Watch With Me

It's an exceptionally bright November morning for Prague. While most of the people on my time-line are posting about the upcoming cricket finals I am starting to watch Jawaan Extended Edition. Why? I gave up on watching sports of almost any kind years ago. I still have a passing interest in tennis but cricket was the first to slip of my radar. Also I am not particularly a Shahrukh Khan fan. We are watching the movie because it was just there, taunting us with its presence on the home screen of Netflix.

In between scenes I scroll through social media. Seeing all the posts about the match it's hard not to get caught up in the fervor. But the feeling is momentary. I ask my wife if she watched cricket in her younger days. And we realize that we both watched with much enthusiasm back then. What changed over the years?

Cricket in particular can be a very long game punctuated by a lot of filler in between the exciting moments. Over the years I think I just got less patient with everything. The other factor that we realized was common to both of us though was the people we watched it with. For both of us it was our grandfathers.

While I cannot comment on her individual experience, my memories of it are mostly clear. After retirement was the phase of his life around which I was born. And other than the copious amount of time spent reading the newspaper, the rest was spent watching various kinds of sports. Primarily cricket, tennis and Formula 1 racing.

The way he watched was with a kind of detached calm. Focused on every minute of the match but without a single sound no matter what was happening in the game. I watched while sitting besides him with a similarly tepid display of emotions. But I was in awe of him at all times. He kept sharing with me facts from the yesteryears of the game. When they didn’t even have televisions in the house.

That for me was why I watched above all else. In the absence of the internet and social media the matches were certainly a major talking point. But it really was a bonding experience. Those days were some of the most memorable moments I have with him. After he was gone the experience of watching sports was never the same for me.