Every few years the flags come out. Faces painted. Anthems memorized.
Entire nations remember they are nations.

A striker scores in the eighty-third minute and someone cries
in a bar six thousand miles away.

No borders move. No governments fall. No cities burn.

Commentators speak of battles, campaigns, defending territory,
national pride.

Eleven young men in matching uniforms become temporary vessels
for millions of private longings.

It is difficult not to notice the resemblance.

For most of human history the neighboring country was not a team.
It was an army. The flag meant someone was about to lose a son,

a harvest, a language. The body evolved for that world. Perhaps
this is why the nervous system still responds to jerseys

with such vigor. A safer outlet for an ancient appetite.
The desire to divide the world into us and them.

To gather behind a banner and experience the intoxicating certainty
that our people are somehow special.

Better.

Chosen.

I suspect this is why relationships can feel so paramount.
Two people carrying centuries of tribal software into a kitchen,

negotiating dishes, bedtimes, text messages, as though
the future of civilization depends on who apologizes,

who is right, and who wins. We all have done this.
Turned another person into a country.

Defended borders that did not exist. Interpreted small slights
as incursions. Gathered evidence. Mobilized grievances.

Prepared speeches. Forgotten the person
across from us was never the enemy.

The match begins. The crowd roars. No one dies.
This feels like progress. And yet

there are moments when the old machinery shows through.
A missed call. A hard tackle. A goal celebration.

Suddenly millions of strangers are furious at eleven men.
The same machinery that paints a flag across a face

can paint an enemy across a lover.

The World Cup is people singing together,
dancing together, believing together.

How easily love becomes hatred
of another. How quickly a flag can transform

from a symbol of celebration into a weapon.

Two people who spend ninety minutes pretending to be enemies
are now exchanging jerseys, embracing, taking photos.

How many relationships might survive
if we learned to do the same?