This card could be priceless! |
At least every couple weeks, I go back and read my blog posts from past years. Or I'll check the stats page and see which posts people have read in the past week. It's always a very random sampling - I'm guessing it's what people are Googling and being led to, I'm not sure. But anyway, today this post was in the list.
It was the last part of a list of items that originated in this post from Off Hiatus Baseball. It's an adaptation of a 30 day music challenge that appeared on Twitter. I completed my list in three posts. And then I put this at the end:
That's what the most important thing about this hobby is - the connections we make. The searching, finding, obtaining, cataloging, storing, admiring, and completing are all fun, but the trading, buying and selling, and discussing cards with other people, plus meeting the players depicted [on them] is the time to be valued most. That personal value of a card is what drives the hobby. It's not the dollar value, it's that it reminds you of a time with your Dad, or your friends, or witnessing a great ball game at the stadium, or home on TV. That real-life experience of family, friends, and heroes is the actual benefit of hoarding these little cardboard slices. They are merely colored and pressed paper, but what they can represent to an individual is a wide range of memories, feelings, and happiness. And there's no such thing as too much of that!
Keep in mind that this was three years before the COVID boom. I don't remember writing this specifically, but I think it sums up why I love these little slabs of cardboard so much.
(The other reason has to do with the psychology of addiction to some degree, I'm sure.)
Let me know what you think....