Luna

Tonight I surfed under the moon.

All eyes were fixed on the west

the others bobbed and watched the smoldering sun kiss the horizon good night

not I

My gaze stayed with the rising moon

to the east.

The sun has too many lovers

he sends his warmth and flashes rays to any suitor that will have him.

Not the moon

she shows her face but once a month

she teases

she ebbs and flows

waxes and wanes

she pulls at my heart like she pulls at the tides.

She shines bright as she rises

penetrating my core

sending cosmic light through the warm autumn night

I am immersed

I am transfixed

Yet I know she will soon turn her back

a slow march beyond reach.

I shiver in the water and mourn her while I still have her

I yearn to dance underneath her soft glow

again

always.

She teases.

It is not easy to love the moon

but I will forever try.

The Road of Happy Destiny

John F. Kennedy once wrote,

“The highest duty of the writer, the composer, the artist, is to remain true to himself, and let the chips fall where they may.“ 

Jack, as JKF was called by many, proceeded—

“He has, as Frost said, ‘a lovers quarrel with the world.’ In pursing his perceptions of reality, he must often sail against the currents of his time.” 

He went on, detailing the heightened emotions and sensitivities of those called to create, and the unique role they serve within our society.

Further describing Robert Frost, he explained how—

“His sense of the human tragedy fortified him against self-deception and easy consolation. ‘I have been’ he wrote, ‘one acquainted with the night.And because he knew the midnight as well as the high noon, because he understood the ordeal as well as the triumph of the human spirit, he gave his age strength with which to overcome despair.”

These words impacted me with indescribable magnitude. 

It was not until I read them that I began to feel comfortable identifying as an artist. Doing so previously felt utterly pretentious. 

When the modern person hears the term ‘artist,’ the they think of the visual masters, Picasso, da Vinci, Monet, Warhol. Images of classical pieces like the Mona Lisa and Starry Night race to the forefront of their minds. 

And the pinnacle of my visual artistic achievements comprise a series of derivative Dragon Ball Z canvases and graffiti bubble letters I painted for my ex-girlfriend during her gigs as a muralist. 

So ya, being with her and calling myself an artist made me feel like a fucking imposter. Don’t get me wrong, I have a steady hand and a decent eye. But anime and bubble letters? Come on, papi. You ain’t no artist.

Despite this critical inner monologue, the words of my favorite American president resonated with me deeply. Like Frost, I too, feel differently. I always have. My perception of the human condition has always had a deeper spectrum, depriving me of ‘self-deception and easy consolation.’ I am well acquainted with midnight. But I have also basked in the brilliant sunlight of high noon at temperatures that many have not, many cannot. 

And the urge to release the often overwhelming surge of emotions and energy bursting through my soul has always called. 

Your boy made his first art show when he was in the third grade, my Nana was so proud. It was a still-life portrait of the pencil cup that sat on my desk at school, but that thing was cleeeeaaan.

I still remember the high I got when I finished that piece. I was able to take something in my physical world and repeat it, by my own hand, from my own perspective. And people actually liked it and recognized the beauty of my rendition. 

For many, this urge to create does not exist. For others, it is a necessity. The life blood of our existence. 

The soul of the artist feels incomplete if this ability to create and purge the emotional energy that courses through their veins is not firmly incorporated into their daily lives. A true artist must build a lifestyle and surround himself with a host of friends that encourage and enhance this necessity. 

I also remember when I first used words to satisfy this burning desire. When I was finally able to corral the emotions and fragments of my soul and transcribe them into something permanent. Something perfect. It was an out of body experience, a moment of divine clarity. The incredible satisfaction encouraged a leap of faith to share my musings with you, with the world. And the response I received was intoxicating. Comments from friends and strangers alike rushed in, describing how I moved them. They thanked me for making them laugh or cry or even better, inspiring them to make positive changes in their lives. 

