Heute darf ich mein sechsjähriges Blogjubiläum feiern. Es ist unglaublich, was aus einer spontanen Idee alles entstanden ist. Deshalb appelliere ich an euch alle: Seid positiv verrückt und glaubt an eure Träume! Habt Visionen, vertraut auf eure Fähigkeiten, glaubt an eure Ideen und versucht sie umzusetzen.
Als ich diesen Blogbeitrag beginnen wollte, wusste ich nicht, welches Foto hier am besten passen könnte. Denn wir erleben schon eine äußerst merkwürdige Zeit im Moment (ich weiß ja nicht, wie’s euch geht, aber ich fühle mich im Moment, als würde ich in einer Blase leben…). Doch dann entschied ich mich sehr schnell für das obige Bild, das ich in Newcastle upon Tyne in England aufgenommen habe. Mit dieser wundervollen Stadt verbindet mich sehr viel. Ein Fußballfilm hat mich einst inspiriert, dorthin und in einige andere englische Städte (London, Manchester, Liverpool, …) zu reisen. Der St. James‘ Park ist – noch vor der Anfield Road (!) – derzeit mein Lieblingsstadion weltweit (da es das altehrwürdige Jahnstadion an der Prüfeninger Straße ja leider nicht mehr gibt… [Ein bisschen Fußballnostalgie muss hier schon sein!]). Auf den einen beiden Seiten ist es höher als auf den anderen zwei Seiten (ja, nachdenken…;-)) und damit hat man an so mancher Stelle einen atemberaubenden Blick über die Brückenstadt. Immer, wenn ich dort war, war es ein bisschen wie „nach Hause kommen“. Und glaubt mir eines: Diese Reise nach Großbritannien war meine erste längere Reise alleine ins Ausland und sie wurde eine der schönsten, aufregendsten, spannendsten, verrücktesten, wundervollsten und besten Fußball- und Kulturreisen meines Lebens!
Gerade in diesen Zeiten bin ich der Meinung, dass wir die positiven Erinnerungen und Bilder, die wir in unseren Köpfen gespeichert haben, aus den hintersten Gehirnwindungen mal wieder nach vorne holen sollten… Tauchen wir ein in unsere Eindrücke, schmecken wir die Fish and Chips, riechen wir den frisch gemähten Stadionrasen, spüren wir, wie die Luft britzelt bei diesen besonderen Spielen, hören wir die lauten Fangesänge… (ihr dürft ruhig noch ein wenig weiter in euren eigenen Erinnerungen schwelgen – genießt es, ich schreib derweil schon mal weiter…)
Heute feiere ich mein Blogjubiläum jedoch nicht im United Kingdom, sondern in Deutschland. Es hat mich mal wieder in ein Fußballstadion gezogen. Wohin es mich verschlagen hat, werdet ihr voraussichtlich noch im Dezember auf meinem Blog erfahren.
Ich freue mich unglaublich, nach mehreren Jahren wieder in dieser Stadt zu sein und mir ein Spiel anzusehen. Vor allem bin ich sehr dankbar dafür, dass das im Moment noch möglich ist und deshalb nutze ich diese Chance. Mir ist bewusst, dass es aktuell ein großes Privileg ist ins Stadion gehen zu können. Am meisten freue ich mich jedoch diesmal nicht auf die Partie an sich (klingt komisch, ist aber so). Sondern vielmehr darauf, wieder fußballbegeisterten Menschen zu begegnen und das Spiel mit einem guten alten Freund zu besuchen, den ich durch ein Ehrenamt im Fußball kennen gelernt habe. Denn mir fehlen die sozialen Kontakte derzeit ehrlich gesagt wirklich sehr.
Schließlich soll Fußball Menschen in allererster Linie verbinden. Fußball soll Grenzen überwinden. Ich hoffe, dass er dies in den kommenden Wochen wieder vermehrt schafft und dass er nicht spaltet oder neue Grenzen schafft. Denn diese Zeit ist eine besondere und sie fordert viel.
Deshalb: Lasst uns positiv in die Zukunft blicken und seien wir gespannt, was kommt! Ich freue mich jedenfalls, euch jetzt schon ankündigen zu können, dass bald wieder ein neuer und interessanter Beitrag online geht – worüber genau, das sei natürlich noch nicht verraten…
Bleibt gesund!
