yep, that's what Stewart and I decided too.   Man, he is out there!

----- Original Message -----
From: "Jeff Todd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "RollTideFan - University of Alabama Athletics Discussion List"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, December 20, 2004 8:25 PM
Subject: Re: [RollTideFan] NFL: 60 Minutes Interview with Ricky Williams


Ricky be smokin' some good shit!

Slef E.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Rick Mc." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "RollTideFan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, December 20, 2004 8:10 PM
Subject: [RollTideFan] NFL: 60 Minutes Interview with
Ricky Williams


I wanted to watch this last night but missed it. Here it
is in print if
anyone else is interested...

==

(CBS) Former Miami Dolphins superstar Ricky Williams won
the Heisman
Trophy as the best college football player in the
country at the
University of Texas.

Then, he had five years of glory in NFL. He carried the
ball more often
over the last two seasons than any other player in the
league. And he
made millions doing it for the Miami Dolphins, as the
team's star player.

But then, just before Dolphins training camp began this
past July, he
turned his back on all of it: the stardom, the fame and
the salary of $5
million a year. His sudden decision to quit stunned his
teammates,
infuriated his fans and ruined his Dolphins' entire
season. He never
really explained why he quit, and he has stayed out of
public view for
the past six months - until now, in his first television
interview with
Correspondent Mike Wallace. Williams is now studying
holistic medicine
in the California hills outside Sacramento, where he
surprisingly agreed
to answer any questions 60 Minutes asked about how, at
the peak of his
earning power, he could just walk away.

"Well, my whole thing in life is I just want freedom.
And I thought that
money would give me that freedom. I was wrong, of
course," says Williams.

"Because, especially when you're 21 and you're given as
much money as I
was given, it bound me more than it freed me. Because
now, I have more
things to worry about. I have more people asking for
money. I had to buy
a house and nice cars and different things that people
with money are
supposed to do. It just seemed to create more problems."

His first check, at 21, was for $3.6 million - before
taxes. "After, it
was like $2, 2.4," says Williams.

He would have made $5 million this year, but he said,
"it's blood money,
as far as I'm concerned. The money is what made me
miserable. I want to
be free from that stress."

But Williams tells Wallace that the real reason he left
was to avoid the
public humiliation that would undoubtedly follow news
that he had just
failed a drug test for the third time.

"The thing that I had the most trouble with was that
after you fail your
third test, then it becomes public knowledge that you
failed the test.
And that's the one thing that I couldn't deal with at
the time. People
knowing that I smoke marijuana," says Williams. "That
was my biggest
fear in my whole entire life. I was scared to death of
that."

So rather than face the music and the media about his
failed drug test,
he quit football and ran away to Australia, where he
lived in a tent
community that cost him just $7 a day.

"In my tent, I had about 30 books. And every morning,
I'd wake up at
about 5 a.m. And I'd take my flashlight and I'd read for
a couple of
hours," says Williams. "Everything from nutrition to
Buddhism, to Jesus,
to try to figure out, you know, what am I? What am I?
So, I just kept
reading and reading. And couldn't figure out what I was.
But I learned a
lot."

There, he learned about an ancient healing science from
India called
Ayurveda. "It's using nature to heal yourself, to put
yourself in
balance," says Williams. "I'm more in balance now than I
was a couple of
months ago. But it's a journey that people spend their
whole lives on."

What's balance?

"To talk about balance, it's easier to talk about what's
out of balance.
And I think anytime that you have any disease, and
disease meaning lack
of ease, lack of flow," says Williams. "So anytime
there's disease,
you're out of balance. Whether it's jealousy anger,
greed, anxiety, fear."

These are emotions, he says, that most people have
experienced in their
lives.

Just this fall, he enrolled in an 18-month course at The
California
College of Ayurveda. Freed from the structured life of
the NFL, Williams
is now immersed in the search for his soul.

"Playing in the National Football League, you're told
you know where to
be, when to be there, what to wear, how to be there,"
says Williams.
"And being able to step away from that, I have an
opportunity to look
deeper into myself and look for what's real."

Dr. Mark Halpern, who runs the small college, says
Williams is learning
to become a holistic healer. "I see burnout in probably
60-70 percent of
society at any given time," says Halpern. "He will help
individuals to
live in greater harmony with their environment through
all five of their
senses. We say that when we're living in harmony with
our environment,
our bodies naturally express themselves in the form of
health."

Receiving massages that balance the various energies of
the body is part
of Williams' training to become an ayurvedic masseur.

"He's following the whisperings of his soul, as opposed
to the shouting
of his own ego. It's our ego that desires the fame and
the fortunes,"
says Halpern. "The whispers of the soul that lead us
toward the pursuit
of harmony, the pursuit of health and well being,
including sometimes
facing the consequences of letting go of the fame and
the fortune."

The fact is, Williams has gone from fortune into deep
debt, and from
fame to infamy. The Dolphins claim he owes them more
than $8 million --
much more money than he has - for leaving in the middle
of his contract.

And his sudden departure just days before training camp
doomed the
Dolphins to their worst season in franchise history, and
infuriated his
former fans, especially his teammates. And if they want
me to apologize
just to apologize, then I will apologize. But it doesn't
mean anything
unless I understand what I'm apologizing for."

