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Batkid: Young Knight Rises

November 18, 2013 · Discuss on the GT Forum

There are few times that an entire city comes together. When asked to think of a city or country uniting, it usually brings up images of facing adversity. 9/11. The Boston Marathon bombings. Hurricane Katrina. Superstorm Sandy. These tragedies brought us together as people in ways that stick in our minds forever.

Traumatic events force us to look at our own lives, appreciate what we have, and want to help those touched by what has happened. Is this sense of community only created by negative events?

http://www.webvisionsevent.com/userfiles/BatKid.jpg

(Image via webvisionsevent.com)

I witnessed such a gathering this past Friday. Not as a result of tragedy, but of triumph and celebration.

My city transformed from San Francisco into Gotham City for a 5 year old boy named Miles Scott. If you’re reading this and haven’t heard his story, you probably live under a rock…but here’s a recap anyway!

Miles has been battling leukemia for most of his little life. 3 years, to be exact. He’s now in remission…and hopefully he stays that way! During his treatment, he told the Make-A-Wish foundation that he wanted to be Batman. Looking forward to being Batman helped give him hope for the future and fight off the cancer.

You see, for a kid who can only remember feeling sick, fighting, and struggling, the idea of something to look forward to can mean everything. To look forward and believe you have a future worth fighting for can give you an energy boost. And this boy’s boost was Batman.

(Image via Business Insider)

Research has shown that mental imagery has a huge impact on the health of those who are fighting chronic disease. Imagining that you’re strong, in charge, and a survivor (all qualities of a superhero) can cause you to actually be those things. I mean, look at Miles in the photo above. He could take anything on, couldn’t he?

…Even a crowd of thousands upon thousands of people, cheering for him.

Unfortunately, I was unable to make it to any of the Batkid events, due to previous appointments…but I am kicking myself for not cancelling and going to see this outpouring of support.

From what I’ve heard, Miles was shy and a bit overwhelmed at the start of the day. Who wouldn’t, if they had never seen what 10,000 people look like and all of a sudden you’re surrounded…and they all know your name…and are looking at you?

By the end of the day though, he had gotten somewhat used to it and was taking on villains like the Riddler and the Penguin. Two major villains in one day! He saved Gotham, rescued a damsel in distress, stopped a bank robbery, and save the SF Giants mascot, Lou the Seal. And at the end of it all, he had a huge smile on his face.

http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/assets/131115202505-01-batkid-1115-horizontal-large-gallery.jpg

(Image via CNN)

This is a day this boy will never forget. And if someday he has to fight off bullies, or stress, or (god forbid) cancer again, he will have this memory to pull strength from and believe that he is Batman. That is something no one can take away from him.

In fact, the entire city of San Francisco (hell, the entire SF Bay Area and beyond) were there to help create this memory for him. Rather than coming together in tragedy, we came together in support and hope that Miles will never have to face something like this again. In celebration of his remission, and to help him keep fighting to keep his immune system strong.

http://cdn.abclocal.go.com/images/kabc/cms_exf_2007/news/bizarre/131115-img-ap-batkid-batman-fists-in-the-air-02.jpg

(Image via ABC)

It was incredibly moving to see my city do what it did for one boy. He was our hero for a day. I’d gladly see it done for any other child in need of some hope. Patricia Wilson, an executive at Make-A-Wish has said that as far as she’s concerned, every child facing a life-threatening condition is a superhero to her.

I hope that more children get the chance to feel like a hero.

I’d love to be out there for Thorkid or Captain Amerikid.

Sleepless in San Francisco: Extra-Life 2013!

November 7, 2013 · Discuss on the GT Forum

So….Extra-Life. I’m still not sure what to tell you about it, other than the fact that it was one of the most awesome experiences of my life. A bunch of my friends crammed into the apartment and played games. For 25 hours.

That’s easy, you say. I do that all the time, you say. Well…I said the same thing, and it’s not as easy as it sounds

(Image via Extra-Life.org)

I’ve been recovering all week. I’m still recovering. I cannot tell you what time it is for the life of me. This marathon is hard, exhausting, mind shattering…and totally worth it. You get to do something you love, and help children who really need it all at the same time.

When you think about people who run, walk, or bike, marathons, they all train and prepare before hand. If gamers were smart, they would too!

Ok, maybe gamers are smart and I just wasn’t….or I and half of my team weren’t. Going to bed at 12:30am when you have to be up at 8 and stay up for 25 hours…who would have thought that was a bad idea?

In any case. We got little sleep, woke up, stayed up all day and night, and had a blast. We a little ADHD with our games…with 6 of us in the apartment and only so much bandwidth and so many computers, we had to switch around and be creative.

Some of the video games on our playlist were: Arkham Origins (of course), World of Warcraft, Borderlands 2, Arkham City, Saints Row 4, Star Wars Kinect, Halo 4, and Castle Crashers. I was even convinced by a friend to buy Diablo 3 (that did not take much convincing at all).

We also threw in some board and card games such as Legendary (the Marvel version), Seven Dragons, Fluxx, and Betrayal at the House on the Hill (pictured above).

The board games were helpful to get us talking and interacting, which provided some chance to wake up. The Kinect was also helpful at waking us up, and also provided a chance to get moving.

My roommate also streamed the entire thing live, so everyone and anyone could have a chance to see us acting crazy. At around 2 in the morning, this happened:

We lost our minds. At one point, one of my teammates said she was Geordi Picard. We also created a Captain Dragon song, sung to the tune of Captain Planet. We were silly, and loopy, and it was the most fun I’ve had in a while.

Then around…4 or 5am, we really started to crash. While playing Castle Crashers, I kept button mashing and it started to lull me to sleep. I couldn’t focus on which character on the screen was mine. My teammate literally started to nod off sitting up with the controller in her hand. Her character just kept running into the right hand wall until we woke her up.

She still had a better score than I did.

Once it was over, we all crashed and slept for half of the day…and then had a full night’s sleep that night. And yet…I don’t think any of us have caught up on sleep. I probably never will.

I still say it’s worth it. We helped a lot of kids, had a lot of fun, and created a lot of memories.

My team of 7 (6 here in California, and 1 in New York) weren’t very organized, but we raised nearly $2,000 for Children’s Hospital Oakland.

At the end of the 25 hours, Children’s Oakland won an extra $60,000 from the Diablo 3 challenge for having raised the most money. I think it’s at $333,000 now.

(Image via Extra-Life.org)

The total at the end of the marathon for all of Extra-Life was $3.4 million dollars. That’s up to $3.8 million today, with a make up day this Saturday for all those who missed some time…

Or for those who want to sign up now and do the whole thing.

All I know is…I did my 25 hours, helped some kids, played some games…and now it’s time to start getting ready for next year. Registration starts in February.

You know you want to join me.

Extra-Life…Extra Long

November 4, 2013 · Discuss on the GT Forum

Yesterday was Extra-Life, the 25 hour gaming marathon to benefit Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals. I participated…and I’m still feeling the effects.

Don’t get me wrong, it was amazing! I loved doing it, and I’ll do it again next year. But…I need some time to sleep. Writing a blog when you’re exhausted is not the smartest idea. We could end up with something like:

First, I played Batman Arkham Origins….pink banana…my back hurts…one fish, blue fish….dragon, dragon, dragon fire. We don’t want that.

So as soon as I’m all rested up, I’ll start writing about my 25 hour gaming adventure. Check it out Thursday. It’ll be a doozy.

Spoiler alert! My team raised just shy of $2,000! Rare Candy, you rock. I’m so proud of you guys.

Time to dream of batarangs and Deckard Cain.

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