1376. Why I just don’t get the Winter Olympics

Somewhere on a snowbank in Russia, a handful of snowboarders are kicking back, smoking weed, and talking about jumping out of helicopters to board some pure white. I’m supposed to care about this and them as part of my patriotic responsibility. I’m supposed to clap for Ashley Wagner and cheer on the tandem of Meryl Davis and Charlie White as they blaze across the ice at Sochi. The only problem is I don’t care. I don’t think I was meant to care either.

I was raised in Harlem, NY. I’m fortunate enough to have a mother who thought beyond the ghetto. She made sure I was educated. She introduced me to chess and tennis. She took me to swimming pools. She tossed me on the ice on more than one occasion, just to give me the experience of doing these activities that a lot of inner city kids never connect with. Like I posted earlier, I didn’t play basketball. I had to find football on my own. She did everything she could to give me an experience that was antithetical to what many (often falsely) associate with as the traditional black experience. Even still, we never skied. The thought of such things didn’t even come up in our house. As a grown man I’ve only snowbarded a handful of times and still have never skied. It cost too much money and was too alien to me.

Skiing–winter sports in general–is something that doesn’t exist in the realms of inner city America. There is a reason why you can count the number of black and hispanic Ice Hockey players on one hand. Unlike soccer, basketball, football, and baseball, inner city youth were not traditionally targeted for hockey or figure skating, or many other of the Winter Olympic sports. I’ve always felt this social distance from those sports, as if they belong to an entirely separate audience–like backgammon and shuffleboard.

if not for my new hero, Shiva Keshavan, and the miniscule number of American athletes like Shani Davis, my interest in the Winter Olympics would be limited to talking trash about Ice Skaters who fall down and an extremely curious fascination with curling. I’m watching because my kids find the flips amazing and maybe out of some residual social programming to connect with my patriotic side and cheer on America in this us vs. them extravaganza. So, we do our duty on some nights. We stay up late and go ooh and ahh and my kids, without being told to do so, anxiously wait the scores of the American team. We are far removed from the inner city now, but we are also far removed from the conditions that would allow us to do any of what these athletes do. Unlike the sports we play, the Winter Olympics is an alien life form and we’re peering down the viewport for a glimpse of how the other half lives.

1375. Smoked

I put a lot of stock in the idea of universal tides. This is the premise that there are certain things in the universe that are going to happen for whatever reason and you really can’t stop them. The best you can hope for is to be aware of them before they come to pass, so that you are prepared and perhaps insulated. Then again, I’m a bit of a stubborn mule myself. Despite repeated evidence of the futility of the effort, I continue to swim against the tide, or as Wesley Snipes once famously put it, “Ice skate uphill.”

To stay with the Wesley quotes a moment longer, “You either smoke, or you get smoked.” We got smoked today in two age groups. The 6-7 free fall continues with a cavalcade of tears and busted attitudes. 2 straight blow out losses and I’m down to less than five players I can depend on to go out there and give their all if their not up by 3 scores. It was actually worse for the formerly undefeated 8-9 squad who was beaten thoroughly by the best team they’ll see for the rest of their lives: themselves. Errors cost us a game we should  have won by at least two touchdowns. Worse still, it was a loss to a team that I don’t particularly like. Short of the head coach, the coaching staff is mean, demeaning, and should not be around kids at all.

Not even their own.

The sad fact is I saw this loss coming a week in advance and tried everything in my power to change the tide. Nothing worked. Our team was in the best position to win on practically every play and could not perform at all on offense. The drops seemed to ring up in the double digits, and the unforced errors on defense still have a sneer hanging from my lips. Yeah, its kids below the age of 10, but no matter how old you are if you care about something enough to fight that much for it, then it matters.

 

Some Thoughts:

  1. Facebook is evil. I mean, what else would you call daily updates of the life you aren’t living and the friends you never get to see?
  2. Still pissed off. This may last a while.
  3. Shiva Keshavan is my new hero. You shouldn’t–heck, you really cannot–do what he did and still finish the run. #BMF