People get upset about things that are out of their control all the time; it's human nature. Last few years, for example, I've found myself enraged over Russia's 'Special Operation' in Ukraine; October 7th and the ongoing (and escalating) Israeli response; and pretty much anything Trump-related. Does that make me 'insane'?
In the great scheme of things, football seems unimportant. But it isn't; it's tribal, visceral... it has you leaping off of your seat and screaming in celebration, or tearing your hair out in despair... at events on the pitch that are entirely out of our control. If you can imagine enjoying the 'football side of football', is it really so hard to imagine others getting upset over the transfer side of football? There is, after all, a pretty clear connection between the two; you can broadly track the rise or fall of a team by the quality of their recent transfer activity.
For the past decade or so, no one, regardless of which team they support, would have been surprised to see us in the top 4. We might not always have been the most fancied to get top 4, but it would never have been a surprise. This season, I strongly suspect that no one, not even the most ardent amongst us here, is expecting us to finish in the top 4. After a shocking season and a half in the league, and a fortunate (I don't think it's unreasonable to categorise it this way) CL qualification, coupled with our size and stated ambition, I think it's reasonable to feel 'upset' by the way this transfer window has unfolded... because, unless there is a rapid and unexpected change over the next couple of weeks, we're going to be doing more hair-tearing than celebrating next season when the football side of football gets underway.