Friday, November 21, 2008

More Violent Dreams

I'm not a violent person. In fact, I'm a pacifist in ideology and in temperament. But for a while now I've been having particularly violent dreams. I don't know what's causing them, possibly stress from work. Or maybe my two years of dabbling in medical malpractice etched some deep morbidity into my sub-conscious and I'll never be the same again. Who knows. I don't entirely mind them, because it's nice to wake up from bad dreams and experience that feeling of relief as you realize that it isn't real.

Last night I had a whopper of a nightmare. I dreamt that I was walking down a dark alley in some city. There were two kids walking behind me. Although they were just talking to each other and joking around, it suddenly occurred to me they were going to mug me. Then, out of the corner of my eye, I saw a gun pointed at my head. Before I could say anything I heard the gun go off and I felt the bullet go through my brain. My body went limp and I dropped to the ground. Everything started fading to black and I knew I was going to die right there. I couldn't move and my only thought was how terribly sad it was going to be when Priya found out. She wouldn't understand how I could be shot dead on the street for no reason. After a few seconds, was dead. I looked down on myself as I started to float away.

Then I woke up. My heart was pounding and I was breathing hard.

I lied there for a couple seconds and then rolled over and kissed Priya and Maddie who were both lying next to me. Priya didn't really wake up but she rolled over and put her arm across my shoulder.

When I was thinking about the dream today it occurred to me that I actually was mugged once, or almost mugged really, by two kids in a dark alley. It happened in New Orleans, only two or three days before I moved to LA for law school. I was walking around the French Quarter at about 3 am on a Wednesday night. I had been out late with some friends and was trying to remember where I had parked my car. At some point I realized that two guys were following me. One was just a kid. The other was older and looked like a criminal. He had a full grill and short dread locks. He looked pissed off. At some point the older guy told me to hold up. Although my gut told me to just start sprinting away, I reluctantly stopped. The guy asked me for change for a bus fair. I told him I didn't have any change and kept walking. I turned a few corners and walked couple blocks away, but they cut me off at one intersection. I started walking up another street and maybe got ten yards away when I heard one of them running up behind me. I turned around just as the older guy was taking a wild swing at my head. The punch just glanced off my face and knocked my glasses onto my head. I thought the glasses had landed somewhere on the street and I didn't realize they had stayed on my head until the episode was over.

I had managed to push the guy past me in the direction that his wild swing was taking him. But then he got back in my face and started yelling, "So you ain't got no change huh, bitch?" or something like that. I put my fists up -- seriously, I did -- and said, "I don't have anything for you." The younger kid watched us from about ten feet away. He looked nervous and I felt like he wasn't going to bother me. But the other guy was threatening me, staying now a few feet away.

My friends had told me stories about having guns pulled on them in the French Quarter. It had literally happened to two or three of my co-workers, all late a night when no one else was around. No one else was on our street. So I was expecting the guy to pull a gun out at any moment. In fact, I was sure it was going to happen. I was just waiting for him to pull it out and I was going to give him my money. (Yes, I realize how gay that sounds.)

But he didn't pull out a gun. In fact, after a couple seconds of him staring me down, I just turned around and walked away. I had no idea if the guy was going to follow me, but he just walked away too. I never saw either of them again.

I was told later that the tactic is to surprise people with a punch and knock them to the ground. But muggers don't want to risk fighting someone straight up without an advantage. Apparently the guy was trying to stun me and then they were going to pile it on.

After I got a couple blocks away from the guys I realized that I still had to find my car. With no police officers in sight, I went back to where I thought my car was parked, peering around corners before starting off in a direction. Eventually I found it, locked the doors and went home. The next day I had nothing to show for the incident except a slightly red cheek. I wasn't sure if I should even tell people about it. I told my boss and I think he thought I was making it up. Oh well.

It's been a while since I've thought about that night in New Orleans. My dream last night rekindled the same feelings I had had that evening. Mostly, the feeling that I was going to die alone on an unfamiliar street because of someone's random act of violence. It's a terrible feeling for sure.

