Life, NCAA College Basketball, NCAA Tournament, Philosophy, positive thinking

Addition by Distraction

When Wichita State guard Fred VanVleet’s last second heave bounced helplessly off the rim in the final moments of a historic and emotionally draining loss to Kentucky, it was over.

referees-iowa-state-north-carolinaWhen the refs of the Iowa State – North Carolina tilt got together shortly after the horn sounded, for what felt like another long NCAA Tournament commercial break, and decided that yes, in fact the math of delayed clocks starts and timeouts evened out, it was over.

Just like our upcoming Spring Break, my sister-in-laws pending nuptials, my son’s just-underway baseball season and that movie you have been dying to see.

These are all distractions, and they will eventually end. Many of them happy, of course, but what lies beyond?

We use these distractions, these things, these events in life as markers and moments to look forward to, to enjoy, knowing full well that nothing can last forever, but being just a tiny bit saddened when the reality sets in that the moment has indeed passed.

Time stops for no man, as they say.

Now, you can take this one of two ways. You can be saddened by this fact that everything ends and spend your days locked in nostalgia and reliving the past.

Or, you can choose to enjoy each moment for what it is. You can be here, now. You can choose to actively be present in your life. Immerse yourself in the good and the bad of it all and let the negativity and drama wash away.

As the great Dr. Seuss said, those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind. (I could be paraphrasing here.)

This is life and too much of it is spent on the trivial details that don’t really matter. The hard part is we rely on distractions to help us pass the time. We go from New Year’s to NFL Playoffs to College Basketball and March Madness to Baseball and Spring Break to summer cookouts, concerts, vacations, football of all levels to the Holidays. And then we repeat.

Mostly, we’re just trying to get through the day until the day becomes the end of the week. And we’re passing along through this life without truly getting the point.

Now, I do not pretend to know what the point is. And I’ve spent several hours writing about it in a variety of similar ways. I am still working on it. And that’s just it; you never really stop working on it. Life is kind of a long education.

So for the friends and readers who get tired of the motivational, introspective mumbo-jumbo I’ve been producing, that is perfectly understandable. I’ll give you the same advice I give myself, friends, family and colleagues all the time: choose something else.

Change your distractions so they are not subtracting from your life. Let your distractions be additions to your life.

Case in point: if friends on Facebook are annoying you with selfies and negativity, then hide them. Defriend them. Do whatever you gotta do. But at the end of the day, that is a you problem. It is their page and they can post 400 pictures of their kids, their vacations and as many happy quotes as they want. You don’t have to look at it.

Same goes for Twitter. If you don’t like my stream of Disney World construction photo retweets, surfing photos and random sports commentary that is perfectly OK. I’m a weird dude, and I am OK with it. But if you are not, then stop following me. We can still be friends.

But we tend to lock in on things and get stuck on repeat, focusing more on the other party (and what they do not even know they are doing to annoy you) than our own issues. In these cases, our distractions become our obsessions.

It is a fine line we toe between rooting for our favorite college basketball team to win a game – and getting into fisticuffs with a fan from a rival team…during dialysis treatments.

Distraction is being more than curious about what happened to the Malaysia flight that has still yet to be found. Crazy obsession is pretending to fly the plane like a five-year-old in his backyard on cable news.

We are constantly battling these two sides of ourselves. Distractions give life spice and variety, something to enjoy, something to look forward to, something to focus on. Hone in on them too much, though, and we become wild beasts obsessing over the material goods of the world.

Sadly, much the world has become about the material.

It occurred to me, somewhat rather recently, that the past few years have been nothing but a growth stage for me. I did not particularly think I had much left to do in the ways of growth, but I have felt as though my heart was physically expanding, my head hurting with new thoughts and new ideas, knowledge that I did not know I did not have.

And all this time – at least the past two years – I’ve been writing to myself in many ways. Trying to remind myself of what I value or at least what I should, what I need to keep valuing and what I need to let go, all for the sake of finding a positive path for myself and my family on this crazy road of life. It calms me and helps me remember that your destination is not a collection of trinkets, but instead of memories of time well spent collecting life.

Others, including some of those who are or were once quite dear to me, seem to disagree. And of course, to each his own. We can only control what we can control, which is just ourselves.

