The Jersey on Your Back: What Vicarious Suffering Reveals About the Self
A man wears a stranger's name on his back, suffers a penalty shootout loss as though it happened to him, and feels it in his body. The experience raises a precise question: is vicarious victory and loss an escape from one's own circumstances, a boost to the ego, or something with a genuinely relational structure? The answer matters for how we understand belonging.

In the final days of a World Cup, a man in Rosario wears a replica jersey with another man's name on the back. He did not play. He will not collect a medal. And yet, when the final whistle sounds, his body registers the result the way bodies register things that happen personally: elevated heart rate, cortisol spike, muscles braced for impact. Across town, someone else watches the same match and feels roughly nothing. He noticed the score, appreciated some of the footwork, and moved on. Both responses are real, and the interesting question is what each reveals about the person who has it, specifically what it means that the first man's joy or grief is vicarious: felt through another's performance, not his own.
Three explanations for vicarious emotion
The most skeptical account is that vicarious victory is ego reinforcement by proxy. The fan who shouts "we won" after sitting motionless on a sofa for ninety minutes is borrowing reflected glory, absorbing another's achievement into a self-image that could not earn it directly. This mechanism has a name in social psychology: Basking in Reflected Glory, or BIRGing, first documented by Robert Cialdini and colleagues, who found that fans wore more school apparel after a win than a loss.[^1] On this reading, committed fandom is a flattering mirror. It costs little and returns a periodic rush of unearned self-esteem.
The second account is avoidance: fandom as structured escape. The committed fan redirects emotional energy that might otherwise go toward his own projects, his marriage, his work, his interior life, into a drama he controls nothing about. The investment is safe precisely because it is not his. He can grieve an elimination fully and still go to work Monday without lasting consequence. Rudolf Allers, the Thomistic psychologist, described a related pattern: interests that are intense yet remain too peripheral to touch what he called the depth of personality.[^2] A powerful enthusiasm for a team that never touches anything genuinely personal is a large emotion attached to a shallow root.
The third account, the one hardest to establish, is that vicarious emotion can be genuinely relational and therefore genuinely formative. This requires a more specific argument.
What the committed fan has actually done
The committed fan has extended his sense of identity outward to include a collective project he did not author and cannot control. From outside, this looks like a bad bet. From inside, the logic runs differently: he has staked something of himself on a shared fate and made that stake visible. When he puts on the jersey before kickoff, he declares publicly that he is willing to be seen caring about something he cannot control, willing to lose alongside others, willing to let a stranger's excellence become a source of his own joy.
Steven Hayes, the founder of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, has put the underlying principle simply: "we hurt where we care, and we care where we hurt."[^3] The fan who genuinely grieves an elimination is discovering, with unusual clarity, what he cares about, and discovering it alongside millions of others who care about the same thing. The grief here is a consequence of having staked something real, not confusion about who actually played.
That staking is what distinguishes the relational account from the ego account. The ego account predicts that fans attach more tightly after wins and detach after losses, defending the self-image. And some fans do exactly that: the fairweather supporter shows up for trophies and disappears during relegation battles. The committed fan who renews his season ticket after a terrible season, though, is absorbing the loss as his own rather than protecting a self-image, a different psychological posture, and the opposite of escape.
The relational structure underneath
Catholic anthropology holds that the human person is constitutively relational: not an isolated agent who later acquires social bonds as optional accessories, but a being whose development occurs through encounter with others.[^4] The capacity to feel another's result as your own is evidence that the self has grown outward into genuine relation, more than it is a confusion about identity.
Gabor Maté has written that children whose emotionally nourishing relationships with adults give them a strong sense of themselves do not need to soothe themselves by passively taking in either food or entertainment.[^5] Sport cuts in a specific direction here: the genuinely invested fan is actively participating in a shared fate, absorbing results into his own emotional register, and bearing the consequences alongside others, rather than passively consuming a spectacle. What he finds there is not only what he values but who he is with. The strangers who groan at the same moment, the cousin who calls immediately after the final whistle, the particular solidarity of people who have lost something together: these are integral to the experience, not incidental to it. The shared defeat creates, briefly but really, a community organized around a common loss.
Vitz, Nordling, and Titus locate this kind of encounter within the structure of personhood: the human being grows by moving outward from himself into genuine relation with others.[^4] Sport provides one of the few remaining public arenas where that movement happens spontaneously and across the usual social divisions of class, neighborhood, and profession.
When it is ego and when it is not
The three accounts are not mutually exclusive. Any given fan on any given evening may be doing all three at once: escaping something, reinforcing a self-image, and genuinely belonging to something. The question is which structure is primary.
Allers's criterion offers a useful diagnostic. If the attachment to a team never requires anything of the fan, never produces genuine sacrifice, never survives a long losing run, never creates real relationships with other supporters, then it is likely operating at the peripheral level he described: intense but shallow, touching nothing deep. The ego account and the escape account are probably correct about that fan. If the attachment survives defeat, though, if it produces genuine solidarity with others who share it, if it becomes a language through which a person connects with his father or his city or his childhood neighborhood, then it is touching something deeper. The vicarious joy or grief is earned through the commitment that precedes it, not borrowed.
The jersey is the visible sign of having made that commitment public. What the fan feels in his body when the whistle sounds is the normal emotional consequence of having staked part of himself on something shared, one of participation's genuine forms.
References
[^1]: Robert B. Cialdini, Richard J. Borden, Avril Thorne, Marcus Randall Walker, Stephen Freeman, and Lloyd Reynolds Sloan, "Basking in Reflected Glory: Three (Football) Field Studies," Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 34, no. 3 (1976): 366–375.
[^2]: Rudolf Allers, Forming Character in Adolescents (1940).
[^3]: Steven C. Hayes, "Psychological Flexibility: How Love Turns Pain into Purpose," TEDx talk.
[^4]: Paul C. Vitz, William Nordling, and Craig Steven Titus, A Catholic Christian Meta-Model of the Person (Divine Mercy University Press, 2020).
[^5]: Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts (North Atlantic Books, 2010).
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