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Entries from October 2009

The Importance Of Hobbies

October 29, 2009 · 2 Comments

Like so many others, I have developed a pretty extensive collection of hobbies in my short 27 years on earth. My most recent hobby -as readers of this blog are well aware – has been surfing and in the 2 short years that I have had it in my life it has become a pretty central passion, one that I hope proves to be more than a mere blip in the story of me. I was fortunate enough to get some time out in the water this weekend and as usual I found time to reflect on my own thoughts.

Each of my passions have either served as a teaching example for an important facet of life or provided me with a metaphor for life in general, allowing me the opportunity to pull out whatever lessons I was able to interpret. It dawned on me while surfing that this is likely the case for all of us and it is likely what encourages us to fixate on a small number of activities – sometimes so intensely that other areas of life are forgotten or ignored. I guess the reality is this: it is far easy to conquer a metaphor for life than life itself.

Likely born out of my passion to my hobbies, I have always felt like they presented a glimpse of life in general. With water polo it seemed pretty clear. Success was largely determined by the work that went in. Training was difficult but the rewards seemed to pay out. Like other team sports there was often that goal of achieving more as a team than the sum of the parts – that sneaking suspicion that a mystical energy can be created by the harnessing of individual talents into a team effort.

Of course, like so many things in life there were obvious problems. Some seemed to be blessed with far too much natural talent – and it frustrated me (and others) that what took us hours of hard work to achieve took others no more than minimal input. Later I learned that this is true of all things in life, although lately I have begun to question even that basic rule in the place of another: sometimes the people who seem to have it easiest face challenges and obstacles you could not begin to imagine.

Perhaps the most intruiging thing about water polo is that so much of the sport takes place out of the eyeline of others. Each player, just like each person in society, is faced with the dilemma of how far to push things in their favor against what the rules allow. Some take great liberties, others respect the game and the rules and stay within the boundaries of the game.  Just like in life, some of those that cheat get away with it and we learn that sometimes the “winners” often achieve that status through means that others would not even contemplate.

With any luck, in water polo or life in general you find your little niche and you determine your balance of hard work and payoff and of respect for the game and what falls in your favor. Happiness is relevant and some players are happy with one win – others only happy with 50 wins. I found similar feelings in surifng and perhaps that is what drew me to it.

I found water polo at a time in my life where I was attempting to learn what it took to be “successful” in life. How to get into a college, how to win a job, how to earn money etc. I suppose the lessons that water polo seemed to teach were particualiry apt for that time in my life and I imagine this was a large function of the pull I felt to the sport. Soon enough I realized that success and happiness were not necessarily the same thing and that among the lessons water polo provided there was no insight into the more meaningful areas of life. I am happy to say that surfing provides that.

There were many mornings – especially in the beginning – where it seemed exceptionally painful to pull myself out of a warm bed, jump into the freezing cold water, and get beat up by an endless barrage of waves. But every morning I got up and did it. I spent hours upon hours with my teeth chattering, my arms aching and tired, and my nose running – all for a few seconds of bliss. The more I practiced and the more work that went into my hobby then those seconds of bliss turned into minutes – but no matter how much improvement came the ratio of work to bliss stayed pretty top heavy. But that ratio is the same one we all face in life. We all spend our time paddling in the cold, putting ourselves through hardship just for chance of those few seconds of bliss: marriage, family vacations, holidays, grandkids and anything else that puts a smile on our face. Maybe we need the hardship to appreciate the bliss. Or maybe there is a spiritual presence in this world who just wants to see us earn it. Either way it seems to be a simple formula and ever since I began surfing I find myself far more accepting of all the paddling we have to do.

There was a time when I was starting out with surfing that I watched the professionals and the really good surfers catching waves and dreamed that one day that could be me. I was like the 18 year old kid who looked out and saw a whole world out there and decided that one day it would be his. But like so often in life, a couple of years in I have found my relative niche. I like my spot on the outside of the line-up. Enough waves to keep me happy, not so many that I have to sacrifice other areas of my life to keep up. I hope that’s a lesson I can always remember.

