HIDALGO, TEXAS - Royce White rides down the glass elevator to the hotel lobby. He's wearing a sleeveless T-shirt that shows off his thick arms and the large "TC" representing the Twin Cities on his left biceps.
He confers with an associate, then pulls up a chair at a table far removed from the noisy bar.
An hour earlier, White's current team, the Rio Grande Valley Vipers, lost to the Texas Legends. White, looking rusty, made one of eight shots and committed five turnovers, although most of them seemed a result of unfamiliarity with his teammates.
Following high school and college basketball careers alternately described as promising and troubled, he has spent much of the past four months in a public dispute with the Houston Rockets over the handling of his anxiety disorder, which manifests itself most noticeably in his fear of flying. Now he is playing for an NBA Developmental League team in Hidalgo, a small Texas border town whose city hall features an elephant-sized killer-bee statue.
As the 16th pick in the NBA draft, White should be staying at the house he purchased in Houston last summer and flying on team charters. By choosing to make himself an example of and a spokesman for people with mental-health problems, he wound up in Hidalgo, flying commercial and coming off the bench.
White believes this is a path well-chosen. He leans forward and eagerly speaks for an hour about mental health, his prospective businesses and his plans to become a philanthropist and politician. He mentions a documentary he's working on, and lists the late Sen. Paul Wellstone and Gandhi as inspirations.
"Every time I go through adversity, not only am I able to reform whatever it is I'm going through by standing for what I believe in, but I also get to reform myself," White said. "Being a humanist and a humanitarian and wanting to do public service, I've learned that every adverse situation you go through helps you see what is necessary."
He says he learned from his troubled time at the University of Minnesota and that he experienced an "awakening" at Iowa State. Long described as "troubled," White hopes he can use his visibility and charisma to improve the quality of American life.