Category Archives: Writing

Why Osama bin Laden’s death isn’t necessarily good for America

Like everyone else tonight, I am happy that one of the most hateful and horrible people the world has ever known has left us for good. However, I am hesitant to celebrate its implications.

Bin Laden is unarguably one of the most influential people of all time. His name alone has literally changed the foreign policy of not only our country, but many of our allies. Because of Osama bin Laden and the threat of his al-Qaeda cronies, we have spent trillions of dollars, sacrificed tens of thousands of soldiers, and have waged multiple wars in the Middle East. Because of him we have changed how security and civil liberties work in this country. Because of him, we have changed our way of life in order to protect ourselves.

Now, he is dead. Here are 2 reasons why that isn’t necessarily good news:

1. More Terrorists – Bin Laden’s death will undoubtedly cause major backlash. His single death, killed at the hands of the United States Military, has just spawned dozens, if not hundreds, of more terrorists. For the past ten years we have drone-bombed and demolished houses, killed non-combatants, and have destroyed homes in the name of fighting “terror” abroad. Each non-combatant killed, each house destroyed, creates dozens more terrorists – dozens more America-haters.* They do not hate our freedom. They hate when they see their homes destroyed and their family killed – just as we hated it when it happened to us in New York City in 2001. Let us stop giving bin Laden’s supporters a reason to hate us.

*(I do here concede that there are many citizens who are also happy to see us in their country, helping defend them from the same terrorists)

2. Prolonged Wars – Bin Laden’s death will surely be used as bait in the coming years (and especially in the coming election year) of why we should be involved in more conflicts in the Middle East. It will be used as justification for why we are in Libya and Afghanistan. It will be used as justification on why we should invade Iran or send ground troops into Libya. But we cannot protect our sovereignty by forcing others to forego theirs.

I am very glad that Osama bin Laden is gone – but let’s be careful when we think about its implications because it doesn’t mean the end of terrorism, It means a revamping of the enemy forces. Al-Qaeda is fragmented and spread across the entire region not because it is weakening, not because it is dying, but because that is how it functions best – in the shadows of a complex network that is nearly impossible to trace. That is the reason it took us nearly two decades to kill Osama bin Laden, while losing tens of thousands American, combatants and non-combatants alike.

We can only stop terrorism by giving people zero reason to be terrorists. If our true mission was to kill Osama, then we should come home now.

We shouldn’t be surprised to see another decade filled with terrorism, foreign engagements, and an expansion of our military bases that are now in 120 countries. Osama bin Laden may be dead, but that doesn’t mean America is safer.

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The End…

I should be studying. I should be doing some sort of project. Maybe for one of my many classes. School ends soon. I am going to get a job. Maybe in New York City. Soon, I will be a full master – and you will have to call me master. “Master Sheldon” is what you will have to call me. Don’t think I won’t make you do it. I will. Because I am a master, and you are more than likely not a master (well, unless you are a sibling of mine, then there is a good chance you are a master or doctor or something of that nature – like a coach – same difference).

I hope I can get these projects done. So I can be a master. And I can then have my evenings back. And my weekends. So I can rock climb, bike, run, do yoga, play soccer, parkour, and other awesome activities. I want to make movies again. I miss it. I must go get my video camera and shoot some things. Maybe another stop motion, with a little more direction this time. I have some ideas sketched out in my head. They are in my head because I feel it is a waste of time to put them down on paper. I can type 75 words a minute. I didn’t test it, I just know. When you are down by 3, in field goal range, and there is only 30 seconds left in the game, do not throw an interception – that tip is for free, but they won’t all be. Remember that. The featured picture in this post is something random that has nothing to do with this post, but I need to put one up anyway.I think I will choose a beach, because it makes me calm. Because of Peyton Manning, I kicked a very large hole in my wall – it was a very weak wall. I thought it was going to be a bit tougher, but my high karate-kick went through it like it was styrofoam. I will now have to make my way to the Home Depot and fix that before my landlord finds out. Sheldon out.

