Tag Archive for 'convict'

06
Aug

There is nothing between us but air and opportunity

I said that the other day out of reflex. I hadn’t said it in a long time. I was joking around with one of my buddies, play-fighting if you will. It is one of those standard responses when someone wants something from you (even if all they want is a fight) and you are trying to motivate them to make a decision.

Normally it is two guys squared up, ready to fight. Both are willing to go the next step, but neither wants to commit to the next step on their own. But no matter what the circumstances, neither wants to take the first punch. They each want the other to make the first move so that they can react. They are waiting to follow, neither want to lead.

That strategy has always bothered me. In the schoolyard, guys would talk tough. They would bump chests, push each other, talk about each other’s mommas – they would do everything but commit to the first punch. This is what I knew of school yard fights in the 3rd grade. It took an older guy to teach me that it was the one who threw that first punch who usually came out on top. It was the guy who had the heart to act first.

R.T. was an O.G. in the literal sense. He was my best friend’s older brother. He was a gangster who worked his way to the top of the game (at the street level that is). He died around the age of 26 doing gangster shit. But before that, R.T. taught me how to fight. My dad taught me how to box, my mom taught me how to find sticks and rocks when your hands can’t do the job (see how men and women attack a problem differently?). R.T. taught me how to survive for real. Continue reading ‘There is nothing between us but air and opportunity’

05
Nov

Abraham Lincoln was a Hustler

“People are about as happy as they make up their minds to be”

Now those aren’t my words, they are Abraham Lincoln’s. They are still very true and often disregarded.

My adaptation to this would be “People are about as successful as they make up their minds to be.”

People may disagree, find fault with that statement or plain call me names. I don’t care because I have made it up in my mind that I would be successful. The first time I said it out loud, I was about 10 years old. I actually said it as a way to torture my younger brother. I told him that he would be a homeless person and that I would be a millionaire. Now I am not exactly proud of telling him that, but we were young and that’s what boys do – they terrorize each other.

What was remarkable about that situation was that he asked me how I was going to do it. See, he was also the first person to not believe I could do it. That was the first time anyone had asked me how. It was the first time that I had actually tried to answer it. It was the first time I had actually wondered myself – how will I become a millionaire?

Continue reading ‘Abraham Lincoln was a Hustler’