Anyway, the point is that I hope I'm always lucky enough to be able to wake up from such violence and enjoy the love and comfort that only a half-asleep wife can provide.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Comparing the NFL to the NBA

Last Monday night I was flipping back and forth between the Monday night football game involving the Kurt Warner led Cardinals (the old Jesus freak is apparenlty still at it) and the Shaun Hill led 49ers (I don't know who he is either), and the Celtics/Raptors game. Both games were dubbed "great" and even "classic" by the post-game space fillers. For me, the two games epitomized how I feel about the NBA and the NFL.

Lets start with the NFL. I've never been a huge fan. I've always watched it, but I've never cared too much about it. I've never fully invested myself in a team, except that I genuinely hated the 1990's Dallas Cowboys dynasty. Despite my dislike for the Cowboys, the home team of my youth, the Redskins, never really compelled my rooting interest. Why? For starters, growing up on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, I never associated myself with Washington DC or anywhere else on the "western shore," as it should be known. In fact, I was taught to believe that people from the western shore were all helpless idiots who we tolerated in our little towns for the sake of making a few bucks off them. But they were Baltimorans and Washington dirt bags -- all helpless fools who would die quickly in a state of nature. Now I could have been pulled into the Skins had they had a particular player that I cared about. I loved the O's because they had Cal Ripkin and, for a while, Harold Baines, who was from my home town. But the Skins have always had boring players. When they won the Super Bowl in 1991, they were led by Mark Rippen and Art Monk, two of the most boring players in NFL history. Can you remember anything about either of those two guys other than Mark Rippen's crater face? Me neither.

Now, rooting loyalties aside, the NFL has always struck me as an impersonal game where the stars hide behind helmets and frequently come and go before you can really get to know them. The only avenue for self-expression is annoying and contrived end-zone dances that stopped being fun in 1984 or thereabouts. It's also a game that's bogged down by drive-killing penalties and conservative play calling. I can't watch a game with Priya without her getting all indignant about failed run plays up the middle. "That's so stupid," she says. "Why didn't he just run around those guys?" she says. "Because he would have taken a loss," I tell her. "It was better for him to just go nowhere."

So the NFL a game of risk avoidance and clock management that is occasionally punctuated by incredible displays of athleticism. But those displays of athleticism tend to involve familiar things -- a breakaway run, a great catch, a great throw, a big hit, an interception run back for a touchdown. Rarely do you see anything that makes your jaw drop.

In the entire 22 or so years that I can remember watching the NFL, there has been one player that excited me to the point of jubilation (no, not Tom Brady): Barry Sanders. Barry Sanders was a virtuoso in the backfield who ran like a gazelle among a field of retarded water buffalo. He did things with the football that made you laugh and giggle. He took risks that no other running backs could afford to take and frequently took big losses as a result. But even if he took a loss, even if his team was never that good, Barry's brilliance always made him fascinating to watch. Not one player in the NFL today has that quality.

That brings me to the Monday Night game. It was a game that ended with a goal line stop as time ran out for the Niners. The final was 29-24, Cardinals. If I remember correctly, the Niners had four plays and about 45 seconds left to get the ball into the end zone from 5 yards out. The first play was a spike. The second play was a run that fell two yards short. Then the Niners let about 30 seconds run off the clock before spiking the ball. The final play was a run up the middle that fell short again. Game over. The Niners lost, having wasted a down and calling a horrible final play. This supposed climactic finish capped off a game that had 20 penalties called for a total of 160 yards lost. One penalty brought back an interception that was returned for a touchdown.

It was a terrible game. Poorly played. Poorly officiated. Frustratingly slow. Like so many NFL games, the outcome was determined by penalties, poor clock management, and poor play calling. But since the game came down to a goal line stop, it was deemed a classic of Monday night football. When it was over, Kurt Warner thanked Jesus 47 times in one sentence and Stewart Scott continued to embarrass black people everywhere. And I said to myself, "This is why I hate the NFL."

