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A Basketball Coaching and Parenting Memoir

The score is tied at the start of the second half of my son Sam’s eighth grade recreational league basketball game.  Sam is trying very hard, as he always does.  He is arguably the best all around player on the team, having chosen not to play on the town team after not getting a lot of playing time on that premier team the year before.  He passes exceptionally well, drives to the boards, something I haven’t seen him do before, is more aggressive and confident.  And although his inside shots are not falling today he is trying.  I tell him, “just keep it up, you are doing everything right, the shots will start to fall for you.”

Sam goes up for a rebound under the offensive boards.  He gets tangled up with the other team’s center and comes down very hard and awkwardly on his right ankle, which bends horribly under him.  He is on the ground writhing in pain with an injury that is instantly obviously more than just a sprain.  His mother takes him to the health plan for examination while I continue to coach the game, which we lose in overtime, and I then join them at the doctor’s.  Although the x-rays are inconclusive, it doesn’t look good.  He leaves with a major splint, crutches, and an orthopedic appointment for Monday.  He will not play or practice all this weekend, all next week, maybe not the week after that, and who knows for how long beyond.  I am immensely pained and disturbed by his injury.  It is a lonely experience for each of us.  Were I Sam, I project I would be terribly upset at my losses and at the limitations on my freedom.  I think of the school trips that are planned for the coming weeks and the many activities he has been so happily engaged in.  He was on a roll and he is now virtually stopped in his tracks.  I tell Lynne I’m surprised at how much equanimity Sam seems to be displaying.  She says maybe it won’t hit him fully until he has to go to school.  Were it me I’d have been a basket case at the start.  I am so disturbed in my identification with him I go to sleep and check out for twelve hours.  Lynne’s trip to India is less than a week away.

The x-rays on Monday confirm that Sam has an ankle fracture, as well as torn ligaments.  He is placed in a hard cast up to his knee.  His good brave spirits amaze me.  He takes great hope in the possibility that this injury is not a season ending injury that will preclude his return for the championship tournament games in the recreational league or in his school league.  Indeed, the only time I see his equanimity shattered is when he understands that prudence may require we assure this potentially season ending injury does not turn into a career ending injury, that he might indeed not return to the courts this season at all. 

“Basketball was the best thing in my whole life this year,” he says. 

I understand how completely true that is, how engaging playing ball five days a week has been for him, how much being a starter on the rec team and the Pierce School team has meant to him.  He’s been on such a roll even his grades pick up.

Lynne leaves for India.  She is gone two weeks.  Sam limps around stoically.  Bravely.  I go with him on his class trip to Chinatown.  Sam continues to go to all his school team practices, never missing one, notwithstanding his injury.  He sits on the bench at every school game and every rec league game, game after game.  When we leave one of the recreational league games after a well-played victory he says, “That was fun.”  I am so impressed with his demeanor, his good spirits, and calm.

I come home from work in time to coach the rec league basketball practices.  Sam doesn’t go which is the right decision, but leaves him home alone while I coach and play with his friends, a weird sensation.  In a dream I have I ask one of the young ball players if being down on himself helps him to play better, worse, or a little of both.  It is a good question.  I also think about the question’s relationships to injuries and wounds.

When I was a young boy, at age eight, leaving a summer internment camp I didn’t like after two months, I “accidentally” dropped a big rock on my foot, seriously injuring myself.  It was not merely an accident.  Nor was it an accident when I rode my tricycle down the stairs in front of our apartment on 168th street at age four and badly hurt myself.  And when I fell out of the tree and dislocated my elbow at age 39, that act of carelessness also was more than simply accident, or inattention.  On the other hand, when I pressed down on the metal apple corer and it snapped and gashed my hand to the bone that was an accident.  And when I was running on the beach at age twelve and sliced opened my foot on the broken coke bottle that was an accident too.  Shit happens.  Life is a mystery.

I speculate that Sam’s and my vulnerability to disease and the potential for decreased resistance can be affected by our emotional strength or clarity.  I think that is true for many people.  It is also true that people get sick or hurt for reasons that have nothing to do with their clarity of thought or mental health.

Lynne returns safely from India.  I go with Sam to the health plan on Valentine’s Day to get his cast removed after six full weeks.  The smile of relief I see on his face is a cherished moment.  The town wide school playoffs start three weeks later to the day.  He hopes and he prays. 

Our rec league team loses in the finals, Sam does not play.  But Sam’s Pierce elementary school team makes it to the final round of the town tournament, although Sam has not played one minute of any game since the fracture.  On the night before the school league championship game Lynne, Sam, and I sit in Sam’s bedroom discussing whether he will play the next day or not.  His fractured ankle is still hurting him badly, but there is also really only this one opportunity in life for him to play in his town’s grade school championship game. 

