Never underestimate the power of having someone who believes in you. Everything just looks different when you know you’ve got someone on your side!
Random Thought #28
February 15, 2010In the not-so-distant past cellphones had antennas. That is hilarious!
Random Thought #27
February 15, 2010I just saw a photo of me someone uploaded to Facebook. It was from a show I performed at on Friday night. There I was, mid-verse, going for it, passionately gripping the mic…and my crotch! Why must rappers do that? Why must I do that?!
MOVED!
February 11, 2010Just wanted to let everyone know, I’m excited to announce, my book MOVED is now available for purchase! You can buy it here (for United States website). Or here for UK website.
Random Thought #26
February 5, 2010I always feel like “no one” should be one word, or at least joined with a dash or something.
Random Thought #25
February 5, 2010Not having a car and being forced to walk everywhere allows one to stop and smell the proverbial roses. The roses, viewed from the inside of a speeding car, are merely a proverbial green and red blur.
Borrowed Car, Borrowed Time
February 5, 2010There’s a certain resilience that comes with poverty; a “make something out of nothing” attitude that fills the moneyless gaps. This translates into things like: newspapers, magazine pages, or product labels being used for wallpaper to decorate the would-be-destitute walls of a shack in a township, or making meals feel more filling by a huge pile of starches and little to no meat, or like when underprivileged children turn any random found object into a toy that can entertain them for hours, days, months even. Money is stretched for weeks longer than it should be, and saved in areas thought impossible. Resources, considered rubbish by those with “more”, become useful parts of every the day life of those with nothing. I have grown to admire, appreciate, and learn from this buoyancy, adopting it when I myself am pinching penny’s to squeeze out a dollar.
One day I called my friend and he told me he was walking through the aisles of a store, trying to do a week’s worth of grocery shopping with only 30 Rand (Roughly $4.00 U.S.). “Let me guess what’s in your trolley,” I said. He seemed to like the idea of an impromptu telephonic game. Game on. “Eggs, a loaf of bread, and two-minute noodles,” I said with absolute confidence. At this point I think he looked around and over his shoulders for a few seconds before answering, “Are you in here?” I laughed and said I wasn’t at the shop, but I knew that line-up well, and had just lived off the same supplies the week before. People who have always had more than enough would be surprised to know how cheap it actually is to have enough.
A material resource can be stretched until the elasticity of that resource is absolutely compromised. But as I took the thirty-minute walk from my flat to the train station yesterday, I thought about one thing that cannot be stretched, manipulated, or messed with: time. Sure, one can learn how to manage it, using every second for the most productive outcome, but those seconds can neither be frozen, lengthened, nor made shorter. With time, you take what you get, and you have to learn to work with it; one has to learn to budget it, and work around it, because it will not work around you. So yesterday, as I walked and watched car after car whiz past me, the drivers turning my thirty-minute walk into a mere five minute drive, seemingly taking their comfort for granted if only in my mind, I realized (maybe for the first time with such an epiphany) that another aspect about poverty is it can be incredibly time-consuming.
Luxuries like cars, microwaves, and hot water from the tap, things seen as “basic needs” in most of the developed world, shave minutes, even hours, off of daily tasks. The twenty-five-minute drive I take to work when I have a car turns into an hour-and-forty-minute journey when I am without; a thirty minute walk to the train station, a forty minute train commute, and another thirty minute walk to my place of work. My mentioning this is far from a complaint, but merely an observation, because I realize that millions, if not billions, of people all over the world live in this constant reality, and rarely, if ever, complain. I mention it because I know how easy it is to take these luxuries for granted; I fall into the trap of becoming ungrateful when they are at my disposal.
For instance, the other day when I borrowed my friend’s car, I popped in here and quickly stopped there; conveniently forgetting that merely one of those stoppings or poppings, taking five minutes out of my car-graced day, would have taken me an extra hour on a day I’m on a taxi-train-foot mission. I was again humbled, and brought back down to reality, when I dropped the car back off at my friend’s, and began my twenty-minute walk home, realizing it would have been a one-minute drive. But I know that I am not alone in my subconscious adaptation and ungratefulness in times of much. I see others around me who blindly take the wonderful luxuries of life completely for granted, and even worse, people who are merciless when it comes to dealing with others who do not have those valuable things.