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My Past Two Weeks

Okay, Okay… I haven’t written anything in like two weeks. Do I apologize for this? No. Who are you to tell me when I should write? Do people hunger for my writing? Yes, I know they do. They hunger for it like a tiger cub hungers for its momma’s kill. But does the tiger momma always give its kill to the cub? No, sometimes the tiger momma eats the tiger cub instead. The point is, you get what you ask for sometimes. And if you ask and plead and beg enough to be fed, sometimes you get eaten. It’s a catch-22 actually… Ironic, it is not. Because irony doesn’t mean what people think it means. Someone taught me that. Interesting. But really, ironic does sort of mean what people think it means because thats what people think it means, so if people thinks that what it means then thats what it must mean. Who am I to argue? I know who I am: I am the author of this post, so I can believe anything I want. And I want to believe that when a tiger cub wants to be fed but instead gets eaten, that is irony. Done.

Now, this post is titled “My Last Two Weeks”, so lets get to it. I have been working. I have seen a few different places. I have been to a few different areas. I have seen a small variety of people. I have talked to a few more than that. That’s it. Honestly – that is all I have done. Granted, I could go into a lot more detail on a lot of those things, but who am I to tell you about my life? I am the author of this post, that’s  who. So sit back and listen.

Places I have been: Staten Island Ferry, subway station, work, my apartment, the street, inside, outside, upstairs, downstairs, others…

Things I have done: Worked, push-ups, sit-ups, chewed, ate, swallowed, drank, swallowed, typed, worked, worked some more, rode subway, waited for subway, read, studied, worked, rode subway, worked, rode subway, slept when I got the chance, watched Mad Men, others…

I’m done. I don’t want to tell you anymore. I have also taken some pictures. I went to Shatterbox’s first Salon (no fingernail painting going on unfortunately) and took pictures. I also went to a party for a thrift store whose owner Shatterbox is doing a video on and shot video of said owner doing things that Shatterbox could use for the video they are doing on the owner of a thrift shop that just had a birthday party which I attended. A picture  of the salon is here:

Salon now means a bunch of people sitting around talking about how awesome they are. In fact, they are awesome. I cannot deny this. They were all cooler than me. Do I believe this as I type it? No.

Currently it is Friday afternoon at 4pm and I am sitting in Brooklyn drinking a Hoegaarden while doing work. That is awesome. Back to things I have done recently: I hung out with my good friends Mackenzie and Sara from CMU and more specifically the English department and even more specifically my Literary Journalism class and even more specifically the two people who sat next to me for most of the semester. Then, last week, two more CMU compadres came and visited Mandy Mc. and their names are Brittney and Stephanie and though they blame me for getting kicked out of the Seinfeld restaurant because I was sitting on the subway while they were already sitting down in the restaurant and therefore were kicked out because they were waiting for me while I was sitting on the subway and the waitress wouldn’t let them sit there and wait because “we’re really busy!” I myself had nothing to do with such getting kicked out and in reality it should be those three who are blamed because it was their fault for sitting down before I was ready because oooohh someone has to come alll the way from friggin Brooklyn and just doesn’t happen to live a block or two away from the places they want to go but instead sits on the smelly puke-filled subway for hours on end just to get anywhere. We ate next door instead. I had an omelette. yum. You can see a picture of an omelette here though my omelette looked nothing like that thank the high heavens above because that one looks like it has pukey-subway green stuff squishing out of it like some nasty stuff on the subway leaks down into the tracks and not like the delicious omelette I had no no no no nothing like that all.

I have also seen Inception twice and if this is a surprise to you then you do not know me at all and if you have not yet seen Inception then consider our friendship canceled and if your name is Mary and you just though the movie was ehhhh then I cannot trust your movie taste anymore and shall now disregard you every time you say “I loved Leap Year starring Amy Adams!” but if you understand how awesome this movie, inception I remind you, really is then I think we can be friends so call me.

