Archive for the ‘INTRO TO ME’ Category

First Day in El Paso

January 10th, 2009

FIRST DAY IN EL PASO

This is where it all began. This is where my life changed and twisted in a totally different direction. My Dad had recently announced that we were moving to El Paso, Tx. Here we were living outside of Frankfort, Ky., living the “Country” life. But it was time to move on. My Dad said that God had spoken to him, and told him that he needed to be reaching those “Heathen-Catholic Mexicans”. I always suspected that my Dad’s life-long friend, who was stationed in El Paso and was trying to start a Baptist Church, was really the “Voice of God” he was hearing. But I guess that was neither here nor there. I mean God does work in mysterious ways, right?
So we loaded up a moving truck, piled the five of us in the car, and took off on our 2,000 mile journey to our new home. I don’t remember much of the actual trip, but there was one moment that kinda sticks out in my mind. We were about 60 mles away from our destination. My sister and I had just figured out how many licks it really took to get to the tootsie-roll center of a tootsie-roll-pop. I was honing my Rubik’s cube skills, my sister was mixing it up and timing me with a stop-watch as I solved it, that was actually the first time that I solved it in under a minute (:58 to be exact). My mom was drawing the beautiful mountain scenery with her colored pencils on a sketch pad. She was a gifted artist, always very creative. My very insightful (almost psychic) sister got my attention, pointed at Mom, and with a sad look in her eyes told me, “We’ll never see Mom draw again.” I thought that was a weird statement from a 7-year-old, but turns out she was right. El Paso seems to suck the creativity right out of you. Must be the water.
About an hour later we pulled up in front of our new house. It wasn’t much. It was the first time any of us had seen it. You see, the members of the church had picked it out in our absence, and seeing as that the church had only 9 members, they couldn’t afford the rent for much better. LUCKY US! To tell the truth, I was actually pretty excited, the newness of anything pretty much excited me. We all went inside, decided where everything was to be placed, and left it to the movers to set up our “casa”.
Here is where the “Culture Shock” actually set in. Looking around, we could see the curious neighbors checking us out. It seemed like they all knew who we were already, there was pointing and talking, but we couldn’t understand a word being said. Then finally, my prized possesion (my bike) came off the truck. I jumped right on it and started riding in circles in front of the house. I soon got bored with that and I really wanted to go exploring, (must of been the country-boy in me). I asked my Dad if I could ride around the block real quick to check things out. Dad was excited and in a good mood so he of course said,”yes”. I think I was probably being annoying, trying to help. So anything to get me out of the way seemed like a good idea.
I took off on my bike, wide-eyed and full of excitement. I got to the end of the block and noticed there was a park right at the corner. I pulled into the park, excited that there was a place to play all my sports, whenever I wanted. There was a basketball court, a big field for football, and a playground. JACKPOT! Then I heard someone say, “Hey!” I looked around the corner and saw a group of Hispanic kids on bicycles, they were dressed so weird to me, all wearing T-shirts and khakis with their hair all slicked back. I later found out that they were referred to as “Cholos” or in this case since they were between the ages of 10-13 I guess theywere really “Cholitos”. Then one said to the others,”That’s the keed who stoole mi bicicleta.” I had no idea what that meant, but the way they looked at me and started running/riding toward me, I knew it wasn’t good. I took off like a shot, with about six of them right on my trail. I guess my reflexes or my legs were too slow, because they caught me pretty much immediately. After about 20 blows to the head and body, they finally wrestled my bike away from me and were gone. As theywere leaving I heard one of them laughingly yell, “Welcome to the hood, white boy!” That was when it really hit me that “I wasn’t in Kentucky anymore.”
That day really was the beginning. I got beat up alot more in the next few years. I also went through about 5 more bikes in the next 4 years. It got to where I knew I was getting a new bike for Christmas every year, and so was some kid in the next neighborhood. MINE!

Introduction (part 1)

November 17th, 2008

Okay, check this out. I realize that for my stories to appeal to you the reader, you need to know a little about me. This will you give you more insight as to where these stories come from. Like I said, as of now they will come in no particular chronological order, just from which ones I feel like sharing on any particular day. So with that in mind I will give you a quick overview of my life, the stories will then fill in the blanks. Does that sound reasonable to you? Alrighty then…..AWAY WE GO!

I was born in the great state of Arkansas. I lived way out in the boonies where there was a church every couple of miles and a preacher behind every tree. My dad, was one of those Baptist types of preachers and my mom was a PK(preachers kid) herself. For about the first 5 years of my life we moved around a lot, from church to church, and wherever we went we brought our mobile home with us. My dad would get a new pastor gig, and we would just park our trailer in a clear spot somewhere near the church, and that would be home. We wouldn’t even take the wheels off.(RED_NECK) When I was 2 my younger sister was born legally blind. Then after my kindergarten year, my dad decided to start a Mission in Frankfort,KY. Close to where my mothers parents lived in Lexington. They actually set us up with a house so we left the trailer in Ark. And I think its still there in the same spot.

Kentucky was cool. We lived right outside of town, and the church was actually held in our basement. How weird, but that was life. I was always an athlete, and I played all sports. I had good friends. I was an excellent student. I was in gifted programs. I had now a new baby sister, and life was good. Until….. My dad decided that he needed to preach the gospel to them “poor heathen Mexicans”. This was in the 70’s and my dad wasn’t too bright about the world, coming from the small country world he was from. So, off to the barrios of El Paso, Tx. we went right when I was to start 5th grade.

El Paso was a culture shock to say the least. I was pretty much the only white boy in the hood, and I was a PK. Which meant I got beat up A LOT. The way my dad was programmed, I was not allowed to run, so a fighter I became (tons of stories). I still played all sports, but had a hard time with getting much playing time due to the fact that I didn’t speak Spanish like my coaches and team-mates. Even though I mostly attended Christian schools, I started spending a lot of time on the streets and the lifestyle fascinated me. By the time I was 16, I was running the streets, had moved out, and had been jumped in to a neighborhood gang. I lived in a detached garage behind a HUGE family of illegal aliens during my junior and senior years of high school. But, I still finished H.S. with a 3.7 GPA, living on my own and working nights. Eventually, due to violence that seemed to follow me, my parents asked me to get out of town before I or one of my family members got really hurt or dead. And this is exactly where I will pick up at my next posting……….C-YA!