We all struggle with the question of what is best for him.  Could he play?  Should he play?  Will it hurt him to do so?  Will it hurt the team?  Who will make the final decision?  Lynne says she thinks that we as parents should make the decision, that it is not fair to put the weight of this choice on Sam.  I say I am not convinced it isn’t Sam’s choice to make.  We all agree to sleep on it and make the decision, better informed as to Sam’s actual condition, on game day.

When I go in to wake Sam the next morning I ask how his ankle is and he says with absolute clarity, “I can’t play.”  I respect and love this man.  He is sad, and clear, heroic in my eyes, and still limping.

When I arrive at the game Sam is suited up with the rest of the team and gingerly moving around, running lightly in a lay up line.  The game begins and is very competitive and close throughout.  The high school gym is full to overflowing.  Many of the students who have gone on to high school and college from the two finalist schools have returned for the game.  The energy and rivalry are super-intense and it is tremendously exciting.  The Pierce team dominates at first going inside again and again to their big center Terrence Raeford.  In the second half the Runkle School comes back with exceptional team play, pressing on defense, stealing the ball, making their outside shots and the easy lay ups.  With about five minutes left in the game Pierce is down by nine and the boys step it up.  Pierce is down by five with four minutes to go but Terrence has fouled out.  Brendan O’Connor, the team’s second strongest player makes two clutch free throws and then he fouls out.  With two minutes left and still down five points the third starting player, Eli, fouls out.

After Eli fouls out, the team coach, Billie, comes and stands right in front of Sam and looks at him.  He doesn’t say a word and doesn’t even really ask, but shows with his desperate eyes how much it would help, if Sam has anything to give, if he could go into the game.  I watch Billie staring at Sam.  There is no pressure intended in his inquiry.  He is a great coach and he and Sam respect each other.  They hold each other’s eyes for three or four very long seconds and then Sam simply nods his head yes and limps over to the scorer’s table.

Sam trots on to the floor to cheers and fears.  He limps up and down the court.  He handles the ball well but has no shot opportunities and can’t really put any pressure on his injured ankle.  But his passing helps and his presence is a lift, and with the crowd going wild the game ends in regulation time in a tie.  Sam then plays the entire five-minute overtime.  Each team is so exhausted and tense that not one field goal is made in the overtime period.  The Runkle team scores four points from the foul line.  The Pierce team scores five.  There is a tremendous moshing of players and fans on the floor of the gymnasium.  Sam emerges from the pile eyes gleaming with happiness.  He runs over to me on the sideline.  “How’re you,” I ask. “My ankle is killing me,” he screams, “and I don’t care!”

There is life.  And there is basketball.

Sports writing image.
Sports Writing category image.

Miles’ Journey

I, Miles Everest Dale,
am on a journey.
and let me make it clear
that although technically,
well, let’s just say for now, “dead,”
that I also walked among you in human form
for 28 earth year voyages around the sun.
Brother Miles I am called now,
He who wrote poems
others got to read
only at my ending
the words that tiled
my secret notebook
where the other dimensions
of who I was
met the earthly context
in which I existed.
When I lay in that coffin
with my eyes closed
and that slight smile on my lips
and looked so peaceful,
beautiful actually,
even serene,
me, Miles Dale, serene,
in the box
with all of those people crying
and having panic attacks
and packing the house,
my crazy earth father
taking my picture in the ef’ing coffin
And me lookin’ good, y’all
Can I get an amen?
Just once?
You do not know how hard it was
to be Miles Everest Dale.
First there was that so-called “minor” glitch
in the supply of oxygen
from the mother ship to the fetus baby
while he rode thru those way too small
vaginal passageways
the walls of the holy temple
the gateway to breathe,
earth consciousness,
and individual identity
I’ll tell you one thing,
speaking as Miles Dale,
mine was a very hard role to be assigned,
some would call it
a tough hand to be dealt,
to be speech impaired,
and a little slower in the academic track
where, like everywhere,
I was different,
only more so,
odd,
vulnerable
crazy
funny
annoying
not fitting in
as it is imagined a person should
in order to be considered “normal”
in human terms.
And now, lo and behold,
I am about to enter the Guinness Book of World Records
in the lead
in the category
of most-human-ashes-carried-and-left-in-most-sacred-places.
You might want to read that last sentence one more time.
A little ash in Thailand,
a little in a half dozen holy rivers
running to a half a dozen holy seas,
in a camp for the rehabilitation of elephants
(and I know about rehab facilities),
a little in Laos,
in Angkor,
in Mandalay,
in Southern India,
in the holy caves of Allora and Ajanta,
and at the headwaters of the Holy Ganges
after which there will be so much more about my journey to tell,
but for now you just have to wait here
at the side of the road
for my uncle in his pick up truck
to take you along the trail
and tell you more of my tale.

Conversation With A Ladle

Ladle is asked
How it maintains such a good attitude
When its ability to reach into the abundance of life
Is so dependent upon the agency of others
It’s just what keeps happening to me, ladle says,
I’m always being utilized
Asked to dip into these wonderful substances
Get filled to overflowing
Lifted up, even tilted
I love being tilted and used
Love serving my masters and my purpose
Why even in my states of rest
I am happy being ladle,
Knowing I will be used again,
Will feel vast pleasure again,
When you are a ladle
Someone always comes around
Saying, “I need a ladle.”
Nobody’s going to use you as a hammer
When you’re a ladle
And you can trust you’ll be put to good use.
Even if you’re a malformed ladle
If you’ve been bent or twisted
Or rendered less perfect in shape
You will be used,
Although perhaps less frequently,
Unless you’re the only ladle around,
Which isn’t a bad thing,
But can raise serious doubts
About whether it is you they love.
But if you maintain a desire to be of use
You will be used
That’s all I can tell you
Sometimes deformations
Are what make you attractive
Show you’ve been of long and steady service
Draw to you the ones you need
Who lift you up
Dip you in
Wash you
Use you, and leave you
spent and cleansed.

Native American Land Stolen

Colonialism is where we start – Land back!!

Free Leonard Peltier

… and all other political prisoners who are unjustly held captive!

History of the Winged Free Leonard Peltier Spirit Mask and Puppet

The Winged Free Leonard Peltier Spirit Mask was created in 1992 for a cultural festival and parade in Jamaica Plain, Boston, at a time when many people were celebrating 500 years of Indigenous survival and trying to call attention to the ongoing oppression of Indigenous People and Indigenous leadership on Turtle Island. The actual puppet/mask was constructed and brought to life by creative artists and cultural revolutionaries associated with “Spontaneous Celebrations” a community empowerment through art organization in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston after Dennis Banks – who lived in Boston during the 1990s – visited the home of Spontaneous Celebrations and spoke about Leonard’s unjust incarceration and the history of the Massachusett People who lived around Jamaica Plain, which was named after a Massachusett sachem, Kuchamakin. In 1995, Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council President, Russell M.Peters, wrote of Spontaneous Celebrations that he was “particularly impressed with the attention paid to Native American issues … and to the Leonard Peltier puppet…”

The Free Leonard Peltier mask has been to big Climate March demonstrations in New York and Massachusetts. Dennis Moynihan – then of NPR- took Leonard to the White House where he was photographed on the front lawn. For many years Leonard was carried during the Wake Up the Earth Festival in Boston and at Boston’s First Night Parade. Leonard’s Winged Spirit has traveled over 20,000 miles and has been to Pine Ridge, Wounded Knee, and Oak Flat. The mask also spent a week encamped at Standing Rock in 2016. Many repairs have been made to Leonard’s mask over the years. Most recently his face was repainted by the famed Uruguayan artist, Roberto Ciao.

Leonard’s allies in Massachusetts – including Spontaneous Celebrations and the Massachusetts Peace and Justice Community – hope at this time in Leonard’s life – Fall 2023 – to gift the Free Leonard Peltier mask/puppet/winged spirit to the Lakota People.

05 – Minneapolis

I travel to Minneapolis, mostly to see if I can reconnect a broken friendship. And it seems we do. I visit Louise Ehrlich’s bookshop, mostly an art gallery filled with books about Indigenous Americans. We are NOT a nation of immigrants. On the morning of my departure I attend an Indigenous Peoples’ Day sunrise ceremony.

03 – Akwesasne

The Red Path awaits its visitors in silence, welcoming those who tread upon it. The visit to the Mohawk Cultural Center is both ordinary and amazing. There is that absolutely incredible emblematic Wolf Belt that depicts a treaty between the French and the Mohawks. The seven purple lines signify the seven nations, white the peace paths guarded at each end by sachems of the Wolf clan, symbolized by the purple animal figures. 

01 – Grandmother’s Sendoff

“The first night I was ever completely alone in the forest I was already a grandmother. Later that night the heavens opened and the earth and the rooted ones drank the waters and I stepped out of my tent into the rain and mud barefooted and did my spinning jiggle dance. May that which I felt in those moments be with you in mind and in spirit on your travels among the living and the dead. May you be as one on your way with our blessing. Walk in beauty.” Author unknown.

02 – We begin…

I depart on my next voyage September 30, 2023, my mother’s 110th birthday. My plans are to go to a powwow on the land of the Massachusett people that day, and then proceed to the land of the Western Abenaki in Vermont, where I will visit friends and memories. Next Akwesasne, Minneapolis, Standing Rock, Pine Ridge, the Black Hills, Calgary, Banff, Vancouver, Orcas Island, Bainbridge, Seattle, Portland, Petrolia, San Francisco. I must get to Calgary by 20 October where I will rendezvous with my good friend Joy. I plan to be in SF by 11/10.  “Where before we locked the gates, help us now to keep them open.”