My life as a football dad started on Monday July 9.
It began in absentia.
I was in London while registration for football lessons for the boy was in Paris.
It meant that the missus had to stand in line for 47 hours for the lad to get on the course.
I felt this was an abandonment of my paternal role.
It will be the missus who has to take him to the course as I will still be shuffling around the park on Saturday mornings when it all begins.
Strange really. At least there won't be any chance of living out my dreams through him for the moment.
I couldn't become part of the Olympic Family in absentia. I went to the Olympic Park this morning to get my accreditation put into a lovely plastic holder.
I also put my name down for a trip round the athletes' village on Thursday. I will find out later if I have been accepted. The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, will be there on Thursday.
That should be interesting.
The park looks wonderful. They're still putting the finishing touches to it. And for the most part the helpers look helpful.
Going to the park from Stratford is a set a set-up. You have to run the gauntlet of shops and the urge to succumb to expenditure is immense. I faltered by the Cafe Nero.
A macchiato and croissant were enough to gird my loins for the trip inside the fence or into the heart of the family - the international broadcast centre.
Once there I was sent off to the accreditation office and it was so painless. But then I've been used to accreditation centres at the Africa Cup of Nations.
So anything other than that is going to appear scintillating in its efficiency.
There is another bonus to the Olympic dream. I am allowed to travel in the six zones of London for free until August 15.
Quite what happens if you want to go to Hampden Park in Glasgow to see the football is a mystery.
If you have to pay, that will be a deep hole into any company's pockets. A snap train journey in Britain isn't cheap.
Might perhaps send you into a depression. Still I know one place where you can shop your way out of the anxiety.
Tuesday, 10 July 2012
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