What βisβ professional wrestling?
Is it a sport? An art form? Is it theatre, or does it belong in the Olympics? We all have our opinions. Nevertheless, we all want to define what wrestling βis.β The problem with our need to define professional wrestling, however, is that nobody can agree on what it βis.β With unparalleled access to information at our fingertips, discourse reigns supreme on social networks. Everyone seems to know whatβs best for the industry and, whatβs more, has the unique ability to resurrect the βdyingβ wrestling business.
Some people even earn their entire livings telling other people what wrestling βis.β Some other people are even willing to pay good money to be told what wrestling βisβ so that they can, in turn, tell other people what wrestling βis.β Answering the question βWhat is professional wrestling?β is a need that burns so greatly inside the human spirit that it has spawned an entire economy!
Youβve heard it before. Deathmatches are βgarbage wrestling.β Lucha libre is gymnastics. Technicians have no charisma. Comedy acts canβt work.
In reality, there is only one thing about wrestling that matters:
Wrestling is nothing.
Professional wrestling is entirely subjective. It can never truly be defined because it means something different to every single person. Pro wrestling is not a noun. Pro wrestling is a verb. βPro wrestlingβ is the emotional connection formed between performer and audience member that creates a mutual piece of existence β wrestling is those moments in time.
Movies are static storytelling devices. If you yell at the Superhero on the screen, it wonβt change the outcome of the movie. Pro wrestling is different. You can yell something at a live show, and it will not only influence how the performer behave but might even determine the showβs outcome. The wrestlers donβt know how the audience will react. The experienced ones can guess. Fans donβt know what will happen in the ring before it happens. The experienced ones might have an idea. You canβt guess what moves will occur spot-by-spot. If you yell βchopβ at a paperback novel, the protagonist doesnβt stop what theyβre doing to slap their opponent in the chest and yell βWOO!β
Pro wrestling occurs at the intersection of the physical perceptions experienced by two or more individuals β performer and viewer. Without the viewer, pro wrestling ceases to exist and becomes something else entirely. It is the audience that gives professional wrestling its unique brand of storytelling. Note to wrestlers: without the audience, you have nothing. Appreciate this fact.
Wrestling βisβ nothing β it is not a static term. Wrestling is entirely subjective and means something different to each individual person, and it is physically impossible to truly know any other personβs version of it. Each person has their very own βpro wrestling.β and experiences professional wrestling through a unique lens crafted by their own collections of lifeβs perceptions and experiences.
Wrestling is such a unique emotional experience, a peak experience β a moment where we are entirely alive and focused on the present moment β fans tend to attach a good chunk of their identities to professional wrestling. When a babyface firing up makes us feel good, we get upset when someone else tells us it was bad β they are telling us we shouldnβt feel good! This invalidates our feelings and our very existence, and the human robot is programmed to push back against that with sometimes lethal levels of force.
In the same way, you cannot tell people what they βshouldβ or βshould notβ feel, as feelings are not logical, you do not choose to feel a feeling, it is a chemical reaction in your brain, you cannot tell another person what βisβ or βisnβtβ wrestling. They can only feel what βisβ or βisnβtβ wrestling to them. You can only tell them about your own version of wrestling.Β
If itβs safe and it makes money, whatβs the difference? There are very few things that havenβt been done in pro wrestling at this point β and the business is arguably doing better than ever. If we all had a nickel every time someone said the business was dead, weβd all be able to start our own companies with full pyro budgets!
Wrestling is action. Wrestling is drama. Wrestling is comedy. Wrestling is a three-ring circus: if you donβt like the acrobats, you can go laugh at the clowns. Wrestling is honour. Wrestling is tradition. Wrestling is an industry. Wrestling is a business. Wrestling is progress. Wrestling is despair. Wrestling is pain. Wrestling is memory. Wrestling is life.
Wrestling is everything.
And therefore, Wrestling is Nothing.
On its own, professional wrestling doesnβt exist.
Now that it doesnβt exist, that really takes the pressure off, doesnβt it?
So maybe itβs time we take wrestling a little less seriously. Maybe itβs time we be a little more open to other versions of wrestling. Maybe itβs time to have a little more fun and consume what we enjoy instead of wasting time hate watching things we dislike. Life is short. Time is money.
If you do not like a particular brand of professional wrestling, you do not have to consume the product.
Such products are not an attack on your existence or identity. They can exist. There is room. You can ignore them!
If it’s safe, and it makes money, who cares?Β
Wrestling is not a finite resource.
There is enough wrestling for everyone.
Your wrestling might not be my wrestling.
My wrestling might not be your wrestling!
And thatβs okay.
Because at the end of the day, we will still both get what we want.
More wrestling!