That has been my last two weeks and now if you’ll excuse me I have to go feed my pet baby tiger (do they call those cubs?)

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Ugh Subway. You’re gross.

Everyone knows about the horror that is the New York subway. Its disgusting attributes and colorful characters are well documented. There are the metal poles, which sometimes feel as if a large group of ragamuffin kids licked them to make them sticky for the sole reason that urinating on them would have a more adhesive result. Then there is the incredible lack of trains, which often leaves you sitting in subway stations for more than twenty minutes during peak time. This may not seem like a really long time to most people, but twenty minutes in a subway station feels like five hours of playing sports, three hours at work, and one hour in Hell. Then there is the stop-jerk motion that makes holding on to your lunch (the one that is already in your stomach) quite difficult. Speaking of which, let’s begin today’s story…

It was a lovely day. Birds chirping. Sun shining. Kerrin whistling. Everything was progressing quite nicely indeed. I had shaken off my last horrible occurrence on the subway and was being optimistic about today’s ride. As I made my way through the turnstile, the C train, my train, pulled into the station, gliding smoothly and silently right in front of me.

How wonderful! I thought. No waiting time at all! What a day!

I skipped my way towards the train and didn’t even have to break my gaily gate as the doors opened at the perfect moment. I swung my laptop bag over my left shoulder and held my plastic ‘Urban Luggage’ bag, holding extra supplies for the night’s soccer match, in my right hand, swinging it lightheartedly.

“Good morning, dear sir!” I said to the man playing an out of tune saxophone near the entrance. “What a lovely day!”

I looked around the subway car, noticing that despite its relative lack of bustling New Yorkers all of the seats were taken.

The first damper in a perfect day. I thought, for it is always harder to read my ridiculously heavy book (yes, my book is bigger than yours. Be intimidated) when I am standing than it is whilst seated. This is common knowledge so I won’t explain further. But then, what providence! I noticed a row near the end of the subway car that was only half full, plenty of space for both myself and my extremely large, smart-person’s book. Just then, a bright and cheerful ditty stuck up on my iPod and as I walked towards my seat I looked down to see what song it was. I never thought of looking up as I sat down on my unbelievably empty seat. I mean, everything had been going so well at this point, what could possibly go wrong? I placed my Urban Luggage tote bag between my legs and my messenger bag on the empty seat beside me.

I picked my bobbing-to-the-music-head up and smiled at a few people who I noticed were staring at me. I gave them my friendly eyes, but it didn’t seem to affect them, as it has so many others, and they continued to stare at me with less than friendly looks. But I paid no mind and looked the other way.

Then, from far, far away, I heard a faint whisper.

“Hey. Man.”

I listened closer, wondering if it was coming from somewhere deep inside my headphones. Maybe a trick that the musician put into his song. A subliminal message by a worldwide government perhaps! I heard it again, this time a bit louder.

“Hey man! Hey, hey, hey!”

I realized this time that it wasn’t coming from within my headphones, but miraculously, from outside them. I looked back to the small group of unfriendly faces. A man in the middle of the group was the one who spoke. I widened my eyes, as if to say “stop bothering me you dummy” or “what can I do for you, kind sir?” depending on how you interpret it. I’m not sure how he interpreted it because his only reaction was to sternly point at my crotch. How rude! I thought. Not to mention slightly inappropriate. But I followed his spiny index finger to where he was pointing and looked down between my knees, knowing what I would find there, but deciding to check anyway. As I lowered my head rather slowly and dramatically because I figured if this was a movie scene than that would be a cool way to do it and would go well with the current Muse song that just came on my iPod, I realized that he wasn’t pointing towards my crotch, but at the floor beneath my feet and bag. It was brown. And bumpy. And… squishy. I lifted my foot and watched as some sort of gooey substance stuck to the soles of my foot. I put it back on the ground and the floor gave a soft little splash.  My feet and bag were literally soaking in the largest pile of puke I had ever seen. It was spread out over a ten square foot area.

