Monday, May 19, 2014

The Action that Does Count

I remember being five years old sitting at the table after Halloween with my brother, Dusty, and my ex step-mother, with what seemed at the time to be a huge treasure of candy, and all I wanted to do so badly, that I was bawling, was to take it to the homeless people. You know, so that they would not starve. Simply put I was told, “That’s a sweet thought.” It seemed my whole life I was told that it was a nice to have those thoughts; to think about doing something but never really acting on it. As if somehow those thoughts made you the next Mother Teresa. My personal belief for this reason is because all too often people do not trust, and rightfully so.  We hear almost every day about some scam artist, who made a bundle of tax free cash by sitting on the corner. While we have to work 40 hours a week to make what they did in a few short hours, and that is just not fair. The hardest lesson I learned in life is just that, LIFE IS NOT FAIR. Now I always knew life was not fair but I did not know how unfair until I lost my little brother, and that why this little story is dedicated to him.

Now there are two major events in my life that occurred that changed my thoughts into actions. The first one was when I was in eighth grade history and the second one happened when I was about 14, right after Thanksgiving.

When I was in eighth grade I had a history teacher that I was not so fond of. I felt as if she was a stuck up snob who felt she was too good for her job. She was always bragging about her advertisement degree, her husband who made oodles of money and her two young daughters, but one day she came to school with a story that changed my harsh judgment towards her and gave me a lot of respect for her. She was slightly upset and one of the other students asked what was wrong, which of course allowed her to talk about herself, so began to tell her story. She had been at the circle K at about 35th avenue and Dunlap near Cortez High School in Phoenix, AZ. There was a lady outside the store, with her two children, begging for money. My teacher did not have any cash on her so she went inside and bought some food for the family, well as much good food as you can at a convenient store, and garishly walk out the doors and gave the lady the food she had just purchased. Instead of this lady being thankful she asked her if she could go back in and buy her some cigarettes and booze, when she replied no the lady took a swing at her and her husband/boyfriend got out the car and called her a b*tch. Now my respect for her grew, but my compassion slightly faded for people asking for “things.” What restored my compassion was right after Thanksgiving, when I was 14; my brother and I went to Metro Mall to do some holiday shopping. There was a homeless man walking around the parking lot, begging everyone in sight for money because he was hungry. I walked passed him as if he was invisible and smelt the reek of alcohol and filth, but as I turned back and saw my little brother who was 13 at the time giving him all the money he had. I was so angry I told him, “Why did you waist your money he’s only going to go drink it.” My brother looked at me with tears in his eyes and said, “maybe and maybe not but no one deserves to go hungry and alone on the holidays.” In that moment I realized that he was absolutely right, and who was I to judge this man I did not even know. That was the day my brother taught me to love unconditionally.

Those two life changing events are what started a chain reaction of putting my “sweet thoughts” into real life actions. We never know what life struggles someone is going through or what demons they are trying to destroy.  The fact is we are all human and we all have life struggles. No one is perfect and no one always makes the right choices, but I know the world is a lot brighter and easier to handle when someone, anyone, shows their unconditional love.


Thank you Bubba John for being the greatest teacher. I thank God for every moment that I had with you, every memory we share, that art you inspire me to create and every story I get to tell my daughter, your niece. You are the reason I started, with Jessica, the nonprofit organization "God Boxes".