Sportliche Grüße
Lisa Blue
P.S.: Falls sich einige von euch fragen sollten, wo der Text über die Ultrakultur bleibt… Der kommt noch, allerdings wird dies noch eine Weile dauern. Auf Grund dessen, dass ich das im Moment alles ehrenamtlich mache, haben andere Themen bei mir gerade Prio. Und vorher möchte ich aus verschiedenen Gründen noch ein paar andere Texte veröffentlichen. Also habt bitte Geduld, mir liegt das Thema auch am Herzen und aufgeschoben ist keinesfalls aufgehoben!
ENGLISH VERSION:
Dear football fans around the globe!
Today I celebrate my six-year blog anniversary. It’s incredible what has emerged from a spontaneous idea. Therefore, I appeal to all of you: Be positively crazy and believe in your dreams! Have visions, trust in your abilities, believe in your ideas and try to realise them.
When I wanted to start this blog post, I didn’t know which photo would fit best here because we are experiencing a very strange time at the moment (I don’t know about you, but I feel like I am living in a bubble at the moment…). But then I very quickly decided to take the photo above, which was taken in Newcastle upon Tyne in England. I have a lot of connections with this wonderful city. A football movie once inspired me to travel there and to some other English cities (London, Manchester, Liverpool, …). St. James‘ Park is – even before Anfield Road (!) – currently my favourite stadium in the world (since the venerable Jahnstadion on Prüfeninger Straße no longer exists…). [A bit of football nostalgia must be here!]). On one side it is higher than on the other two sides (yes, think about this…;-)) and so at some points you really have a breathtaking view over the bridge city. Whenever I was there, it was a bit like „coming home“. And believe me one thing: this trip to Great Britain was my first longer trip abroad alone and it turned out to be one of the most beautiful, exciting, crazy, wonderful and best football and cultural trips of my life!
Especially in this time, I think that we should bring the positive memories and images that we have stored in our heads from the back of our brains to the front again… Let’s dive into our impressions, taste the fish and chips, smell the freshly mown stadium turf, feel the air sizzle at these special matches, hear the loud fan chants… (feel free to wallow in your own memories for a while longer – enjoy it, I’ll continue writing in the meantime…)
Today, however, I am not celebrating my blog anniversary in the United Kingdom, but in Germany. Once again, I was drawn to a football stadium. You will find out where I ended up in December or January on my blog.
I am incredibly happy to be back in this city after several years and to watch a game. Above all, I’m very grateful that this is still possible at the moment and that’s why I’m taking this chance. I am aware that it is a great privilege to be able to go to the stadium at the moment. But what I’m looking forward to most this time is not the game itself (sounds strange, but it’s true). Rather, I’m looking forward to meeting football enthusiasts again and attending the game with an old friend whom I met through voluntary work in football. Because, to be honest, I really miss the social contacts at the moment.
After all, football is supposed to connect people first and foremost. Football is supposed to overcome borders. I hope that it will do this more in the coming weeks and that it will not divide or create new borders. Because this is a special time and it demands a lot.
Therefore, let’s look positively into the future and be excited about what is to come! In any case, I am happy to be able to announce that another new and interesting article will be online soon – but of course I won’t tell you exactly what it will be about yet…
Stay healthy!
Sporty greetings
Lisa Blue
P.S.: If some of you are wondering where the text about ultra culture is… It’s still coming, but it will take a while. Due to the fact that I’m doing all this on a voluntary basis at the moment, other topics have priority for me. And before that, for various reasons, I would like to publish a few other texts. So please be patient, this topic is also close to my heart and postponed is not abandoned!
As announced before, the football book has travelled from London to Texas. Michael Lahoud, former MLS player and Sierra Leonean international, has immortalized himself in it and answered my questions about the book, but above all about his life story… Read for yourself what wonderful experiences he could make through football…
Enjoy, take care and stay at home!
Lisa Blue
Interview with Michael Lahoud
Lisa: Hello Michael, Thank you very much for your time. It was so nice when I heard that the book went towards Texas and now we are talking with a time difference of seven hours. Football really connects people…
Why did you want to take part in this project and what did Ryan tell you so that you wanted to take part in?
Michael: You know, I think what really interested me is – I am a big believer that things happen for a reason and that things are coming to your life at the right time. So, Ryan and I, we have been catching up and when he messaged me about the book, it came at the perfect time because I started reflecting back on my career. I started reflecting back on this season. And I really needed to be reminded of why I play this game. So it was just really the right time to be able to be given a blank canvas, to write something, to be a part of something, and really to give back to the game of football something that has given me so much. I want to give back so this story seems like a perfect opportunity.
