THOUGHTS
Occasional Reflections & Musings...
“Holy shit Kobe Bryant’s dead!” I exclaimed much too loudly for the serene Sunday afternoon lunch setting. One of my best friends and I were wrapping up a post-church meal at our favorite Thai restaurant when my smartwatch buzzed with the news alert: Kobe Bryant, 41, died in a helicopter crash. Hours later, to add to the tragedy, we would learn that his 13-year-old daughter and seven others also lost their lives.
You didn’t have to be interested in sports to know the name, a testament to his athletic greatness. But if you were a basketball fan, even just a casual one, this was a gut punch. Just a few highights for the uninitiated: Kobe was basketball’s 2nd coming; the heir to His Airness, Michael Jordan; perhaps the most anticipated prospect to enter the NBA right out of high school; 5 NBA Championships; two-time NBA Finals MVP and Scoring Champion; 18 All-Star appearances; 4th on the NBA total points made list; two (not one...two) jerseys retired; two Olympic Gold medals; the only player to come close to challenging Wilt Chamberlain’s historic 1962 100-point game when he single-handedly decimated the Toronto Raptors on January 22nd, 2006 by scoring 81 points; just so we wouldn’t forget his on-court prowess, he scored 60 points in his last professional game; and oh yeah...after retiring in 2016 he won an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 2018 for his film Dear Basketball because why not? This is by no means to say he was perfect. On the court he was known to be a ball hog. He did not regularly socialize with teammates. His desire to win put him at odds with players on other teams that thought they were life-long friends. And there was the 2003 rape accusation brought against him by a 19-year-old hotel clerk which was eventually settled out of court. Yes, there is no such thing as a flawless hero, which only complicates our feelings in situations like this. Celebrity deaths are a strange thing. Because of their visibility, and how much of themselves they share with the world, it feels like we know them. I did not know Kobe Bryant. Yet the loss felt personal. Was it because his name floated in and out of the headlines for the last 25 years? Was it because his sheer determination and incomparable work ethic (aka “Mamba Mentality”) was an inspiration for millions around the world? Was it because of the beginnings of a post-basketball career dedicated to family? Was it because he was so young? Was it because it was so randomly tragic and unexpected? Was it because it triggered my own grief from the loss of my wife five years ago when she we 43? Was it because I’m the father of a daughter? Was it because we weren’t ready to let him go yet? We do or best to find or assign meaning at times like this. If we could make sense of the tragedy maybe it would hurt less. If we knew why it happened maybe we would feel more in control. The difficult truth is that there is no meaning. Birth and death are the sides of the coin of life. We don’t know what our life will be when we are born. We also don’t know when we will die, and this is perhaps why death defines us so much more. What we do know, is that we get one shot (apologies to the reincarnation crowd), so as the transcendent (and also recently deceased) poet Mary Oliver invited us to consider, “...what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?” I would take it a step further and ask, “If you know, why aren’t you doing it?” If there is any meaning we can ascribe to Kobe’s death, it is this: Live life as fully and authentically as you can, and do it now. Do not settle for less. As we sat across the table from each other, reeling in shock from the news, my friend asked, “If you knew you were going to die tomorrow or next week, what would you do differently today?” She knows me well enough to know that I’m pretty much living the life I want to experience. But I gave it some thought, and shared my only regret would be not having seen more of the world. “Where would you go?” she asked, and I said Australia and New Zealand are top of my list. Turns out they were top of hers too. So in that moment, motivated by Mamba Mentality and mimosas, we began planning our trip. As we stood to leave some minutes later, with a hint of incredulity in her eyes, she asked, “Are we really doing this?” Hell yes we are. We let ourselves believe that we don’t have all we need inside of us to achieve our dreams. Our that we will have time to bring them into reality later. In his relatively short lifetime, Kobe taught us otherwise. And he taught us well. Thank you, Kobe. Mamba, out.
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The first morning of 2020 started the same way many of my mornings for the past five years have started: in the gym. When I turned 40 I began to lift weights three or four times a week. It has been good for my body, my stress level, my emotions, and an unexpected opportunity to practice mindfulness. From the beginning, given my budgetary constraints, Planet Fitness was my only choice. There is much to mock about Planet Fitness (search YouTube if you have any doubts), but $10 a month can’t be beat.
The first morning of 2020 brought heavier than usual expectations. It wasn’t just a new year. It was also a new decade. Memes have already declared it the Year of Hindsight. The implication is clear: this is the year we apply the wisdom we acquired in the past decade. When it comes to new year’s or new decade resolutions, you’ll find me in a state of perpetual eye-roll. Such benchmarks are arbitrary and useless. Every day is the start of a new year or new decade. Every day is an opportunity to adopt a new intention, declare a new way of being, begin a journey of transformation. The first morning of 2020 found me doing weighted step-ups beneath one of the gym’s trademark invocations: No Critics. After a half decade of blending into my routine, the sign had become invisible. Yet today it spoke to me like never before. Today the eye-rolls were stilled. Today I admitted that in recent years I had been listening to, and believing the excuses created by the biggest critic in my life: my own inner critic. Its excuses held me back from being brave in the pulpit; held me back from writing the book I already declared to the world I would write; held me back from having difficult conversations; held me back from moving forward. And all these excuses were rooted in fear: fear of failure; fear of success; fear of conflict; fear of rejection; fear of loss; fear of disappointing others; fear of disappointing myself. I was genuinely surprised to realize that, as much as I have grown over the last two decades, fear still made its voice known in my life. The first morning of 2020 found me taking on a new resolve: No More: no more listening to my inner critic; no more playing small; no more holding back. Today I choose to believe wholly in my true self and all that my Divine potential holds. Well played Planet Fitness. Well played. |
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