Thursday, August 4, 2011

Welcome Back!

Hello there! I know it's been AGES since I've blogged, but that's because I've been so busy working at my new internship with Liggett Stashower. If you wanna catch up on the happenings in my life check out our intern blog here. As for my personal blog, I'm hopping back on the wagon...so stay tuned!

Friday, February 18, 2011

read this, read that


I recently finished a book by Colum McCann called, "Let the Great World Spin". McCann takes the story of a tightrope walker and weaves it in and out of the lives of various people living in New York City. Influenced by the events of September 11, McCann places the tightrope walker balanced precariously on a wire strung between the towers of the World Trade Center.

Taking his story loaded with emotion from the top of the WTC to the depths of the New York subway, McCann introduces characters one at a time, each riddled with a problem or question that connects them all at the heart. You meet a mother whose son was killed in Vietnam, a hooker in love with an Irish priest and artists addicted to love and drugs. Each one of these lives overlaps the other in ways that are both tragic and compelling.

As I read the stories of each New Yorker, I found myself wanting their lives to touch...they were all so close to knowing that the others existed it was almost painful. I watched their lives unfold and come back together because of something that someone outside of their realm did. The book changed my life and allowed me to realize that although at the end of the day we control our own ultimate destiny, we may end up somewhere completely because of the actions of another person...whether that person be a tight-rope walker, a priest, or the children of a heroine addicted hooker. "Let the Great World Spin" is definitely a must read-let it change you.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

"Forever Watching"

Two days ago, college basketball fans across the country tuned into ESPN for one of the greatest rivalries of all time: Duke vs. UNC. For those who don't know the history of the game, the Battle for Tobacco Road pits two of the greatest NCAA basketball programs against each other. Located just eight miles away from each other, Duke and the University of North Carolina have hosted some of the most memorable games in NCAA history, as well as producing some of the most well-known names in the game. Players like Danny Ferry, Johnny Dawkins, Michael Jordan, Christian Laettner and J.J. Redick played the rivalry game with all they had, like it was the last time they would set foot on the court.

This week, another standout player may have begun to make his mark on the rivalry's history. When Nolan Smith took the court against UNC on Wednesday night, I'm sure he had no idea that his performance would launch him into the race for player of the year. Scoring 34 points in Duke's 79-73 victory over the Tarheels, Smith was the visible leader of the team whose highly toted player, Kyrie Irving, watched from the bench at Cameron Indoor.

But Smith's story has much more to it than just shooting 3s and strong defense...it all starts with his father. Derek Smith, famed Louisville forward and Nolan's late father, passed away suddenly at age 34 during a family cruise. Nolan watched his father die on a stretcher off the coast of Bermuda, turning a paradise into every son's worst nightmare.

Those who played with Derek Smith are overwhelmed with emotion every time they see Nolan on the court. Johnny Dawkins, former teammate and close friend of Smith's father says, "The way he moves on the floor, the way he handles the basketball, the way he shoots the basketball … it's uncanny. They have the same form, the same movement. It's eerie." As Duke's associate head coach, Dawkins has played the role of coach and mentor to the young Blue Devil, tayloring his potential and driving him to constantly improve. Nolan serves as a reminder of Dawkins' old friend, both on and off the court.

Nolan has a lasting reminder of his own located on his right bicep...a tattoo of his father with the words "Forever Watching" inked permanently into his skin to remind him that he's playing for his lost hero, his fallen angel....his father.