Saturday, August 4, 2012

Afterthought: Deep Wounds Will Heal




I noticed after the fact that I never actually paused to comment on the victims of the Colorado Massacre in my "Our American Problem" blog, other than mentioning the number of casualties. However, I'm not like Vladimir Stalin who once said, "One singular death is a tragedy, one million deaths is a statistic"; I believe in fairness, equality and justice to the memory of those who died that night. You see, I don't mourn statistics or death tolls, I mourn fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, aunts, friends, lovers. One story that has arisen from this tragedy is of the boyfriends who died valiantly protecting their girlfriends. Instead of ABC opening up with the troubled mental history of James Holmes, why didn't it do it with the story of these brave men instead? They were the true superheroes that night. 

I offer my love and best wishes to all the victims of the Coloroado Massace, those who died and those who still live, and their families and loved ones. And if I can say anything in parting that will serve as consolation, I'd say deep wounds will heal. I know myself.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Our American Problem



"We have it in our power to begin the world over again." Thomas Paine

I don’t watch the news much, but it seems like every time I venture passing by a TV screen that’s showing the news, some heinous, violent crime is being reported on. The latest one, that of a young former grad student named James Holmes, who dutifully took it upon himself to hold a full-house theater venue playing The Dark Knight Rises captive at gunpoint, unloading shells into them that resulted in 12 people dead and 70 injured, the worst mass shooting in American history. It’s quickly becoming clear that this type of phenomenon is one that is exclusively American. Why, you may ask, because we here in this country glorify violence. We buy it on a daily basis by giving into and consuming it, and exult it by opening up and consuming the news with it. Yet they (the media) remind us that this is rare, and even have advise on how to speak to our children about it. The answer is there in front of our face: By glorifying and exulting violence, we promote the propagation of these  mass murderers and serial killers. And to be sure, these occurrences may be rare, but the reporting on them is anything but.

Look around you. It’s not only television, it’s everything: music, video games, toys, and all types of other merchandise. Violence sells and people buy it. Little by little, the foundations of our society are beginning to erode. By nature, we simply aren’t this violent, and are quickly reaching a breaking point of excess. The moment is ripe to collectively bring it down a notch and declare a moratorium on violent-crime-news-reporting. You see, not until we as a society decide to stop participating in this violence orgy and turn off our television sets, will the major conglomerates that rule the airwaves get the message and stop broadcasting violence. Turn off your TV and they will turn off their cameras. 


We are better than what see on TV. So why stoop down to that degrading lowness? Rise above it. Keep that quiet dignity that mutes the volume every time a violent crime is reported on, that looks away when someone is killed on TV. Keep it, and you’ll see how much better you’ll feel after not subjecting yourself to an onslaught of mindless violence. 


We live in a world of reciprocal actions. If we support violence by consuming it, we’re creating a demand for it and multiplying the instances of it across all spectrums of life. That’s why it will take nothing short of a movement to quell this spell; it will take a worldwide gathering of enlightened minds concerned with spreading love, peace and prosperity. It will take a higher consciousness. We are at the summit. It’s only left to us to act.




James Holmes, charged in the Aurora Massacre, appears dazed and confused in court. Violent criminals like Holmes use violence as an outlet to release their frustrations, a uniquely American problem

Thursday, January 26, 2012

YOU ARE NOT THE FATHER!

Earlier today, my mom forgot to turn off the TV before leaving to work. When I came into our apartment, much to my annoyance The Maury Show was on. I don’t watch much television, and least of all talk shows as they are nothing more than salacious trash--and cheap salacious trash, at that. And over the years, from flipping through channels and conversations with friends, I’ve become too familiar with Maury’s show topics, of which the bulk consist of Who’s My Baby Daddy and Cheating Husbands Put to the Test by Backstage Sexy Decoys. It’s a sad fact, for at least there’s more substance in the Is It a Man or a Woman and the Out of Control Teenage Girl Sent to Boot Camp show topics. It’s also sad because during the first few seasons of the show when the host himself wasn’t dogged by sexual harassment scandals, The Maury Show spent considerable time on serious subject matter. But I guess there was simply no fun in that. In any event, I kept the TV on as I unwound.

On this particular episode, a woman who we will conveniently call Jezebel, came on the show for the fifth time to have the fifth man tested to determine the child's paternity. Old footage was conjured to recap her past appearances on the show. Almost without fail, Jezebel always followed the same script: she was initially 100% sure the alleged man was the father, after it was revealed that he wasn’t, she went backstage and broke down crying. If Jezebel is so disgraced that this walking, unthinking penis isn’t her baby’s daddy, then why does she even show up on the show to begin with? This woman is on live television announcing to millions of people that she is a, should we say, whore!

What shocks me even more is that the audience always seems to side with Jezebel. When Jezebel cries, the camera doesn’t fail to catch their displays of sympathy; when Jezebel lashes out at her almost-certainly-not baby daddy, the audience rallies her on. This is beyond outrageous (and even laughable). Maybe Jezebel is their version of a model citizen, maybe they want their children to grow up and follow her example. Not that I have any defense of the baby daddy, either; after all, this man (and I use the term here very loosely), whose knee-jerk reaction after being exonerated is to start dancing like a buffoon, has almost always very bad taste (judging by Jezebel’s appearance) and not even the slightest presence of mind to put on a condom when consorting with some woman he just met at the club that night. As far as I’m concerned, he’s already a baby daddy multiple times over, not to mention a walking venereal disease factory.

