Curveballs and Contemplation
Anthony Rodriguez Klinzing tries to not overthink on the baseball field.
鈥淏aseball is really about clearing your head and trusting the work that you鈥檝e put in during practice,鈥 he says. 鈥淪ome people fail at baseball because they think too much; they can鈥檛 focus on the main thing because they鈥檙e so wrapped up in the minor details.鈥
Klinzing says the sport has taught him to be disciplined and have self-control; he鈥檚 learned to be committed to his fellow teammates and to have a good attitude, because 鈥渋f you don鈥檛 have a good mindset,鈥 he says, 鈥渢he game is going to beat you down.鈥
Klinzing is glad that he had a chance to play college baseball at Dordt. 鈥淵ou hear about other college programs, where coaches don鈥檛 treat the players well. But our coach isn鈥檛 like that: he wants us to be the best baseball players we can be but also to help us grow as humans.鈥
Off the baseball field, though, Klinzing spends plenty of time thinking. After taking courses in macroeconomics and microeconomics, he decided to pick up an economics major because he liked the philosophy and theory behind it. He enjoys reading novels by writers like George Orwell and Fyodor Dostoevsky, scholarly works on theology, and philosophy books (particularly those by German philosophers).
鈥淧hilosophy and theory help me understand why things are the way they are鈥攊t gives me a better understanding of the world,鈥 he says.
Having grown up in a big city in Germany, he initially experienced culture shock coming to the rural Midwest. 鈥淚n Germany, people are blunt. There鈥檚 less casual small talk. You don鈥檛 really ask people how they鈥檙e doing. It took me a while to grow accustomed to the Midwestern way of communicating.鈥
He was also initially taken aback by how Christian 凹凸视频 was. As an incoming freshman, he was aware that 凹凸视频was a Christian university, but he didn鈥檛 fully understand what that meant and what to expect.
鈥淏y my second semester, I met some people who challenged me to ask myself what I believe,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o, I started to break down my own prejudices and read the Bible out of a genuine interest. Initially, the hypocrisy really bugged me. However, I started to recognize that humans鈥 sinful nature makes it so that people are unable to live up to their own standards. Once I began to understand that the problem was not with the religion, but with the people, and I separated the ideas and the people, I was better able to embrace being a Christian.鈥
As his faith grew, he began to recognize the incongruency between his 凹凸视频life and his lifestyle back in Germany. 鈥淚t's easy to fall back into old habits when your faith isn't very strong and you're constantly around people who live a different lifestyle,鈥 he adds.
He knew that he had to live out his faith not only at Dordt, but also at home in Germany. 鈥淚 ended up finding a church community back in Bonn to support me and be a good influence.鈥
Returning to Bonn with a strong Christian perspective also made him appreciate the historical context of Germany in relation to the church. 鈥淚 went to Wartburg Castle over Christmas break,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 visited there years ago, and I just thought it was a cool castle. But this time, I knew that it was where Martin Luther stayed for 10 months. And that made it even more exciting for me to be there; I had more of a personal investment in what took place there.鈥
After graduation, Klinzing hopes to obtain a Master麓s degree in Politics, Philosophy, and Economics at a university in Germany.
鈥淚 enjoy these three subjects, so to be part of an interdisciplinary master鈥檚 program sounds really interesting. I can see myself getting a Ph.D. in philosophy someday as well. We鈥檒l see what happens.鈥