Upon self-examination I’ve concluded; were it not for a dash of serendipity on all the right occasions, sprinkled at just the proper times, I wouldn’t amount to very much in this world. The fact that I was born here in America and not under a bridge in Lagos is, in itself, a divine intervention of sorts. And if you don’t know of that particular Nigerian slum then let me just add that not being born at all would be a a more desirable volition in this writer’s mind.
what I could have received…
what I got instead…
And still, it’s not enough. In comparison to the Bill Gateses, the Mark Cubans and even the Flavor Flavs of this world…I am but a speck. Dust doesn’t even know I exist. Okay, maybe I’ve got more going on than perennial homeboy Flav…
…but I’m sure there are many in this world who would argue agin. (On my own behalf though, if the ‘picture’s worth…’ cliche holds any water at all, I just saved the Recycle Bins 15,000 words.) I’m trying to be a greener man, thus the whole self-examination exercise in the first place. I’m just not a big fan of the color, I guess.
I calculated the amount of trees I saved by not succumbing to print advertising or mass mailings this year–and to honest, it wasn’t that much. In fact, I probably saved more of the rain forest by simply making half of what I made last year but even I can’t put enough spin on that reality to feel that I’m a better man for it. It kind of makes me sick, actually….
Until I hear about a place like Lagos, Nigeria and learn of the pure misery there. Now without getting into personal idealogical bents I will simply say that I listen to National Public Radio all the time, if for no other reason than to get my blood pumping and to know I have an opinion on a thing or two in this world, all specks of dust aside. Politically, I don’t like anybody and since, (according to those who profess their love for me), I’m wrong almost half the time anyway, I can safely go on record to say that there’s always a fighting chance of me being incorrect, at some level, on any given issue. So you see…by nature, I am Politically Incorrect. No further need to scold me in the Comment Section. I hereby confess.
Ellis Cose, a columnist and contributing editor at Newsweek Magazine, recently aired an inspiring and heartfelt piece on NPR about an African refugee camp boy named Abass Mohamed, and the ‘odyssey’ that eventually landed him at Princeton University as a freshman. He was taught without books for the greater part of his life. He learned his lessons scratched in the dirt. His most cherished possession was a kerosene lamp for studying deep into the night–in a hut. I could barely comprehend what I was hearing. I was ashamed of myself for the waste I’ve left behind over the years, the things I myself, have taken for granted, and my own internal stuggle to perform the next best, mortal act when the prospect of a quick buck was far more appealing. Yeah, I’m a realtor and I help people with their housing needs but I’d like to think I have more than just that dimension of humanity going for me.
So I make half this year than what I’m used to earning (and that’s what this is really all about, you see); the number is still several times more than my own father made during his best working years and a hundred thousand times more than the father of Abass Mohamed earns selling trinkets in the refugee camp market. It’s a pure mathematical phenomenon that I was even born at all, according to Dr Math at Drexel University (hey, I Google a lot). So my name won’t be on the front page (or even the back page…yikes!) of the annual CAR glory edition for 2007. So what? Mouths are fed under this roof. Water needn’t be ‘gathered.’ No need for kerosene or lessons scribbled in the dirt. I’m not from an ousted clan or a stranger in a stranger’s land…
Rather, I should be thanking my luckiest stars that I’ve been given the breaks and the gifts that I have. I should stop every so often and take a look behind me rather than aspring only for what is ahead of me. I’ve been sprinkled with a dash of Serendipity at just the right times and hell, whether I like it or not; or think I should have been given more; or find myself pining for the days of insane pricing, cash only deals, and multiple offers… the moment of respite allows me to see who I really am and at the very least, keeps me from walking around with a stupid clock around my neck. Boyee.
Anyway, I’ll be vacationing in Hawaii until the middle of December. See you in two weeks.
Greg Swann says:
Beautiful. Good on ya. Have a great trip.
November 27, 2007 — 12:40 pm
Todd Carpenter says:
Several years back, I moved to a new lender, only to have them aquired just days into the adventure. MY new job was gone, and I was feeling greatly smited. Then I went home, flipped on the TV and watched a news story about a lady in Nigeria who found herself trapped in a tree as a massive flood destroyed her village. A helicopter eventually came along and fished her and her baby out of the tree. Yes, she gave birth to the baby, alone, in the tree. Suddenly, my news of the day seemed very inconsequential.
November 27, 2007 — 12:49 pm
Mona says:
Truthfully and beautifully written. I read it twice to make sure I didn’t miss anything.
November 27, 2007 — 3:04 pm
Eric Blackwell says:
Serendipity indeed. Well written. Enjoy Hawaii…
November 27, 2007 — 3:59 pm
Jim Duncan says:
Very, very well said. Perspective is a humbling thing worthy of visiting more often.
November 27, 2007 — 5:30 pm
Brian Brady says:
Word.
November 27, 2007 — 6:44 pm
Geno Petro says:
Thanks all. And like my West Coast (nee right coast) bud, B.B. so eloquently puts it…’Word’ out…
or is it ‘up’?
G.
November 27, 2007 — 7:38 pm
Allen Butler says:
Nicely done. I thank God every day for what I have. Literally. Somehow, I have managed to keep a six figure number in this atrocious mess.
November 27, 2007 — 7:40 pm
Russell Shaw says:
Killer post. It is “word up”. And “peace out”. But I prefer, “peace outside” as I hit my chest with my closed hand and then make the peace sign (index finger and middle finger in the V). I think it gives me a certain street cred with young hipsters.
Have a blast in Hawaii, Geno.
November 28, 2007 — 1:21 am
Brian Brady says:
“I think it gives me a certain street cred with young hipsters.”
Bro, you had street cred before it was dope
November 28, 2007 — 2:16 pm
Russell Shaw says:
I was going to get the Doctor Martin shoes but found that there was no actual doctor named “Martin” who wore them.
November 29, 2007 — 12:54 am