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by Robin Sharma
On Basketball and Ascension
There's Always This Year by Hanif Abdurraqib captures the enduring spirit of hope and resilience in the face of uncertainty, blending personal reflections with cultural critique to inspire readers to persist despite life's challenges.
The concept of home is intricately tied to your sense of identity, community, and belonging. In the world of sports, these ideas take on a particularly powerful meaning, as personal experiences often blend with collective identity.
In Ohio, the basketball court is much more than a physical space – it’s a cultural anchor that unites people and fosters a shared sense of purpose. The community’s relationship with LeBron James is a prime example of this connection. For many Ohioans in the early 2000s, LeBron was more than a basketball player; he embodied their hopes, dreams, and collective aspirations. His achievements on the court symbolized a shared victory – a reaffirmation of their pride in the place they all called home.
However, the idea of home is complex and layered with contradictions. When LeBron left the Cleveland Cavaliers for the Miami Heat in 2010, many Ohioans felt a deep sense of betrayal, as though their very foundations had been shaken. This moment – notoriously named “The Decision” – revealed the fragile nature of community bonds and the reality that it doesn’t take much for a sense of home to be disrupted.
The complexity and fragility of the concept labeled “home” was further underscored when LeBron returned to Cleveland four years later, and the local community rallied to welcome him back with open arms. Perhaps a city so used to losing was simply desperate for a taste of winning again. But perhaps this was a needed reminder that home isn’t only a place to share success; it’s just as much a place to endure, heal, and rebuild together.
Home is also a space where individual desires can clash with communal expectations. LeBron’s departure and eventual return to Cleveland brought these tensions to the forefront, reflecting the complex emotions tied to the idea of home. In a similar vein, the author Hanif Abdurraqib describes leaving his hometown of Columbus, Ohio, for New Haven, Connecticut, as a move of necessity – of survival – not one of departing in search of something better. As a result, “home” adopted two disparate definitions for Abdurraqib – one was a place he yearned for but couldn’t return to, and the other was a place he returned to but didn’t yearn for. In this way, love, disappointment, and hope became intertwined in this one dynamic word, illustrating that home is as much about emotional and psychological connections as it is about physical ones.
Ultimately, home is a multifaceted concept that embodies both the comfort of familiar ties and the challenges of change. Home is where your identities are formed, tested, and reshaped, where you navigate the delicate balance between personal desires and communal responsibilities. In understanding home, you can gain greater insight into the deeper connections that bind you, even – and maybe especially – in the face of adversity.
There’s Always This Year (2024) is a reflective exploration of the intersections among sport, culture, and personal experience. Through a blend of personal anecdotes and cultural commentary, it offers a unique perspective on the complexities and nuances of home, identity, life, and success – both on the basketball court and off.
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Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
Start your free trialBlink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma