I got my first nemesis in fourth grade. His name was Ofer.
He was my nemesis for two reasons: 1) I was totally jealous of his name, which started with a vowel and was therefore cooler than "Matthew." 2) Even though he was short like me, he was amazing at sports.
This wasn't fair. And therefore he was dead to me.
My strong feelings about Ofer -- (in retrospect, not such a cool name,
huh?) -- had nothing to do with his personality, because Ofer and I
were in different classes and barely interacted at all.
But he was still my nemesis. I looked down on him for no good reason
other than the fact I looked up to him, which I also did for no good
reason.
Since Ofer, I've had a succession of nemeses. And this, I'm convinced, is a man thing.
It's not that women don't hate each other. But men have a biological
predisposition toward competitiveness, making us almost crave enemies.
A 1998 study at King's College Research Centre in Britain enlisted
students to keep diaries of their competitive interactions and found
that men compete with each other more than women compete with other
women. Men are also more likely to use physical rather than verbal
aggression.
Unfortunately, I'm not really built for a fight, and I've been pacified
by an American culture that insists fists don't solve problems.
So even though I'm purely male in creating epic competitions against
other men, I'm totally female in the way I deal with it: verbally, or
not at all.
My nemeses typically fit the description of the kind of person the
Greek goddess Nemesis was responsible for punishing: someone with
excessive pride, undeserved happiness or good fortune.
In other words, my nemesis is someone who makes me acutely and uncomfortably aware of my own inadequacies and insecurities.
Men are inherently player haters, and if I think that another guy got
some luck that was supposed to go to me, then I will hate him.
Right now, for example, there's a little man who lives in my
neighborhood whom I've met three times. Each time, he has not
remembered my name. Each time, I've praised him pathetically for the
new book he wrote. Each time, I've gone to the bathroom afterward and
cursed at the urinal for him being a published author without really
paying his dues except for having the skeezy-intellectual personality
loved by book publishers and other people who don't have real jobs and
sleep 'til 11 and hang out in coffee shops looking for cocktail-party
conversation pieces in The New Yorker.
This guy is a perfect nemesis for me because he has accomplished something I haven't. And that is unfair.
My nemesis in college was in a rival fraternity and lived next door to
our fraternity house. We had regular Saturday night pushing and shoving
sessions with these guys -- which is another study in ridiculous male
competitiveness, by the way, and somewhat embarrassing to think about
years later.
But during the week, the nemesis and I had English class together where
we would stare each other down. We never spoke. We just stared. I hated
him.
Three years later, I ran into him at a Phish concert. Perhaps it was
the good vibes of the tunes or the mushrooms he was tripping on, but he
gave me a bear hug. We had a good old time hanging out.
This, of course, proves that nemeses are silly personifications of
excessive testosterone. And yet they're totally necessary for my
well-being.
I need a foil in my life, someone I can focus my aggression toward.
Recently, I've found a new nemesis: Glenn Sacks, a self-described
"men's columnist" who, based on the TV appearances he brags about, is
considerably more famous than I am.
Since I don't know of another "gender columnist" besides myself, this
"men's columnist" will do. Sacks qualifies as having undeserved good
fortune -- because he makes a living saying things that are entirely
wrong!
Zinger! Looks like it's on, Mr. Sacks. I will harbor unwarranted hatred
against you for the next few months, or few years. As a "men's"
columnist, I'm sure you'll understand.
This column appeared in the Courier-Post and Gannett newspapers nationwide.
POSTSCRIPT: An old friend later forwarded me Ofer's MySpace
page. It turns out that not only did Ofer do two tours in Iraq, but he
was a MEDIC there, and on his profile he lists his mother as his hero.
I really know how to pick 'em. As for Glen Sacks, I got three weeks worth of hate mail from his supporters.
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