The Wheelchair Runningback

Alright, I admit that I haven’t had enough coffee. Accordingly there are cobwebs in my belfry. But here’s the thing: I go to bed with a disability and when I wake up I still have it. And in turn this means that even in the half awake-half asleep intersection, the state that Edgar Alan Poe admired, I am still blind. I am blind when counting backwards by sevens. I’m blind when I watch the TV.

The experience of disability is invariably the “half-awake-half asleep” World view of Edgar Alan Poe: at once terrifying, revealing, darkly beautiful, unforeseen, foreseeable, sacred and profane, you name it. Disability defies our notion of stable space both in physical and metaphysical terms. Disability is the sore thumb of a saint: it reveals where culture must go if society will be just. And yes, people aren’t ready for it.

I remember being in a meeting some years ago with administrators whose job it was to provide services for the blind. The meeting had something to do with hum drum budgetary matters. I was the only blind person in the group. Everyone was talking about the legal battle between Casey Martin, a professional golfer who had sued the Professional Golfer’s Association over the right to use a golf cart during PGA sanctioned golf matches. Casey Martin won the right to use a motorized cart as a means of getting from one tee to another—a right that was eventually upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. The justices agreed with Martin’s assertion that his disability didn’t prevent him from hitting a golf ball and they disagreed with the PGA’s assertion that allowing Casey Martin to ride from one spot to another would fundamentally alter the nature of the game. I agreed with the Supreme Court on that occasion and I was surprised by the evident distress of the other men in the meeting. They felt that allowing Casey Martin to ride in a golf cart from one fairway to another would radically destroy professional golf.

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There's No Lip-Synching in Baseball!

Since everyone in America is talking about Barry Bond’s achievement, which is to say, "the feat" which is to say "the mountaintop" and because Mr. Bonds’ ascent to the top is marked by controversy, I want to add my little voice to the cacophony.  After all, that’s what a baseball crowd is for: it serves as a democratic shouting index and that’s as it should be.

As everyone knows by now, Barry Bonds has been under supreme suspicion of having used illegal steroids during the last decade of his career, a period for most athletes when players experience the erosion of their athletic skills.  Not only did Barry Bonds hit more home runs in his final decade in the batter’s box, but he looked suspiciously bigger and brawnier while doing it.

At this very moment Mr. Bonds’ former personal trainer is sitting in prison because he refuses to testify before a federal committee that’s looking into the use of illegal drugs in our nation’s pastime.

The home run title is baseball’s most glorious prize and my personal view is that anyone who breaks a cherished record while using banned substances should be given an asterisk.  After all, when doctors or attorneys take their respective board exams more than once this information is entered into their professional record with the phrase: "passed the boards on the second try".

Let’s let Barry Bonds have the home run title with a similar caveat, something like: "Performance enhanced record".

Heck, they could even build a special room at the baseball hall of fame for guys like Bonds and others who surpassed long held records with the help of chemistry.

I think this is the best solution to the whole problem of drug use in professional sports.  People could choose to be listed as either authentic or performance enhanced competitors.  In turn we would keep two kinds of record books.

In my view, and in the view of millions of other baseball fans, Henry Aaron is still the home run king.  The man doesn’t need an asterisk.

Right now it looks as though professional baseball is going to let the record stand as if it’s authentic.  That’s really a shame.

I love baseball.  I also love grand opera.  But I don’t condone lip-synching.

S.K.