And when my eyes opened to this new existence, the vastness of the Lord’s splendors crashed over me like a powerful wave. I sprinted to take it all in. I flew with mouth open, straining to suck in as much of the fragrant air as possible. I scrubbed my old skin and surfed through life raw and exposed, desperate to absorb every sensation, every encounter, and write it for you. Like a child catching fireflies with jar in hand, I chased the moon and wrote the world as I saw it. 

I had found my purpose, I had found true meaning.

But somewhere along the way I lost connection with the principles and foundation that led to my new life and the ability to create.

You see I suffer from more than the angst of an artist. I have a spiritual malady that thrives on insecurity and fear. A selfish nature and complex wiring that if left unchecked, leads me to incredibly low valleys and destructive behaviors. 

But there is a solution to my condition. 

I joined a fellowship of likeminded feelers that gave me the structure needed to leave behind my previous struggles and connect to the only source that could pull me from the undertow. 

We all call this source something different, but I know Him as God. 

And once I put my reliance upon Him, my paths were made straight. I changed course in a way that only few have. Everything shifted dynamically in such a short amount of time. I was no longer the same man. My mother saw this transformation in my eyes hours before her passing. No words were needed, no explanations. She looked into the eyes of her son and knew that he was finally on the path she had worked so hard to carve for him. Tears rolled down her cheeks as she nodded and smiled. The most precious gift of my life.

And I beat the hell out of that path. For seven years my frequency vibrated like never before. In simple and vulgar terms, I was a fucking walking miracle. And not one day passes that I do not feel gratitude for this radical grace. Surely, there are days when the gratitude is just a flicker, but the knowledge that I am undeservedly blessed has always permeated my heart and mind. 

But like I mentioned, I drifted from this fellowship. And more importantly, I drifted from their principles. The principles that enabled me to live a balanced and virtuous life and finally strive towards my full potential. The solution is not a cure. It’s not a ‘one-pop and you’re all better’ kind of deal. If practiced properly, the actor receives a daily reprieve, contingent on the maintenance of their spiritual condition. To feel consistently grateful and maintain the desire to put others before yourself are the keys. But I lost them. I’m always losing my keys. And without those pillars, I am blocked. I choke. Without my connection to the Source, I am selfish, insecure and fearful. 

Without connection to God I cannot create. And when I cannot create, the flow of my energy is disrupted. I cannot help and serve others, I only think of myself and my desires. At that point I’m playing Minecraft in Survival mode, just trying to evade the Creepers. And I really suck at Minecraft. 

When I first moved to Nashville I went on a couple of dates with a professor from the Vanderbilt School of Philosophy. Our initial connection was substantial. We visited museums and cafes and spoke of life and art and love with immense profundity. But she soon stopped replying to my messages. When we finally connected, she explained that I had a beautiful mind and a rich heart, but that my energy seemed “disjointed.” Her words stung immensely. They affected me deeply. And they cut so deep because she was right. 

Have you ever seen a parched field flooded with water? The cracked earth, in dire need of moisture, is unable to absorb the sudden rush of hydration it so desperately needs. Water rushes over the surface in search of hospitable soil and eventually moves on. The earth stays dry, in desperate need of tilling. It needs time and work. Patient hands, sweat, investment. Consistency and routine. 

Without these things the field soon becomes flooded. Seeds planted with the intention to grow roots and sprout life are quickly washed away. Pools of shallow water gather where the grade drops, and I drowned in those shallows. 

For over four years I drowned. My character defects returned with a vengeance. My insecurities, my judgement, my selfishness. And even worse, the choking of my artistic expression and connection to God suffocated the inspiration and vibrancy of those around me, one person in particular.

I had sensed this regression within myself early on, and tried desperately to reintegrate several of the components of my previous success into my life again. I went to therapy, joined a boxing gym, deleted social media, and volunteered at my church. The list goes on, ad infinitum. But like the friends from my fellowship always said, “half measures avail us nothing.”

I tried to write too. Flashes of inspiration came and spurred me to produce short pieces or poems or moving love letters to my girlfriend. The bare minimum. Just enough to survive and give her a glimpse of the real me. It didn’t work.

I was diagnosed with ‘general anxiety disorder’ and prescribed a cabinet full of medication that I hated. I took the doc’s pills for a grand total of four days and then flushed them into the Cumberland River.

In an effort to help others and inspire creativity, I started a mental health non-profit. I designed hats that asked a simple question intended to normalize conversations about mental health. You Good? No man, I was NOT good. I eventually let the enterprise fizzle away because— you guessed it— the constant upkeep increased my anxiety. If that’s not funny, I don’t know what is. But I still wear the hats, they actually work!

My core was dying, and these sparks of creativity were desperate cries from my soul to return to my previous way of life.

My anxiety progressed, and I was soon unable able to participate in the things that defined me as an individual. The cortisol levels in my bloodstream were consistently high, making anything that required focus extremely difficult. I could no longer read books and I certainly lost the ability to write consistently.

Social situations became dreadful experiences.

I am a natural born extrovert who is invigorated by a room of strangers. I love to learn and connect with others, to ask a new acquaintance what they burn for and see their eyes catch a flame as they begin to describe their passions. I loved meeting my girl’s friends and family and watching her beam with pride as I made them laugh or smile. No one knew that each conversation was a struggle, a charade, a performance. I was not putting on, the lie was my confidence and comfort. I couldn’t even hold a conversation, eat a Chipotle burrito or sip my morning coffee without experiencing dizziness and heart palpitations. And if a man can’t drink coffee or eat Chipotle than what the hell is the point? 

No, but seriously, my anxiety crippled my life and ruined the most meaningful relationship I ever forged. And no amount of roses, Shakespearean sonnets or flowery poems can fix it. 

Do you believe in soulmates?

I do, sort of. I believe there are several individuals roaming this strange and wonderful sphere that the Lord crafted of the same elements, the same clay. Special someones who God designed for your hands and your heart, in the same batch.

It is a strange experience to meet a soulmate while your true self is drowning. Running on fumes and self-will. Swimming upstream, against the current. Completely incapable of the patience, trust and selfless love that is required to blend two lives and create a family.

I feel like I am waking from a four year slumber, a misty dream. The memories feel as though another actor was playing my part. They feel so distant, but they also feel like yesterday. The regret is often difficult to shoulder. The biology behind the human tendency to romanticize our past is fascinating, but it offers little consolation. Especially when we know we could have done so much better, done so much more.

But it’s over. Kiss it goodbye, Smalls.

I am just thankful that God quickly set us on two individual and parallel paths of health, love and inspired creativity. Two unique trails that lead to self actualization and true meaning. The only type of road that can bring an artist joy and contentment. 

And we cannot see beyond the horizon. Only God can. Solo Dios. Only the Lord knows if our paths reunite in the distance. 

Most likely they drift apart slowly and lead to similar destinations. And it brings me great strength and joy to know that our paths are separate yet kindred. I will do nothing but smile and thank the good Samaritans she meets on her journey.

All we have in this world are choices. 

And poor choices have consequences which bring regret. But regret can bring great clarity and inspire transformational action. 

When we abandon the desire to be the star and director of our lives and move in the direction of God’s will, we hear His voice clearly. When we begin to put others first and live in prayerful gratitude, He speaks to us through a megaphone. He speaks through friends and strangers and even through priests that generally have mediocre and confusing homilies. 

Last week I was praying the rosary in a quiet chapel that has recently brought me peace and serenity. After finishing my prayers I glanced to my right and saw a small book with a sticky pad that read “free” on the cover. Anyone who calls me friend knows that I never say no to free. I’m working on it, but I took the book. Always take the book.

The book was called “Holy Moments” and it has provided much comfort, these words especially:

“Choices have consequences. We know that. But we throw this indisputable truth aside in order to deny the consequences of our unholy moments. But by denying that our choices have consequences, we abandon our power to create holy moments, and render ourselves spiritually impotent.”

