Intern_8033 wrote:My problem with sports is that they're innately competitive, meaning, in order for you to be good, someone else must be bad. You could argue that this isn't true in theory, but it certainly is in practice. Compare this to music, for example, which is regularly practiced as a self-contained process of challenging _yourself_, competing against _yourself_.
Practicing an instrument is no less competitive than playing catch with a friend or shooting a basketball. If performing music does not contain a competitive element, does that imply that one band is just as good as another? Granted, this competition might be perceived only by an audience (e.g. "the Shellac concert rocked, but the opening band was much better"). This is not so different from saying, "The Braves won the game because they are a better team than the Mets." The difference is that organized sports have more clearly-defined rules for recognizing accomplishments. Then again, the ancient Greeks wrote volumes about the rules of aesthetics, which sadly seem to have been lost on most artists today. Anyway, most musicians that I know don't really care whether they're seen as better or worse than anyone else, and as you say, they're only competing with themselves. I would reckon that most athletes feel pretty much the same way. If you are a shitty baseball player, you will likely have a hard time making a team. If you are a shitty musician, you will probably have a hard time getting people to listen to your music. In theory, music is a subjective expression of non-competitiveness; in practice, when was the last time you listened to a Toto album, or wanted to?
I think it’s better to be able to berate your team, than say, to beat your girlfriend.
Why choose one when you can have both?
Point well taken. I'll have to try that next time my team blows an 8-3 lead in the eighth inning.