We encountered the NFL linebacker and an athlete in the truest sense,
star of the Travel Channel's show and citizen of the world Dhani Jones
strolling the streets of Dubrovnik. Approachable and personable, he
immediately agreed to an interview.
CP: Dhani, you've been a pro linebacker for about nine seasons now.
Is that right?
DJ: Yes, this season coming up will be my tenth.
CP: How long have you been in the sport?
DJ: My mother didn't let me play in the beginning so I played all
different types of sports. When I got older and went to high school, she
allowed me to play so I've been in the sport since then.
CP: What brought you to football? Did you just love the game or were
there certain aspects of football that were particularly attractive to
you?
DJ: Well, I had a bit of an anger problem, so to express myself and to
find my way out of certain situations, to just sort of better myself I
started playing football. I enjoyed it so much that I remained motivated to keep at it and to get good enough at the game to be able to play
in college.
"Every day, every week, I practiced hard and got
a bit better, learned more"
CP: When did you first realize you were good enough you could go pro?
Did someone point that out to you or...?
DJ: I don't know (laughing...). I always sort of maintained the blue
collar mentality where if you just work hard things would work
themselves out. In this case they worked well. Every day, every week, I
practiced hard and got a bit better, learned more. My aim was to be as
knowledgable as possible about the position that I was playing so that
when I entered the field I could do whatever I wanted to do.
CP: Some people characterize you as a Renaissance man and, indeed,
you are a man of a scope much wider than that of an excellent football
player. You are engaged in various worthwhile causes. Can we briefly talk
about your involvement with the Climate Change Project, working with Al
Gore...?
DJ: There are people who are socially conscious, many are politically
conscious, yet there is an additional important concept of being
environmentally conscious. When you spend so much time outside every
day, especially playing sports, you begin to notice the difference, the
changes in environment. As a result, I committed myself to learning more
about the causes of those changes and being able to create a meaningful
positive impact by getting educated about it and sharing with people
what I have learned.
"Certain countries and people hoard the
resources
and we strive to find a way to channel those resources
toward the ones that are most in need of them"
CP: You're also involved with the UN's World Food Program...
DJ: There are millions of people in this world that are in need of the
basic neccessities such as food and shelter on the one hand while on the
other there is an overwhelming amount of natural resources to take from.
Certain countries and people hoard the resources and we strive to find
a way to channel those resources toward the ones that are most in need
of them.
CP: A noble effort. Within the same line of thought and the spirit of
charity is the Gift of New York -- a 9/11 philanthropy organization.
Perhaps you could shed a bit of light on your involvement with it?
DJ: The attack on the World Trade Center shook up America and the world.
At the time I played for the Giants. We stopped playing for a week.
Aside from the much needed philanthropic side of it, we understood that
people needed and wanted a way to collectively come together and that
football, as a sport and an inexorable part of the fabric of culture, is
a great means to do that, to get their mind off the pressing thoughts by
'being on the field with the athletes', to allow them space and time to
communicate and spend time with one another.
CP: Were you always a worldly person, a guy who has his mind on affairs that
impact all of us, modes of existence that lie beyond your immediate field of vision...
DJ: I've always been interested in people. Both my parents were in the
military so we traveled quite a bit. Having experienced so much
interaction with various people and all these different places at such a
young age ingrained in me a lasting curiousity that ever propels me to
learn about various peoples and their cultural worlds. I do not think
this will ever end.
"If you wanna travel, get on a plane and get out
of the country;
if you wanna paint, find a canvas and illustrate"
CP: Dhani, you're an athlete and entrepreneur, a poet and a painter,
photographer and musician, world-traveler, environmental philanthropist
and a community volunteer. How are you able to find the time to do all
these things?
DJ: It's about using your time wisely, that is, finding what you passion
is and commiting the time to yourself so that you can do the things that
you want to do. If you wanna travel, get on a plane and get out of the
country; if you wanna paint, find a canvas and illustrate. It's the same
approach for any of the things you wanna do.
"My motto is CARPE DIEM"
CP: You're a man of action, you don't just think of something you
would like to do and then leave that wish stowed away in some drawer to wait
for a better, more auspicious time...
DJ: My motto is CARPE DIEM. I truly believe that. You know, a lot of
people stare out of the window and just wait... Other people see that
window is open and they take a chance and jump through it. I live my
life trying to take chances. Now, of course I do not proceed
haphazardously. I think and calculate, but I do proceed despite inherent
inevitability of a
certain amount of risk.
CP: Your love of travel is well known.
DJ: Travel is my passion, it's what I love to do. It's something I'd
like for others to do as well because I believe it would enrich their
lives.
"Communication is not only verbal. Thus, I find
that people
can always relate to one another and find a way to communicate"
CP: How has traveling enriched your life?
DJ: I think it has allowed me to be a better person, to expand my
horizons, to learn how to communicate with different people even if I do
not always know their language. Point in case is when I found myself in Paris.
I do not speak French, but because I have traveled widely I just drew
from my experiences and successfully communicated with the French. Or,
when I ended up some four hundred miles outside one of the main cities
in an African country without a translator. Same thing. Communication is
not only verbal. Thus, I find that people can always relate to one another and find a way
to communicate.
CP: Travel, it seems, is also a great way to get the first-hand
knowledge of the world?
DJ: Sure. You learn about places, about people, different cultures,
history, you learn what makes the world -- the world. Some people sit at
home and try to learn that through televison and the internet, but there
is no better way to acquire the understanding of the world than by
witnessing it first hand.
"I maintain understanding that we're all just
men, women, and children
who happen to live in different places and do different things"
CP: You were a TV-host and now a TV-star. How has being in the
spotlight affected your life?
DJ: I don't pay attention to it. I maintain understanding that we're all
just men, women, and children who happen to live in different places and do
different things.
CP: Let's talk about sports for minute. You participated in a whole
variety of them. Can you tell us of some?
DJ: For example, Hurling in Ireland, America's Cup racing in New
Zealand, Surf Life-Saving in Australia, Mauy Tay in Thailand, Pradal
Serey in Cambodia, Waterpolo in Croatia... the list goes on and on. I
just hope I can continue and do as many sports as possible during my off
season and then, during the season, just get back to football.
"... Waterpolo is a very difficult sport
that you have to practice to be able to really play"
CP: How was your athletic experience here in Dubrovnik, Croatia, the
world's capital of waterpolo?
DJ: It was a bit ackward because waterpolo is a very difficult sport
that you have to practice to be able to really play. However, I am a
swimmer and I am a competitor, so I had at least two thirds covered. The
last third is being an experienced waterpolo player and that's the edge
that professionals in the sport have over me. I just went at it wanting
to participate in the sport and to learn, to have fun experiencing it.
"Open your eyes. Go out and see the world"
CP: Your advice to children. How can they grow up to be better
persons, better athletes, how can they better respect and appreciate the
world and people in it?
DJ: Open your eyes. Go out and see the world. Don't spend all your time
in the house, with the blinders on. God gave us the environment, God gave
us nature, God gave us people and different countries and forms of
transportation, a way to see the world, God gave us means to communicate with
our mouths, with our eyes, through foods, through sports. Go out and
experience all these different cultures. That's the best form of
education you can get, the best way to understand who you are and where
you fit into this world, the best way to express yourself and give to
other people.
CP: Dhani, on behalf of Cavtatportal, thank you very much and welcome
to Dubrovnik and our Riviera. We hope to see you here again.
DJ: Of course. And, I'll always come back.