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Norway Olympics Van2010 argyle loud norge pants svae white blue
These are the Norwiegan curling pants from the 2010 Olympics. (Photo: kennymatic/Flick)

The Coldest Stone: Life and Pants

Have you seen what Norway's wearing?

Published: 
Norway Olympics Van2010 argyle loud norge pants svae white blue
(Photo: kennymatic/Flick)

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You shouldn鈥檛 do anything because of a pair of pants, but curling is boring. At least, in a mainstream-sport, easy-to-excite sense, it is. There鈥檚 no one moving fast or jumping high or tackling anyone. It鈥檚 just one guy sliding on some ice and two other guys furiously sweeping a broom. Stones move toward an iced-over target, and whatever team is closer to the center gets the points. When you can鈥檛 really grasp what鈥檚 going on, it鈥檚 basically watching a game of tic tac toe.

The Coldest Stone

Welcome to Curling聽

It鈥檚 definitely more complex than that because otherwise everyone would be in contention for a spot in the Olympics, but the camera angles don鈥檛 really do much justice to the delicate and slight movements the stone makes, and coming from the outside, all the complexities get stripped away. (YouTube announcers at a continental, niche-sporting event tend not to cater to beginners, either.) One guy slides a stone down the ice. Then, so does his opponent. It keeps happening, eventually the points go a certain way, and then a group of guys wearing scary pants win.聽

At least, that鈥檚 been the story of the European Curling Championships so far. They鈥檙e happening as I write this. It鈥檚 live on YouTube, and as jaypek94 said, 鈥淗ard to believe there are only 97 people watching this!鈥 To jaypek94, I鈥檇 posit that there are actually 90-something families huddled around computers, skipping work and generally letting the foundations of their lives crumble just to watch curling, which brings that number closer to 270. I mean, free curling! (It鈥檚 actually not bad background sound, a white-ish noise of unintelligible Nordic and Eastern European screaming, brushes scraping ice, and occasionally-clanking rocks.) But if only 97 people are seeing on a consistent basis, then it鈥檚 kind of sad.

The typical curling uniform consists of some kind of short-sleeve shirt, black trousers, and black shoes. Norway鈥檚 pants, though, are an extended, repeating Norwegian flag that kind of looks like a windowpane covered in the blood of their competitors because Norway does not mess around on the ice. Dudes are vicious. They鈥檙e 6-1, tied for first with Sweden, losing their one match to whose best curler was “Struggling with my confidence a wee bit. Struggling with ice a wee bit.”聽

If you stare at these pants for long enough, you will die鈥攂ecause, if you do anything for long enough, you will die. A flag is a symbol, though, a normally rectangular thing that is what it is: a flag. It鈥檚 a design on a constant-size rectangular fabric鈥攂eginning and ending there. But flag-pants are something certainly more sinister because how many flags actually are there here? There鈥檚 an infinite number if you really think about it, and well, contemplate infinity for too long and you will cease to exist.聽

Beyond generally rendering human life to be pointless, flag-pants do two things. They rep鈥 a country, but they also commodify an entire nation as a way to keep warm, to not be naked, and to say something about yourself. Because, most of the time, the pants you wear say something about you. They鈥檙e on your legs for one reason or another. (We already know these guys are Norweigan, so it goes beyond wanting to be identified correctly.)聽In that these pants are uniforms, though, someone on Norway鈥檚 team probably begrudgingly puts them on one leg at a time鈥攃urlers are just like us, guys鈥攚ondering what鈥檚 wrong with everyone else鈥檚 black pants. But someone, at some point in the history of the world, thought these pants would be a good idea.

(Norway has .)

After a win over Denmark on Sunday, Norway鈥檚 team leader and lead curler, Thomas Ulsrud, . 鈥淭he only problem is I鈥檓 feeling better now,鈥 Ulsrud said, 鈥渂ut I鈥檓 playing not that good. Yesterday, I was feeling shit and playing good. So now it鈥檚 the opposite.

It鈥檚 a reminder of the fleeting nature of the human condition, but more generally a reminder that we are all human. We do everything we do鈥攍ike watch curling, wear stupid legwear, or watch curling in order to see stupid legwear鈥攆or reasons, however specific, nebulous, and unable-to-be-articulated they are. And still, things happen that we can鈥檛 control. Living a life is a contradiction mirrored by a volatile curling performance. Things happen because we want them to, but they also happen, more often than they don鈥檛, outside of our volition. Today, you put on your pants because you wanted to鈥攁nd that lets you know you鈥檙e alive. Yet, the first time you don鈥檛 put on your own pants is the last time you鈥檒l ever get dressed.

Lead Photo: kennymatic/Flick

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