Fresh Air - WNBA Star Brittney Griner Imprisonment & Release
Episode Date: May 7, 2024Griner spent nearly 300 days incarcerated in Russia after authorities at the Moscow airport found two nearly empty cartridges of cannabis in her luggage. The WNBA star spoke with Terry Gross about the... dehumanizing prison conditions, her release, and return to the court. Griner, who is 6'9", says she felt like a zoo animal in prison. "The guards would literally come open up the little peep hole, look in, and then I would hear them laughing." Her new memoir is Coming Home.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Support for NPR and the following message come from the Kauffman Foundation, providing access to opportunities that help people achieve financial stability, upward mobility, and economic prosperity, regardless my guest, WNBA star Brittany Griner,
was released from a Russian penal colony where she was serving a nine-year sentence.
She'd already spent 293 days incarcerated in Russian prisons.
Now she's preparing for her second season reunited with her team, the Phoenix Mercury.
Like many WNBA players, her salary was so low that back in 2014 in the offseason,
she started playing for a team in Russia, where the pay was considerably better than in the U.S.
She continued playing in Russia during the offseason until 2022. Then, when she arrived
at the airport in Moscow, she was unexpectedly stopped, questioned, and asked to empty the contents of her luggage.
She discovered that there were two nearly empty cartridges of cannabis that she'd neglected to
remove before the trip. She had a prescription for medical marijuana to ease the chronic pain
of basketball injuries, but in Russia, there's no such thing as medical marijuana. And she was
accused of having a significant amount of cannabis, which was just not true. Her imprisonment made national headlines and
a movement formed to demand her release. The Biden administration eventually was able to
negotiate a prisoner swap. In return for releasing Greiner, America handed over Victor Boot,
an infamous Russian arms dealer known as the Merchant of Death.
Griner is a women's basketball star. In her senior year playing for the Baylor Lady Bears,
she was named the most outstanding player of the Final Four. She was the WNBA's number one overall
draft pick in 2013. The following year, her team won the WNBA championship. She holds the WNBA record for most dunks.
She won Olympic gold medals in 2016 and 2020.
Now that she's reunited with her wife, they're expecting a baby in about three months.
Brittany Greiner has a new memoir called Coming Home.
Brittany Greiner, welcome to Fresh Air.
Congratulations on your freedom. Congratulations on your freedom.
Congratulations on playing again. Congratulations on being reunited with your wife and of expecting
a baby. Thank you so much. I'm glad to be here right now. So I just want to say before we start
for real that I know because you write about this that when you got back from your imprisonment in
Russia, you had trouble,
you kind of withdrew for a while and had trouble even talking with your wife about what you'd
experienced because it was so traumatic. And I know you've written a memoir, but it's one thing
to work on a book and another to be interviewed on mic. So if I ask anything that would be too
traumatizing, too upsetting to talk about, I hope you'll let me know.
And that way I can be guided and drop it.
Thank you so much. I appreciate that.
So let's start with how are you now? How are you physically?
Physically, doing good now. Doing better than definitely when I first came back. There was a lot of growing pains and just getting the body back into normal shape and then trying to get it back into athletic shape.
Has your back recovered?
You had cracked your back in high school playing basketball.
And I wasn't sure when you said you cracked your back whether that meant you broke a bone or displaced a disc? It was a disc vertebrae kind of smashed together a little bit.
I went up actually for a dunk, and it got hit in the air and came down really bad.
But definitely better now.
I have a little flare-up here and there, but it's just all the years of play.
Yeah, and you have no cartilage
left in your knees from playing. You also had a bad ankle and leg injury from a game in 2017.
And you're right that all this pain came back when you were put in cages way too small for you and
you couldn't straighten out. This happened, you know, during long car rides and, you know, at
times in detention, in the courtroom, you were
really uncomfortable. Can you describe some of the most uncomfortable positions you were put in?
And particularly for you who are six foot nine, you know, a confined small space is really
terrible. It's not ideal. I'll tell you that. I mean, the beds that we had to sleep on,
I mean, I basically had just metal rods going up my back, you know, every night just trying to find somewhere comfortable to lay.
But there's really no way you can lay when the mattress is just a little bit of fabric and some stuffing in it.
Those metal rods go right through, basically. But one of the toughest times, honestly, is probably the transportation, going back and forth from the detention center to court and then from court back to the detention center.
You're inside this small, it's like a small van.
