CNNfyi.com
  > News
 from:
cnnsi

A crucial time-out

November 22, 2000
Web posted at: 2:53 PM EST (1953 GMT)


In this story:

DISCUSSION-ACTIVITY
RELATED STORIES, SITES icon


Look at the Player of the Year, scrubbing his hands like a surgeon -- 50, 100 times a day. How can the best athlete in school, the most handsome, with a 4.15 GPA, have such filthy hands?

He begins to walk away from the sink, and now he spins back, sure he's missed a spot, and starts all over again.

Look at Julian Swartz, the 1999 high school Player of the Year in Wisconsin, 23.2 points a game, a full ride to the University of Wisconsin, senior class president, doesn't like to miss church. So why can't he sleep? Why does he keep getting out of bed in the middle of the night, terrified that someone might break in, that someone in the house might die in a fire, and whose fault would it be except his? So he creeps through the halls, checking the locks, the oven, the range top, the microwave, for crying out loud. He begins to go back to bed, and now he spins back to check it all again.

 ALSO
 

Look at him, freshman at Wisconsin, April 2000, just back from the Final Four, girls doing backflips to get noticed. So why is he sitting on the pier, on the lake, at sunset, writing his suicide note? I cannot, nor anyone, take away the sadness, pain, and undescribable feelings I battle every second of every minute of every hour of every day.

Yeah, they have a name for it, but that doesn't make it any easier -- OCD, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. His obsessions were that his germs, his actions and his imperfections would put others at risk. His compulsions grew into ceaseless thoughts of suicide.

He'd been given Prozac. He'd been sent to a therapist. It was no use. "My brain overpowers all of it," he told his friends. "It overpowers everything." He stopped the therapy.

It's been this way for years. Look at him, fifth grade. He takes a 10-minute shower and then spends a half hour wiping every tile bone-dry so the next person won't slip. Sits on the playground doing homework while the other boys play, checks his answers for the 10th time, gets up to play, spins back to check them again. Sits taking a test, innocent of cheating, yet so terrified he'll be accused of copying that he takes a right answer and makes it wrong.

Look at him on the court -- the high school star -- 6'6", 220 pounds, with a sweet J and big ups. He'll get 23 points and 12 rebounds in a win, but he'll skip the pizza party, go back to his bedroom and brood about a turnover, fret about it all night, write about it, analyze how he let everybody down, until he feels so ashamed of himself that he aches to die.

Look at him, his first college season, winter 2000, staying for hours after practice, can't go to his dorm until he's made 10 treys in a row or 25 straight free throws. Coaches, buddies left long ago. He has to keep shooting because he's letting them down. He's not starting. Shoots until he's bleary, starts to leave, spins back to do it again.

His extra efforts are never enough, which is why, on the pier, the suicide note is finished. Eight pages, perfectly neat, block letters. He tucks it into his coat pocket and heads for Walgreens, where he will buy a bottle of poison, chug it, and at long last will come sleep.

So why doesn't he drive his moped to Walgreens? Why does he end up back at his dorm room, vacant-eyed? What leads a female friend to find the letter a week later, in his journal? After only a half page she races to call Julian's brother, who calls his parents, who calls their son, who, with work, finds a way not just to stay alive but to live.

Look at him today, tight with his God. He's writing a book about his life and his faith, speaking to groups around the state, running a prison ministry's basketball games and working with kids who have OCD. He's taking this hoops season off, this school year off.

Yeah, he found a way to fight OCD: by helping 10 kids who have it. Make it 11 -- he helps himself the most. He talks of next year, of rejoining the Badgers. His best friend, Greg Monfre, worries about what the vice of big-time college basketball could do to him. "All it takes is one small incident," Monfre says.

"I'm keeping it under control this time," says Julian, now 20. He promises he will finally make the game fun, play for himself, dirty his hands and let them stay that way.

Look at Julian Swartz. He wants so badly to get better. Pray he doesn't spin back.



RELATED STORIES:
CNNSI.com's NCAA men's basketball preview
November 14, 2000
Spartans badger Wisconsin to reach title game
April 2, 2000

RELATED SITE:
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.

© 2000 Cable News Network. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you. | Read our privacy guidelines.