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Desmond Was Tripped January 21st, 2024 at 9:00 AM

Previously in this series: Business is Finished, by Ace Anbender

As you may be aware, Michigan won the national championship. Brian's said his bit on what this means to him, and now it's everyone else's turn. We're inviting everyone who's contributed to the blog over its existence to write whatever they want about the 2023 football team, and hope to roll out a series of these over the course of the next few months.

Next up is regular diarist/resident Michigan War Dad Desmond Was Tripped, who wrote a journal to accompany a many-drafted revision of the Better Son or Daughter 2009 Hype Video. Yes there are others, but by the powers invested in me in the name blog I name this one, which has an entire fool-hurdling sequence I might add, the official successor to the original. –Seth


The Video (link):

This entry will be a little bit of a departure from my normal content. Sure, I could do “Michigan Basketball at the Battle of Hattin” or “Juwan Howard and the Defense of Singapore”, but I wont. I want to pull the warmth of being National Champions one more time over my body, and say thank you the only way I know how to the man who made this blog. I’ll thank him by taking something he once made, and improving on it just a little bit. Brian thanked everyone in the marathon podcast (including me, I was touched), but I wanted to thank him.

So I convinced a friend of mine with far better technical skills and an enthusiasm unknown to mankind (who really took no convincing at all) to help me update Brian’s 2009 Magnum Opus. He has mentioned the 2009 hype video a lot, and how it opened with the disasters of 2008, but finishes with some optimism: a hope that maybe Michigan would pull itself out of the morass of mediocrity it found itself in.

[After THE JUMP: we will all go down together]

But it wouldn’t. It wouldn’t in 2009, or 2010, and despite a promising 2011, it would regress in 2012 again. We struggled, and endured, and prayed that, like the song says, our ship would come in. But long was our watch and long did we wait in seemingly unyielding vain, even through years of our Roland come home to rescue us, we waited. We suffered defeat after heart breaking defeat… until we didn’t.

Brian sat through it all. Continuing to generate content, continuing to not only watch the team he loved fail on game day, but watch it over and over throughout the week. No one deserves this more than Brian. He kept us involved, he helped our brains try to make sense of the disasters we were seeing, and he kept us feeling like it wasn’t just us, alone with a black pit of negative expectations.

I didn’t see much of the 2008 season. I had been in the stands for The Horror, but was in Iraq when the 2008 season began. Still, I listened to the Toledo game on the radio, and pushed a mission to listen to parts of the Ohio State game, but after 2008 the strain began to take its toll. I stopped feeling connected to most things I had once loved, and I no longer believed that there was any good left in the world. It was an incredibly dark time in my life, and with the war showing no signs of coming to a close, there was no light at the end of the tunnel. It is a difficult feeling to describe, being present and yet not. Being around the people you should love, and who love you, but not really being there at all. To watch the things you once loved go on without you, and not caring at all that they passed you by.

It was around this time that I found MGoBlog. I had been gifted a desk for a brief period, and spent entire days (sorry taxpayers) hitting refresh on the page to see if there was new content. It got so bad that MGoBlog appeared in a briefing on a list of unclassified sites “most visited by members of the organization”. One of the things you learn when you come face to face with the finite nature of life is that you don’t waste time on garbage. Almost every other source of college sports content was just that. Garbage. But not MGoBlog. It was content. Quality content. And I was there for it. I watched a few games on television, but could never bring myself to go back to a place that had brought me such unmitigated joy as a child and as a young man. I couldn’t let whatever was in me get in there.

In 2011, after another deployment, I forced myself to go back to a game. I thought “if that Brian dude can suffer through it, so can I”. So I went. Western Michigan. It was easy, and fun, and beautiful. A week later I was in Afghanistan again.

I missed the 2011 win against Ohio State, and caught the 2012 season opening loss to Alabama transiting through Bagram. But it didn’t matter. Adrift in a sea of sardonic fatalism, the one pillar of hope I had was Michigan Football. Even if I held out no optimism for myself, I held it for the forlorn hope that maybe, just maybe, we would be Champions again. Though I couldn’t always watch the game, I could eventually read about it on MGoBlog. MGoBlog was my connection to the world that I had let leave me behind.