And in that van, there's little metal cages all around the outside.
I do not fit. There was a couple of
rods and a couple of different vehicles that they would switch up. And literally, to close the door,
I had to pick my legs up and they would shut the door. And then my knees would literally be
on the metal door frame for about an hour, hour and a half to get from the detention center down to the
down to the courthouse.
And then did you have to live with residual pain for a long time after that?
Definitely.
I mean, my knees that first year coming back from all that, not being able to move, not
being able to stretch out and then being forced, you know, my knees up against these metal
metal doors,
I definitely felt it. There was a lot of pain that would just come back.
How are you emotionally now?
I have my moments. You know, I'll definitely say it's like a roller coaster.
I'm starting to string together a lot more better days now than before. It'll just be a thought
that'll pop up in my head sometimes or a dream. And then that turns into just a restless night
or just my mood being a little bit off. But it's definitely getting better now. It's something that
I've learned to kind of deal with and cope with. You had been having a lot of nightmares. What would happen
in your nightmares? So I have this one reoccurring dream where something was wrong with paperwork or
something was wrong and I had to go back to the embassy in Russia, actually. And when I go back,
they take me and I'm stuck right back in the cell that I was in, and there's no talk of coming back.
So it's just right back into the place where I spent most of the time.
Early in your book, you write about how before basketball, there was no place for you because you're 6'9 or 6'8?
I want to get it right.
6'9.
6'9, yeah. So were you that tall in high school too?
I grew the extra inch once I got out of high school and into college. Went in the ninth grade,
six foot, graduated 6'7, grew two more when in college.
That's a lot of growing.
A lot of growing, a lot of growing, a lot of new clothes.
So I wasn't mad about that. And also you didn't develop breasts and people always thought, oh,
really a boy or later, oh, you're really a man. And you were asked to leave women's bathrooms
because people assumed you were a man. And you're right, you were mistaken for what society fears most, a black man,
a big black man. When you were younger, before you were a basketball star, did you constantly
have to explain yourself? Always, always. I mean, I just made a habit very, very young on just
making sure I use the bathroom before I leave the house and, you know, wait till I'm in my locker room where I know I'm safe. Um, I would leave class and go to the locker room and use the bathroom.
When I'm at my gym, it's in our locker room. Um, you know, I, I've, I've made this habit now that
it's a little bit easier to do now, but, um, I still don't like having to use public bathrooms
because I've been chased after literally had security come into the bathroom to get me out of there.
And I'm just like, y'all, like, I'm a female.
I know you probably don't think I look like one, but I am.
And I've literally pulled my pants down and flashed them like and they're like, oh, my God, I'm so sorry.
I'm so sorry.
You know, like, it's not like I can flash my chest. Yeah. Right. my pants down and flashed them like and they're like oh my god i'm so sorry i'm so sorry you know
like it's not like i can flash my chest yeah right it's not like you could flash your chest right
and in basketball your height was an asset and you were special what did you fall in love with
about basketball it was just a way for me to channel anxiety, anger, anything. It gave me a focus. Basketball helped me be able to relate to a wide range of people because you're not going to like everybody on your team. It's just life. You're not going to like everyone. And you have to learn how to work towards a common goal together. And I think that can be applied to life I really like that and being
challenged you know like there's always someone bigger and better coming along there's always
someone gunning for you so you either evolve or you get left behind and I love being able to
stay in the game as long as I have and hopefully I have a longer career well you played in Russia
for eight seasons you know largely because you needed the money
because especially back when you started um women's basketball pro ball was paid very little
um i think things have improved a little but proportionate to the nba there's no comparison
um and in russia some of the teams are run by oligarchs so like there was there was money um but of course the last time you went you were
detained and arrested um you didn't want to go you wanted to stay home with your wife and you
kind of had a bad feeling and you decided okay this is going to be your last season in russia
you had just gotten over covid you were still coughing do you think you had a premonition? I definitely think the universe was telling me to stay at home, honestly. And it was something that
I promised myself that I would always listen to my intuition, no matter how big or small I think it
is. I'm definitely going to listen to it because there was just so many signs of, you know, don't
go. But I just heard that voice in the back of my head you know I grew up on the
morals of you finish what you start and you know I never want to leave my teammates in a bad
position and we were right there we were about to go win EuroLeague and Russian League you know like
we always have so I just wanted to finish it out and then let that be the end. Yeah and you had
packed in a hurry you threw things in your luggage and didn't check to see if anything was in the pockets.