I looked back up. People were staring at me. They all had their hands over their mouths, some to stifle laughter, others to stifle reverse peristalsis. I considered putting on a brave face, leaning back with a smirk, and staying there as if to say “Yea, I saw that BP oil spill-sized puke all over the floor. What’s it to you?” But decided this would only exacerbate the situation, and stood up to move. I picked up my bag (waterproof!) and watched it drip puke like a leaky faucet as I moved to dry land.  Once there, I sat the bag down and slowly dragged the bag across the floor, leaving a pukey disaster in my wake. as if I were dragging a bloody corpse to the Hudson river for disposal, the puke bag left a trail that made it easy for anyone to track me as the pukey perpetrator. Like a sad character from Arrested Development I hung my head and stood by the door, putting myself in a self-inflicted ‘timeout’. When the subway stopped at the next station, I got off, dragging my pukey bag and a trail of guilt behind me.

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Story: Buried Where The Earth Meets The Sky

I have taken a few stabs at writing about this before, but I scrapped everything and started over again for this attempt. This was one of the most memorable moments of my year in China, so you can read about it again. You should enjoy it thoroughly. Read it. Now.



Buried where the land meets the sky

By Kerrin Sheldon

The box wasn’t big enough to hold a man.

It was a TV-box with blank sides and just large enough to hold a 32-inch TV screen – not an entire man.  Two men pulled it out of the back of an unmarked white van, windows tinted and engine running.  One of the men wore a bright orange shirt – the color of the prayer flags wrapping up the hillside – over his bulging belly and a brown cowboy hat with a red feather sticking out its side. The early morning sun sat low enough in the sky to evade the hat’s wide brim, bringing light to his face. His skin was dark, even for a man of Tibetan descent, and he had a thin, neatly trimmed moustache. The other man carrying the box was skinnier and his arms were straining from the weight. Two young monks, their long blood-red robes covered by black leather jackets, pulled their eyes away from their cell phones and came over to help the two men. Together, they pulled the box to the area designated by the Big Llama, the head monk of the area who had blessed the ground from the passenger seat of a silver coupe before leaving the Tibetan ritual in the hands of the Tomden, his right-hand man.

The box is not big enough to hold a man. I thought.

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Story: Free Lunch!

Here is a literary journalism piece I wrote about handing out free lunches to the homeless in Pittsburgh. It was a good time and I met some fun characters. Enjoy!



I. Blindness, A-Bud, and DJ

Diana held a folded piece of pizza in her hand. It was eaten down to the crust, and she had little intention of finishing it. She held it for security, like a drink at a party.

“The ministry is very hit and miss,” she was telling me. “Some days, when I think we’ll see a lot of people, we don’t see any, and then on the days I don’t expect to see anyone, we see tons. So, it is really hard to predict who we’ll see or how many people we’ll see.”

“I bet I won’t see anyone.” Rich, a blind man who worked with the ministry, was placing cheese on sandwiches and laughed at his own joke. “I won’t see anyone. Ha-ha.” Angela, a woman who was almost blind, turned to Rich as she put a sandwich in a paper bag. “Of course you won’t see anyone, Rich. You’re blind.”

I smiled and put a finished sandwich into a Ziploc bag and passed it to Angela. It was my first day working with the Homeless Ministry at First Trinity, a Lutheran Church in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Lead by Diana, every Sunday the ministry would make packed lunches before walking the streets of the Oakland and Squirrel Hill neighborhoods, looking for anyone who could use a free lunch. Participating in the walk today was Diana, myself, and a college student from Erie, PA named Matt.

“How do I not accidentally ask someone who isn’t homeless if they need a free lunch?” Matt asked after we had finished packing the lunches and began our walk on the city streets. I was glad he asked this, as it was something I had been worrying about myself.