It is for this reason I am angered to the point of fighting and spitting when I hear a rich South African “Madam” of Constantia complaining that her Domestic Worker from Khayelitsha is late every now and then, the Madam most definitely unaware of the efforts taken and the challenges overcome to even get there at all; the Domestic Worker, coming from a township conveniently placed far from the eyes of the rich, has to wake up around 4:00AM, to boil water for her own children to wash and get them ready for school, making sure they are fed and out the door before she can begin her first walk, or taxi ride, to the first train station, to get on a train that travels for thirty-minutes, taking her to another station where she gets another train and rides for twenty-minutes, to then board a taxi which takes her twenty-minutes and drops her at the outskirts of the wealthy suburb, where no minibus taxis are allowed in. There she begins her thirty-minute walk to the Madan’s mansion.
By the time the Madam is groggily sipping her first wonderful mouthful of coffee, made by the Domestic Worker, she is blissfully unaware that her employee has already been awake for more than four hours. One would argue that the Domestic Worker should not complain because “at least she has employment and it’s her responsibility to get there”, but the complaints I hear do not come from the Domestic Workers; they come from those who have more than enough, if not way too much, and they are insensitive, ignorant and non-empathetic complaints at that. The Domestic Worker is not asking for the right to be late all the time, or for pity or patronizing attitudes, but rather a little understanding when the trains are not running properly, or the taxis are striking, or when her shack is broken into; happenings often perceived as “lies” or “excuses” by many-a-madam.
Cars, microwaves, and hot water from the tap are conveniences of life, not obtainable to all. Conveniences have the power to turn hours into minutes and minutes into seconds, but convenience has a price. Those who cannot afford it have to learn to manage the time, that will not bend for them, and make do with what they are given. I am not saying it is better or worse to have or not have; that is up to the individual to judge for his or her self. But what I am saying is no matter how little or how much we have, it is an important exercise to look around us, taking stock, and being grateful for what we do have, whether great or small, because just as we can count on time to remain the same, predictable, steady force, we can equally count on life for being the unpredictable, unreliable, and mysterious force that can take something and turn it into nothing, or take everything away with one fell swoop. It does us good to appreciate what we have. Because what we have today may indeed not be there tomorrow. An time… it will remain steady, and keep on ticking. It waits for no one.
Random Thought #24
February 4, 2010A five-minute drive is a thirty-minute walk. That’s gotta be some sort of metaphor to life!
It All Makes Sense: From No Father to Know Father – Part 2
February 4, 2010Yesterday I wrote about Caleb meeting his father for the first time. The experience was so moving I wanted to share it immediately, as to not forget the finer details and feelings of it. I’m afraid in my attempt at sharing it, possibly before I could really get my head totally around it, the blog was more of a long-winded rant than a well thought out, nicely written piece. Sorry for that. But there’s also an aspect of the story I forgot to share.
Caleb getting to meet his father, for the first time since he has been capable of putting words with more than two syllables together in a properly formed sentence, was not the only good thing that happened to him that day. He also received a fairly simple piece of information which seemed for him to be the equivalent to the Buddha’s enlightenment. It happened on the drive home, through casual conversation with his grandma. She said to me, part earnest and part jokes, “Caleb tells me he has a girlfriend around the corner from where he stays. I told him he must bring her around for me to check her out before they can continue.” Caleb did this little teenage eye-rolling mixed with a smile mixed with a nervous laugh, with a slight awkward sigh turned fake yawn.
“I know they’re making out! And he’s way too young for that!” she shrieked. Caleb’s light brown skin turned dark reddish brown. He laughed shyly in disagreement. “Yeah, he told me about her. And I already told him he is way too young to be a father, and he better not try anything too soon.” Caleb’s grandma took a quick gasp in and was speechless, probably for the first time that day. “I never thought of that!” she said, not even considering sex as an option for her lanky teenage grandson. Oops, I thought. “Well, you know the kids of today!” I said like a 72-year-old man. She confirmed her knowledge of the “kids of today” and went on to speak about Caleb’s mother, mentioning that she was only 15 when she had Caleb. His eyes widened and he looked over at me, there was a certain twinkle in them, mixed in with the shock of this, apparently new, information. He didn’t say anything at that point and the conversation drifted on to other things.
As Caleb and I drove away form his grandma’s house, and after we had had a chance to speak about the whole father experience, he said, “Yho! And I can’t believe my mother was only fifteen when she had me! That’s the first time I’d ever heard that!” There was a strange hope and comfort in his voice. I said, “Yeah, that’s pretty unbelievable. But it makes a whole lot of other stuff make sense to me.” He nodded in agreement as though he we shared the exact same thought, or even brain. I continued, “I mean, you’re sixteen now. That means when your mother was your age she had already had you for an entire year!” Caleb shook his head in disbelief, “Yho!” I let it sink in for a second or two, “I mean… do you feel mature enough to raise a kid right now?”