And that's where the two mostly used up cartridges of cannabis were.
And, you know, you had the prescription because of your pain from basketball injuries.
You were stopped at the Russian airport.
And it sounds like that was not typical, but there was a whole lot of security people there.
I'm wondering if that was because this was a week before the war in Ukraine started, before Russia started the war in Ukraine.
Do you think that there were special security alerts because of that?
I mean, definitely a great possibility because, you know, they knew what they were about to do.
They knew they were about to invade.
And, yeah, I mean, I've made this trip multiple times in a season.
You know, we come back two, three times within one season.
Been there eight years.
So I've never seen so much security, both sides open, dogs.
It was very random.
And, you know, everybody that was getting pulled to the side looked either American or, you know, non-Russian.
And, you know, all the Russians were basically just walking through the middle, not getting checked.
So it was definitely something that I for sure noticed.
Do you think you were targeted?
It's hard to say yes or no to that, but, you know, my feeling, I think, maybe not me per se,
but an American, I think that was a big plus for them.
What was the first thought that went through your mind about what this was going to mean for the rest of your life?
Life changing.
I definitely just had a moment of just all the horrible thoughts of just never seeing my family,
being dragged through the media, through the news outlets, you know, everyone putting in their opinion and all
the naysayers, you know, having ammunition to just start spewing out all these things about me that
people have never even seen me or they don't even know who I am.
Yeah. You were able to get a good Russian lawyer and then another lawyer to help too. And your lawyer was able to rent you an apartment nearby the courthouse so that when you were put under house arrest, you'd have a place nearby to stay.
Well, basketball team. But you were given no bail, no house arrest.
You were considered a flight risk.
So that was like crushing.
And then you found out you needed to stay in detention for a minimum of 30 days.
And then after that time, you were moved to a correctional colony.
And I want you to describe what the conditions were like there. So, I mean, the detention center and the penal colony, IK2, that I ended up in once I got my nine years, I mean, the conditions were horrible.
I mean, trying to find clean water, trying to figure out how to buy water from commissary. That took, I mean, that probably took me about a month, two months
to figure out how to even buy, you know, water, bottled water.
And then the games began because I was buying so much water.
Then I was told, oh, well, there's a limit on how much you can buy,
how much you can store in the room.
Because I was buying so much water because our water that everyone uses comes from the bathroom
sink. And that water that comes out that sink is just a milky, it looks like a milky water
because it's just so much sediment and calcium and just rust because everything is rusted.
Trying to be able to have food because what they serve you is, I wouldn't even give it to a stray animal.
Like, it's just disgusting.
The bowls that they serve the food out of, you can see the paint chipping, the rust in it, the bed, how cold it is. One of the things that I noticed when I came back that I hate being cold, because it was so cold there.
They have these little radiators on the walls, but the whole room is metal and concrete.
So it's just like being in an icebox.
And you were there during Russian winter.
Oh, yes.
The blistering cold, rushing winter. You know, once we were at IK2, the penal colony, you have morning check every morning and every count us one by one. It's very old school counting of us. And you're out there for about an hour, hour and a half, and literally blistering, cold, blizzard, doesn't matter.
Snow literally was building up on my shoulders and my head where people would have to knock it off.
Would you describe what bathing and toileting was like in the prison so you have three toilets and one shower to serve 50 plus women then there's no hot water
you literally i had a bucket and a ladle so you would take a kettle like a tea kettle
warm up water out the sink pour it it into the bowl, into the bucket.
You take the bucket and the ladle into the shower.
You squat down in the shower and you just scoop and pour.
And that's how you take a shower.
And you have about maybe five minutes because you have about 10, 12 other women waiting in the bathroom area to get into that
shower. Not everyone showers though. So some people picture like a big farmhouse like sink
with multiple faucets on it. So people be over there washing chests, washing their armpits,
kicking their feet in the sink. You're next to them brushing your
teeth. You have people washing all kinds of body parts. The toilets are side by side and in front
of you. There was five toilets in there, but only three work. So you had a neighbor right beside you
and someone right in front of you. And there's no walls.
So it's very intimate.
You get to know your roommates very well, very personally, which was insane, to say the least.
I thought it was both upsetting and hilarious that the toothpaste you were given expired in 2007.
Yes, you have old toothpaste that they give you.
So if your family can't help you and you can't buy things, you just have to live with expired stuff.