“Well, make sure you don’t ask someone if they need a free lunch.” Diana replied. “Always ask them if they’d like or want a free lunch. Then you’re not implying they need it. And if they say no, then either just move along quickly or just tell them you had some extras, like: ‘I’m just trying to get rid of these, man!’” She demonstrated with a theatrical intonation of her voice then laughed at her own joke. Diana was a recent graduate and worked at a local homeless shelter through the Americorps program. She was short, but her pants barely reached her ankles. Her sweater hung loosely around her broad shoulders, and she had a Giant Eagle tote bag slung over them. Her voice was nasally, but it was smooth and gentle, like someone who was happy with having a perpetual cold.

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From The Vault: “Basketball in China”

Turns out, I am not very good at basketball.

 

I.

 

I knew this to be true before I ever came to China. But now I can say it is official.

Last weekend, after the banquet and too much Chinese liquor, I was recruited to play on a basketball team by a few men in the English department. At the time, I thought this was a fantastic idea; an activity that I could potentially dominate (due to me American-ness, the inventors and perfect-ers of the game), maybe have some fun, and hopefully be able to learn some new Chinese words and phrases, such as “shoot!”, “pass!”, “board!”, and “Oh my gosh! Look out for that ball coming straight at your face!” You know, things like that. Unfortunately, all of these inklings were astoundingly miscalculated.

So, on Thursday, September 18, 2008, I decided that I would join my new ‘friends’ and help lead them to victory in this, the most important of Chinese activities. I was confident with my being both American and white, the latter of which used to make me very self-conscious back home, or at least ever since I saw the movie “White Man Can’t Jump” a few years ago. But here, in China, I was very confident in both my athletic ability and my usually sports-deficient white skin.

I was picked up by one of the players on the team, a man 45 years of age and a rounded stature and whose name I definitely should have known but still can’t quite remember, and we rode the elevator downstairs and got into his own personal car, which is an anomaly and also an impressive show of wealth in China. I tried to make conversation as we rode over to the basketball courts, and despite the fact it was only a two-minute drive, this proved to be quite difficult. Although he was able to speak to me and make his wishes known, it was very difficult for him to comprehend anything that I was saying, making it very difficult for us to actually ‘converse’.

“What time does our game start?” I asked.           

“Yes,” he replied, “we go to the basketball courts.”

“Are we playing other teams from the school?”

“Yes, we go to basketball courts.”

“Do you play in a league?”

“Okay, It’s no problem.”

Alright then, I thought, good talk.

We pulled up to the basketball courts and I got out of the car. We walked up a set of stairs, still attempting at conversation, failing miserably. There was a pathway that cut between the two sections of basketball courts. On both sides of me were at least eight full courts, and it continued to climb up another set of stairs, where even more basketball courts were located on both sides of the pathway. All together there must have been at least thirty full basketball courts, each filled with two teams playing a full game and another two teams waiting for their turn to take the court.

I knew the Chinese loved basketball, but even this seemed a bit ridiculous. There were people everywhere, all Chinese, and they all turned to stare as I walked up, the only white boy in the whole complex, and possibly the only American who has attempted to play in this school league. It was just a bit intimidating, but my years and years of playing sports, and particularly basketball in the driveway of my friends, the Williams’, kept my confidence up and I would be lying if I said I was seriously impressed with the basketball skills that were on display on the courts. Not that they were particularly poor basketball players, but technique was much different (for lack of a better term) then what I have been used to seeing in the United States. There were no ‘elbow up-backspin-follow through’ Pistol Petes out on the court, that much was for sure.

We sat on the sidelines for nearly thirty minutes waiting for our turn to play and the other five guys on my team decided that was a good time to get warmed up for the game by smoking a pack of cigarettes. Nothing like a good chain-smoking social to get ready for the big game. They offered me a cigarette on more than one occasion, as the Chinese always do when you are in a social situation, and I respectfully declined.