After that deployment something changed. Despite still feeling detached from everyone and everything I once knew, some of my friends from the house on S Forest asked me to come to their tailgate. With their families there. Piece by piece, Michigan football, my one attachment to my former self was pulling me back into the folds. One tailgate turned into two, and then every home game, and before I knew it years had gone by and we were all watching Michigan get destroyed by Wisconsin huddled around my tablet in the lobby of some hotel on vacation in Croatia. Because we had become a family.

I saw Brian’s 2008 video for the first time this year, and it brought me back to all of those days I had pushed back into the darkest recesses of my mind. It reminded me that my life, like the life of so many others, could always be redeemed. It reminded me of a time that I honestly thought there was nothing tying me to this world that I was likely destined to leave soon anyway. I don’t recognize that person anymore. Just like I don’t recognize that Michigan team anymore. They, like myself have evolved into something better.

But never alone. I couldn’t have done it without the great people here, and my tailgate (and my regular) family. We could have all given up and done something more productive with our Saturdays. But we stayed and I was with a few of them in Houston, finally Champions. We had endured the highs and the lows and we had come through to the other side together… where we saw that our ship had finally come in. I got to experience all of that, I got to go and sit back in the season tickets my grandfather secured us nearly forty years ago and become friends with the people around us who knew him. More importantly I got to bring my daughter to her first Michigan tailgate (Indiana week, rain in October, do not recommend).

I got to do all of this because MGoBlog kept my love of Michigan Football burning, and Michigan Football kept me going. There aren’t enough thank you’s in the world, but I’ll just say that I’m glad we all waited for that ship to come in together.

Go Blue!

Comments

Walmart Wolverine

January 21st, 2024 at 9:22 AM ^

Thank you for this

I'm in a hard place right now.   Not as hard as anything you endured, but hard enough

It is redemptive to be reminded that there are better days ahead and people who I love and who love me to share them with.

 

Go Blue!

 

edit:  thanks everyone.  I didn't expect anyone to reply.   I will be okay.   This message was very timely for me and I am grateful to get it today.  Especially today.

onward!

what would Bo do

January 21st, 2024 at 2:19 PM ^

When faced with a seemingly unclimbable fountain, it is folly to ask yourself if you're strong enough to climb the mountain, ask simply: can I take the next step?  Life has a way of humbling us all and presenting us with seemingly unclimbable mountains.  Everyone's mountain looks different; it took me over a year and half to feel like I had the agency and ability to face life again after I met my mountain.  In my darkest days, it took everything I could muster just to get out of bed, but I had had loved ones and an awesome therapist that made me do one positive thing every day.  Stack enough positive things and the downward spiral you found yourself in becomes an upward spiral. I don't know you from Adam, but know that I love you and that you are indeed strong enough to do one positive thing today.  You have the strength to climb your mountain, you just don't know it yet.

The Sea Was Angry

January 21st, 2024 at 9:44 AM ^

Outstanding. Thank you, Brian and everyone else who has contributed over the years, to such an incredible site.

What a joy it is to wake up to a wonderful warmth, even with snow covering the ground and the sun hidden behind an endless layer of clouds. No matter, Team 144 has persevered and raised us all to the heights of the blue, cloudless heavens. 

klctlc

January 21st, 2024 at 10:24 AM ^

We are all so lucky.  You correctly pointed out what Brian's creation meant to all of us. However, you left out the additional gift we get with writers like you, Seth, BronxBlue, etc... Truly great writers.

Brian is so unique. I had never heard of David Foster Wallace, but after his piece I looked him up. Glad I did.

As we age, we all experience life differently yet there are so many similarities. Your piece reminded me of how awesome life is, the ups and downs.   Thanks.

Once again, I am amazed by the quality of the content we receive for free. As a grammar challenged person, it is like magic.