This brings me back to the macdaddy of trash television, Jerry Springer. I always thought that his show was the trashiest, but when it was revealed in the late 90s that a lot of the show was choreographed, I realized that there was at least some method to the madness. And after all, Springer himself was the mayor of Cincinnati and pursued a more serious career in journalism. His show also spawned the career of Steve Wilkos, whose show has steered clear from the low-brow salaciousness that has defined Springer’s. All Maury Povich has left behind is trash, and more trash.

By the way, the fifth man who Jezebel so adamantly accused of being her baby daddy, turned out not to be (surprise, surprise!). She went backstage, she broke down, she cried, though this time the man in question was a little more sympathetic and not as eager to flaunt his superb dancing skills. Maybe he’s learned something. As for Jezebel, stay turned for next week’s episode when she’ll have the sixth man tested.



Thursday, December 22, 2011

Discurso de aceptacion de Premio Nobel (Ernest Hemingway)

Hemingway consumido con su obra

Teniendo ninguna facilidad en el arte de discursos y ninguna maestria en el oratorio ni dominacion en retorica, deseo darle las gracias a los administradores de la generosidad de Alfred Nobel por este Premio.

Ningun escritor que conoce a los gran escritores que no recibieron el Premio puede aceptarlo sin nada mas que humilidad. No hay necesidad de mencionar a estos escritores. Todo el mundo puede crear su propia lista segun su sabiduria y conciencia.

Seria imposible pedirle al embajador de mi pais leer un discurso en que un escritor diga todas las cosas dentro de su corazon. Puede que las cosas no sean inmediatamente discernibles en lo que un hombre escriba, y en esto el algunas veces es afortunado; pero eventualmente son sumamente plenas y, a traves de estas y el grado de alquimia que el posee, el aguantara--o sera olvidado.

La escritura, en su mejoria, es una vida solitaria. Organizaciones de escritores plestan ayuda a la soledad del escritor, pero dudo que mejoren su escritura. El crece en estatura publica mientras sacude su soledad, y muchas veces su obra empeora. El hace su trabajo solo y, si el es un escritor realmente cumbre, tendra que asombrar la eternidad, o su falta, cada dia.

Para un escritor real cada libro debe ser un nuevo comienzo donde el intenta de nuevo algo que es inalcancable. El siempre debe intentar algo que nunca se ha hecho, o que otros han intentado y han fracasado. Luego algunas veces, con gran suerte, el sera exitoso.

Que simple seria la escritura de literatura si solamente fuera necesario escribir de otra manera lo que ya se ha escrito bien. Es porque hemos tenido tan buenos escritores en el pasado que un escritor es empujado mas alla de donde puede ir, donde ya nadie lo puede ayudar.

He hablado mucho por un escritor. Un escritor debe escribir lo que tiene que decir y no decirlo. De nuevo, les doy las gracias.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Give Him Credit

Tim Tebow tebowing. "Tebowing" has become a sensation all around the world

I’m not so sure how I feel about Tim Tebow the athlete; the quarterback with a viable NFL future. Not so sure if this kid has what it takes. Not sure than he can weather even a handful of seasons in the gritty sport. How I feel about him as a man, however, is an entirely different matter.

In the world of professional sports, where athletes mire their lives in controversy and are only role models strictly within the confines of the sport and not in their personal lives, where sexual improprieties, drug allegations, nightclub shootings, dog fighting scandals, gross mismanagement of money, and even recently in the case of former Washington Wizards guard Javaris Crittenton even murder hold sway, it is refreshing to finally see an athlete that conducts himself in a clean and upstanding way. Here’s someone that you can say is a positive role model in the full sense of the word, without having to make glaring exceptions of his personal character.

I’m sure Tim Tebow is not perfect; however, on the other hand, I’m all but sure he’ll never shame his way into the headlines by driving drunk and killing a pedestrian (Donte Stallworth), or choking and holding his wife at gunpoint (Allen Iverson). I’m pretty sure he’ll never shoot himself in the foot at a nightclub, like Plaxico Burress’ historically dumb blunder to end all dumb blunders. (He gives a whole new, LITERAL meaning to shooting yourself in the foot.)

Even Michael Jordan, who will always remain one of my favorite athletes and had a pretty clean cut image throughout his career, was known outside the court for his infidelities and gambling (he famously lost 1.2 million on the golf course in a gambling spree against Richard Esquinas). A ten-year-old can hang a poster of Tim Tebow on his bedroom wall without having to wince at a slew of tattoos and body ink that adorn his arms like barbed wire. Not that I have anything against tattoos (a tattoo can be classy, tasteful, and even meaningful), but how easily we forget that in American culture tattoos, especially when they cover 95% of your body, have traditionally symbolized gangs and prison life. Oh, and not to forget, lack of social upward mobility.