But we would use the expired toothpaste.
We would put it on the mold on the walls because it would help kill the mold growing on the walls.
Oh, gee.
Yeah.
Yeah, you get really resourceful.
You were in a cell with two other women.
One of them became a close friend.
She spoke good English and translated everything for you, including TV programs, because you were allowed to watch TV, but it was mostly Russian propaganda.
And then the other roommate you figured out was a spy.
I have a question about the Russian propaganda channel. I want you to
describe the clip of Joe Biden, President Biden at the podium where he kind of turns into Hitler.
Yeah, so it was channel four. He was up talking, addressing the nation, and they started to distort his voice. And literally there was two big American flags right beside him.
Well, the Nazi flag comes down over the American flag.
And I immediately jumped up and I was like, Alana, please, like, what's going on?
And she was just like, the propaganda channel, they're, you know, they're just talking crap about your president.
And I was just blown away.
I never in a million years thought I would see something like that. It was just crazy.
Even the talk shows, she would tell me sometimes about-
She's your roommate who was, your cellmate, I should say, who was translating for you.
Yes, my cellmate that was translating everything for me. She would tell me about just a different show, how Nazi Germany is controlling America,
and we want to come and take Russian land from everyone.
And I was just like, wow.
We need to take another break here, so let me reintroduce you.
If you're just joining us, my guest is Brittany Griner,
and she's written a new memoir called Coming Home
about her life and about her imprisonment in Russia. We'll talk more after a short break.
I'm Terry Gross, and this is Fresh Air.
This is Anne-Marie Baldonado from Fresh Air, here to remind you about what you're missing
if you aren't a Fresh Air Plus supporter. I wound up writing science fiction from the point of view of girls and women just because
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I wound up writing science fiction from the point of view of Black people because I am
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When she didn't see herself in the books she loved, Butler wrote her own stories in science fiction and fantasy.
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With your cellmates who could speak English when you were in Russian prisons, what would you talk about?
We'd talk about all kinds of stuff, honestly.
Me and Alana, she liked cars, so we would talk about cars a lot.
I remember we had this long debate for, I feel like weeks, about what make and model the car was in Supernatural, the TV show Supernatural.
We would literally talk about any and everything.
We would play games where I would say a letter.
We would have a category like, I don't know, states.
I would say, you know, T.
And she would say Texas.
And then I would have to say like a different one, like Tennessee.
And we would play games like that.
We would just try to come up with something to stay busy.
Were most of the women in the prisons where you were there because of drug charges?
Yes.
Number one thing everyone in Russia is in for is drug charges and then murders.
Were you careful around the murderers?
I didn't really even think about it, honestly, when I was in there. I mean, there was a couple of women that I was close to and I knew that they had attacked their husbands. And, you know,
that was a very common thing they had in Russia. They relaxed their laws around domestic violence and a lot of women ended up in really bad situations and, you know, they acted to get out of them. But I wasn't I never was fearful of the things that surprised me that I was grateful for is that there were no interrogations in which you were tortured with like electric shocks or waterboarding or, you know, anything like that.
Were you worried that you would be exposed to that?
Yes.
After hearing stories from a lot of my roommate who, you know, was translating for me, she would tell me stories about, you know, the men's prison and how they actively will torture people.
They use this little metal metal thing that we would use to warm our water up with.
They would use that to torture people with sometimes.
So I knew I knew it was there.
I just tried to make sure I didn't give them a reason to do it.
You know, I tried to make sure I followed the rules.
You know, I didn't act up.
I just kind of stayed in good graces or at least tried to.
Yeah.
Do you think being black and gay was held against you?
And did they know that you were a lesbian?
Oh, no, they definitely knew.
I had pictures of my wife and my little thing of photos that I had.
I was asked about her when I had to do a psychiatric test to prove that I was sane during my committed alleged crime. And one of the questions was,
so how long have you had sick thoughts? You know, when did you decide to be gay? And I told them I
didn't decide, you know, and I don't, I've never had sick thoughts. And they would look at me after it was translated.
They would look at me like, really?
Like, yeah, I don't know what you think.
I could tell their perception on the LGBTQ community is that we're just sick.
What was the law?
So, I mean, there's no marriages of same sex and they were putting in laws, you know, banning it.
That's for sure.
You know, you can definitely go to jail for, as they would call it, showing, you know, homosexual acts in front of kids like holding hands, kissing, promoting protests.