"You're apologizing for letting them down," says
Wallace. "The Dolphins
thought with you, and mainly with you that they had a
chance at the
Super Bowl."

"What if I disagree? Do I still have to apologize, that
I cost them
their season," says Williams. "I played my butt off. I
played as hard as
I could whenever I put that uniform on. But I'm not
doing that anymore,
you know? I moved on. So when is it OK for me to stop
playing football?
When would it have been OK for me to stop playing
football? When my
knees went out? When my shoulders went out? When I had
too many
concussions? Like what? When is it OK?"

"I'm just curious, because I don't understand. When is
it OK to not play
football anymore," adds Williams. "I didn't know ahead
of time. Or I
would have given them a clue. Happened in the course of
two days. Boom,
boom, boom, boom."

Has he retired or quit? "I've retired from that
lifestyle," says Williams.

Now, he's renting a one-bedroom house, in Grass Valley,
Calif., with no
TV, no long-distance phone, and no regrets.

"Do you like yourself," asks Wallace.

"I love myself. Because I'm all that I have. And if I
don't love myself,
then no one else will," says Williams. "If I found
myself starting to
dislike something, I tell myself this is who I am. So
what's the point
of disliking it?"

But he can't pay the $8 million that he's supposed to
pay.

"Let's look at the alternative. If I looked at it, and
every day, I woke
up and I said, 'God, I've got all this money to pay
back. I've got all
these problems,'" says Williams. "I wouldn't be sitting
here with you
with a smile on my face right now, you know? Because I'm
happy."

Is he bothered by the people who are angry with him
because of leaving
the game?

"No, because I did [desert and betray them]," says
Williams. "To them, I
did, yes."

Does he care about what people think? "No, I don't. No,"
he says.

"Ricky's always been one of the most selfish,
unpredictable, purposely
bizarre, and more than slightly off-kilter athletes,"
says Sporting News
columnist Paul Atner. "He doesn't care his behavior
might effect anyone
around him. It has always been about Ricky."

"Half of it is accurate," admits Williams. "But how
could I expect him,
if I don't even know who he is, to know anything,
really, about me?"

So what is accurate about Atner's description? "He got
the name right,"
says Williams, laughing. "Well, I am unpredictable, but
who's supposed
to be predictable?"

Here's more of what Atner said: "You know the type that
fancy themselves
as shining lights in a dull world. They try too hard to
be unique.
Instead of looking brave, they look foolish."

"I look very foolish. That's definitely accurate. To a
lot of people, I
look very foolish in what I'm doing. And I understand
that," says
Williams, who isn't bothered at all by it. "Because the
only thing that
matters is how I feel. And if I let what they feel
affect me, then it
changes how I feel."

Another columnist Wallace mentioned wrote: "To some,
Williams is a
selfish quitter. To others, he's a hero who took his job
and shoved it,
leaving a brutal game before it brutalized him. To close
friends,
Williams is a deep-thinking free spirit, who despised
the stereotypes
that came with football, fame and fortune."

"That's a little more accurate," says Williams.

He's the father of three children, from all different
mothers. He's
never been married, but he supports his children
financially. "I'm a
very generous person," he says. "At least I try to be."

His hero is Bob Marley, the legendary Reggae star from
Jamaica who
inspired Williams to wear dreadlocks for years. But in
Australia, while
out taking pictures, Williams cut them off.

"I took a hike, I set up my tripod, I started taking
some self
portraits, and the dreadlocks got in the way," says
Williams. "So I ran
up the top of the hill, got scissors in my van, cut my
hair right then
and there."

Beyond the dreadlocks, Williams named one of his
daughters Marley, and
he and his hero have something else in common: hash.

"He smoked a lot of it. I have done the same," says
Williams.

Could he pass an NFL drug test today? "No," says
Williams.

"So you still smoke marijuana. Anything worse than
that," asks Wallace.

"Worse? What do you mean by worse," says Williams.
"Something I have
sweets, sugar. Sometimes I have a glass of wine. But
that's about it."

And steroids? "No, thank God, never needed to have,"
says Williams. "I
was gifted. I've been very blessed that I never needed
anything to help
me play football."

Will Williams ever play football again? "I really have
no idea," says
Williams. "I can't even tell you what's gonna happen
tomorrow."

Wallace decided to make him a bet. He'll play football.

"What's the wager," asks Williams.

"You don't care about money," says Wallace, laughing. "I
think that you
will want to have the freedom that you have now. But
you're going to
need more money to have the freedom that you now have. .
You've said
that you might like to play for the Oakland Raiders. And
that Raiders
fan like weirdos like you."

"I did say that. I'd have a much easier time fitting in
Oakland," says
Williams, who admits that from time to time, he still
misses the game.

He's only 27. What does he want to be when he's 50?

"Alive," says Williams, laughing. "I love what I'm doing
here. Just
because I'm doing whatever I want to do. You know, like
I said, I valued
freedom for a long time. And I finally feel like I've
got more of it."

So for Williams, money couldn't buy happiness. But now,
he says he's
never been happier.

"People talk about the money that I've given up and the
money that I've
lost," says Williams. "Like the knowledge and the wisdom
that I've
gotten from this experience is priceless. So, the way I
look at it, I'm
still way, way, way up. Way, way, up."

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/12/16/60minutes/main661572.shtml



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