Again, Tim Tebow the athlete, I’m not so sure about. He may be around for a year or two, and permanently fall off the radar. But give him credit for taking his job as a role model and a source of inspiration to so many millions seriously. This alone makes me wish that he succeeds. At least if he does, I might proudly wear a Broncos jersey. Hell, at this point I might wear one even if he bombs.

Monday, November 28, 2011

10 Things to Remember About Relationships


1. Fools rush in. This is another way of saying do not settle for anyone that you don’t genuinely love and enjoy. If there are red flags that you think may eventually undermine or compromise the relationship, do not commit yourself to that person. Trust me: you’ll regret it later.

2. It’s a give and take. Both of you have to make concessions. There should be no double standards. Double standards are a recipe for a disaster, and oftentimes they’re realized without one person knowing and the other knowing all too well. This creates resentment, as well as a power struggle that will complicate things down the road. At heart, we are all fair and generous—so let’s show it with our partners.

3. Agree on your values. Do both of you have the same values? Opposites can sometimes attract, but no matter how opposite they are, there has to be a core set of values that both people agree on in order for that relationship to work. Make sure that the both of you see eye-to-eye on the most important things, particularly those that pertain to the relationship.

4. Bring the skeletons out of the closet (they’re gathering too much dust, anyway). These will come out sooner or later, so it’s best they come out during the initial stages of the relationship and not when it’s already too late and will likely compromise everything. Or worse yet, when your partner uncovers the betrayal. Be honest and forthcoming. Your partner may not accept the baggage and ditch out on you, but at least you saved yourself the heartache of it happening later on when you already have a slew of invested feelings and emotions.

5. Take it slow. This mostly relates to the beginning of the relationship, during the courtship phase or shortly after it. One date a week is good. Like any good book or movie, you want the relationship to unfold in a natural and fruitful way. The healthiest relationships are those that have developed organically, not frantically rushed into their climax.

6. It's not all about the sex. In fact, the bulk of the relationship should revolve around how the two of you get along. This is not meant to undermine the importance of intimacy, but only to highlight that sex alone will not carry the relationship. Like all things worthwhile, relationships rely on several important variants, of which sex is only one of them.

7. Don’t lose your focus. In this fast-paced world where our careers, friends, and even children vie for our attention, we tend to lose focus on our significant others. At the very least, we will ignore or brush aside important aspects of our relationships. This is highly problematic, and should be curbed by periodic evaluations of the relationship’s progress. This is how we "keep the fire alive" and never get bored of our partners.

8. Trust is hard to regain. Therefore, conduct your relationship as you would your personal, individual life: with the highest level of integrity. Trust is not impossible to regain, but it is extremely difficult. When your partner has lost your trust, it requires a mental rewiring to gain it back—and not everyone is capable of this. Dishonesty is not only toxic to the relationship, but it’s a form of self-sabotage.

9. It won’t always be Disney World. Ride it out. There will be dark moments, but if those don’t compromise the integrity and wholeness of the relationship, then weather the storm. More often than not, you will find that these were only necessary bumps along the way. From them, your relationship will grow.

10. Know when to cut your losses. If the relationship has reached the critical point of no salvation; if every method of recourse has failed; if you cannot even stand to see your partner any longer and infidelity tempts you at every turn, then this is the ultimate moment for you to proclaim, "Enough is enough!" Ideally, the two of you will come to that consensus together, but in the real world this is rare. There will usually be a party that feels betrayed or deceived, and will remain stubbornly bitter.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

A Long Look in the Mirror


If I were Joe Paterno right now, I would take a long look at myself in the mirror and question my integrity as a human being. I would forget about my 400 wins, my tenured reputation, and my success, and concede that these all mean nothing in the face of cowardice. I would forget about the glory that comes with coaching for over 30 years and try to feel the hurt and anguish that at least one man (and presumably more) feels now and felt several years ago as his innocence was robbed. I would then give up all efforts of trying to get my job back, I’d fire my powerful Washington attorney and immediately schedule a press conference where I apologize to Sandusky’s victim, Penn State and all its fans, and the entire world for my failure to act. I would finally turn to my six children, get down on my knees, and admit to them that I have failed them as a father.

There’s only one problem: Paterno’s got no balls. He isn’t even a shred of a man.

Sandusky himself is a slimy animal that has no hope of redemption. This man got away with raping young boys under the guise of helping them for decades, and now he doesn’t have himself to look at but God. And his cellmate Bubba once he reaches jail, and I’m sure Bubba’s gonna have a whole lotta fun with him. Oh well. Poetic justice, I guess.

Penn State as an institution and all the enablers that allowed Sandusky to get away with his lasciviousness don’t just have a damage control problem to deal with, but an asterisk that will forever brand their rich legacy. Might as well. Winning for them was more important than human lives, so an asterisk is the perfect symbol to define their legacy of shame.

Let this serve as an example for all institutions, schools and otherwise. There’s nothing wrong with success, but a moral imperative always comes first. You can choose to ignore it, but sooner or later it will come back with sound and fury. And by then all your success would have meant nothing. It’ll just be another scrap of useless trivia.