If you put your mind to it, you can do anything!

If you put your mind to it, you can do anything

As a child, I heard that statement ALL THE TIME. To be honest, I didn’t believe it. As a young black child, I wasn’t capable of understanding the possibilities of my future. The positive male examples around me were few. I didn’t know any black men that went to college, I knew men that enlisted in the service. I knew men that had good jobs; the postal workers, bus drivers, and grocery guys. That was then in 1980’s, now in 2014,  there are men and women of color that are successful everywhere.

I’m sure YOU may not understand what possibilities are out there for you…trust me there are too many to count. Don’t measure yourself to people who don’t value their opportunities. I don’t want you to be short-sighted like I was…you have time on your side. You really can do anything you want to do. You have time to mess up, you have time to try different things. Find out what you like, find out what you don’t like. Can you make money from what you like to do? Can you make it a career? It’s up to you to find out.

A pivotal moment in my life occurred from a simple discussion about someone else’s future. When I was 15 years old I had a discussion with my best friend Lydell. I remember walking next to him asking, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” He replied, “I’m going to be a doctor.” He didn’t hesitate, he didn’t say try to be, thinking about, or probably.

He said, “I’m going to be a doctor.”

Again as a young black kid from North Philadelphia, I didn’t see black doctors. I saw some on the Cosby show but that’s about it, and that was tv. I wanted to respond to Lydell with, “Brotha you crazy!” but I didn’t, I kept my mouth shut. I realized his statement was serious, unwavering. I realized he had a goal, not a dream, a directive. At that very moment, his response taught me that I need to have a goal too. He asked me what I wanted to be, I told him I wasn’t sure but computers made me curious.

All of my uncles Rusty, Greg and James told me different paths to get to whatever goal I had in my head, all paths involved college. When they were growing up, college wasn’t something that many black kids considered an option. All my uncles, insisted that I go to college, even though none of them attended college. When people love and care about you, they want the best for you even if they don’t possess what you could achieve. I initially wanted to be a lawyer or doctor but that was just what everybody else wanted, but I knew I liked those new computer things, so I went in that direction.

Many of my closest friends went to college, but some didn’t. College doesn’t guarantee you’ll be successful, but it was the best time of my life.  My business associate, ‘Savoy’ from the Calvert County chapter of Concerned Black Men, has a career/business in sheet metal. He’s successful and doesn’t have or need a college degree. At a young age, he was entrepreneurial with a grass cutting business. He doesn’t have to work for anyone, he works for himself. That’s awesome!

A few years back, I was golfing with Lydell in Dominican Republic. He had shot two balls in the water and was standing next to the pond. I walked up next to him trying to hold back my smile and said, “You know that’s 4 strokes…”  He responded, “I KNOW!” Putting one ball in the water was bad enough but two…jeesh. Right there on the edge of the water I said, “Look at us man, you have your own practice and I’m a system engineer, remember those two poor little black kids? Look at us now, playing golf in the Caribbean…crazy right?” We both nodded our heads proudly and continued our game. I reminded him to take his drop. LOL

MPM & Lydell in Dominican Republic...(Two positive young men of color from the Philadelphia, products of single parent households)

MPM & Lydell in Dominican Republic 2006…(Two positive young men of color from the Philadelphia, products of single parent households)

MPM

“There is no passion to be found playing small in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living.”  Nelson Mandela

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Etiquette 101: Creating your own identity as a gentleman

Etiquette: is a code of behavior that delineates expectations for social behavior according to contemporary conventional norms within a society, social class, or group.

This subject may not be, at its core, an etiquette subject but definitely a derivative. Our young men are slowly losing the masculine identity that I grew up inheriting from my role models. There a subtle traits that pour into a young man as he matures. You absorb them from your positive influences, an incorporate them into you own composite. These traits are your behavioral footprint. As a man, there are behaviors that isolate you from the pack. Hopefully they are good behaviors, I don’t need to even discuss the bad behaviors. Even if I did have enough time, why discuss them?! There are enough bad influences out there that shadow the positive people of color. Some men don’t know how to be a gentlemen or exercise some level of etiquette. They think is cool to be thuggish, uncultured, or ultra-masculine without any feelings because feelings make them weak. Well…that’s ignorant, it’s stupid and asinine. Regular people dress up for the occasion; church, weddings, proms…we dress up. If you want to be cool and you’re uncomfortable dressing up, don’t come to the function, stay your behind home. Don’t embarrass me with your ignorance or disrespect of the occasion. Yes you have the freedom to dress the way you want, but I have the freedom not to invite you next time.

Sorry…kinda trailed off into a rant there.

Being a gentleman is something that I picked up from all the males in my family and friends. Honestly, probably more from the women in my family I picked up instruction. Females usually instructed me, but I witnessed male behavior. The statements from my mother, aunts, or grandmother started out like, “A man is supposed to…” After I heard that, that’s what I did. Period. Any person, man or woman, has habits that they pick up from others. These habits or nuances of their persona that make them unique. There are people who feel safe being like everyone else, but that’s typical and boring. I want all of you to be gentlemen, and unique in your own definition.