Now, lets contrast that with the Celtics/Raptors game. Despite the NBA season just having kicked off, the Celtics/Raptors game was indeed an instant classic. It was a surprisingly chippy game from the get go and by the third quarter it felt like the 7th game of the Eastern Conference Finals. In the 3rd quarter, Kevin Garnett, who had worked himself into rage coming out of half-time with the Celtics down by 12, decided to cover the Raptor's pointguard, Jose Calderon. Just think about how ridiculous this is for a second. A 7' man guarding a quick, 6' point guard all the way up the court? KG is probably the only 7' man alive who is quick enough and athletic enough pull it off. The funny thing is, KG didn't just pull it off, he terrorized Calderone, nearly poking the ball away several times with his long arms.

Not to mention that as he hounded Calderon up the court, Garnett clapped his hands, pointed a finger in Calderon's face and shouted obscenities at him. After Calderon passed the ball off and a whistle blew, Calderon got back in Garnett's face and shouted back. To his credit, Calderon didn't back down. But Garnett had clearly gotten into his head. Garnett walked over the bench with a smile on his face for the first time all game.

But the real story of the night was Paul Pierce rallying the Celtics back from the dead by scoring 22 points in the 4th quarter. The Truth did it in classic Truth fashion -- he got insanely hot, hit about three heat-check jumpers in a row, and spun, spun, spun his lanky body to the hoop. He claimed the lead for the Celtics with less than 2 minutes left. It was a complete 4th quarter roll of the Raptors who walked off the court with their heads down, presumably saying to themselves, "If we only had someone like Paul Pierce to finish games for us." The amazing thing is, Pierce did it all with a sprained wrist. It was something I wasn't even aware of until I read about it the next day. Though it's not at all surprising.

Paul Pierce was stabbed in the neck, chest and face 11 times before the 2000-2001 season. He had to undergo lung surgery to repair the damage. You would think that that would have screwed with his game a little bit? Well, the Truth was in the starting lineup for the first game of the season -- less than two months after the incident -- and started all 82 games that season. He had a great year and has never said much about the stabbing. To say that Paul Pierce is a gamer or a tough dude doesn't begin to give him justice. He's a warrior from another era, a guy you would want beside you on the battlefield for lack of a better cliche.

But here's the great thing about the NBA: If you were to rank the most compelling and interesting players in the league, Paul Pierce probably wouldn't crack the top five. Though it's known as a league of prima donnas, it's really a league of warriors, phenoms and virtuosos. There are so many superstars who have risen out of troubled pasts, take Iverson and Carmelo for example, or Loul Deng who happens to be a Sudanese refugee, that it's easy to forget about a guy like Paul Pierce who was once stabbed 11 times. The NBA is also a league of freaks and curiosities, like Yao Ming and Nate Robinson. There are also villains like Kobe Bryant, Bruce Bowen, Ron Artest, and Tim Donaghy, and good guys like Tim Duncan, Shane Battier, and Derrick Fisher. And then there are heros like Lebron, Pierce and D-Wade. They all have something different to offer but they all, in their own ways, will make you giggle.

So I've always loved the NBA. It's soap opera, sport and mythology all colliding before your eyes. It's a sport where the athletes shine and improvisation and creativity abound. As David Thorpe says, if football is played with military precision, basketball is jazz. Great teams like great bands, have the right mix of complimentary musicians. And when the mix is right, the results are a joy to behold.

Those are my thoughts. Let me know what you think.

Friday, September 26, 2008

BABY ROSIE!














Had to post this cute picture of my baby niece, Rosalee, with Nan, her great grandmother. We get to see Rosie this Christmas and can't wait! Hopefully we'll get to see Nan before too long as well.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Tahiti and Moorea

So Priya and I recently got back from our romantic getaway to Tahiti and Moorea. We were in Tahiti for three days and then took a ferry over to Moorea for another four days. Here's a brief description of our trip and the islands.

Tahiti is the largest and most populated island in French Polynesia, though, by comparison, it's a little smaller than Oahu and considerably less populated (175,000 people compared to 800,000 people living on Oahu). The first thing you notice about Tahiti is the dramatically steep, green mountains that rise up into the clouds.














This is a picture of Papeete, Tahiti's largest city, as seen from our ferry returning from Moorea. Despite the few big hotels you can see in this picture, it's actually a quaint city...reminds me of a mix between a much larger Avalon (on Catalina Island) and New Orleans' French Quarter. It has sidewalk cafes, an open air market, and a certain sleaziness that would probably turn off some American travelers. Of course, everyone in Tahiti speaks French and/or Tahitian, with English being a widely spoken third language.