Because there have been protests there in Russia before.
And they definitely will take you off to jail.
Because they thought, since you were a lesbian,
that therefore you had sick thoughts?
Yes.
Were you afraid they were going to put you in the psychiatric ward?
Well, I was threatened that I was going to be thrown into the psychiatric ward
if I didn't answer a question.
And the question was, am I guilty or am I innocent?
Of what?
Of my crime.
Did they mention, was it the crime of being gay
or the crime of the cartridges of cannabis?
The crime of smuggling cartridges, cannabis cartridges in.
And they wanted me to basically say what I'm going to plea.
And I told them I'm not answering that.
I was like, you're not a judge.
I was like, that has nothing to do if I'm saying or not saying.
And I refused to answer the question. And they told the translator to tell me if I don't
answer it, that they would throw me into the psychiatric ward. But I was lucky to have my
lawyers there with me during that interrogation. And they stepped in at that moment.
Were lawyers always helpful? Because it's always struck me that in Russia,
they do what they want to do, no matter how good your lawyers are. They were definitely helpful. And the fact that I had two,
I guess, was shocking because they were always trying to figure out why I had two lawyers
and not just one. Normally, your lawyers aren't even in those interrogations where they're questioning your sanity, but I was lucky to
have them with me. However, they brought me back without my lawyers knowing to re-ask me basically
all the same questions again without the lawyers. And that was pretty common.
Were you afraid that if you were defiant and refused to answer some of the questions
that you'd either be put in the psych ward or be punished in some other way?
A hundred percent. I had a talk with one of my lawyers about that scenario and he, you know,
he instructed me, you know, try as hard as you can not to answer it, get around it. But, you know,
at the end of the day just know if they want
to put you in a psychiatric ward or you know do something to you they can so just go ahead and
and answer it um you know he wasn't telling me to to do it but he was like you know it's at your
discretion you know how far you want to take it so So what did you do? I never answered the if I was guilty question or not.
I kind of called their bluff on that one.
But some of the other questions, you know, I went ahead and answered.
We need to take another break here.
So let me reintroduce you.
If you're just joining us, my guest is Brittany Griner.
She's written a new memoir called Coming Home.
We'll be right back.
This is Fresh Air.
One of the things you had to deal with in prison, and this will sound obvious, was depression. But you dealt with depression before you had suicidal thoughts and panic attacks when you were in your
20s. And you're right that you were overwhelmed with the thought that this life was all there was.
What do you mean by that? What do you mean by that?
What did you mean by that?
I was in a really bad place.
In your 20s you're talking about?
Probably a little bit earlier than my 20s too,
a little bit growing up as well,
just being so isolated and so different.
I always wondered why I was so different.
Why do everybody want to point out the fact that I'm different?
Literally, I had girls that would come up to me in school
and touch my chest and laugh and giggle and say that,
oh, look, she's really not a girl.
She's a man.
Listen to her voice.
Look how big she is.
So just dealing with that in isolation.
And this is all before sports, before I became the cool athlete.
I was the weirdo and the one that was just so different.
It was a different feeling when I was in prison a little bit.
You know, there was definitely times where I felt like I was that zoo animal
that everyone was coming to look at because the guards would literally come open up my little peephole, look in, and then I would hear them laughing going, you know, walking down the hallway.
So I was like isolation, just the bad thoughts just started creeping in.
You know, my life is over.
You never know, you know, when you go to jail for a certain amount of time, who will be alive when I come out?
Will my parents still be there?
Will me and my wife make it nine years while I'm locked up?
You know, all these bad thoughts started coming in,
and it just felt like it would be better if I wasn't here maybe.
Did you think seriously about suicide?
Yeah, I came up with a plan.
But then I thought on it more, and I was like, you know,
they might not even release my body.
And then now I've been putting my family through not even being able to get my body back.
And I was like, I can't put them through that.
I got to survive.
And then my deeper instincts started kicking in.
All those talks my dad used to tell me about how he made it through, you know, Vietnam and everything.
And I was like, if my dad can make it through that, I can make it through this.
Let's talk a little bit about faith. Your wife, Sherelle, who you call Rel,
she's a person of faith. Her father was a preacher. Your parents are people of faith,
but you'd pretty much abandoned it. But you returned to faith in prison. Was there a turning point for you?