And I don’t about y’all, but I want to have a life filled with good choices and holy moments. I want to be of service to others and shine the Lord’s light like the dawn, as I trudge the road of happy destiny. And I sure as hell don’t want to be associated with the word impotent, in any way. 

I will continue on this path and reinfuse my life with art, compassion, humility and gratitude. I will continue the Aristotelian pursuit of self actualization and strive to be the best version of myself. To do anything less would be a great dishonor to those who were forced to endure the lesser. 

So stick around if you want to read my words. They will be available here and will hopefully bring joy, levity and perhaps, if I stay the course, inspiration. 

With love, humility, and refreshed purpose,

Aaron 

2019: The Year of the Buzz

I wrote a blog post about New Year’s resolutions in 2015.

I blasted people for setting unrealistic goals and hammered on about consistency and loving the process and hard work. Blah blah blah.

It was a typical piece from mid-twenties Aaron, obnoxiously self-assured, critical, yet simultaneously optimistic and positive in tone. The things a man can do with a full head of hair.

At the end of my rant, like a true smart-ass, I made a resolution for 2015 anyway, proclaiming, “this year I am going to travel.”

Well shit… that changed my life.

2019 Aaron has nothing bad to say about New Year’s resolutions. How could he?

Just do me a favor and pause before you commit to the 200 dollar monthly membership fee at your local Equinox. We don’t have warmed eucalyptus towels, but Fitness 19 is happy to have you for… you guessed it…19 bucks a month. You won’t feel so bad when you stop coming by February.

epic-gym-fail-treadmill

The smashing success of yesteryear’s facetious resolution in mind, I set aside time for reflection and personal inventory during the holidays. Where can I improve? What can I change this year? How can I be better? You know, those super unique questions that no one else is asking themselves at the end of December.

After answering all of the ubiquitous questions I came to a realization, a personal truth of sorts: I sucked at being ME in 2018. Now I’m not saying I’m the bee’s knees or anything, but I have some redeeming qualities, one or two at least. And one of the qualities that defines me most is my persistent pestering. Seriously. I am a professional nuisance. The prince of pests.

I BUG.

And not always in a bad way. Let me explain…

I love people. And if I care about you, you will hear it. If I am thinking about you, I will fire off a quick text and let you know.

If we ditched work when were were 19 and drove to Rosarito listening to the T.I. vs T.I.P. album all the way to Mexico, I will text you EVERY time I hear Big Shit Poppin’ (what’s up Cory? Miss you bro). If I walk past you in the mall and we make eye contact and you’re with your side-chick and really don’t want to stop for a chat, I WILL come over and say hello. If you call me, I will answer. Text me and your boy will text right back. If I drive by your house, chances are I’ll pop in for a quick hello around dinner time. I keep in close contact with my family and my friends and just about anyone with a pulse.

My craving for layered and genuine human connection can also have residual effects. I’m no Anthony Bourdain, but I LOVE cooking for the people in my life. And nothing makes me happier than sitting back and observing two groups of friends meeting for the first time and hitting it off.

Softball friends, meet my surfing buddies.

or

Falicia, we suck together romantically but I think you should meet my brother’s girlfriend, Lacey, she needs friends. I bet you’ll become besties and she’ll ask you to be her bridesmaid one day.” Boom. True story.

That’s me, and I learned from the best.

My Momma.

Even though she passed nearly seven years ago, our family is still finding unopened letters and handwritten notes letting the recipient know that she was simply “thinking of them.” I still have the voicemails, “Hey mijo! I was thinking of you and missed your voice. You’re probably surfing, let’s Skype when you’re done!” Her love was not passive, it was work.

Every time I told my mother I loved her the response was the same. Three words. “Love you more.”  She didn’t, but she sure as hell was better at showing it. She spread it too. Ana always had an extra place (or three) at her table. Family gatherings were familial only in name. My mother built a community of friends that otherwise would have never mixed. A home built on inclusion, never exclusion. A home with doors wide open, laid on a foundation of active love. That is her legacy, a legacy I was pretty damned good at perpetuating.