What do you like most about the game? Is it about the connection of people from everywhere, is it the team feeling or what do you like?
It’s multi-fascinating, I absolutely love playing. It’s a place where you can dream in football or it’s a place where it doesn’t matter where you come from, your background doesn’t matter. Personally for me, football was the place where my background, my story, my socio-economic status doesn’t matter. In football age, race, nationality: It does not matter. We are all connected by football. And I think that I got to know there what really inspired me is anything that was given to me, anything that was taught to me, it has really started to inspire me to pass that knowledge on. I believe in young people, in young footballers. I used to be a young footballer and someone believed in me and so, whenever I get up there with young players and I see a little bit of myself in them, makes me that much more passionate about playing the game.
How hard was it? You have been a refugee when you came to the United States. Did you came on your own or with your family?
I came to the US as a refugee, I traveled by myself and I was awarded an emergency reason when I was six years old. I had no clue what was going on around me, but there is a tragic civil war going on in Sierra Leone at that time and that visa saved my life and football, really, saved my life. And when I came here, it didn’t know what was going on. I knew that I was going to come to reconnect with my family, my immediate family. But it was the best thing that probably could happen to me that I was too young to know anything. But I am very grateful for that visa, and that’s something I will never forget.
I imagine it must have been so hard because you were six years old, a little child…
Yes, it was difficult. It was hard enough when you go to somewhere new. The language is very difficult. English is spoken around the world but it’s unlike any other language. So I was learning English in school back in Africa. But what really made it difficult for me was, as a child, from Sierra Leone, we just grew up as Sierra Leonians. We never talked about what race you where, what you believe … It was really was we are just like all the same. And when I came to America… It was the first time that I felt different. And it was the first time it was hard done how different I was. So, I was so confused because I was like – God damn – I have never experienced this before. And the easiest way to tell who you are if no one says it for you is: who you are not. So I just started noticing all the differences. That was very difficult for me.
Did you make experience with racism or how did you feel?
No, I lucked out. The first day I came to school in America, I met my best friend. Believe it or not: It was football that connected us.
That is really the power of football. It really unites the world. When I came to school, I was so afraid. A group of kids where playing football. Really, I wanted to be seen and I did not want to be seen because I hoped that no one sees me because I don’t know, I am the kid that’s different, that’s new. That is different. And of course, whenever you don’t want that you will be seen. The ball came to me, someone kicked the ball at a bounce. And the students said: ‘Hey, throw the ball.’ And I have never thrown a ball before, so I was very nervous. I did the one thing but I did not know how to do. I got the ball and I volleyed it back to them. And they have never seen that before. I volleyed it so hard and I kicked it over the roof of the building. I had the respect of everybody immediately. I was the kiddy who was new and nobody noticed. It didn’t hurt that the first person that came over to me was a most popular kid at school who said: ‘Hey, I have never seen anyone do that! You’re my new best friend.’ And he took me to his family. He was like: ‘Oh, this is my goalie, he can kick both – soccer balls, tennis balls – on the roof’. I could not believe it.
Did you get the chance to live in a family there because you were very young or was it like a refugee home?
My family was here. It was really interesting being in Sierra Leone and my family being here. I didn’t realize that I was so grateful for that. We all have family that is our blood. And we have the people become family to us. Because of that day it was like I was adopted.
He was like your brother…
Yes, really. It was really like I became part of them, it was offered this adopted family. They were so awesome to my biological family and they were so loving for me. My parents worked all the time. My mum, in particular, she’s a nurse, so it was really difficult for us trying to make sense of life here from where we came from. But my best friend, his name is Jack Wolf, I am forever grateful for what they meant to my family and I, over the years, what they made for me over the years.