Caleb laughed and shook his head adamantly, “Pssht! No ways!!!” His head continued to swivel in both disbelief and understanding. I looked at him, “You getting removed from her care at such a young age makes a lot more sense doesn’t it?” For maybe the first time Caleb realized his mother was not a bad mother, and he was not a bad kid, causing his removal from her care; she just had him at a very young age and was probably experiencing the rebbellion and immaturaty that he now knows well. He looked at me with a look of relief as he said yes. And at that very moment his entire aura changed; I think it was merely a manifestation of his entire internal world shifting. The dark, black and grey thunderous clouds parted, making way for the beautiful blue sky with the sun sitting high, shining warmth in places deprived for far too long; not a corner or crevice was spared light. The unstable tectonic plates that had been forever shifting beneath him, causing constant tremors, rumblings and quakes, fell into place and the earth seemed to fall to its most stable position as the dust settled from years of trembling. Caleb’s life soundtrack shifted from the sinister low, bassy strings and obo, foreshadowing something terrible in the near future, to a hopeful refrain played by high strings and flutes; the kind you hear in a movie when everything begins to work out for the hero.
At that moment life seemed a lot more fair to Caleb; or at the very least it made more sense. This new information gave answers to questions he did not even realize he was asking, or at least ones he had never articulated. Feelings of unexpressed resentment, anger and bitterness Caleb had stored against his mother all the years began to evaporate. Guilt he has always carried on his shoulders, the idea that maybe his life’s state was his fault, lifted graciously. His head sat higher, his shoulders broader, his lips formed a pleased smile, and his eyes gleamed with hope. And though I knew it wouldn’t be long before his hormonal teenage mind told him life was “effed up”, for some reason that was probably too small for such a bold statement, I could see that, at least for now, the effed-upness of life had drastically let up for Caleb, and something within him was forever changed for the good.
If meeting his father for the first time began to bring a sense of resolve to his struggle, this information about his mother brought Caleb liberation that just might just have ended that particular battle; it might have set him free.
From No Father to Know Father
February 3, 2010The topic of fathers, or the lack there of rather, has come up a lot lately. I recently finished Donald Miller’s new book A Million Miles in a Thousand Years where a huge part of the storyline was about him trying to find his dad who he had never known. Last week Caleb, a young sixteen-year-old boy I have known since he was about seven, broke down and started crying while we spoke about his father, who he has not seen since he was three. Another young guy I know just asked me over the weekend if I thought it was possible for him to get his father’s face tattooed on his back, and how much I thought it would cost. He never had the opportunity to meet his dad because he died before the little fellow was even born.
All of these interactions reminded me of the important role the father plays in the life of a child (most especially a boy), even if he is nowhere to be found. It is like there is something inside every boy who cries out for the attention, approval and acceptance of a father. I guess that’s why when there is no father around these needs often find warped outlets through negative influences, gang loyalty and so on. But as Caleb cried and spoke I could see this almost carnal need, deep within in him, to really know his father.
Caleb and I had tried in vain in the past to track down his dad. The other day when he was crying and speaking about it his voice was filled with pain and confusion, “I don’t even know what my own dad looks like. And he doesn’t even know what I look like.” Before the topic moved on to other things about how his “life is so effed up” (his own exact words) we decided to give the search for his father another try. He told me his dad’s brother lived across the street from his maternal grandmother’s mother; Caleb’s great grandma to make it simpler. I told him to get his grandma to get his dad’s details from his great grandma.
A few days later he excitedly called me to tell me he had gotten the uncle’s phone number from his great grandma. We called him together. The uncle said he does not know Caleb’s dad’s address but he can take us to the house. We took him up on this offer. Caleb and I made a plan to pick up his grandmother (because she knows where the great-grandmother lives) and go find his dad, and yesterday was the decided upon day. The day before yesterday I spoke to Caleb about his expectations, and tried to prepare him for both the best and worse case scenario. He said he felt nervous but glad he was finally going to get a chance to meet his dad.
He is also going through a, what I would consider to be fairly “normal”, 16-year-old rebellion phase, and is also displaying quite a bit of anger about…well, I don’t even think he knows why. As I said, a fairly “normal” 16-year-old phase. I had hoped that meeting his dad could be a good experience and maybe help him be a little les angry. But I also worried, if the dad was a total jerk, it could set Caleb back, deeper in his anger.