But I lost something when I came back from Spain.

Friends.

No seriously, my phone was on Do Not Disturb most of the year and people really seemed to hate that.

Jokes aside, my mother’s legacy is a taxing one. A vast amount of emotional capital is invested when you’re constantly the person reaching out, bridging gaps that space and time can bring. When the love isn’t reciprocated, it stings. A few unanswered texts and calls can make the life of a recluse seem alluring. Perhaps the move back to the States had me feeling lost, and when you’re lost and lonely a cocoon looks pretty damn comfortable. I know I said I bug, but I ain’t no caterpillar.

Damn it. No more bug jokes.

And no more Do Not Disturb. My phone is now set on vibrate. 2019 is the year of the buzz (NOT a bug joke).

Sometimes, without noticing, and for no apparent reason, we deviate from prior successes. We tend to get swept up by the shimmer of new and forget that we were already pretty damned good at a few things. The self-help/change your mind, change your life industry is just that, an industry. An 11 billion dollar industry! Let me save you some change friends… do you. Do more of what you’re good at. Maximize the gifts that you have been blessed with and spread them ’round. Answer your phone. Write a love note. Call your grandma! I’m off to call mine.

Happy New Year!

 

 

 

 

 

A Blue Mother’s Day

I am so honored to say that this post was featured on one of the top Dodgers Fan sites on the web for Mother’s Day. I have had the pleasure of reading comments and similar stories from fans around the world over the last twenty four hours. Thousands of people are reading about my Ma and I can’t stop smiling about it. You can see my story on Dodgers Nation here.

 

Since the 2006 season, Major League Baseball players have worn pink when taking the field on Mother’s Day. In a dedicated fight against breast cancer, bearded men don pink wristbands, wear pink cleats and even wield pink bats on the second Sunday of May. With Mother’s Day on the horizon and Dodger baseball well underway, it seems like an appropriate time to share a story about baseball, cancer and my Momma.

JT

Anyone ever forced to bear the news of a loved one’s cancer diagnosis can tell you exactly where they were and what they were doing when they first heard the “C” word. Father Time slows his steady march to a crawl when the word is uttered. Confusion ensues, ears ring.

“Cancer…

mother….

chemotherapy…

stage four.”

As the brain begins to process the gravity of the unfamiliar words at hand, they hit like an anvil to the chest

Fortunately, for our family, a strong support system of relatives and friends rallied around my mother when news of her stomach cancer diagnosis reached the edges of our social circle. As she fought for her life, undergoing chemotherapy treatments and operational procedures, my siblings and I felt love and support pour in from all directions. Friends and acquaintances held charity events, cooked dinners and even washed cars in an effort to chip in.

All the while my mother’s condition worsened. The cancer cells in her stomach were metastasizing at an uncontrollable rate, making it difficult for her to pass food regularly. Weekly chemotherapy treatments began taking their toll on her frail body. She lost weight, she lost her hair and at times… worst of all… her eternal sense of optimism. I could hear the sound of defeat in her voice.

Then one day I got a call from my mom and the excitement in her tone reached through the phone and slapped an instant smile on my face.

“Oh my God, son. Oh.. my… God! Guess who I just off the phone with?” My mother exclaimed with the exuberance of a fourteen year old girl.

“No idea Ma.” I replied through grinning teeth.

“Steve frickin’ Garvey!”

“Whaaaaat? No way!” I shouted in confusion, secretly hoping she hadn’t imagined speaking with her childhood crush in a chemo-induced hallucination. Chemo brain is no joke, but my mother hadn’t imagined a thing. As she battled cancer, a distant friend heard of my mother’s diagnosis and reached out to Mr. Garvey.

Anyone that knows my family knows that Dodger Blue blood courses through our veins. For a bunch of Los Angeles transplants living in the desert of Arizona, the Dodgers were more of an identity than a baseball team, a symbol of our past lives in Southern California, surrounded by family and citrus trees. Whenever Vin Scully’s voice hit our ears, we could taste the Dodger Dogs of yesteryear.

