Unleashed is ... manna from heaven for a sports-averse teenager
for the Yakima Herald-Republic
More 'Valley Life'
- WSU/Master Gardeners-- July garden brims with life
- Yakima teen mom finds strength from within
- 07/05/09 Volunteer Opportunities
- Living between the lines
- 06/28/09 Volunteer Opportunities
- 06/21/09 Volunteer Opportunities
- This year, we're celebrating Family's Day
Narrowing it down to a single, earthshaking turning point isn't easy.
There was my first at-bat in Little League, when I was beaned in the back by a 45 mph fastball courtesy of my best friend. I got on base and, eventually, attempted to score a run that, unbeknownst to me as I shot a celebratory finger skyward, had been rendered null by a third out, long before my cleated foot trod that big plastic hunk. We were the Red Sox, but at that point, I was the star player of the Red Cheex.
Still, I don't think that was the event.
I'm pretty sure that moment came when I was 10, during a YMCA basketball game. Through some miraculous mental slip by one of my teammates, I was given the ball after a particularly hardscrabble series of rebounds.
Dopily smacking the ball downcourt, I clod across the parquet of the third-floor gym, lacing the classic Clyde Drexler crossover lay-in that I had practiced so many times in my driveway. As the ball dropped through the impossibly high net, I wondered briefly why it had been so easy, as, up to that point, even two points in a game was for me a massive achievement.
That brief sense of wonder at my own burst of athletic skill was brought crashing earthward when I heard a chorus of high-pitched 10-year-old teammates screaming at me for draining that beautiful shot in the wrong hoop. I had scored for the other team. Van Gogh sunsets have seen less crimson than my face at that moment.
So, I became a writer.
If lay-ins and home runs weren't going to be my thing, why fight it? Thus, it's with eternal gratitude that I acknowledge the Yakima Herald-Republic for establishing Unleashed, essentially the finest nonsports team that a smart-but-clumsy kid with a gift for writing could ask for; and my mother, for pushing a then-reluctant eighth-grader to apply for a position.
While I doubt many of my peers on Unleashed shared my shame-ridden youth sports history (which, to this day, turns my bearded cheeks a bit red), they did partake in what was undeniably a defining element in my adolescence.
Not only did I learn how to report and write from some of the best mentors a burgeoning journalist could've asked for -- serious props to Maisy Fernandez, John Taylor, Adriana Janovich, Jane Gargas and Kim Nowacki -- I developed an evaluative, questioning mind that I maintain today. I made great friends with many of my fellow Unleashed staffers, and shamelessly macked on the cute girls. The fact that I ended up as a journalist throughout college almost seems secondary to the amazing experiences Unleashed provided me in my teens.
From shaky interviews with my punk-rock heroes, to sorta-satiric columns about well-known Time magazine writers who ended up actually writing me back, to congratulations from parents' friends who I barely recognized about a story that I somehow forgot would be read by more than 40,000 people, Unleashed became for me what traditional high-school activities -- yes, varsity athletics, I'm looking at you -- could never have been: a source of undiluted, well-earned pride. My cheeks were red, but for entirely different, entirely better reasons.
Just as importantly, Unleashed gave me a sense of belonging. Punk bands and goofy school plays aside, writing was my thing. When I arrived at a big, scary Midwestern university's journalism school, the kid from an unpronounceable town on the wrong side of a remote state's mountains, I found I could hack it. And when I ditched the journalism degree for a crunchy liberal arts education a little closer to home, my background as a reporter not only helped me with that unending torrent of papers bestowed upon English majors, but kept me marginally employed as a freelance music writer and section editor of the student newspaper.
So, Unleashed, here's to you.
You transformed me from a 14-year-old, journalistically inclined failure at sports into a 23-year-old writer with an eternally inquisitive mind and strong sense of confidence, who, undoubtedly, is still a failure at sports. I fell in and out of love across the pizza crust-strewn tables at your meetings, and learned about who I was, and am, while faced with a blank Word document's blinking cursor, struggling to meet your deadlines. You gave me a place to belong, an identity, and, above all, something to call my own.
Now, who's blushing?
-- Alex Frank, a 2003 Davis High School graduate, was a member of Unleashed's inaugural team. He also served as student editor of the section.
Readers are encouraged to use these forums to discuss issues affecting the Yakima Valley. Comment writers should refrain from personal attacks and offensive remarks, and comments should be free of any personally identifiable information, such as e-mail addresses, mailing addresses and phone numbers. If you believe a comment is inappropriate, you can bring it to our attention by clicking the "report violation" link by the comment.
Registered User?

RSS
E-mail
Print
Comments