Part 1 People think the persona is an act. They think the “bad boy” image is something I put on like a warm-up suit to sell tickets or intimidate opponents. They don’t understand that when you grow up the way I did, being “hard” isn’t a choice—it’s a survival mechanism that you never really get to take off.

I didn’t learn about pressure in the fourth quarter of a playoff game. I learned it when I was seven years old, watching my father beat down two undercover cops who were trying to jack his stash, then packing our entire lives into a U-Haul in the middle of the night to flee Sacramento. You learn early that safety is an illusion. You learn that the people supposed to protect you might be the ones you need to run from.

By high school, I was an athlete, a “star,” but in my town, that didn’t buy you a pass. It just made you a more visible target. We were the only mixed kids in a white school. One day, a kid—son of a prominent lawyer, the type of kid who knows he’s untouchable—spit in my sister’s hair and called her a slur.

I didn’t go to the principal. I went to the hallway and handled it.

The administration didn’t care about the spit. They didn’t care about the hate speech. They cared that I, the black athlete, had put my hands on the lawyer’s son. I got suspended. The next day, I walked onto campus and saw a mannequin hanging from a tree in the parking lot. It was wearing my jersey. It had a noose around its neck. The KKK had come out to vandalize the school just to remind me of my place.

When you see your own jersey hanging from a noose at 17 years old, you stop worrying about what the media thinks of your attitude. You realize the game is rigged. You realize that to them, you’re just entertainment until you step out of line. Then, you’re a threat.

That anger fueled me. It made me a football All-American, it got me to the NBA. But the league is just a polished version of that high school parking lot. You trade the noose for a contract, but the dynamic—power, control, silence—stays exactly the same.

Part 2 The professional world tries to break you differently. It’s not a mannequin in a tree; it’s a coach in Philadelphia telling you to your face, “You’re not going to use that shot here,” trying to erase your value so you disappear. It’s the constant reminder that you are a commodity.

I remember when the Donald Sterling tapes came out. The world was shocked that an owner viewed his players as livestock, as assets to be owned and displayed but not heard. I wasn’t shocked. I had mixed emotions because that man gave me my first contract, my first chance to feed my family. But I knew what he was.

When you come from where I come from, you know that racism doesn’t disappear just because you put on a uniform. It just gets quieter. It moves from the front lawn to the board room. Sterling wasn’t the only one; he was just the one who got caught on tape. They look at us and see production, numbers, trade value. They don’t see men.

I had to play through that. I had to play the night after my mother died of cancer. She told me to go play, so I did. I put up numbers while I was hollowed out inside. The fans cheered the performance, but they didn’t know the cost. They didn’t know I drove home the next morning and she was gone by 4 A.M. You learn to compartmentalize. You learn to shut off the human part of you to be the machine they paid for.

Part 3 The hardest test wasn’t on the court. It was when my aunt was murdered—stabbed in the neck by her husband, left in the street.

My family wanted street justice. They were ready to hunt him down. I was the one who had to stop it. I was the one who had to stand in front of people I love, people who were hurting, and say, “No. We’re not doing this the old way.”

I had too much to lose. I had a career, a platform. I used the media instead of violence. I went on national TV, put his face out there, and got him caught. But it tore me up inside. The instinct to handle it myself—the way I handled that kid in high school—was screaming in my blood.

That’s the trade-off. You get the money, you get the fame, but you become the safety net for everyone around you. You absorb the trauma so they don’t have to. You swallow the anger so you don’t lose the contract.

I’m retired now. The jersey is retired. But I never hid who I was. I never pretended to be the safe, corporate-friendly athlete. I was the guy who saw the noose and kept playing anyway.