Yesterday on the way there I could see Caleb was pretty anxious about it all, and he expressed that to me a couple of times during the car ride. We went to the great grandma’s house and then to the uncle who took us to the father’s house. The long-awaited moment had arrived. Caleb took a big, deep breath and smiled nervously as he climbed out of the car. I asked him if he was alright. He inhaled again and, as confidently as he could, said yes. We entered the house and were first met by Caleb’s grandmother (whom he had never met). She did not seem to be bothered in the least bit that he was a blood relative, and more worried that we were coming to “cause trouble” in the form of demanding child support from the years not paid.
When we insured her that we were not looking for trouble of any kind, she called Caleb’s father from the back. It being an incredibly small house he must have already heard the reason we were there, and therefore knew very well that the tall, lanky, handsome young man in the living room was his son. But he shook Caleb’s grandmother’s hand first, and then mine, and then took a step back, without even looking at Caleb. I said, “This is your son.” And he finally took his child’s hand with about as much love and interest as someone greeting a stranger in the form of an old, boring rock. We sat. The adults mostly talked. Caleb’s father barely looked at him. But Caleb stared at his long-lost dad. I could see tears welling up in his eyes. I kept trying to direct the dad’s conversation towards Caleb, and the grandmother’s talk away from money, insisting that the reason we were there had nothing to do with money but it was Caleb’s wish to finally meet his father.
As the grandmother tried again to bring up the many years of child support not paid I interrupted her, rudely one might say, “Actually, the reason we are here has nothing to do with money and so I do not want you to get that thought in your head. Neither I nor your son care about this money thing. We are here because he,” I pressed my finger on Caleb’s chest, “wanted to come and see you. He doesn’t want your money. He just wants to know what his dad looks like, what his voice sounds like, if he bears any resemblance to him. He wants to know you!” The dad smiled a smile that was somewhere between pride and fear.
Caleb said nothing the entire time. When it was time to explain where he lived and what he was up to, he passed the mic to me. I explained that he lived in an institution for young men in Salt River. And then gave the father mine and Caleb’s cell phone number. After looking down at the page where i had just written Caleb’s name and number, Caleb’s dad finally looked at him, addressing him directly, “Your name is Caleb, nuh?” Caleb nodded his head as his grandmother suggested that she and I step out and give the two of them a chance to chat. I looked at Caleb on my way out and asked him if he was ok. He, maybe not so sure himself, said yes. The two grandmothers and I stepped out of the house and left the newly acquainted father-son duo, giving them a chance to “catch up”.
I stood out in the yard, protective of and, nervous for Caleb. I could hear soft conversation on the other side of the cracked door. It sounded friendly enough. I relaxed and played with my cell phone to pass the time. After a few minutes I heard Caleb’s father’s voice raise to a high decibel. I walked quickly over to the door, ready to bust it down and kick his face in. The last thing Caleb needs is a dad who just walked onto the scene, already yelling at him. But as I got close to the door I stopped and was relieved to hear it was loud talking inspired by laughter. Shew!
After about ten whole minutes Caleb emerged from the house. Promises of visits were made, goodbyes were said, hands were shook, and we climbed in the car and drove away. Caleb seemed pleased, but a little dazed, like someone who just woke from a dream. After we dropped his grandmother off I asked Caleb how it was. He smiled and said it was great to meet his dad, and then he began to tell me all about their “talk”. Caleb was pleased that his dad had remembered his birth date. Apparently his dad was also very pleased that Caleb mentioned the last time he saw him (when he was 3) he remembers his dad giving him five rand. His father promised to visit the place where Caleb stays.
Caleb even had the courage to ask his dad why he left, and was very pleased with his father’s open and candid answer that had everything to do with his mother and nothing to do with Caleb. He seemed very pleased with the outcome of the visit and that made me happy. He had a certain peace about him that I cannot explain. Maybe it was a peace just knowing that his father didn’t leave because of him, maybe it was as simple as just seeing his father, knowing what he looks like, what he sounds like, and how he sits. “I wanted to hug him at the end but it was kind of awkward so I just shook his hand.” Caleb said shyly.
“There will be plenty of time for hugs buddy. This was the first of many meetings.”
Maybe ironically, Caleb is staying with me this week because he is suspended for a week from the place where he stays for his 16-year-old rebellious behaviour. Last night, as he laid on his bed I could see from the other room his mind was swimming through the events of the day. I went in and sat on his bed. “You think he will actually come visit?” Caleb asked. “I don’t know. But I do know that he really wants to. Sometimes things that people want do not always translate into action, but I could tell when he said he would it was something that he really, really wanted to do. Caleb was pleased with that answer.
“So is life a little less effed up now?” I asked with a smile.
Caleb exhaled a sigh of relief and smiled, “Yeah, it’s a lot less effed up now!”
Posted by capetownbrown