Deleted
Deleted Member
@Deleted
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Oct 13, 2017 17:06:39 GMT
But that's a professional who does that for a living. Most professionals spend several hours doing their things and also engage in charity, family, etc. I'm talking about someone who does something else, and also finds the time to follow thoroughly ALL sports. The day has only 24hrs and people need to be asleep for part of these. Unless fake marco26 is a professional in the Sports world in real life, what I said still applies. As I'm explaining to the "doctor," Boomer works more than 40 hours per week where that work does not involve watching sports. He has to watch games on other time. That's his OWN time, where he's not being paid to watch/go to Rangers games, Mets games, etc. It's a bit of nuance but so be it. Maybe he is one of the exceptions that confirm the rule. I'd say, though, that generally speaking, people who work elsewhere/other fields, don't typically follow ALL sports very closely. Maybe people's priorities and use of their leisure time differs (I mean, not just maybe; certainly it differs), but generally speaking, people who are otherwise very busy with other pursuits only manage to follow *closely* two or three major sports that interest them, and they pay some cursory attention to others. That's my case, at least. But yes, you are right that it is not impossible; certain people are natural multi-taskers. I do remind you that sometimes when people are too immersed into something, they may appear to be very proficient and happy and all, but at a future point this activity might take a toll and other parts of that person's life might suffer. Imagine for example, God forbid (I have nothing against the guy and don't wish him ill; it's just an example), that at some point Mr. Boomer's wife divorces him and says "well, he wasn't paying any attention to me; it was all the damn sports all the time! I had to get a lover!"
|
|