I want to share some trait examples of what I’ve seen and possibly helped me create my own identity as a gentleman. I don’t have sole rights to any habit or characteristic but I’ve incorporated them into my own definition.

One of my “things” is… I don’t let the woman, any woman for that matter, touch a door. Getting in the car, getting out the car, I open the door. Walking in a restaurant, walking out of restaurant, I get the door. Walking in or out of the movie theater…I get the door. Getting on a roller coaster, carnival ride, photo booth…I GOT THE DOOR. I’m not trying to be special, I just want the woman who I’m with to feel special. She’s not just ‘with’ me…we’re together.

Years ago, my uncle Thurman, was dancing with my aunt Cheryl at their wedding on a cruise ship in New York. It was their first dance as husband and wife. My uncle Rusty and I were watching them dance and I noticed something weird. My uncle wasn’t touching my aunt with his fingers. I know, sounds funny but he was holding her with his palms, almost guiding her. I asked my uncle standing next to me about it. He said, “That’s old school, back in the day a man didn’t touch a woman with his fingers, it was seen as disrespectful.” I was blown. Watching my uncle guide and hold his new wife with his palms. That was the first time I saw it and I vowed the next time I would see it was when I was getting married.

Something similar, one time I was walking with a woman, holding her right hand with my left hand. We were walking to the car and a fight broke out to my right. As we continued to walk to the car, I kept my eyes on what was happening and put her in the car. I didn’t give it much thought until we were in the car and driving away. She said, “I feel protected when I’m with you.” I said, “Huh…where’d that come from?” She said, “The entire time the disturbance was going on, you were squeezing my hand.” She continued saying, “You kept yourself between me and the fight, you wouldn’t even let me see what was happening, and you never stop squeezing my hand and shielding me. I felt safe, protected.” I didn’t really know what I was doing, it came natural as her boyfriend. For some reason, we broke up later that year, but we remained friends, not close friends but we had an extended circle of friends. She called me and told me that she misses that in other men she’s dated, “feeling protected”. It was a compliment, I felt that I was doing something right, I felt like a gentlemen.

I’ll give you another example, from a another perspective. I had always attended cookouts or eating venues with girlfriends or a female companion. One time, I was at a cookout with a woman I was dating and she didn’t get me a plate of food. I never thought of it, I never knew I expected to receive a plate from my girlfriend but I know I didn’t like it. I thought it was disrespectful. I watched other women get their men a plate, and I sat there with a dry mouth. I was quite perturbed. We had a discussion about it on the way to her house, she was dismissive and flippant. Let’s just say, that was the last time I dropped her off…anywhere.

I started off this blog about our young men losing true masculinity to ignorance. Our young men don’t know how to be men. My mother always said, “If a person, doesn’t know, you can’t blame them.” So I write this blog to address an ignorance that seems to prevail with our young men. They are NOT being taught how to be gentlemen and that’s truly unfortunate.

MPM

“A gentleman is someone who does not what he wants to do, but what he should do.”
― Haruki Murakami

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Do the best you can until…

Looking back at my life at the age of 18 makes me appreciate where I am now.

At 18 years old, I had just graduated out of Girard College High School in Philadelphia, PA. I was unsure if, where, and how I was going to college. Would I be able to graduate college,  and where I would get the money?! I didn’t know what I would choose as my occupation. I was working two part-time jobs and balancing new challenges of being “grown” at 18 years old.

I was living  in a one bedroom apartment with my mom, and my grandma. I was sleeping on the couch with about a foot of closet space and three shelves for clothes. I was helping raise my newborn sister and coping with a family member dealing with a crack addiction. My brother was struggling with being a teenager but he lived with his father.  I was thinking about joining the military but everyone was saying, “The military ain’t for no black man.” My uncle Rusty was in the air force and my uncle Greg was in the navy. They were the only two black men I knew that had money. I really wanted to join the military but my uncle Rusty said, “Get your degree first!” I didn’t have a plan but this plan was the best plan I could commit to, I had nothing else.

I enrolled in Peirce Junior College and worked two jobs until graduating and transferring to Morgan State University.  I worked three jobs while attending MSU full-time. I graduated, moved south to Washington, DC and never looked back. The rest is history.

Switching gears, same topic…

Every time I see an old friends on Facebook I always say, “If you’re ever in DC, give me a call.” Well yesterday my old friend from Peirce Jr. College, called me. Deb and her husband, Monte were in town to support their daughter, Shanice. She was attending the “The congress of future medical leaders” at the DC Armory.  Deb called me yesterday at like 8am in the morning…crazy, but I’m glad she did. My girlfriend and I invited Deb and her husband Monte to brunch. We sat and talked about old times. The discussion was soo positive. They were so proud of their daughter and it seemed like we hadn’t changed a bit. We sat together in the Founding Farmers restaurant and had a blast. I was just meeting Monte and Deb was just meeting Carma but it was like we were old friends. It was no drama no nonsense just 4 adults talking about our successes, family, and viewpoints.