I would say my wife was my turning point, honestly. Right before I went back over and,
you know, got incarcerated in Russia, she's always been gracefully patient with me on the religion front. And she
knew that I had so many people judging me, calling themselves Christians, but judging me to the
fullest as if they're, you know, our maker. And those people really turned me away from religion.
You know, going to a church and you hear the whispers and you hear the, oh, you're going to hell or why are you in here? That turned me away from religion. It made me think, I don took me to her church in Arkansas. And it was such a warming experience.
It opened my mind to, you know, seek it out a little bit more.
And then being locked up, you know, some people call it jailhouse Jesus, call it what you want.
But you have to believe in something or you'll go mad.
And I just deep dived into my Bible and read more. And it just
started to click for me more. I started to get that blind faith even more.
What was it like to get on the plane back to the U.S.? Like when you stepped on the plane,
it sounds like everybody was at your service. There were medical people there and people giving you food and candy of all sorts,
like whatever you wanted or needed.
Yeah, my wife had shared that I like Lemonheads and I like Sudoku.
So they had a lot of Lemonheads and a book of Sudoku for me.
There was definitely medical there to check me out, to do a quick check, make sure I was okay and see if I needed anything.
There was a counselor there on the plane as well.
And then our security detail in the back as well with us.
And they thought I was just going to sit down and, you know,
go to sleep. But there was no way I was about to go to sleep on that plane. I was just too
anxious to get home. And I think I was even more anxious to just talk to somebody. You know,
I had Alana, I had Ann at the penal colony and Kate, who I could talk to. But at the same time, you know, English isn't their first language.
So I was just excited to have a normal conversation
and not have to think about how to make it childlike
because a lot of the talk was childlike
because, you know, you want to try to use shorter sentences, less words.
When I was in Russia, and now I don't have to do that anymore.
I could actually have full length, long conversations.
And I just kind of wanted to talk to everybody.
Did you learn much Russian?
I learned a little bit of Jailhouse Russian, but it's a hard language to pick up on. It must have been remarkable to have people surrounding you, like officials and medical people surrounding you, who wished you well as opposed to wishing you ill.
It was nice just knowing that if I do want to close my eyes, I don't have to be on guard right now.
I felt I had a complete sense of safety for the most part.
Well, let me reintroduce you again.
If you're just joining us, my guest is Brittany Griner.
She has a new memoir called Coming Home.
We'll be right back.
This is Fresh Air.
Your memoir is called Coming Home.
And you came home to the U.S.
You came home to your wife and to your family,
you know, your parents, your siblings, but you couldn't literally go to your house home
because it was considered too risky. What were the kinds of threats that you needed to avoid?
Well, our address had got, our old house address had got leaked. My wife had went home one day
while I was still, you know, abroad. And as soon as she got out the car, a reporter had got, our old house address had got leaked. My wife had went home one day while I was still, you know, abroad.
And as soon as she got out the car, a reporter had hopped out and was running up trying to get her to answer questions.
We were getting a lot of hate mail as well.
For what?
What were people hating you for?
Just evil things saying I was non-American.
I shouldn't have came home. If I was any kind of American, I would go back
and go back to jail and let them send Paul home. It was called the N-word a lot. My wife was as
well for fighting for me to come home. Were you considered non-American by these people
because you're black? Why were you not American? A lot of different reasons.
Black, gay.
I've protested against police brutality.
I've not stood for the national anthem in protests.
Right, right.
Which I think is just crazy because it's my right as an American to be able to protest as well.
So, I mean, if anything, I'm more American because I'm using my right to protest. They think I just hate America, and that's far from the truth. I wanted to go into the military and be a law officer as well. I wanted to follow my dad's footsteps. counselors or therapists who you spoke to told you to expect that your wife, Rel,
will have changed, that she was without you for over a year. So she's learned to do things that
maybe she wouldn't have done before. She's learned to become more independent. I mean,
she became like a media spokesperson. She also, while working on behalf of your release, finished law school, passed the bar. So, I mean, she had quite a tumultuous life. And you changed, too, as anybody would who was in prison for, you know, nearly 300 days. And I'm wondering if you each had to adjust to new versions of each other after you got back home?
Definitely. We had to learn how to be together, but then also have time to heal away from each
other too a little bit. And some of the things that we loved doing before changed. I used to
love being in the house all day, in the room.
Like an off day was just stay in the room all day, watching TV, watching shows.
And that was triggering for me because in the detention center, all I could do was sit on my bed for the whole entire day, minus one hour outside.
