Monday, January 28, 2013

Testing the Terrible Towel

Like all Nations, Steeler Nation has its flag: the Terrible Towel. 16x25 inches, golden, and stained with the victories of 6 Super Bowl Championships, the Terrible Towel has a seemingly unearthly and sacred power that can be recognized by any Steeler Nation citizen, and the defilement of said towel has historically and recently angered these citizens, but why?

SteelerNation has great respect for the towel. Fans walking into the stadium wave their Terrible Towels; they wave them during warm-ups; they wave them during the game; they wave them on the celebratory walk back to the parking lot. The playful performance of towel waving at a live game gives Steelers fans a unique experience. The towel is a Steeler’s ritual, if not more. Sport fans’ rituals unite fans everywhere under one identity, so messing with the Terrible Towel is messing with Steeler Nations identity.

The reason opposing teams blow their nose in, rub dirt in, and burn the Terrible Towel is because they want Steeler Nation to get upset. They feel a sense of self achievement in doing so, because they hope those actions might distract Steelers fans (and possibly the players) from the game at hand and could have a direct effect on the outcome. This would be the intentions of focused and vested fans, because they would more likely attend the game, and they want to win, but their interest is in another team, and frankly it is legal for them to do these vile acts.

The Terrible Towel has a different meaning to a lot of people, but Steeler’s fans would agree with Greg Garber when he says, “theTerrible Towel inspires an almost irrational loyalty.” Seeing thousands of towels at an away game is quite possibly one of the greatest sights to a Steeler’s fan. The reason we hate seeing our flag defiled is because it rallied a tremendous population of fans everywhere to wave together for the past 38 years, and it’ll wave for 100 more.