I’d rather not cough up a lung during the second quarter, thanks though.

It was finally our time to take the court. We were a ragamuffin group of six. One guy was wearing a bright neon yellow shirt and the others were in an assortment of colors: red, blue, navy, and gray. I was dressed in my traditional workout color of all-black, and together our team nearly covered the entire color spectrum. I looked across the court and to my dismay saw the other team all had beautiful, ironed, matching uniforms. They had numbers and their names were emblazoned across their backs in neat, Chinese characters. Their team was also quite large. There must have been at least twelve members, enough for two full lines and a couple of leftovers, and they were running through gracefully choreographed warm-up drills: lay up, rebound, pass, a cut into the paint, sharp bounce pass, outside fade-away, rebound – repeat. I looked back at my team. The guy in neon was pushing the ball from his chest with all his might as he attempted to heave up a three pointer. Two other guys sat with their backs against the pole, double fisting cigarettes and smiling as they puffed away. Another guy was attempting to chase down yet another air ball and the ball slipped through his hands twice before he was able to reel it in and pass it back out to Mr. Neon, who believed that after another thirty shots or so, he was bound to find his range, which I was convinced couldn’t have been farther than four feet.

To sum up: we were in trouble.

We had six guys, and since I didn’t want to be that outsider who just steps in and takes control, I quietly backpedaled my way off the court right before the game was going to start. Not that I was scared or anything, but I was pretty sure we were about to get slaughtered, and I really didn’t feel like being a part of that right away. Maybe once the game was way out of range I could come in, no pressure, and bring the team back from certain defeat and save the day. Actually, sitting and watching it all unfold was even more tempting.

Unfortunately, Mr. Neon spotted me ever-so-casually making my way to the bench and adamantly motioned for me to return to the court. He sent off one of the more heavy smokers, who obviously was not mentally prepared for this sort of clash.

Alright, I thought. Just go out there, run around, play defense, and get home as soon as possible. I believed this to be the best game plan.

The referees, who were in full uniforms and had whistles and everything, brought everyone to center court and threw the ball up for the tip, which, to the surprise of no one, we lost. The other team, in their beautiful navy uniforms, pounded the ball down the court. I searched frantically for someone to guard. As I swung my head back and forth in desperation, automatically realizing that if I wasn’t guarding anyone, than someone on the other team must open, I began to realize that every single player on my team was doing the exact same thing.

Uh oh.

Somehow everyone on the other team was open and after a few quick passes, they scored with an easy lay-up from about a foot away.

The game went that way for some time; we went up the court, Mr. Neon threw up a desperate three-point shot, missed by miles, and the navy team pounded it down our throats for another easy bucket. It wasn’t until our fourth trip up the floor that I actually touched the ball. Frustrated that we were losing 6-0 within the first three minutes, that no one would pass me (The American!) the ball, and Mr. Colorful-Neon was shooting up dead ducks like it was the Great Outdoor Games, I decided to get a bit demanding. I clapped my heads adamantly and yelled gibberish that I hoped was Chinese for “pass me the friggin ball you air-balling, weak-armed pansy!”

Sure enough the ball came to me and I was now in the game. It’s go time baby.

The Chinese are all about teamwork and good structure, and our opponents filled the stereotype wonderfully. They played stingy zone defense, moving and shifting as one, and no one ever took more than two dribbles before passing. Even if a player had an open shot, he would look for a teammate who had an even more wide-open shot, and against our team, that wasn’t hard to find. They were the epitome of a team, as so many Chinese are.

But I’m not Chinese.

While I have decided to adopt a lot of Chinese customs and traditions in my every day life (baijou liquor!), basketball is one thing that is inherently American, and if we know anything about American basketball players, it’s that the player is greater than the team, and, gosh darn it, I believed it was time for the Chinese to learn this wholesome and very important cultural difference.