And no player was held in higher regard than Steve Garvey. When my Momma coached my t-ball team, she made sure I wore number six in honor of her childhood crush. She loved to tell the story about waiting for Mr. Garvey in the parking lot of Dodger Stadium after a game when she was twelve years old. Garvey pulled up in a red convertible, rolled down his window, and signed an autograph for her. She almost fainted.  After my mom passed away, I found a manila envelope filled with Steve Garvey newspaper clippings and hand sketched drawings she had collected and drawn as a young girl.

She never had an Instagram, but Garvey would have definitely been her Man Crush Monday.

Ana

The few minutes that Mr. Garvey took to reach out to my mother would have been enough. His thoughtful act brought joy and light in a time of darkness. But number six didn’t stop there.

In a last ditch effort to remove the cancer cells from her stomach, my mother traveled to the City of Hope in Duarte for surgery. If time slowed to a crawl when we first learned of my mother’s diagnosis, it stood completely still as my family sat in that second floor waiting room. The longest day of our lives. When the surgeon finally appeared, the news was grim. Six months to live. How does one react to such words?

Devastation.

As my mother healed in the hospital after the procedure, our families’ moral sunk to unprecedented depths.

A few days after the surgery, a box arrived in her hospital room. Gifts from Mr. Garvey. My mother reached inside and pulled out a white jersey with elegant blue letters flowing across the chest. Underneath, the number six flashed in a radiant red, bringing a gasp from the mouths of family members gathered around the bed. The words, “To Ana, a Sweetheart… Fight On!” were written in blue permanent marker just above Steve Garvey’s signature.

And fight she did, until the end. But first… she smiled.

ma

A few months after the failed surgery a friend sent word that Mr. Garvey was making a public appearance in the City of Industry. Determined to thank him for what he did for my family, I made the drive to the event and joined a long line of Dodger fans, eager to meet their favorite first baseman. As I neared the end of the line, I sensed a hint of nervousness enter my body. Will he remember us? Maybe sending gifts to sick fans is an everyday thing for baseball legends.

My apprehensions were quickly assuaged. As soon as I mentioned “Ana,” my mother’s name, Mr. Garvey’s eyes lit up.

“Oh Ana! How is she doing? What a sweetheart. I’ve been meaning to call and check up on her. You know what? Let’s call her now.”

My eyes drifted to the long line of waiting fans as he pulled out his cell phone and dialed my mother’s number. I silently prayed she would pick up, my ma was notorious for never answering her phone.

Nope.

Mr. Garvey laughed and left her a voicemail. We spent a few minutes chatting and even posed for some pictures. Mr. Garvey noticed my cousin and uncle waiting behind velvet ropes and invited them over so he could sign their baseballs. What a guy. If dudes could have Man Crushes, he would have definitely been mine. Okay that sounded weird, but seriously, Garvey is the MAN.

My mom finally called me a few hours after we left the event.

“Ma! You totally missed Steve Garvey’s phone call!” I scolded her.

“Honey, I have to play hard to get and be challenging. I will call him back in a day or two and he can ask me on a proper date, the rest will be history.”

She totally big timed a big leaguer. I laughed so hard I got a cramp in my neck.

My mother lost her fight to cancer three months later, but she went down swinging, and thanks to Steve Garvey, she went back to the dugout with a smile on her face. A week after she passed I got a call from number six. And of course, forever my Momma’s son, I missed his call.

IMG_3582

 

 

City of Light

IMG_1776

Paris.

I had an entire post written about it.

I strung together words about the welcoming people I met and places I visited in the city by the Seine.

I wrote about the art and the cathedrals and the sculptures.

I  described the details of my enchanting evening in Saint-Germain. I wrote about the dinner I shared with new friends. The ambiance was palpable; the conversation, the food, the music… a night I shall never forget. I even got all poetic and whipped out my iPhone during dinner and typed a note about how I felt the ghost of Hemingway swirl around me in the cigarette smoke.

