Sign up, and you can customize which countdowns you see. Sign up
Sep 19, 2014
1:29:55pm
I live in Logan
A few data points:

People here are generally great. I have a lot of close friends, neighbors, acquaintances, and happy clients who are Aggies. Sure, the students go a little nuts sometimes. And there are message board cranks. But I have never experienced "irrational hatred" in person. I have adopted the Aggies as my distant-second-favorite team. It's not that hard to cheer for the Aggies. If I didn't love an underdog, I wouldn't be a BYU fan either. And I like to see the long-suffering Aggie fans experience whatever sports joy they can.

There is a decent number of BYU alumni and fans in Cache Valley, but many of them lay low. Some are employed at USU, receive funding through USU, or have other political/social reasons for needing to fit in. So I was surprised and pleased to see folks I know, even members of my ward, at the football fireside a few years back.

I have been involved in BYU alumni/J. Reuben Clark Society stuff both here and in the other places I have practiced. It has been a tough sell in Cache Valley. In most places, LDS lawyers are happy to have an organization that brings them together. Here, the association with BYU keeps a significant majority away. I suspect others stay away out of fear of being tainted by association. Too bad.

I wear BYU gear around town, have a BYU Law sticker on my car, etc., etc. The worst I have got is harassment from lower level employees in stores. Most are cool. We exchange barbs, and I can usually get them talking about how their team looks this year. They act human when treated with a little humanity. Very rarely, a college kid has been a little rude. I call them on it with a smile, asking if the owner of the store knows they treat customers like this. No big deal.

My favorite story about being BYU fans in Cache Valley: my oldest daughter was in the Cache Children's Choir shortly after we moved here several years ago. The choir agreed to ride on a float in the Aggie homecoming parade singing the Aggie fight song. When my daughter heard about this, she stood up in front of 100+ kids and declared, "I'm not singing some stupid Aggie song! I'm a cougar!" Part of me was proud. The other part of me put together a family home evening lesson about being kind to people who are different than us, that Aggies are our friends and neighbors, etc., etc.
Blue Haired Lawyer
Bio page
Blue Haired Lawyer
Joined
Sep 7, 2014
Last login
Jun 26, 2019
Total posts
70 (0 FO)
Messages
Author
Time

Posting on CougarBoard

In order to post, you will need to either sign up or log in.