JOE PATERNO, EPICUREAN
“Death does not concern us, because as long as we exist, death is not here. And when it does come, we no longer exist.”
Joe Paterno is dying in front of our eyes, and that is no overly dramatic statement. His body is beginning the inevitable decline he staved off for so many year by running, staying involved in his job, and leaning on the good credit his robust genes advanced him in his later years. This is not a sentimental judgment: it’s fact, as clear to the viewer as the cane he now requires to get from point A to point B or as obvious as his absence from the sidelines when he takes to the booth in the second half of games due to hip pain.
Brent Musberger may be annoying, predictable, and prone to over-excitement on the smallest play, but give him due credit for honesty in discussing the factors motivating Paterno’s insistence on remaining on the sideline.
He is fearful — and he looks back at Bear Bryant as the example — he is fearful that he would not be with us if he stepped away. He is a man that doesn’t fish, doesn’t play golf…he has no other interest other than his family and football. And he’s just afraid what would happen with the rest of his life if he walks away from it.
“What would happen” here is cloaked language for what happened to Bryant: death. If you feel a vague unease at all this, at watching Paterno slowly deteriorate physically, it should be a familiar creep: it is the same sensation the smell of hospital disinfectant gives us, since everyone we’ve ever known kicked off in the perpetually swabbed and sterile corners of a hospital. It’s the primate fear associated with anything reminding you of your own demise.
In the pilot of Six Feet Under, there’s a debate about how death is dealt with in America: that it is too sterile, too impersonal, too well-packaged to properly recognize the moment. Nate insists his father’s burial should be a more personal, emotional farewell than the standard packaged, gift-wrapped costume dramas they sell; David, the other brother, objects, but ultimately relents at the graveside.
We’re more on Nate’s side, as annoying as the character was, but would like to take it a step further: the unease surrounding Paterno is part of an overall gerontophobia, a fear of the old rooted in the fact that some deep, primal part of your brain recognizes that if you’re lucky, you’ll be tottering along in slip-ons and a robe at the end of the driveway as part of a four-minute ordeal just to get the mail. Many of you are scared of old people because they’re “creepy,” which we take to mean “close to death, and therefore death-y, and therefore ‘creepy.’
To be fair, some old people may scare you for legitimate reasons. Many in our part of the nation have both guns and cataracts, a great combination resulting in festive fun for the whole family. (”Don’t go over in the yard to get the ball, kid. That’s how people die.”) They do tend to be stubborn, they do remind you of death because they’re so much closer (by the odds, at least) than you are, and they do have a statistically significant propensity for causing horrific traffic accidents.
However, Joe Paterno, as morbid as it may seem, may be living the dream: he’s choosing both how to live, and potentially how to die. Most of our friends, when asked “how would you like to go,” usually choose the Willie Nelson route of “being shot climbing out of a woman’s window at 135 years old.” The more common answer, however, would be “doing what I do,” which in JoePa’s case is to die coaching football.
This may seem creepy, but the fault would not be on Paterno, who being a Classicist by education seems Stoic in his approach toward death. Musburger may have been plying inside information, but he may have also ignored another, more positive angle on this: Paterno’s fear of no longer being able to do what he loves, not what would happen if he stopped doing it. The fault is in the viewer, so insulated from aging and death that the sight of it in any real form obscures the fact that Paterno, in the form he’s chosen, is doing his job as well as anyone in the country right now…and happens to be very, very old.
This seems less like a man worried about death, and more worried about how he’s going to get through the rest of life in spite of the pain his body is experiencing-an Epicurean in the purest sense of the word to the end, and the current coach of the number three team in the nation. Let him live how he chooses. Whether anyone likes it or not, death will take care of the rest. The rest is useless worry, and a waste of precious life with the clock winding down.
61 Replies »
Pages: « 7 6 5 4 3 [2] 1 » Show All
Pages: « 7 6 5 4 3 [2] 1 » Show All
20
This is probably the best article I’ve read in relation to life and death. I agree, and having recently watched my grandfather do the sterile, unemotional crawl to the grave this is exactly what JoePa should be doing, coach until you can’t coach anymore JoePa.
Comment by Chasing a Big XII Title — October 16, 2025 @ 1:52 pm
19
Outstanding post. That UF education done you good.
Comment by 4.0 Point Stance — October 16, 2025 @ 1:50 pm
18
I attend an annual coaches clinic put on by PSU each year in April. We are very accessible to the team and coaches as they work through spring drills. Make no mistake about it, JoPa is still the head coach of that team and is still VERY active in the day to day of what goes on on the field. I love going just to see him get in the grill of a 6′ 5″ 330 lb lineman and tear him to shreads for blowing an assignment.
And a nicer guy you will not find. And I am not a Penn State Fan.
Comment by shovel-pass — October 16, 2025 @ 1:47 pm
17
On second thought, I’d rather go out in hail of bullets like in “True Romance”, after a car chase, running from the government like the Bourne Idenity….even if I was 80 and all that was in my head……
How does Joe Pa remember all the players who has played for him? What happens if he has a “senior” moment and just starts not recognizing anyone?
Who is older, Al Davis or Joe Pa?
Comment by Mr.Pelican Pants — October 16, 2025 @ 1:47 pm
16
I’m looking to go out on a hooker and heroin binge when I decide I’ve reached a ripe enough age or get diagnosed with cancer from too much smoking over too long a period, whichever comes first.
Comment by Biggus Rickus — October 16, 2025 @ 1:39 pm
15
A ton of credit Orson; well written and insightful while taking an inspiring(?) position not seen too often.
As a Penn State fan, it has been strange reconciling what so far has been a season growing stronger with each passing week, yet at the same time seeing JoePa seemingly move in the other direction.
I’ve been critical of him the past two seasons, but now, with all things considered, nothng would make me happier then seeing Paterno on the sidelines of a BCS in January, yelling at a reporter for trying to do their job.
Comment by DanF — October 16, 2025 @ 1:23 pm
14
I figured I’d provide the requisite “BRAINS” response to any post about Joe Pa, even on so classy as this.
Comment by poguemahone — October 16, 2025 @ 1:22 pm
13
What the fuck is this shit?
Comment by 3L Over the Line, Sweet Jesus — October 16, 2025 @ 1:20 pm
12
This should be sent to the PSU AD.
Comment by hobeg8r — October 16, 2025 @ 1:17 pm
11
I think it is ironic that Tommy and Terry are done way before Bobby is…..
Paterno is the closest thing that college football has to a Congressman who never leaves office, doesnt have to, doesnt want to, he is the master of his domain….Would work for free just to work and be around people…Old people fear being alone, since most of their real friends are inactive or passed on, and their families usually see them when its convenient for the family….Paterno is cut from the fabric of those who have to work to live. It is who they are. Some people cannot have idle time, it drives them crazy. Could you imagine Joe Pa at some swanky retirement home? The lack of pressure starves them because good coaches feed off of it. Legends literally have to die on their own. If I wanted to put a Disney spin on this, Penn State goes all the way, wins the BCS, then Joe Pa dies in his sleep the next day.
Myself, I want to go out like Brad Pitt did in “Legends of the Fall”, fighting that damn bear…..
Comment by Mr.Pelican Pants — October 16, 2025 @ 1:16 pm