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NYT: Michael Phelps' Tumultuous Career and How He Found Himself

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Seeking Answers, Michael Phelps Finds Himself

COLORADO SPRINGS — The guide enthusiastically led his guest from room to room in the barracks-style building, pointing out features like the emotion tree and providing thumbnail sketches of the people they encountered. He seemed to know everyone, and everyone returned his greetings in kind with a comment that elicited the guide’s generous, rumbling laugh.

The tour ended in a television room, where the guest and the guide watched an Arizona Cardinals football game while grazing on snacks. For years, the guide, Michael Phelps, and his guest, Bob Bowman, had watched N.F.L. games together, but from a suite above the Baltimore Ravens’ home field at M&T Bank Stadium, sealed off from autograph- and selfie-seeking strangers but often surrounded by “friends” who fed off Phelps’s swimming fame.

The trip to see Phelps by Bowman, his longtime coach, at the Meadows, a treatment center in Wickenburg, Ariz., northwest of Phoenix, in the fall of 2014 was a revelation, an introduction to a man stripped of the armor that had helped make him an athletic machine.

Bowman had difficulty reconciling the swimmer who wore headphones to the starting blocks to sequester himself from the outside world, the guy who was so deeply absorbed in his own journey that he did not learn the given names of all of his teammates on the 2004 and 2008 United States Olympic swimming squads, with the person standing before him offering biographical snippets on those who walked past.

“He was like, ‘That guy over there, he owns his own company,’ ” Bowman said. “He had a little story about everybody. I had never seen him like that. I looked at him like ‘Who are you?’ ”

It is among the questions Phelps, 30, sought answers to in rehab and, in some ways, is still answering as he prepares for his fifth consecutive Olympics.

Phelps’s road to becoming the most decorated athlete in Olympic history had been treacherously steep and single-file narrow, as isolating as a deep free diver’s plunge. The years he should have spent developing and embracing his personality were devoted to developing and embracing his swimming talents.

It seemed like a path well chosen when Phelps won a record eight gold medals at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. The years that followed produced more Olympic glory but also a damning photograph of Phelps with a bong, a second D.U.I. arrest and numerous splintered relationships.

By the end of 2014, it appeared plain to everyone that the trail Phelps blazed had veered into a dead end.

“He had no idea what to do with the rest of his life,” Bowman said. “It made me feel terrible. I remember one day I said: ‘Michael, you have all the money that anybody your age could ever want or need; you have a profound influence in the world; you have free time — and you’re the most miserable person I know. What’s up with that?’ ”

Phelps has spent the past year and a half pondering it first in therapy as an inpatient at the Meadows and later in the pool, which started out as his sanctuary, became his glassed-in aquarium and now serves as his platform. His message: Vulnerability is a strength.

.....

Phelps’s nadir came two years ago, on the last Monday of September. On his way out of the Horseshoe Casino, two miles from Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, after an evening spent playing poker while drinking, Phelps placed a phone call to his girlfriend, Nicole Johnson. After a two-year estrangement, they had recently gotten back together, a reconciliation set into motion by a soul-baring call from Phelps.

It was after 1 a.m. on the East Coast. Johnson, on the West Coast, asked Phelps if he was sure he was O.K. to drive home. He had spent the start of the weekend with her in California at a wedding and had flown home on a redeye, landing in Baltimore less than 24 hours earlier.

She said she was concerned that fatigue from his hectic weekend, combined with the cross-country travel, might aggravate the effects of the alcohol in his system.

A few minutes later, she received a text from Phelps, who was stopped at a light. “There’s a cop behind me,” he said. An hour passed before her next communication from Phelps, who phoned from jail.

His Range Rover had been clocked by the police traveling 84 miles per hour in a 45 m.p.h. zone, and Phelps had been observed crossing the double lines. According to a report in The Baltimore Sun, he failed two field sobriety tests, and a breath analysis recorded his blood-alcohol level at 0.14, 0.06 in excess of the state driving limit.

For the next 72 hours, Phelps locked himself in his house and refused to see or talk to anyone. At one point, he texted his agent, Peter Carlisle, and said he wrote, “I don’t want to be alive anymore.”

The machine was irrevocably broken.

“I didn’t see me as me,” Phelps said. “I saw me as everybody else did — as an all-American kid. Let’s be honest. There’s not a single human being in the world that’s like that.”

A really sad perspective on this man's life. It's always made me wonder how he was one of the greatest athletes of all time and yet that bong picture seemed to basically cancel all of those medals out. He's a shitty person for having a DUI but I don't think it should take away from his astonishing career.