Corny iPhone writing aside, I fell in love with Paris that night.

I also wrote about the warnings I received back in the States before leaving for France.

The French hate Americans.

Parisians are rude.

Pretentious. Stuffy. Arrogant.

Tell them you’re from Canada.

I listened to the warnings and stored them in their proper place, the little file in my brain called “People Are Entitled to Their Opinions, Now Go Out and Form Your Own, Guy.”

But that all changed. No need to make up that complicated story about how my Mexican parents immigrated to Vancouver when I was a baby.

Now, most of my friends on Facebook have a Blue, White and Red filter over their profile pictures. Slacktivism at its finest. But who can blame them? We can all relate to the suffering caused by the senseless atrocities committed on the evening of November 13th. For Americans, the feelings were all too familiar. The disbelief and shock, the tension endured as we waited for news of another attack to break on our television sets.

I was lucky. I boarded a plane to Morocco the evening before 129 innocent people were slain in the coordinated attacks. My hostel, in the heart of Gare du Nord, was a five minute walk from the restaurant La Petit Cambodge, where fourteen people lost their lives. A new friend, Pauline (Popo to her inner circle), a vivacious Parisian with a personality that dwarfs the Eiffel Tower, was at the Stad de France with her boyfriend when the bombs went off. I feared the worst when I first heard the news. I relay my proximity to the massacres of Friday the 13th not for sympathy or some twisted badge of honor. I simply want to explain that I was deeply troubled by the events that place that night. I had friends there. I was worried and scared and disgusted.

Ironically, I found myself in the middle of a very Muslim nation, albeit a very liberal region, when the world first learned of what was going on in Paris. As you can imagine, the warnings from back home quickly changed tune. Anti-Muslim rhetoric flooded my social media accounts at a remarkable pace. People I respect and love wrote words filled with hate, fear and anger the obvious motivators of their prejudice. Once again, I was disgusted.

This site is not meant to be a political or religious platform. It was created as a space to collect my thoughts and experiences as I travel. A place for family and friends to be entertained by my words. To inspire a laugh and perhaps plant a seed of motivation for others to venture out and gain their own perspectives. The lens in which we view others, others being different societies and their respective cultures and customs, should be calibrated through our own personal experiences. This is the aim of my journey.

I have not been on the road for long. But I have been abroad long enough to gather that most humans are strikingly similar. Regardless of creed or nationality, gender or social standing, most people simply want to be happy. Through random acts of violence, terrorists aim to propagate fear and hatred.  They aim to divide us through our self-righteous reactions and emotions. When we help them spread their hate, they win.

If, Antoine Leiris, a man who lost his wife on that fateful night can refuse to hate, so can we. I’ll leave you with his words:

YOU WILL NOT HAVE MY HATRED

Friday night, you took an exceptional life — the love of my life, the mother of my son — but you will not have my hatred. I don’t know who you are and I don’t want to know, you are dead souls. If this God, for whom you kill blindly, made us in his image, every bullet in the body of my wife would have been one more wound in his heart.

So, no, I will not grant you the gift of my hatred. You’re asking for it, but responding to hatred with anger is falling victim to the same ignorance that has made you what you are. You want me to be scared, to view my countrymen with mistrust, to sacrifice my liberty for my security. You lost. 

I saw her this morning. Finally, after nights and days of waiting. She was just as beautiful as when she left on Friday night, just as beautiful as when I fell hopelessly in love over 12 years ago. Of course I am devastated by this pain, I give you this little victory, but the pain will be short-lived. I know that she will be with us every day and that we will find ourselves again in this paradise of free love to which you have no access.

We are just two, my son and me, but we are stronger than all the armies in the world. I don’t have any more time to devote to you, I have to join Melvil who is waking up from his nap. He is barely 17-months-old. He will eat his meals as usual, and then we are going to play as usual, and for his whole life this little boy will threaten you by being happy and free. Because no, you will not have his hatred either.