The discussion made me revert back to a time twenty or so years ago when I had no plan. I had no college degrees, no money, no friends in other countries, no businesses, no cars, no resume (civic or professional), no house, no golf clubs, no passport, and no dog. Deb and Monte were not married or together yet. She was just beginning her career, Monte wasn’t a published author yet. Their daughter Shanice, hadn’t been selected in the “National Honor Society”, she wasn’t even born yet.

This weeks blog is about the possibility of life. At 18 years old I had no idea how my life would turn out. Being among old and new friends with similar drive and determination. Being happy about shared successes, networking and relating the struggle that pays off over time. Looking at what your best is at the time, and watching it get better. Looking back on my goals that became accomplishments and those accomplishments that became a life I’m proud of. 

That life is out there for you. Believe it, it is, just go get it. Don’t look to your friends to define you…don’t look at where you are but where you want to go.  Do look out beyond everyone’s expectations reach for your imagination and make it a possibility.

MPM

Venus ethos, ““I can do this even if you don’t think I can”

Playing in the snow!

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REPOST: Movie Review: “American Promise”

American Promise

This blog was my first movie review and now my first repost.

I was emailed by Darcy Heusel, a campaign organizer and speaker for Black Male Achievement week. Darcy is a part of a conversation with film makers and American Promise influencers. There’s a campaign evolving from this movie. She asked that I re-post my movie review. How could I say no?  If you are interested in assisting in the awareness campaign and premiere parties visit the website: http://www.pbs.org/pov/about/premiere-party.php/

The Institute for Black Male Achievement is celebrating Black Male Achievement from February 3rd – the 9th. The PBS premiere of “American Promise” will be on February 3rd at 10pm Eastern Standard Time on you local PBS channel.

There are several efforts regarding more viewings across the national. An organization in Southeast DC called, “College Tribe” is hosting a viewing at 6:30pm on March 7th 2014. The location is: Covenant Baptist United Church of Christ 3845 S. Capital St. SE Washington, DC 20032. There will be food, I’m going to be there, and a youth panel discussion afterwards. Visit their website: http://www.collegetribe.org 

The Black Student Fund is hosting another viewing to take place on 1 March 2014 4:00 pm at the Metropolitan AME Church, 1518 M Street NW. Immediately following the screening there will be an open discussion. For more information please contact Mr. Leroy Nesbitt at 202-387-1414. I’m not sure if this event is open to the public. http://www.blackstudentfund.org

This is a repost of my first movie review, “American Promise”.

No spoiler alert here!

Yesterday, I was sent a link for a movie trailer:  http://www.americanpromise.org/. At first when I visited the site, I was thinking, “another sad story about our youth”. After I watched the trailer I said, “I have to see this movie, TONIGHT”  Last night I went to E Street Cinema downtown DC to watch the 7:30pm show of American Promise. http://www.landmarktheatres.com/Index.htm  The E Street venue usually shows really good quality movies that don’t just follow status quo of what is comfortable for society. You’re not going to see the blockbuster movies here but you will come away with a good discussion piece from just about any movie there. E street shows movies that hit home with a cinematic candor that you don’t want or need watered down.  The really good stories about the black experience are rarely on the major venues so I was hopeful and curious last night.

I’m not going to spoil the movie for anyone nor am I going to become a critic and inject my own opinions. My blog will always be positive so here goes.

I wasn’t overwhelmed with this movie,[that’s a bad way to start] but wait. 🙂  I didn’t come away with some new understanding of my own childhood or revelation about being a man. As a grown man, I could comprehend what was happening in the movie. The stages of maturity represented in the movie were not something foreign to me. However, to any young black male, this movie has a value beyond any movie I’ve seen. It takes the viewer through a candid journey from adolescence to maturity. You, the viewer, witness the happiness, sadness, perseverance, and triumph in the incremental years of a maturing young man. You see the repercussions of decisions both good and bad. A young black boy has an evolving comprehension, and this movie provides two real life examples of the “middle passage”. The evolution of Idris and Seun would help any young black male in these “middle passage” years navigate a little better. “American Promise” walks you through the lives of Idris and Seun. It takes you through the challenges they face through their educational timeline. The movie provides a platform where any young viewer can examine the parallels of their own lives and possibly replicate the triumphs. Any adult can appreciate this movie, but young black boys NEED to see this movie. If you have children, especially young black boys, take them to see this movie!

The movie wasn’t overwhelmingly racial, not at all. To whites without an understanding of the black experience, some movies can be slightly abrasive. Don’t get me wrong, some movies NEED to be abrasive to give a circumstance the proper relevance.  In this movie, the message was not lost in the offensiveness of the implied guilt of racism. For the average white person that may not have an understanding of the experience, this movie has a topical amount of the racial dispute. You don’t get lost in a militant message that massages just one race or gender. I was impressed by how the movie touched on so many relevant discussions and categories that parallel my concerns for our young men. I could not resist blogging about it to hope that others see this movie.

American Promise

My motivation for setting up this blog is to assist young positive black boys to manhood. I don’t exclude anyone but my target audience is young black boys. To my followers you all know this…and thanks for continuing to follow. I’ve never used the blog for a movie review but I must endorse this movie based on an aligned objective of helping young black boys.

MPM

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