First thought after finishing this "Man, what a fun book."
The day after getting laid (off), I took a stroll to the TJs by the river, picked up some dried mango, and found this at McNally&Jackson. Thought it could be a good antidote for what ails me and it was!
Hollander covers everything from neuroscience to racism to sexism to the loneliness/opioid epidemic to open democracy to alternative models of banking. Basketball, of course, the solution to all of these. He oversells it and the connections are tenuous, but it's a creative lens combining a lot of things that interest me.
I found it fun, romantic, inspiring, invigorating, and simply interesting. Full of so many gorgeous quotes about this game I love and how it can help this world I love. It evoked a lot of memories. Shooting 100 free throws in sixth grade on Tuesday nights with my dad. David and Goliath battles against my oldest brother Pat. Lil pick and roll chemistry with Jack Mirabito. Base high sets with Coach McMahon. Dribbling in the garage during 15 min contact tracing breaks. Shooting around whenever there's a lot on the mind.
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Two particular passages rejuvenated me.
Ubuntu (pg. 19 -21), the African philosophy that guided the 2008 Celts to banner 17, translated as "I am because we are". Obama described Ubuntu as Mandela's "greatest gift... his recognition that we are all bound together in ways that can be invisible to the eye; that there is a oneness to humanity." The common humanity of man!! This is the principle that has long been the North Star in my life, that prompted my supply chain obsession. It is not solely spiritual; it is material. We are connected to every and all through materiality. The pages of this book were once light, made to tree, cut to log, formed to paper. This is because we are.
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Transcendance (pg. 259-261). Hollander writes that "Basketball is about air... We must fly. Or, we must dare to dream to fly. That dream is a basketball dream." Pope Francis on Basketball "Yours is a sport that lifts you up to the heavens, because, as a former player once said, it is a sport that looks upwards, towards the basket, and so it is a real challenge for all those who are used to living with their eyes always on the ground." I fell in love with basketball because of my roots and it continues through my branches. My whole childhood I was obsessed with Irishness. In second grade, I tried to do a project on Brian Boru. In fourth grade, I did a project on the Irish language. In fifth grade, all I wanted for Christmas was an Irish cap like my grandfathers had. When I found out that there was a professional sports team called the Celtics, with an Irish leprechaun as a logo, it sparked the obsession of a lifetime.
I wasn't naturally drawn to sports. I was a fat kid. I sucked at little league. I didn't stand a chance in soccer. Could hardly throw a football. But the existence of a basketball team named after my roots, sprouted a love. I fell in love with the Celts. I fell in love with basketball. I played every day at recess in fourth grade. I tried out for the travel team in fifth grade. I got cut. Tried again next year, made it.
Like all loves, it ebbed and flowed. The game hurt me and I hurt the game. It always remained the solace.
Last year at New Years, after the tumultuous trifecta of a breakup, a job loss, and a move, I decided I needed a goal. Not a grandiose one like years past, but a simple one: Dunk. In Hollander's words, air. During the malaise of living and working at home, I'd put on 30 pounds. I used to be able to throw down, but now I was a ground bound mound of rebound. Equipped with a goal, I had my branches. Ulysses, to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
Armed with a godsend of a gym, we strived, we sought, we found, and we did not yield. And, man does a two hand slam feel fucking good.
Basketball is about air... We must fly. Or, we must dare to dream to fly.
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The 13 Principles are:
- Cooperation
- Balance of Individual and Collective
- Balance of Force and Skill
- Positionlessness
- Human Alchemy
- Make it Global
- Gender Inclusive
- No Barrier to Access
- For the Outsider, the Other, and the Masses
- Urban and Rural
- Antidote to Isolation and Loneliness
- Sanctuary
- Transcendence