Papeete was cool but this vacation was all about relaxing on the beach.















Tahiti has almost entirely black sand beaches as it is a volcanic sort of place. (I wish I could say that I took this photo but I actually downloaded from Wikipedia...we somehow managed to not take any pictures of the black sand beaches.)

Our resort had one of the few non-black sand beaches on the island. We spent lots of time lying on the beach and around the pool at our resort. Tahiti is the kind of place where you can shamelessly lie around for days because, frankly, there isn't a whole lot else to do. It's a guilt free beach vacation in paradise.















Here's another picture of the same view at sunset. The island that you see in the distance is Moorea, which means yellow lizard.














We did manage to go on a half-day 4X4 tour up into Tahiti during which we saw some cool waterfalls and swam in a beautiful river. Here's a pic from that excursion.
















After our time in Tahiti we took off on a ferry to Moorea. Physically, Moorea is distinctively paw shaped with two nearly symmetrical bays on the northern side of the island that are separated by a mountainous peninsula. Here's what I'm talking about:













This aerial photo shows the two bays. You can also see them in these next two photos.














This is Cook's Bay, named after Captain Cook who, as we were told a thousand times, actually landed in Oponohu Bay and never went to Cook's Bay. Cook was not the first European explorer to reach the island but rather the third behind fellow Brit Samuel Wallis and Frenchie Louis Antoine de Bougainville, both of whom arrived in the 1760's. Wallis was ill and didn't stay long enough to make much of an impact. Bougainville and his men, however, had a good old time. They were greeted by the natives with outrigger canoes filled with fruit and women, the implication clearly being that the men were to each choose a woman of their liking and make sweet love. Bougainville's men happily oblidged. Many of them actually abandoned the captain and ran off with their native girlfriends. Surprisingly, Bougainville appreciated that the Tahitian's didn't have an "ownership society" like we got here in America, and tolerated a good amount of theivery as well as the looseness of the women.

Cook, however, was not as liberal-minded and destroyed some of the villagers' homes after a goat was stolen from his men. He also locked up some of the island's chief's in order to get back a few of his men who had run off with their own native girlfriends. While Cook didn't seem to enjoy the people of Moorea, they were apparently amused by Cook and often stole things from him only to give them back a few days later. It must have been love-hate relationship because Cook returned to the island twice and was warmly welcomed on both occassions, or so we were told.















In this picture, taken from the same spot, you can see Oponohu Bay.

Moorea is maybe 1/3 the size of Tahiti and has only 16,000 residents. It takes about an hour and half to drive the one road around the entire island. Actually, there is one other road that goes up to the lookout from where these pictures were taken. From there you can hike out into the island's jungles. We did exactly that and found some cool stuff, including ruins of several old temples and this monstrous banyan (or banyan-like) tree. It's hard to judge the size of the tree from this picture but it was easily 30 feet around. I climbed it a little before Priya made me get down. Oh to be a kid again.















Okay, so the interior of Moorea is cool, but the main attraction is the warm turquoise waters that surround the island and all of the cool stuff that lives in the water. The picture at the very bottom of the blog is the view from the end of the dock near our bungalow. This next picture is of Priya looking serene on the "dock" of our bungalow.













The little buoys in the water are marking a coral garden so that kayakers don't bump into it. There was great snorkeling all around our bungalow. Priya even got into it and she generally doesn't take to swimming.















This is another picture of our resort in Moorea. Again, not a bad place to lie around.

Other highlights of Moorea included feeding sting rays, swimming with black tipped sharks and eating some delicious fresh seafood.














The rays are not at all afraid to swim right up to you. In fact, they hover around like pigeons waiting to be fed...like demonic water pigeons.

All in all, Moorea is one of three most breathtakingly beautiful places I have ever been. (The other two being Kaua'i and Rocky Mountain National Park.) I would live on that little island for the rest of my life if Priya would come with me. Maybe if McCain wins I can convince her.



Someday.