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Our American Stories

Why Ole Miss Fans Learn Humility Early

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 26 February 2026

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, loving a team that loses year after year certainly has a way of shaping character, and in Oxford, Mississippi, Ole Miss football has never been a safe bet. For generations, being a Rebels fan has meant learning how to hope carefully, endure long seasons, and keep showing up even when winning feels distant.

Our American Stories listener Nancy Ball shares a story she wrote titled “Being an Ole Miss Fan Is, in and of Itself, a Lesson in Humility,” and explains why winning isn't always about making playoffs.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an IHeart podcast.

0:02.3

Guaranteed human.

0:25.5

And we return to our American stories.

0:29.0

And up next we have a listener story from Nancy Ball.

0:34.5

Nancy lives in Birmingham, Alabama, but grew up in the heart of the Mississippi Delta.

0:39.3

Today, Nancy reflects on her childhood with a short story she wrote called Being an All-Miss fan is in and of itself a lesson in humility.

0:45.4

And for anyone who's been a fan of a perennial losing team, whether you are a Chicago

0:51.4

Cubs fan or you are a New York Giants football fan. You know what I'm talking about.

0:57.9

Here's Nancy to share her story. I grew up in the town of Inverness, Mississippi. The town of Inverness

1:05.1

has a population of approximately 1,000 people that bypassed put in around the town some 30 years ago negated the

1:11.6

need for the town's one red light. It is a farming community and is surrounded by fields of various

1:16.9

crops such as cotton, corn, and soybeans, as well as catfish ponds. I never gave much thought about

1:23.4

the childhoods of other people until I went away to a college located in a big metropolitan

1:28.3

city. It was then that I realized that not everyone had a similar childhood as mine.

1:33.3

Of course, that is not to say that a childhood spent in a small town versus a large city is superior.

1:39.3

I had just never given the difference as much thought.

1:42.3

Childhood spent in a small town was all I knew. Additionally,

1:46.5

most people who I encountered during my childhood had also grown up in similar environments. I was

1:52.5

under the impression that all childhoods consisted of small towns where everyone knew each other's names

1:57.9

and their family histories going back for several generations.

2:01.7

I thought everyone else's small grocery store allowed its eight-year-old customers to charge

2:06.5

their purchases to their family's account with a simple signature.

...

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