A short Chinese man with glasses stood in front of me as I held the ball in both hands right outside the three point line. I guessed he was from the Chemistry Department. He looked like a guy who would work in the Chemistry Department. I almost smiled at the sheer unfairness of the situation: short Chinese man with glasses versus average sized American with contacts.

             Advantage: Star-Spangled Banner.

I put the ball on the floor, bounced it twice and dribbled between my legs, adding a soft juke to the left to throw off the defender. It worked. He took a short step to his right, biting on the juke, and as his weight shifted onto his right leg I brought the ball back in a quick crossover to my own right side, leaving him staggering and helpless. And before he could say “Kobe Bryant – very handsome!” I was by him and exploding into the paint.

Defensive help came from their center, who was also the tallest man on the court. He attempted to step into my path and draw a charge, but I was already near full speed and pushed off the ground as I picked up the ball, flying towards the rim. Two opponents gave out a loud yell to try and break my concentration, and I heard someone yell “loawaaiiii!” (foreigner!) from the crowd.

As I floated through the air, I looked back on my development as a basketball player, and, I realized, that it was somewhat limited. I was very confident in my defensive skills, where the quickness and speed I acquired from years of playing soccer aided me tremendously to make quick pokes and jump in between passes. I was also a fairly good dribbler, as I had worked on dribbling between my legs, pulling crossovers, and doing spins in the paint quite often. I could pass fairly well; between my legs, bounce pass, chest pass, and everything in between. But there was one part of my game that was not entirely honed; not completely developed, you could say. Unfortunately for me, that was the most important part of the game: shooting. Or, in general terms, putting the ball in the little round hoop and through the basket. Not my best skill.

This realization came to me just as I was floating ever so gracefully past Mr. Tall (which might actually be his English name). Suddenly, all the confidence that I had as I blew past the Chemist faded away, and all I became was a white boy who was way too high in the air and moving much to quickly to make any sort of feasible shot. At the last moment, I tried to do a Steve Nash-like scoop lay-up, hoping that I could slow down the velocity of the ball enough so that it would gently sink through the basket. Everyone watched as the ball left my hand and it felt good as it did so. I was still in the air, while Mr. Tall watched helplessly as I continued to float by him like Woody Harrelson in the end of “White Men Can’t Jump” when he finds out that he can jump and he dunks the ball. Or something very similar to that.

The ball approached the rim, and I smiled as it did so, knowing that it was on its way for two points and I was going to bring my team back in this game, something that seemed impossible only moments before. I landed like a Care-Bear on a cloud and I kept my eyes up as the ball approached the rim. I was waiting for that soft swoosh sound (the sweetest sound in all of sports) as the ball sunk smoothly through the hoop.

CLANK!

The sound resounded across the court and my eardrums quivered as the ball clanged off the back rim and ricocheted back into the open court, where Mr. Tall was gladly waiting with his long arms and big, strong man-hands. I hung my head in utter dismay. I had failed myself and, more importantly, I had failed all of America. The small crowd and the opponents’ bench cheered madly at my miss, euphoric at the American’s inability to make a lay-up.

The navy team flew back down the court, leaving me staring at their wonderfully straight names and large, bold numbers on the back of their jerseys. By halftime, we were down big. No one actually knew the score except for the one score keeper sitting at a small table at mid-court, but I knew we were down, and by the look of everyone else on my team, so did they.

I decided to dedicate myself to playing strong defense and just pass to any one who seemed to be able to shoot fairly decently, and as the second half begun, that is exactly what I did. I began to understand our opponents’ offense, and I jumped in front of pass after pass. At one point I stole the ball on three straight possessions, thundering down the court two of those times to make a lay-up and have another careen off the trampoline-like backboard. But still, I had disrupted their play and kept them from scoring for a short time, which was good enough for our team. So, while our ability to score remained very, very low, our defense became strong, and soon I had stolen the ball so frequently, and grabbed so many rebounds, my teammates began to feel confident in my ability to play basketball once more. As long as I never shot, which, unless I was on a breakaway, I never did.

