother me.
The quiet kids are just saving their noise up for later.
* * *
So first day memories then folks. You know what to do.
Mine are:

1. Sat with two kids I didn’t know and we all shared our crisps so that we each had a bag with three different flavours. One other girl was wearing her green cardigan under her pinafore.

2. Wouldn’t let my mum walk beside me on the way to school, as I wanted to go myself. She humoured me and stayed several paces behind like she was a wife in some hardline Arab country and I her domineering husband.
3. The teacher was called Mrs Potts, which has to be the best Primary One teacher name ever.
4. Was told to look out for my Uncle’s name on the School Dux board by my gran, but didn’t know anything about ducks or indeed how to read. She is still going on about this achievement 30 years later. I think she wants it written on her tombstone, “Loving Mother to a son who was the Dux of the School”
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June 10, 2008. being a kid, political activist dads, running on empty, schooldays, schools. Leave a comment.

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