I don’t know what the future holds for me and my surfing passion. Perhaps other hobbies will present themselves or perhaps surfing will continue to provide the insight needed to make life seem easier. Either way, it has helped me recognize some very important lessons that I hope all eventually learn – through whatever means get them there. There is a whole ocean of experiences out there that we are all a part of. Sure, it may seem that some are catching more waves or perhaps lucky enough to find bigger waves but hopefully we can find peace in the waves we get. Surfing has helped me do that. Sometimes complicated things simply need to be broken down to a level where the answers are a little more obvious. Few things are as complicated as life; thankfully we have our hobbies there to make things seem just a little simpler.

Categories: About Me · Society At Large · Sports · Surfing

Where Men Win Glory

October 15, 2009 · 1 Comment

As most of the people who read this blog are aware, I have been reading the new Jon Krakauer book, “Where Men Win Glory”, an in-depth account of the life of Pat Tillman. It is a fascinating book, obviously endowed in large part by the fascinating subject that Pat Tillman was. The book is both terribly tragic and terribly inspiring and it paints a picture of a complex man whose legacy has been largely shaped by people who had never met him. Krakauer’s reputation of accuracy and character development hold strong and what remains is a complete and honest portrayal of a remarkable man – one certainly worthy of a book. It is comprised of his journal entries, in-depth interviews with the people who knew him best, and interviews of eye-witnesses to the many phases of his life. While the book is essentially the story of a man, much of the focus is understandably on his participation and ultimate death in both the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

I have acquaintences who are enlisted and have been deployed to battle. Thankfully, they have come back safe and frankly I have never had a conversation with them about their experiences, thoughts, or opinions. I have paid attention to the war but only superficially. The occasional article, documentary, or news segment. The 344 pages of “Where Men Win Glory” changed this though, giving me a human face to attach to the continuing conflict.

This got me thinking about how funny human nature is; that nothing becomes real until we experience it ourselves or through someone we feel close to. We formulate opinions with no true insight or experience yet we rigidly hold those opinions as fact – that is until someone close to us proves us wrong. I had my opinions on the war but the truth is that like so many others my opinions were based on assumptions and minimal knowledge. While I am opposed to war in general, I was exceptionally opposed to this one, a fact owing more to my own beliefs regarding the men in Washington who were pushing the war than any true understanding of the argument. I am not going to go into whether or not this book changed my position on this war (it did not). My blog entry goal is instead to discuss the thoughts I had as I closed the book and reflected upon what I had learned.

I am ashamed to discover how guilty I am of intellectual laziness. I took the easy way out, turned a few feelings into foundational assumptions, and put it to bed. We all do this I know, but this book reminded me that we can all be slapped in the face when and if we come across a human objection to our world view. We oppose illegal immigration until we meet an illegal immigrant and discover how honest, hard working, and genuine they might be. We oppose gay marriage until we meet our gay son’s boyfriend. We oppose stem cell research until one of our beloved is diagnosed with Alzheimers. The scary part of this is that most of us truly live our lives untouched by the very causes we fight for. We live in our safe bubbles avoiding the very experiences that could perhaps provide meaningful insight into the opinions we hold. I wonder how many people who fight on either side of the abortion debate have actually have been touched by abortion. Or how many people supporting or opposing a war have experienced it in a capacity deeper than print or visual media.

I understand the roots of this behavior. It is human nature to want to take sides and formulate opinions. Furthermore, policies cannot be established that take into account case-by-case basis’. And so we simplify, assume, extrapolate, and synthesize and eventually create our own beliefs based on what comes out. We carry along content and confident in our worlds so sure that our side is righteous. And then sometimes our world gets shaken – someone or something close to us comes and points out to us that that which we thought we knew is in fact far more complicated then we ever cared to discover. Some of us learn from this and we take our next steps in life far more curious, open-minded, and inquisitive than ever before. But many others do not learn this lesson. They remain detached and confident in their other views – certain that those assumptions are still fact despite evidence otherwise.

If nothing else this book reminded me that we do not know all that we think we do. We humans have been blessed with tremendous intellect and what I believe we owe in return is a commitment to challenge, question, explore, and learn. To never settle on opinions because we have seen a few supporting pieces of evidence. The world is an exceedingly complex place and it is increasingly difficult to fight the urge to make things black and white – it makes that complexity seem less daunting. But I hope we can all recognize that this results in flawed decision making and more importantly that someday we may find ourselves proven wrong by the very people and things closest to us. Pat Tillman unfortunately gave his life to learn this lesson. With any luck his story will prevent more from the same fate.

Categories: Politics · Society At Large