My "MgoBlog" moment was the Roy Roundtree fumble against Illinois. I swore I was done. No more MgoBlog, no more Michigan football.  Within a week, I bookmarked the site again.   

BTW Desmond Was Tripped, you have a top 10 moniker!!!!

Don

January 21st, 2024 at 10:28 AM ^

You’ve brilliantly captured how something as cosmically insignificant as football can nonetheless be a force for wholeness, redemption, and love.

leidlein

January 21st, 2024 at 11:19 AM ^

I can't believe it's over. So anticlimactic. They won it all, and it feels great. But then I am left with this feeling, that I don't want the season to end. I want one more game. Two more games. Keep playing please! I am not ready for this beautiful collection of players and coaches to go their separate ways. 

But thanks for the memories. I will never forget this season. 

Z_Wolverista

January 22nd, 2024 at 12:03 PM ^

"I want to pull the warmth of being National Champions one more time over my body, and say thank you the only way I know how"

^^ this.

Savor, bask a moment in expressions of gratitude, then go on, carrying it with you. Like hot chocolate warming your insides as you step out to shovel the knee-deep, sparkling snow.

schreibee

January 22nd, 2024 at 6:30 PM ^

Yeah but see, if they keep playing eventually they lose. I mean I couldn't say when, but it would happen. I don't ever want to see this team lose! 

This team played 15 games - and really if we consider 144 an extension of 142 & 143, which I do - they played 43 games, losing only 3 times. 

It's like End of Watch - they've finished their service.

But if you want to keep watching them, by all means, the games are all out there. I've watched the Rose Bowl over 10 times (being honest I skip some parts, but never bama's 1st possession, and NEVER the last few minutes + OT!)

I've watched 2021 osu close to 20 times, and never skip anything but the ads! It's Gold, Jerry, GOLD!

michmaiku

January 21st, 2024 at 11:43 AM ^

Brilliant. I'm hooked on the Maize and Blue but come here for the writing and, dare I say, philosophy. Certainly a place of reflection. And connection, of ideas and personalities, all too rare in online experience.

Yesterday, I told my wife, a therapist, about JJ's "Connected to everything, attached to nothing" tattoo (which I learned of here) and pre-game meditation routine. 

She really latched onto the phrase for her clients, and also for herself, when transferance finds her carrying the weight of their experiences after session has closed.

Of course, session never really closes if we're fortunate and find the means to keep at it.  As they say, "Those who stay ..."

So MGoBlog writing reaches far and deep.

And such a gift for us that now, for a stretch, we get both content and contentment.

Brimley

January 21st, 2024 at 12:00 PM ^

Really well written, like all your diaries. I've dug a little into military history over the years because I find it fascinating and have family ties to some momentous stuff (not me, thank God; my dad's fervent wish was that his son didn't have to go through what he did). Guys like you make me realize how much more I can learn.

By the way...S. Forest represent! If memory serves, my address was 1122 (so SOUTH Forest) in 1982-83. I believe that was the year I took a course on WW2 taught by a retired full bird colonel working on his PhD. I cannot remember his name, but can picture him, and I LOVED the class.

Ezeh-E

January 21st, 2024 at 12:08 PM ^

Love what you wrote (and have written each game). Others responses, Don’s especially, covers it well.

The video. Brilliant. Love love love how there were color shots of the high points of years past, too, to capture the full journey since 07/08 and what those teams did to “keep the light” so to speak. Loved Blake bringing us home. Loved the hurdling sequence, of course

schreibee

January 22nd, 2024 at 6:42 PM ^

The first burst of color, timed with the dramatic burst of music, was so perfect. 

That single second encapsulated everything about the past 3 years - which is obviously why it was the cover shot on HTTV 2023!

Bur the music welling up just as Mikey tips the ball out of what's his name's hands (oh thank God I've already forgotten his name - it won't scar me like so many others over the past 20 years!) That moment in the video brought such a feeling of happiness, and pride, that I - that we - stuck with them to see this happen! 

Did It!