He full article also discusses how his long practices growing up never allowed him to develop a personality (which is most likely why he was so awkward in interviews).
 
Seeking Answers, Michael Phelps Finds Himself



A really sad perspective on this man's life. It's always made me wonder how he was one of the greatest athletes of all time and yet that bong picture seemed to basically cancel all of those medals out. He's a shitty person for having a DUI but I don't think it should take away from his astonishing career.

He full article also discusses how his long practices growing up never allowed him to develop a personality (which is most likely why he was so awkward in interviews).

I think it's ridiculous to say he's a shitty person for getting a DUI, but that's just my opinion.
 

HStallion

Now what's the next step in your master plan?
There are a ton of philosophers and great thinkers who would actually say dedicating yourself solely to one task for so much of your life is actually a failure on your part to live a whole and well rounded life. Not saying this is the case with Phelps or other super athletes but it does make sense. Look how many people finish a sport and just go off the rails because they were never developed in other areas. Or those who make it huge and squander their wealth and power through their own demons or letting others take advantage of them. Its often interesting too look at how successful someone can be in one area and a failure in so many others.
 
I think it's ridiculous to say he's a shitty person for getting a DUI, but that's just my opinion.

By driving under the influence he risked his own life, but also those of innocent people. 84mph in a 45mph zone whilst drunk and crossing the double lines is wantonly reckless toward the health and wellbeing of others.

Notwithstanding the possibility of contrition or redemption, that makes someone a shitty person.
 

kavanf1

Member
By driving under the influence he risked his own life, but also those of innocent people. 84mph in a 45mph zone whilst drunk and crossing the double lines is wantonly reckless toward the health and wellbeing of others.

Notwithstanding the possibility of contrition or redemption, that makes someone a shitty person.

No it doesn't, it makes them a person who did something shitty.
 
By driving under the influence he risked his own life, but also those of innocent people. 84mph in a 45mph zone whilst drunk and crossing the double lines is wantonly reckless toward the health and wellbeing of others.

Notwithstanding the possibility of contrition or redemption, that makes someone a shitty person.

He did a shitty thing and made a mistake, no doubt. He endangered public safety due to his actions. That's on him. However, you're judging him based off this action alone. He might be a shitty person, but this alone does not make it so. Actually, from what I can tell, he learned from his mistake and is a good father and husband.

I know a fair amount of folks who got arrested and DUIs while in college and they are great people, so I guess the way I see things are different than the way you see them.
 

pelicansurf

Needs a Holiday on Gallifrey
No doubt that being completely focused on nonstop training would put a hinder to personality development. Especially when your interactions are mostly slanted towards talking about swimming and no in-depth interactions about feelings and stuff.

The same thing that happens to plenty of people who spend most of their youth playing video games.
 
No doubt that being completely focused on nonstop training would put a hinder to personality development. Especially when your interactions are mostly slanted towards talking about swimming and no in-depth interactions about feelings and stuff.

The same thing that happens to plenty of people who spend most of their youth playing video games.
He's never gonna tear up the Olympics again but I hope he can at least gain some more respect. Before the bong incident, people were still high on his wins but now he seems like an afterthought.
 

Reckheim

Member
By driving under the influence he risked his own life, but also those of innocent people. 84mph in a 45mph zone whilst drunk and crossing the double lines is wantonly reckless toward the health and wellbeing of others.

Notwithstanding the possibility of contrition or redemption, that makes someone a shitty person.

He was a shitty person back then, i'm sure he wouldn't do it now. You never fucked up/done stupid shit when you were young?
 

JustenP88

I earned 100 Gamerscore™ for collecting 300 widgets and thereby created Trump's America
"Damning photo of him with a bong" in an article written from Colorado Springs. Lmao. How times change.
 
By driving under the influence he risked his own life, but also those of innocent people. 84mph in a 45mph zone whilst drunk and crossing the double lines is wantonly reckless toward the health and wellbeing of others.

Notwithstanding the possibility of contrition or redemption, that makes someone a shitty person.

The capacity to judge someone merely like this is not a good look.
 

milanbaros

Member?
Incredible athlete.

Couldn't care less about smoking weed but the DUI and risking other people's lives is just a massively shitty thing to do.
 

nilbog21

Banned
Yeah the dude just can't be left alone and live his life. He probably just feels like a tool, being used by everyone for something he probably cares little about. Winning is great, when you have a relatively normal life.
 
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