Posts Tagged ‘lance armstrong’

Monday, January 28th, 2013

Real Heroes Don’t Need Excuses

How the mighty have fallen…

Or should I say, how the mighty have fallen again

Or perhaps

Keep on falling….

A number of months ago I wrote about “The Deaths of Two Heroes.”

One was Neil Armstrong, who died of natural causes and left behind a sterling legacy of what can be achieved in life when we reach for the stars.

The other was Lance Armstrong, who was a fallen hero – a victim of his own unbridled ambition and personal lack of integrity and honesty.

Little did I know that Lance was dying the death of a thousand cuts and that he would finally admit and come clean – albeit not graciously – to years of lying and cheating.

And one would imagine that would have ended the sordid saga. But no…the follow-up is, will he be rehabilitated? Can he restore his reputation? Will he once again soar in our esteem and in the checkbooks of mega sponsors?

And therein lays my Ramble.

I read a most disturbing piece in the January 28, 2013 edition of New York Magazine – written by Will Leitch. His thesis is that Armstrong’s primary issue – “his fundamental problem, and the one he can never fully recover from, is that he was just too good.”

Read the piece – we don’t understand how PEDs (Performance Enhancing Drugs) really work; all his competitors took them so he never really had an edge; we don’t even know the sport of cycling…

Maybe all true…

His conclusion: “People just wanted to be inspired. And now: They just want to be angry.”

I don’t know about you – I always want to be inspired – I want to be inspired by big public heroes and I want to be inspired by the little everyday heroes.

I want to be inspired by the people who do amazing feats that we follow breathlessly and I want to be inspired by watching in awe as people cope with the unimaginable.

I don’t want to be angry – in fact, many of our biggest and most public heroes are flawed – but the flaws, and some are big – are rarely related to why we admire them – to their deeds that make them heroes to us. The flaws are to remind us that they are human and that we are too…anger? – no – disappointment? – yes.

From the early Greek myths to the Bible and onwards, many – if not most – of our heroes were all too vulnerable to personal weakness; failings; imperfections – yet those were the very reasons we stuck with them – we could relate – we could understand – we could empathize and project ourselves into their space as we struggled with our own issues.

But doping and lying and taking others down? That is not an example of a humanized hero; that is not a case of people looking to place their anger – that is merely one doping, lying and uncaring narcissus – who didn’t just let us down – as do occasionally the flawed and real heroes – he out and out screwed us.

In today’s always-on, nowhere-to-hide world – heroes can rise and fall as quickly as our fingers can hit a screen – that is why having a standard – a filter that allows for forgiveness but by the same token gives no quarter when it comes to what is just bad behavior. If we don’t, we will never retain our humanity.

I hope that my children and grandchildren find heroes – of all kinds – they can relate to – warts and all – but I also hope that they will be able to distinguish between them.

Lance Armstrong might have been better served to have contemplated this thought – listen:

“One reason I don’t drink is that I want to know when I am having a good time.” Nancy Astor

He might have lost – but at least he would have known why….

And clearly, as William Arthur Ward wrote – listen:

“Leadership is based on inspiration, not domination; on cooperation, not intimidation.”

And clearly we learn from Lance that domination and intimidation – his hallmarks – do not a leader make….

Yet I have no intention of bashing Lance Armstrong for his deeds or Will Leitch for his article – I see it as closure to my early piece.

So let me leave you with a thought from a real hero – Christopher Reeve – who could have succumbed to bitterness and hatred – the “just want to be angry” thought – and instead elevated the world by using his own tragedy to help others…

“I think a hero is an ordinary individual who finds strength to persevere and endure in spite of overwhelming obstacles.”

And there you have it – I leave you with Neil Armstrong and Christopher Reeve and the people that you and I know….

What do you think?

 

  • An interesting perspective. I highly recommend reading 'Racing Through The Dark: The Fall and Rise of David Millar' for a detailed insight into life in the peleton during Lance's reign as TdF champion. I do not condone his actions, but Lance is still a hero for raising $500 million for cancer research and for inspiring so many to ...
Monday, August 27th, 2012

The Deaths of Two Heroes

Armstrong is a name much in the news this week.

Neil and Lance.

Two heroes. Both dead.

One of natural causes at the end of a long and storied life of humility and public service. The other had his reputation killed at the end of a long-drawn-out and sordid scandal.

One will be a hero forever…enshrined in our memories – forever in my opinion – as the stuff of legend and worship like the Odyssey, the Kon-Tiki, the Vikings, Marco Polo and many other trailblazers from many ages and cultures the world over. Neil Armstrong will be an icon of what we can achieve as people with the added grace and modesty that the truly great bring to our world.

The other will be remembered as a fallen hero and will of course have a few die-hard fans and protectors (all fallen angels do), while most will hold up his tarnished memory as a lesson to what people will do to stay on top and the dangers of a culture that demands “winners” and rewards the fastest, richest, strongest no matter what. Lance Armstrong will be an icon of the sad outcome of excess that has no limits in its pursuit of success.

At one time – they were similar figures in my personal pantheon of heroes. While I never met Neil Armstrong, I am and have always been enamored with space travel, and as a teenager I remember watching his moonwalk and spending a sleepless night in awe of his accomplishment that ignited my imagination in ways that still spark today.

I did meet Lance, though, and was involved in the famous sponsorship of his Racing Team by the US Postal Service many years ago. Truth is, he ignited all of our imaginations too. Imagine a US Team winning the Tour de France – unheard of – absurd. But he was so passionate – so convincing – so sincere. They won – and won again – and again – crazy (it was a great sponsorship!). His illness. The comeback – amazing…LIVESTRONG – I was/am a supporter and believer. And then this…bad enough the allegations; the letdown – the notion that other athletes who suffered and toiled in pain without enhancements lost to a machine – worse…no accountability – none. And what about the cause? How the mighty have fallen.

So a thought as we near the end of August – two Armstrongs; two heroes – both had dreams that others thought were impossible. Both faced negative odds that most would not bet against. Both tilted at windmills…but with diametrically opposite outcomes…

Listen to this small piece from my favorite play of all timeCyrano de Bergerac by Edmond Rostand:

DE GUICHE (who has controlled himself, smiling): …Have you read ‘Don Quixote’?

CYRANO: Yes. And take off my hat to that knight of mad excess.

DE GUICHE: So think again…About the chapter on windmills!…For when you tilt at windmills you often find…That a swirl of the sails on their huge arms will hurl you in the mire!…

CYRANO: Or among the stars!

One was hurled in the mire – the other among the stars.

Two Armstrongs – two outcomes – the mire and the stars.

I for one will be celebrating the life and achievements of Neil – who is truly among the stars…and hoping that LIVESTRONG will not be tainted by the mire.

What do you think?