If you are bothered by the fact that someone you know has changed, then you miss the point. We all should change. Who wants to remain stagnant? Change implies motion, staying the same means there is nothing new to you, and I’m not a fan of reading the same book twice.

bakerGo onward, upward; get new experiences. Old friendships should serve to fuel new adventures, not rehashing old mistakes and slights. Either you can move on, forgive and forget or you cannot. But it does no good to remain in the status quo.

Not long after Wichita State had it’s perfect season ended at 35-0, redshirt sophomore Ron Baker, who had a fabulous game, blankly looked at the press and gave a great explanation of dealing with the loss to Kentucky.

“You’re going to go through some humps in your life, kind of like this one. It’s tough to see us go out like this,” Baker said. “At the end of the day, someone’s got to go home.”

It’s somewhat of a strangely put together quote, with a tinge of sadness, yet a grounded sense of optimism. And really, it’s true. You hate to see it end – whatever it is. Coming home from vacations are rough, the loss of a long friendship is rough, the end of a season that you’ve poured yourself into, is indeed tough.

But life is not over, it continues on. How you approach the next distraction, where you place it on the scale of overall importance can affect you for a large portion of time in this life. And I have somehow arrived at a point where I have mildly convinced myself that as long as it is, it is also quite short.

I like Kevin Bacon’s idea, frankly.

This is a party. Let’s dance.

 

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Life, NFL, Philosophy, pop culture, positive thinking, Rashard Mendenhall

Pulling a Mendenhall

Last week, I heard a story on the radio that rated the Midwest, specifically the major metropolitan close to the suburb I reside in, as one of the hardest working cities in America.

No doubt, many who heard this locally puffed their chests out a little bit with pride. Others perhaps slightly lamented this fact, as they thought about the hours put in to their specific jobs and all the things they’d rather be doing. Both these groups and anyone in the middle carried on with their day, which was likely spent trying to impress someone else.

The brutal truth is this: We cede power of our self-worth to someone else’s opinion. In fact, we care way too much about what people think of us. We spend too much time wracking our brains over a comment someone makes, spinning it out of control in our own mind to the point of obsession.

Sadly, we let this define us. From our self-worth to emotional balance, we are infinitely more worried about someone’s opinion reign supreme over what we say we value.

Actions must always speak louder than words, and sometimes you’d be amazed at where you will find a voice of reason. I’d never given much thought to Rashard Mendenhall, an NFL running back who just announced over the weekend he was retiring at age 26. I did not know what his likes or his interests were, nor that they would even be close to my own.

In fact, upon hearing of his retirement, the immediate reaction I heard on talk radio was that of ridicule, mostly because why would someone throw away a promising NFL career at 26? All that money! All that fame!

mendenhallThen, you read Mendenhall’s thoughtful comments, delivered without a press conference or fanfare, and you get it. Or at least you should. He speaks of the changes in our society and not finding a way to fit in:

Today, game-day cameras follow the most popular players on teams; guys who dance after touchdowns are extolled on Dancing With the Starters; games are analyzed and brought to fans without any use of coaches tape; practice non-participants are reported throughout the week for predicted fantasy value; and success and failure for skill players is measured solely in stats and fantasy points. This is a very different model of football than the one I grew up with. My older brother coaches football at the high-school and youth level. One day he called me and said, “These kids don’t want to work hard. All they wanna do is look cool, celebrate after plays, and get more followers on Instagram!” I told him that they might actually have it figured out.

And he is absolutely correct. Times have changed, rapidly so, over the past 10 to 15 years. The increasingly connected world we have created through technology makes it a more social place, but a less emotional one. We do just kinda want to look cool.

If we look hard-working, put together and speak well, watch all the right shows and drive the right cars, then we’ve got what exactly? A meaningless, consumer-driven existence that we have built solely on what others think is meaningful or cool.

And that group of “others” is a rabid bunch, documenting every up-and-down. One minute, you are beloved, the next, a bum. In this constant over analysis, we forget there are no experts, just opinions. And as we know, Americans have lots of opinions – and we are paid and unpaid to share them.

As Mendenhall says:

There is a bold coarseness you receive from non-supporters that seems to only exist on the Internet. However, even if you try to avoid these things completely — because I’ve tried — somehow they still reach you. If not first-hand, then through friends and loved ones who take to heart all that they read and hear. I’m not a terribly sensitive person, so this stuff never really bothered me. That was until I realized that it actually had an impact my career. Over my career, I would learn that everything people say behind these computer and smartphones actually shape the perception of you — the brand, the athlete and the person.

Perception shaping reality? Around these parts? No… you don’t say. There is a snowball effect to perception, one of the lessons we did not learn from early educational books. And when we start to feel its effects, it damages us in many, many ways.

From our parents, to our coaches, our teachers and friends, we begin to rapidly care about what other people think of us. In a vacuum, influence is not necessarily a bad thing. When it changes who we are, why we do or do not do certain things, then influence holds too much power over us.

It strips away individuality that produces well-balanced and centered people. There is certainly enough room for all of us, with our various likes and interest, just not enough acceptance. We’re all like the movie “Mean Girls” and life continues to operate like the cool kids table in the cafeteria. That is, if you let it.

Mendenhall is getting out of professional football, at least to my understanding of what he’s saying because he is a person of various interests who wants to live a full and complete life. He’s done the NFL and it was fun, but now, it’s time for something else.

Over my career, because of my interests in dance, art and literature, my very calm demeanor, and my apparent lack of interest in sporting events on my Twitter page, people in the sporting world have sometimes questioned whether or not I love the game of football. I do. I always have. I am an athlete and a competitor. The only people who question that are the people who do not see how hard I work and how diligently I prepare to be great — week after week, season after season. I take those things very seriously. I’ve always been a professional. But I am not an entertainer. I never have been. Playing that role was never easy for me. The box deemed for professional athletes is a very small box. My wings spread a lot further than the acceptable athletic stereotypes and conformity was never a strong point of mine. My focus has always been on becoming a better me, not a second-rate somebody else. Sometimes I would suffer because of it, but every time I learned a lesson from it. And I’ll carry those lessons with me for the rest of my life.

steve-jobsThese are lessons we have all previously learned and now ignored. How many times are you questioned? Daily? Weekly? If you do not do whatever everyone else is doing or how they would do it, then obviously you must not love it or care about it, right? There is an unprecedented level of competition that has entered our minds – a battle between others and ourselves. A game of one-upsmanship, where anything you can do I can do better. I care more about my job than you do because you did not respond to the “urgent” e-mail at 10:05pm last night.

But rarely is that so. Most of us care. Most of us try. But this fight to keep perspective, it is a challenging one. It would be nice – yet unrealistic – if we all just believed when someone said they were working on it, taking care of it or that they tried their best.

Let your actions be your words.

Worried about your height and if people think you are too short or too tall? Worrying about it won’t make you grow, or shrink. Your ancestors and the gene pool took care of that long before now.

Worried about what clothes you wear, what car you drive, how you talk or what others will say when you meekly admit to having never watched “The Wire” or “Breaking Bad”? Why? What does any of that mean or say about you anyway?

To be proud of who you are and what you like is to be an individual, which means you are different. You are not just one of the crowd. We are not cattle, to be prodded toward unity. In the modern age, ridicule and harsh words are used as scorching prods and we are well branded by each other.

Mendenhall’s final statement rings most true:

As for the question of what will I do now, with an entire life in front of me? I say to that, I will LIVE! I plan to live in a way that I never have before, and that is freely, able to fully be me, without the expectation of representing any league, club, shield or city. I do have a plan going forward, but I will admit that I do not know how things will totally shape out. That is the beauty of it! I look forward to chasing my desires and passions without restriction, and to sharing them with anyone who wants to come along with me!

I could not think of anything better: a decision to be and live freely, without worry of judgment without expectation of what everyone else thinks.

We all kind of have a plan, but cannot begin to predict how it will play out. Uncool and unpopular and un-put together as that may seem, we could all afford to be called some of the most passionate people on the planet, who follow dreams and see what the road of life has in store. What if we were called some of the most relaxed, or even-keel, down-to-earth people in America?

Now that would be a statistic based on opinion I could learn to care about.

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