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Jim Brewer (number 11) on the U.S. Men’s 1972 Olympic Basketball Team |
Former NBA center and member of the U.S. Men’s Olympic Basketball
Team of 1972, Jim Brewer reflects on competing in the Munich Games and
the direction his life has taken since then.
For Jim Brewer, of Maywood, Illinois, the Olympics represents more
than the thrill of seeing great athletes perform at their best. Forty
years ago at the Munich Olympics, Brewer was a member of the U.S. Men’s
Olympic Basketball Team. What began as the happiest moment in his life
was marred by frustration and sorrow.
“The Olympics are humanity at its
best,” says Brewer. “The whole world is there in one place and all the athletes treat each other with respect.”
Munich,
however, also brought Brewer face to face with tragedy and injustice,
when 11 members of the Israeli Olympic team died at the hands of
terrorists.
And, on a personal level, he was brought up short by a
decision that turned the men’s basketball final into what is often
referred to as “the most controversial game in international basketball
history.” The U.S. team, thrilled with their 50–49 win in the last three
seconds of the game, ultimately lost the gold medal to the Soviet
Union. Because of unauthorized interference from the scorers’ table,
those last three seconds were ordered replayed twice and, in the end,
the Soviet team took the game 51–50.
Graduating from University
of Minnesota the following spring, Brewer went on to play nine years in
the NBA including a championship season with the Los Angeles Lakers. But
success didn’t bring him everything he had hoped for—there was
something missing in his life.
“I just was not satisfied,” he says. “My career was OK, but for me personally, things were just kind of so-so.”
He began reading self-help books and in 1979 he came across
Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health by L. Ron Hubbard.
“That
book made so much sense to me—the way it explained about the mind, the
body and the spirit,” he says. “I saw that something could be done
about any problem a person might have.”
In the back of the book
he found the address of the Church of Scientology Detroit. He enrolled
on courses, read more books, received Scientology auditing (spiritual
counseling) and trained as a Scientology auditor (counselor).
“I
was very eager to learn how everything was done and see why it worked so
well. I just wanted to know it all. And everything I have looked at and
experienced in Scientology has been positive,” he says.
His advice to young athletes or anyone who wants to succeed in life is simple.
“The
beauty and the joy of living comes from working toward something,” he
says. “Just make sure it’s a purpose that’s meaningful to
you
and something that you enjoy working toward, because you can’t really
fail if you continue to pursue those goals in sport and in life.
There’s always something to get you closer to what you are trying to
accomplish.”
As to his own formula for success:
“I try to
think for myself,” says Brewer. “At a very young age, I was doing what
everybody else did and what people expected of me and I didn’t feel so
good about it all the time. But I think when you look into things for
yourself and make decisions based on what
you think and keep counsel with yourself, that makes you a lot happier.”
For
Brewer, thinking for yourself includes making decisions about
recreational and psychotropic drugs. Knowing that athletes are role
models for youth, Brewer volunteers with a Scientology-sponsored drug
education and prevention program, conducting seminars in Chicago and
Texas. He also worked on a program for Milwaukee kids identified as “at
risk” by that city’s police department.
“Drugs are demand
driven,” he says. “Kids are sold the wrong information—that they should
drink and try recreational drugs—they don’t really understand what the
effects are. If they know the effects of these substances and where
drugs will lead them, they won’t try them, or, if they do, when they
understand the down side they will quit. With the largest proportion of
the U.S. prison population stemming mainly from drug use and sales, we
owe it to our young people to get the word out to them. And that’s what
my involvement comes from—just wanting to see things get better.”
To
meet Scientologists from all walks of life and learn what they are
doing in their communities, visit the Scientology website at
www.scientology.org.
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The
popular “Meet a Scientologist” profiles on the Church of Scientology
International Video Channel at Scientology.org now total more than 200
broadcast-quality documentary videos featuring Scientologists from
diverse locations and walks of life. The personal stories are told by
Scientologists who are educators, teenagers, skydivers, a golf
instructor, a hip-hop dancer, IT manager, stunt pilot, mothers, fathers,
dentists, photographers, actors, musicians, fashion designers,
engineers, students, business owners and more.
A
digital pioneer and leader in the online religious community, in April
2008 the Church of Scientology became the first major religion to launch
its own official YouTube Video Channel, with videos now viewed more
than 7 million times.
Happiness and strength endure only in the absence of hate. To hate alone is the road to disaster. To love is the road to strength. To love in spite of all is the secret of greatness. And may very well be the greatest secret in this universe.~~L. Ron Hubbard, founder of the
Scientology relgion