Tag Archives: After Earth

Break away from the pack (Blog 1 of 2)

I was visiting my local Chic Fil A restaurant and there was a young black employee who ended the transaction with the phrase,  “My Pleasure”. His friends were in the lobby of the restaurant and they were laughing hysterically at him. The “My Pleasure” comment is kinda corny but it’s the company policy, everyone said it. I could see the laughing kinda bothered him. I said to the young brother, “Don’t worry about them laughing bro, at the end of the day you’ll have money in your pocket and they’ll be still trying to find a job, trust me.”

I was thinking back to my days in college when I worked at the Hechingers during my days at Morgan State. The same thing happened to me…I was working as a cashier and my classmates walked pass laughing and pointing at me while I was ringing up customers in my blue uniform. It didn’t bother me much…I thought it was funny. It was a vindication the next week when one of those friends laughing asked me if Hechingers was hiring.

The first job is significant to creating your identity. It’s that first step away from the allowance or asking relatives for money to becoming independent. There’s a fear of stepping out on your own, beginning your own journey. It’s the fear of leaving the safety of your friends to possibly being different than your friends. There’s that point where you go your own way and sometimes, most times, the path is a solo path. Leaving the comfort of friends is sometimes “uncool”, but you have to do it. It’s necessary to understand your unique talents and strengths as an individual. Your real friends will adjust to the change, whether you’re seen as uncool or not, your real friends won’t treat you any different. They will support your courage to try something new. Those other people or “friends” might try to talk you out of it or  hate on you or treat you different, leave them alone, they were never your real friends in the first place. Those people don’t matter and they never will. Once you weed those people out, it will become easier to weed out any possible obstruction to your goal.

For example, some entertainers or celebrities start out in a group or duo. Some started out as rappers and became business owners or actors. Phil Collins started out with Genesis, Beyonce started with Destiny’s Child, Busta Rhymes, Q-Tip, Justin Timberlake, Diana Ross, Michael Jackson, Ice Cube, George Michael and Lil Wayne all started out in a band or group. Most them faced deep opposition and criticism to them leaving the group. Two people that stick out to me are Ice Cube and Will Smith, I remember these two because Cube was called a sell out because he left NWA and Will’s rap wasn’t “hard” enough. Will’s big hit was “Parents just don’t understand” it was the first rap to ever win a grammy. Will and Cube were both pioneers with going from rapping to acting. Will commands well over 20 million dollars a movie now, do you think it was a smart decision? Now all rappers try to get into acting. Some rappers are now titans in business. Shawn Carter(Jay-Z) net worth 500 million, Curtis Jackson(50-cent) net worth 125 million, Christopher Bridges (Ludacris) net worth 70 million are iconic in their successes. All of these rappers didn’t necessarily leave a group but the set out on an endeavor that was their own.

In the movie, “After Earth”, there’s a pivotal point where Jaden Smith’s character, Katai Raige, has to either come back to the ship and hope to be rescued and die with his father or go alone past the point of no return to get a access to emergency supplies and a beacon. Katai had to face environmental, physical and emotional challenges but he faces them alone and survives to rescue his father.

This symbolic point where manhood is taken in a great leap is very real and it’s very necessary.  You alone have to embark on this journey. This leap into masculinity is a obligation of all young men, prepare for it. There’s this break away point, where the eagle leaves the nest, where the young lion leaves the pride. To get those riches and successes and possibly become your own iconic symbol you have to break away from the pack.

MPM

“Do not follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.”  Ralph Waldo Emerson

Next Blog: Learning how to lead (Blog 2 of 2)

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“Danger is real, Fear is a choice”

A movie came out with Will Smith and his son Jaden Smith called “After Earth“.
In the movie, Will’s character, Cypher, makes a profound statement…I’m not sure if the statement is to Jaden Smith’s character Kitai Raige, or is he making the statement outright. Cypher says,
Danger is real, Fear is a choice“.

This statement  is so applicable to life. The statement applies so well to the subtle choices that young African-American men are faced with and the balance of fear and danger in those decisions.
For most young adults the questions of;
who am I?
what do I want?
how do I get there?
what’s next?
  …are always looming.

Do I Party or Study?
Am I a Good guy or Bad boy?
Do I want to enroll in College or Military?                                     Am I going to school or prison?                                   Do I want to be a Baby daddy or Husband?

Do I have a Closed Fist or an Open Mind?                                             Do I want to Exist or Live?
                                                             …these choices will define who you are as an individual.

It’s easy to make the wrong decision because it’s the easiest…let’s just cheat and not study for hourslet’s skip class and play basketball in the gym...I’m going to mind my business and not stand up to the bully ...the right decisions are always a little harder.

With every decision there’s an element of fear and only sometimes a reality of danger. The more fear you face and overcome, the fear slowly becomes nonexistent. The habit of facing you fear builds confidence, it reduces the impact of the next challenges or future obstacles.  The sooner you understand that those fears or insecurities are NOT real, the easier it will become to make the right decisions.

Making the right decisions will change or elevate everything in your life; friends, career, money, your quality of life. I will blog about this later.

For example, when I was younger, I was a little shy and avoided speaking in front of people…I had a common case of glossophobia, a fear of public speaking. So what did I do, I enrolled in toastmasters. http://www.toastmasters.org/ It’s an organization that coaches individuals that have to speak publicly. I also enrolled in a speech class in junior college.  During the class I gave 5 speeches and learned that I actually like speaking in front of people, almost to the point where I wanted to do stand-up comedy. It’s funny what you can learn about yourself and how brave you can be when you face your fear. I developed an outspoken nature when there are matters of right and wrong. That trait got the attention of people in power and a resulting nomination for the Vice-Chair position of the National Organization of Concerned Black Men, Inc.

The unfortunate reality as a black man is that you have to recognize when Fear and Danger are heaped on you where it should not be. Society has reinforced a condition where men of color are feared and dangerous. It’s something that we have to understand, navigate and respond accordingly. Just because you are not fearless in your environment, does not indicate the people around you are not afraid. Be ever cognizant that these fears are present in people of authority over us; judges, teachers, neighborhood watch captains, state troopers, mall guards…you name it. All these representatives of law and order are inherently fearful of a men of color. Their subsequent decisions prior to making a distinction between perceived or real danger can affect or end your life. I’m not an “anti-establishment” kinda of person, but understanding societies insecurities about black men are somewhat of a rite of passage for all men of color. Without falling too far off the message understand that you must not allow fear to dictate your decisions.

Remember this when you’re on an interview,

remember this when you’re followed in a store,
                                      remember this when you get pulled over by the cops,
                                                                                                                         Remember this in life.

“In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing.”

Author: Theodore Roosevelt

All comments welcome.

MPM

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