Michael Lahoud played for Miami FC. Photo: Alenny Orovio
In your story you wrote down into the football book, you wrote about the sports psychologist Dr. Cristina Fink. That she changed your life…
She was a part of my club at the time of the MLS (Major League Soccer). She was in Los Angeles. Here in Americas we do trades. It is similar to the basketball system. I am grateful that one trade allowed me to meet Dr. Cristina Fink. From the moment I met her, I knew that I need to work with her. It was never anything she said but she has this presence. I didn’t know her story or her background. She is a former Olympian, a high-jumper, from Mexico City. She is a very, very, very brilliant woman. I really knew that I wanted to get better. I wanted to be the best possible footballer I could be. I knew that I was given a talent. I knew my career could go places but I knew that talent wasn’t enough. I wanted help. There was a point where I needed help to get there and that was a very humbling experience. It was the first time in my career that I experienced not being the star. I experienced not being ‘the football player’ and that’s very humbling, if you experience it, when you get at professional sports. I think that adversity is the best thing that can happen to footballers, especially to young footballers. So, it was the right time for me to meet her and so, I was the only person in the team who was going to see her. Everyone, at that time, saying sports psychologists were not really like popular here, especially in America. But I did not really know who else was doing it but once she told me that this was a big thing throughout the rest of the world. And ‘in America, you guys are behind.’ And this aspect with sports, especially with football… That really helped me seeing that even the greatest of football stars, they needed help longer way to get there where they are. You can’t do it on your own. And so, it was just a perfect fit.
In what way did she help you at most?
Part of it was mental coaching but it never felt like coaching of any sorts. It just felt like someone who believed in me, who saw more in me that I could see. More than my talent. I think, every coach that I ever played for, saw, but could never put into words. She was the first person who could.
How old have you been when you met her the first time?
I was 26 years old. I was really haunted by this feeling of doing well is not enough. I have to kill it, I have to be the best of the best ever, I have to leave, everyone has to leave watching me with standing ovation. That’s not realistic. There is always someone who is better than you, who is better than you at something. Cristina didn’t try to take that away from me. She just gave me another perspective. She said: ‘Don’t lose that, and use another way of looking at it, use another way of motivating yourself. It’s not out there. It was always inside of you’. The most amazing things she said to me apart from playing for the love of the game was: ‘A good player doesn’t have to show that he is a good player. He just is one’. That stripped away that feeling of: ‘I need to prove, I need to prove, every day I need to prove,’ and really giving your validation to other people. Other people decide how you are doing. She said: ‘No. You know, a good footballer knows he is a good footballer. He hasn’t to tell the world, he has to know.’ In football, you have to fulfill your job.
It was those type of conversations that were so enlightening. In football, as much as to have talent, I would always think my way through. It came so naturally to me that I would – you know, in my head, I prepared the match as a young boy. At university, neither as a pro, I would get my mind ready and so to be on the work with someone who helped say: ‘Hey, here are some things that you are doing that will help you.’ And, ‘here are some ways that you can actually use to develop your mind to the next level.’ It’s really an incredible experience.
Did you have an idol like Zizou or did you just try to believe in yourself and try what you could?
Yeah, absolutely. Zinedine Zidane was never my idol, I thought he was an amazing footballer. It wasn’t just the class of what he played. He almost played of an elegance that he was so good. And he knew it. And you knew it. But it was that he knew it. And he wanted you to know it. My idol was David Beckham. He was someone who showed me that you can be more than football. For him, it was the commercial aspect of things. But he was the modern-day footballer who did really take that to another level: That you can be more than football. And this means something different for everyone else. For him, it’s the fame. He is also a family man. You can actually be a footballer but you can still be more than football.
Additionally, I would like to ask you about your social engagement. What projects do you do for social purposes?
It is something that has become a passion along with football. In 2010, I met a woman who asked me a question which changed my life. She asked me: ‘How would you like to change the world?’ And I was just started on my career and I was never expecting anyone who was asking me that if it didn’t have to do with football. I answered: ‘Oh, I change the world with football, being an amazing footballer’. But it really invited me into, you know, that the world is bigger than just me. And there is a social currency that runs deeper than just what I see. It’s bigger than just me. It captured my heart in a way that I knew. That I would change, and I would never be the same. That question she asked me, invited me in a process of self-discovery. It has expended my mind. I really wanted to use football, rather than just that means it is from my own game. To use football as a platform to benefit others. When you are a footballer and you play every weekend – yes, you play for your own passions and your own desires – but you are only a professional because the fans pay to watch you play. Without the fans you’re just – you’re an amateur. What it means to be a part of the team, play for that badge: You play for a tradition that is bigger than you. The players that make the greatest impact in the game, they embody that, they take that on, this means more to them. That message of this means more. My life, my story, my career…It means more. And I really want to use that to impact my home country, my native country of Sierra Leone. Her question invited me of finding out more. Not just about who I am, but where I come from. It helped me to recover a part of me because of Civil War and moving to America. So I like to use my platform as a footballer to make sure that this war in Sierra Leone never happens again. I want to help the children to make sure that this never happens again.