And then a funny thing happened. Something that during warm-ups I thought was impossible. Something so inconceivable that I was unable to wrap my mind around it for some time, due to it’s own otherworldliness: Mr. Neon found his range.

I don’t mean that he took a few short jumpers and they just happened to rattle in. No. I mean, he found his range. And just as he was so sure of during warm-ups, his range was behind the three-point line. After another steal by myself, I brought the ball up-court, gave it to our point guard, who found Mr. Neon sitting by himself on the far wing. He heaved up another three-pointer, and, as was my reaction every single time he did this, I broke towards the basket in hopes of catching the ball in my lap as it sailed wildly past the rim. But this time, it didn’t. It banged hard off the backboard and rocketed through the hoop. I looked up at him in surprise and he showed zero emotion, as did everyone else on my team. They all just turned and jogged back down the court, acting as if Mr. Neon had been doing this his whole life: spotting up and sinking threes. It was like if the NBA all-time three pointer leader Reggie Miller had hit a three. Everyone sort of expected it to go in, so it wasn’t that big of a deal when it did. But this was Mr. Neon. He hadn’t hit the rim all day, let alone actually make a bucket. But everyone acted like he was their sure-handed sharp shooter. So, I gave him a thumbs-up and offered a “nice shot!” as I jogged back down the court.

The next trip down the floor, after another tough defensive stop, Mr. Neon once again found himself open in the corner and, once again, Mr. Neon delivered, swishing a three pointer effortlessly and then turning and jogging back down the court. If this was NBA Jam the announcer would be yelling “Heeeee’s heating up!”

I was amazed at this sudden show of skillful shooting, and before I knew it, Mr. Neon had hit five straight threes (“He’s ooooon fiiiiire!”). The energy of the game picked up considerably, and the rest of the team decided to join me in my one-man defensive effort. I jumped in front of another pass and knocked the ball out in front of me. I found myself in the open court and this time I took my time as I approached the basket and put in an easy lay-up. No problem, I thought, the first five were just practice.

Soon, the fourth quarter was drawing to a close, and I knew that we had to have been cutting the prim and proper Navy team’s lead, but I wasn’t sure if we were close enough. The whistle blew for the last time and we all made our way over to the bench. Within thirty seconds my entire team, just as they had done between each and every quarter, were smoking their cigarettes, without a trace of emotion on their face.

“Did we win?” I asked the other teammate who knew some English.

“I don’t know,” he said. “Maybe.”

And so there we were: smoking cigarettes after we had staged one of the most remarkable comebacks in China University of Mining and Technology Teacher League history, and no one even really cared to see if they had completed the comeback and stolen a victory from the seemingly heavily favored “Team Navy Organization and Discipline”. Or maybe they already knew. Maybe they knew they were a second half team. Perhaps everyone expected Mr. Neon to just catch fire in the second half and pull us out of the huge hole we were in.

And all of that happened. And as I waited to hear the score, I expected some high-scoring, shooters delight tally to reflect what seemed like a fast-paced and intense game. Sure, there were a lot of misses, but also a lot of fast breaks and second chances.

Finally, my teammate told me the score: 33-22.

That’s it? 33-22?

“We lost?” I asked.

“No, no!” he said, “we won!”

“Awesome!” I replied.

So, maybe it wasn’t the great offensive battle I had expected. But since all I did was play some defense and make two lay-ups the whole game, I was okay with that, because that just meant I had a greater impact on how the game went. As did Mr. Neon, who must have ended with more than half of our points, despite shooting 7% the first half.

Unfortunately, I was unable to make the next game the following day (I took a personal health day), but my first foray into the world of Chinese basketball was enjoyable, even if I wasn’t the dominating offensive force I hoped I would be. But hey, defense wins championships. Or so say the people who can’t play offense.

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