You could say the life of "88" has completed a lifelong figure 8, where you ultimately come back to the point where it all started.
That starting point for Eric Lindros was sometime at an early age when life was simple, friendships were forming and the game of hockey wasn't tugging him in a hundred different directions. Not that Lindros feels like a kid now, but clearly he views life rather buoyantly.
He smiles, he laughs, he tells stories and enjoys living essentially burden-free.
"I'm seeing things from a different perspective," said Lindros during my visit with him at his new home in the Toronto suburbs. "I think when you're playing, and for good reason, you're focused on your game. You live, eat, breathe the sport and the game. You have the blinders on. You might not be aware of what's going on politically. You might not be aware of what's going on with some of your friends back home.
"Now, I have no blinders. I'm not restricted. If I choose to look left or choose to look right, I can. It's a different mindset. It's a different way of going about it. It's a whole new world."
Lindros left Philadelphia unceremoniously sitting out an entire season before he was eventually traded to the New York Rangers in August 2001, and even after he stopped playing six years later, a lot of those old wounds still hadn't healed and the relationship between himself and the organization was scarred. A once tight relationship with former Flyers GM Bobby Clarke was seemingly frayed beyond repair.
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The 2012 Winter Classic alumni game at Citizens Bank Park was the first step in the rehabilitation between a stubbornly proud organization and its franchise center the city once cherished. Then came Lindros' induction into the Flyers Wall of Fame in 2014, his 2016 induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame and now, the latest culmination is the retirement of his legendary No. 88 along with other events surrounding the former superstar.
There's now a renewed sense that Philadelphia will always be Lindros' hockey home.
"Listen, hockey was great for a long time and where I could give the most was in Philly. From start to finish, I never played as well anywhere else. I really enjoyed it. There's ups and downs with everything that you do, but overall I truly enjoyed playing there," Lindros said.
"Eric doesn't have a home," Clarke told me in 2011 prior to the Winter Classic alumni game. "Eric needs a home and the Flyers are his home."
Of course, it's not exactly a home surrounded by a white picket fence, but rather one that had a fence that needed to be mended. Retirement for Lindros and Clarke, who both coincidentally stepped down as player and executive in 2007, helped gain perspective and patch some damaged feelings.
"We see each other at all these events and Bob's been very nice," Lindros said. "We can joke around. What's happened, happened. Let's move forward and go on."
Eric has done that while also discovering why the present should be cherished so much more than what has transpired in the past. Whenever Lindros spends time at alumni functions, he's easily immersed in the aura surrounding Bernie Parent and how it can easily rub off on him.
"What a fun-loving spirit. He gets it," Lindros said of Parent. "You know where some people have that vibe and you want to be in the room with him. He's got a gift. Bernie's a terrific, terrific man. He's got to get me out on the boat."
After Thursday's ceremony prior to the Flyers' game against Lindros' hometown Toronto Maple Leafs, Lindros and Parent can hang together all they want, at least, in the rafters of the Wells Fargo Center.
However, Lindros doesn't need those types of reminders. Nowhere in his brand-new home will you find any connection between himself and his playing days - no photos on the wall, no replica of the Hart Trophy he won in 1995 and no sign of his Olympic gold medal. Nor does Lindros believe his career was any more distinguishable from that of his wife Kina Lamarche, who was a very successful businesswoman.
As you enter the basement, there's a painting of Jackie Robinson sliding into home plate. Turn the corner and down the hall you'll find a newly-installed locker room and a synthetic ice surface that currently serves as a playroom for his three kids: Carl Pierre, Sophie and Ryan. This is Eric Lindros now, a man with a greater purpose in life.
"Same way my dad was with me," Lindros said. "My dad took a lot of heat for looking out for me and representing me and my brother. People would be lucky to have my dad as a representative. I'm very lucky to come from where I did. I got big shoes to fill. I'm around the house quite a bit now. I got lucky. I really did. I don't think it could have worked out better."