Nina Mandell

USA TODAY Sports

There may never be another Paul Pierce ending the best fight on NBA Twitter with a spaceship graphic that was meant to be an emoji. But Eric Bledsoe brought up another amazing moment in one of the best parts of the NBA world this week when he declared with a single tweet: "I don't wanna be here."

There's technically a world of things Bledsoe could have meant by this. He could have been stuck in traffic, at a terrible movie, hanging out with people he suddenly decided he hated.

But when the Suns coach was fired only a short time later, it was all but confirmed (though it still hasn't actually been confirmed) that he was talking about Phoenix - a team that has well, to be polite, struggled at the start of the season. Which brought part two of this great moment in NBA Twitter: DeAndre Jordan told him to "come back home."

This is perfect for many reasons, but particularly that Jordan was the reason behind the great emoji war in 2015 when the Mavericks and Clippers were competing for his services. Chandler Parsons would later clarify that the tweet he sent to start that war had actually nothing to do with Jordan - it was about his girlfriend's birthday party.

But that never mattered!

Bledsoe, on Monday, perhaps recognizing the wrench he just threw into NBA Twitter or addressing reports that he's going to be traded (again! We have no idea! But that doesn't stop people from going nuts!) or maybe just wanting to wish everyone a good morning, wrote this:

By two hours after he had posted it, it has more than 2000 retweets.

It's meaning?

We literally have no idea. And that doesn't matter at all.