I've come to the conclusion that professional wrestling
escaped the ring years ago and quietly took over the rest of society.
Not actual wrestling, of course. Nobody is getting hit over
the head with folding chairs in Parliament. Although some days, I'm not
entirely convinced that they shouldn’t be…
No, I'm talking about the “spectacle”.
Everything has become bigger. Louder. Angrier. More
dramatic.
Nobody simply disagrees anymore. They destroy. They
annihilate. They humiliate. Apparently, every argument must end with somebody
being body-slammed into oblivion while a cheering crowd waves digital signs in
the comment section.
Politics became wrestling years ago.
Then social media joined in.
Then the news.
Then celebrities.
Then influencers.
And now ordinary people seem to have joined the cast. Every
opinion requires an entrance. Every disagreement requires a villain. Every
discussion needs heroes, betrayals and shocking plot twists.
Even corporations have learned the game. Once upon a time
companies sold soap powder. Now they issue statements. They take sides. They
apologise. They clarify. They release carefully worded responses to
controversies nobody had heard of six hours earlier.
Everything has become theatre. Nothing can simply exist
without an audience. If a celebrity breaks up with their partner, we pick
teams. If two billionaires have a disagreement, we choose sides. If somebody
says something stupid on Twitter, half the internet grabs popcorn while the
other half searches for a folding chair.
The strange thing is that professional wrestling has always
known exactly what it is.
Entertainment.
That's the joke.
Meanwhile, the rest of us are pretending this endless drama
is perfectly normal. Perhaps that's why everyone seems exhausted. We're living
inside a twenty-four-hour pay-per-view event. And there are no off-seasons. No
wonder people are tired. No wonder everyone is angry. No wonder we're all
permanently waiting for the next shocking betrayal, devastating comeback or
explosive revelation.
Personally, I miss boring. I miss the days when the most
exciting thing that happened was someone forgetting to put the bins out. These
days, civilisation apparently collapses three times before lunch.
And somewhere, in the middle of all this madness, common
sense is lying unconscious under a folding chair while Karen from Facebook
climbs onto the top rope to defend her views on seed oils.
Honestly, if aliens landed tomorrow, they'd probably assume
humanity settled its differences through professional wrestling and YouTube
comments.
And frankly, I wouldn't blame them.