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BIG BONG THEORY


Drug Abuse

Pubdate: Tue, 03 Feb 2009
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 2009 The Washington Post Company
Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
Author: Sally Jenkins
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

BIG BONG THEORY

So Michael Phelps dove headfirst into the bong water. Is anyone really
surprised, after all those laps? There has always been something submerged
and escapist about the world's greatest swimmer. When presented with a
chamber containing a hazy translucent liquid, he did what's become second
nature to him. He buried his face in it.

Big Bong Theory

I'm just sorry I wasn't at that University of South Carolina house party
to witness Squid Boy's binge firsthand -- not that I would ever make such
a staggering misstep myself.

According to the British tabloid News of the World, which ran a photo of
Phelps hunched over a glass tube and torching it up quite proficiently
with a lighter, he "was out of control from the moment he got there." Can
you imagine how much dew he inhaled, with his world-class lung capacity? I
don't know exactly what kind of killer nuggets were stuffed into the bowl
of that German-made red Roor bong -- why should I know such a thing, or
even how to use a lighter -- but they weren't cloves.

I'm sure some people will be disappointed in Phelps for partaking of a
non-government-approved substance for relaxation. But he merely got caught
doing what scores of people -- I'm not saying me -- did every weekend in
college, and what many residents of Austin still do every day, given the
quite liberal sentencing laws, which I only know about secondhand.
According to a study cited in U.S. News & World Report last summer, 42
percent of Americans have at one time or another gotten sweetly baked on
hay. No one is condoning illegal activity -- or admitting any. But
frankly, it's better than drinking and driving, which is what Phelps did
last time. And it's organic!

"I'm 23 years old, and despite the successes I have had in the pool, I
acted in a youthful and inappropriate way, not in a manner that people
have come to expect from me," Phelps said in a statement. "For this, I am
sorry. I promise my fans and the public -- it will not happen again."

Or, as David St. Hubbins says in "This Is Spinal Tap," "I'm sure I would
be more upset if I wasn't so heavily sedated."

We already knew that when Phelps breaks training, he means business. After
he won six gold medals at the 2004 Athens Games, he was caught driving
under the influence after a party in Maryland. When he's in his
competitive season, he swims for five hours a day, every day, 50 miles of
laps in a week. When he's on vacation -- well. What did we think he was
going to binge on this time, after winning an all-time-record eight gold
medals in Beijing? Triscuits?

That phrase Phelps used, "people have come to expect from me," is an
interesting one. It points to an emerging fact about Phelps, which is that
there are two versions of him: the obedient Olympic champion who says and
does what's expected of him and the caught-red-handed whiffer, who does
the precise opposite, inadvertently countermanding the purist image built
by his commercial sponsors. Obviously, Phelps doesn't whiff all the time,
or he wouldn't win the way he does. Nevertheless, you get the sense that
Phelps periodically needs to bust out of the confines of the pool and of
his too-coy image.

There's clearly a more genuine and, um, adventurous Phelps than the one he
presents. Like most great athletes, he's a creature of extremes, which is
a quality egregiously unhealthy corporate sponsors such as Kellogg's and
McDonald's don't really like to admit to in their athlete-pitchmen. But
maybe it's one more parents should realize is part of the potential cost
when their kid announces they want to be a gold medalist like Michael
Phelps. Being a champion is frankly not the most healthful career to
aspire to; it's an abnormally stressful one.

Champions tend to develop out of a state of emotional emergency. Winning
is a need. Their training methods are extreme, their goals are extreme and
their rewards tend to be extreme. Lance Armstrong is driven by a
fatherless childhood, and after the Tour de France he consumes quite epic
amounts of beer and ice cream, sometimes together. I once watched Andre
Agassi drink an entire bottle of Chianti -- at lunch. Pete Sampras
rewarded himself for winning the U.S. Open by gorging on steak until he
almost vomited. Phelps is driven partly by a case of boyhood ADHD. One
thing we know about him is that his surface opacity, the phlegmatic,
almost placid exterior hides a different person beneath the water, a
bottomlessly ambitious competitor. As his mother once said, "Under the
water there is another level of Michael."

Phelps's public apology won't satisfy those people who insist their
champions be superhuman ideals. But it's absurd to expect Phelps to
maintain his brand of physical and mental discipline 24-7, while the rest
of us privately anesthetize to our hearts' content. Maybe it was those
very people Phelps wanted to get off his back when he went to a college
house party in South Carolina, while visiting a girlfriend. So he sampled
the local product, perhaps it was Spanish Trampoline, or Mexibrick, terms
which I only picked up on the Internet, and then he probably indulged a
late-night craving for frozen waffles and Skittles.

Fortunately, Phelps won't face official sanctions. If you want to feel
stoned, consider the fact that the draconian World Anti-Doping Agency
doesn't penalize out-of-competition recreational drug use, but gives
years-long bans for accidental ingestion of over-the-counter meds in
season. He shouldn't face the loss of endorsements, either. All he did was
behave in an unmeasured and uncalculated way and suffer the bad luck to be
photographed doing it. He's already enjoying a fitting punishment: public
embarrassment for failing to live up to his commercial pretensions. For
one thing, he's being made merciless fun of on the Internet. A wit named
Gourmet Spud posted this sendup of his autobiography on Deadspin: "From
Breaststrokes to Breasts-Tokes: How I Spent My Summer Olympics Vacation"
by Michael Phelps.

Another suggested he get a Grateful Dead tattoo on his thigh. And perhaps
sign up some new endorsements more in line with his recreational side.
Like Doritos, and Taco Bell. Not that I've tasted them late at night after
a party.
__________________________________________________________________________
Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
---
MAP posted-by: Doug


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