She was helping my country to build schools in my home country. She is a former Peace Corp member. I could not believe the timing. I never had a person whose timing was that impactable to enter my life and enter my eyes.
What did you do?
I started up on a journey. I really wanted to build a school in my hometown in Sierra Leone. In five years, we did this along with my Sierra Leone national team-teammates; we partnered to build a school. That’s something I will forever be proud of. Along the way to that process, awful things were happening in that country; Cholera broke out in 2014; a friend of mine from Heidelberg and I, we teamed out to raise money for ‘Doctors Without Borders,’ and we created this campaign called ‘Kick Ebola in the butt’. People really liked it: They supported the cause and they supported the school. It is amazing what playing for something and using a sport that brings people that would have otherwise never been connected together – when you use that for a cause that is bigger than yourself, for a common cause, it’s amazing, the power of football. I think that encapsulated the power of football. Now, we are looking to take that school to the next level by really incorporating playing football. For these kids, we built a football pitch at a school. It is incredible power for them, also for the people in the neighborhood. It is a moment that I will never forget seeing the kids you are impacting and the gratitude.
Thank you very much for these stories! Now, I would like to come back to the topic of the football book. Why did you decide to take part in our project?
I believe in stories. The most powerful thing about every one of us is our stories and the stories can’t say being written. Being able to go back to Sierra Leone and witness the story that was being written there, it made me so grateful for the people who supported me and encouraged me through the process in building that school. What I played for, or what might have been if I hadn’t, or stopped because there are people who are counting on me that I didn’t know, that I’ve never seen before half-way across the world; who are counting on me to keep their dream alive and to see those people saying ‘Thank you! Because of your dream, we have a chance in life.’ When I think about seeing those kids, that’s what really touches me and I always remember.
We do live in a world of excellence and luxury. If I could give just one wish to other Americans, it would be the ability to travel the world. In Europe, you guys travel so much. Here in America, because the country is so big, a lot of people do not travel so much. Everybody should try to get other perspectives. We need each other, as humans, not just our neighbors.
It feels such an honor to be a part of this book because we all have stories as I said, and even as footballers, people think that everything is just ‘perfect’. They only see you from outside and there is much more to footballers, and human beings, as well. We have struggles, we have moments that change our lives. To be able to invite other people into our stories, it’s really an intimate experience of this book and I can really see it taking it off. I am really excited to go back and read stories. Go back and read my own story with a different perspective, in a few years. I think it’s a special project and it reminds us to be human. When I say that, for me, humanity, there is a sense of stories. The power of stories. That is something that we never lose. That stories make us human.
Here is the news: The football book traveled to Ryan Smith (UK) who works as a player consultant and played for FC Millwall, Arsenal London and Southampton FC among other clubs. Ryan gave me an interview about his impression and he gave a little hint concerning the next station of the book (but he did not reveal WHO gets it). It remains exciting!
Until I know more, I proudly present you the latest interview below… Have fun at reading:-).
Sportive regards
Lisa Blue
INTERVIEW WITH RYAN SMITH
Lisa: What has been your first thought when Danny told you about the football book project?
Ryan: When he called me and explained it to me, I was firstly surprised because I have never heard of a concept like this before. It is a very unique experience I think to do because it is a great idea. I always wanted to tell that I enjoyed writing inside the book because it was actually a lot of memories for me. Really lovely experience.
Was it hard for you or did you have lots of ideas what you could write inside?
Yeah, I mean, with my career, of course, I had many good moments. But one or two leading up to my career, as a kid. So, a few things came to mind. And when something comes to me, I literally run with it and then other things come and then it’s snowballs. For me, I decided to talk about my career prior to become a professional. It’s more about how I actually started playing football at a professional club. So it is a story that I have a great, great memory from. Because it was a special moment for me and it was the moment my dream was realized.
Why did you decide to take part in the project?
I think the main reason for me was everything that I came with it: The concept of the book. The fact that it was unlimited in kind of you want to tell. You can tell anything. So, I mean it was a very flexible situation to be in. For me it was a combination of those things.
Who will you give it to?
I am gonna sending it to the USA. So this book is gonna going further. The next person is someone I played with in England and we both played out in Major League Soccer as well. He already accepted to take it and he is definitely happy to take part in this project. Me, too. As I said before, I love the idea. It is incredible.