So I couldn't do it anymore like that. My mood had changed at one point because,
and I didn't know at the time,
we keep the house cold.
I hate being cold now.
And my mood was just kind of getting,
I was agitated.
I was just off.
And she was just like, what is it?
We had a talk one day and she was like,
what do you think it is?
I'm just like, I don't know.
I'm cold though.
And we realized that me being cold put me back in that cell so you know it was just like little things that we didn't even think would affect
but was affecting us and you know we made the right corrections you'd become withdrawn and
you found it too painful to talk about what you'd experienced
um was that a disconnect to in the relationship until you were ready to connect again yeah we
would have talk we would have talks and i would tell her i would be telling her about my conditions
or something that i had to do and And I could see it was hurting her.
You know, she never said it, you know, like, oh, don't tell me.
She never said that.
She wanted me to tell her more.
But it's hard when you know you're hurting someone that you love.
And, you know, I would pull back a little bit.
I would still tell her, but I just, we would do it in in smaller bursts um but having my counselor was was
was huge for me um because uh i was able to just get it all out
in like very soon you start your second season in the wnba since getting out of prison
and you know it's just so it's your second season since you returned
with the Phoenix Mercury.
So you played last season.
Did you feel ready last season?
Because that was just a few months after getting out.
I thought I was ready.
And then I realized, you know, even after the season, I realized I was like, that was a lot.
It was just hard.
But if I would have waited longer to get back into it, I think it would have been even that much harder, honestly.
Like, I knew I needed to start getting in shape if I was going to have a return back to the game.
I knew I couldn't wait anymore. And, you know, I credit my team in believing in me,
and they did everything that they could
to help me get back on that court.
And I was glad I did do it.
But, you know, this season,
I definitely feel 100% like my old self now.
That's amazing.
How was your game last season?
It was okay. the season didn't go
though is as well as we wanted it to go um to say the least but um you know it was okay
i put up i put up a little bit i put up i put up a few numbers did playing and and also training
before the season help break the depression because you had something to focus on that you liked and that was important to you?
Oh, 100 percent. I was able to channel, you know, if I was having a bad day or, you know, a down day, I was able to channel that into, you know, moving weight in the weight room and going on the court and just focusing on that, I could distract myself. You know, basketball has always been my outlet where I don't think
about anything. It's just winning the game. So part of what you're doing now is work on behalf
of Americans who are detained in foreign countries, who are imprisoned in foreign
countries, working to get them out. I'm also wondering if
you're interested in doing prison reform work in the U.S. because as horrible as conditions were
in Russia, I mean, conditions are not good in most American prisons. Yes, 100%. I was just
talking with my agent about that the other day, actually, about how I can, what I can do, how I can be of use,
you know, what organization I could partner with, because like you said, conditions are
extremely bad overseas, but they're equally bad in certain prisons and even in our country here.
And no matter, no matter what someone has been convicted of, they still have rights as a
human and they still have rights as a prisoner, you know, incarcerated. And you don't get stripped
of those rights just because you're in prison. So I definitely would love to work with a group
that's working in reform and re-immersion as well.
Because a lot of times we say, you know, you do the time, you're corrected.
But then when you come back into society,
we make it even harder for them to acclimate back in.
So I definitely want to do something around that.
Brittany Greiner, thank you so much for talking with us.
Thank you for having me on.
I appreciate it so much. And congratulations
again on your freedom and your new life.
Thank you. And your
soon-to-come baby.
Thank you so much.
Okay. Be well.
Brittany Griner's new memoir is
called Coming Home. Tomorrow
on Fresh Air, we'll talk about Black Twitter and how it became a phenomenon.
Movements like Me Too and Oscar So White grew from this online community.
Our guest will be Prentice Penny, director of a new Hulu documentary series about Black Twitter.
He was also the showrunner for Issa Rae's series Insecure.
I hope you'll join us. I'll end the show with some news we're really excited about.
Our film critic Justin Chang won the Pulitzer Prize in criticism yesterday. It was for reviews
he wrote for the LA Times last year. He leftA. Times earlier this year to become a film critic at The New Yorker.
We're really proud that he's Fresh Air's film critic.
Congratulations, Justin. We are so happy for you.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Ardu Bentham.
Our engineer today is Adam Staniszewski. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by
Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nesper.
Roberta Shorrock directs the show.
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley.
I'm Terry Gross.