Thursday, January 26, 2017

The Journey-Greatness Gifts







If asked, most people could describe greatness. It may be an event, skill, heroic moment or person, a self-sacrificing moment. Many people think of public figures as having greatness. There is greatness all around our lives both public and private.

The parent that gets up to go to a job that they hate to provide and care for their family has greatness. That parent is willing to sacrifice for those that they love. The adolescent that works in a fast food restaurant rather than become a street drug dealer looking for the easy dollar has greatness. The child that studies in school and gets good grades in spite of being teased by their peers is great. The person that has a terminal illness that makes the choice to live life until they die rather than waiting for death. The person that has an emotional hit to their gut that knocks them to their knees that finds the heart to get up. The parent that fights for their child without the language skills and systems skills. The parent that gives up their child because they want that child to have a better life. The person that moves through their fears and comes out on the other side. All of these people and more have greatness.

I would like to share a story with you about a drug addict who showed me greatness and taught me how to become a better person and social worker. Several years ago I had a mother who had a baby that tested positive for drugs. This mother had two previous children that were adopted. (I am going to give some legal background having dealt with a similar situation in my life.Thanks for Pearl Irene Njeri Kiarie for having my back during that tough time, If a parent has a child that has previously been adopted that parent can lose the parental rights to that child within 120 days.)

I was scheduled to pick this mother up and take her to a drug treatment program. When I arrived to pick her up she was high. I was annoyed. On the way to the program she kept touching the handle of the car like she wanted to jump out of the car. I told her that if she touched that handle again I was going to pull over and put her out of the car. I told her that I was not going to have her jumping out of the car and that if she did'nt want to go to the treatment program, so be it. She looked at me and said you don't like drug addicts very much. I told her no I don't like drug addicts. She asked me why. I said because they are the walking dead.

I took her to the drug treatment program but they would not accept her because she was high. The drug treatment program made a call to the hospital in the county and I took her to the hospital. While we were waiting whenever she saw a baby she would lunge at the baby. At some point she pulled out her wallet and she had two pictures of the babies that she lost. The pictures were all crumbled from having been looked at so often. I looked at her and what I previously saw as an addict lunging at babies in a hospital I saw a mother longing for her lost children.

In that moment I changed. I stopped seeing her label, loser addict and I saw her humanity and her greatness. I remained with her at the hospital. At some point she went to sleep and when she and awaken she said to me "you're still here" I said yes, she said "why" I said "because I care". I took her to the detox center by that time it was 12:00 a.m. or later. I will always remember that she looked back at me and she was scared. I said to her that this part you will have to do alone. I told her that this was her beginning.

Fast forward, she successfully completed the drug program, her case on that child was dismissed. While she was working on her case I would sometimes see her in the building. We would stop and chat and I would tell her how proud I was of her and her success. We would hug and laugh. She told me that she told her treatment program about what I had said to her in the car and we laughed because we both had perspective. Three or four years passed and I saw her in the halls again and I said what happened. She told me what happened but this time the social worker did not see her greatness. She was just a loser addict who had been given a chance that she did not deserve. I know that because I heard the social worker talking about her case and I read the report. I know that worker. I saw her in the hallway after her parental rights were terminated and I looked at her and something had died in her.

I had an intuitive sense that she was going to die. I went and told my supervisor of my thoughts and my supervisor said "okay", not knowing what else to say. Flash forward about six months later I ran into the father and child of the baby that she kept at their business. I asked about her. He told me that she had died. Her death happened about two months after I last saw her. She was just another nameless addict that died. For me she honored me with her greatness by allowing me to see her struggle, her strength and her love.

She changed me. I became a dedicated social worker. There are people in the agency that I work in that think that I don't get it. That I am running around and helping these loser/addicts. I get it , we just don't get the same thing. I get that a person can lose their humanity because of their label. That if you don't have someone that understands the system you will not be able to win. That everyone is entitled to an even playing field. That my judgmental attitude was wrong because I was not dealing with a label but a person.

I am saddened by her loss of life and I am honored by her greatness and the lessons that she taught me. I hope that she has found peace and can watch over her children.

Yes greatness is all around us, I am willing to bet someone is great in your life. Let them know that you see them.

Friday, January 20, 2017

Poem For My Family

King Jeriah and My Sister
Life is passing so quickly,
Dreams are proliferating so rapidly,
But in the middle of all these,
Memories are embracing so tightly....

The time we spent together was most memorable,
The days we live apart were most dreadful,
The fights we shared together were most dangerous,
Still the care we tend to do is most wondrous............

Rare is the love which I receive from you,
Precious is the knowledge which I receive from you,
But paramount of all these,
Peculiar are my siblings which I receive from God......

.

5 Ways You Screw Up Your Life (and don’t even realise it!)

This may not be news to you, but it’s the new year – and with it comes a plethora of good intentions and subsequent feelings of “I hate myself, why did I eat an drink truckload of booze?” But don’t worry, I’m here for you – and although I intend to eat whatever I want, and do whatever I want, I still somehow feel very comfortable giving friendly (as well as hugely condescending and patronising) advice like the rest of the internet.

I have identified five ways in which people, that includes you (however if you are an alien reading this, piss off back to Mars – this isn’t for you), screw up their lives monumentally on a daily basis…without even knowing it. Combat these five bad habits, and you will be well on your way to living the life you have always dreamed of!

1) We compare ourselves to other people who are more famous:

Listen you will never be Augustus Gloop. No matter how hard you try you will never be able to fall in a chocolate river and die by way of your lungs slowly filling up with choco milk. It’s not happening, ever. You can fall in a regular river, you can buy some chocolate from your local supermarket – but you cannot, repeat cannot, be Augustus Gloop. So stop beating yourself up because your reality doesn’t match that of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory…you’re painfully normal, and that’s okay.
Just a thought, but to you high-flyers reading this – how about you work your way up at Shell or another big oil company…become the head honcho…and then instead of leaking oil into the sea (Remember Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill) , you leak chocolate milkshake. That way you will make a real difference by letting us little people live out our fantasises!

2) We don’t let people in:

Holding the door shut behind you every time you enter a room is a sure fire way to lose friends and alienate people. Perhaps that sounds good, perhaps that’s actually why you do it in the first place – but trust me when I say this…it’s not cool. Holding a hospital door shut? Well done you just killed someone. Holding a supermarket door shut? Well done an old lady somewhere isn’t going to have milk in her tea. Holding your own door shut? Well done…well actually no, no one is coming to your door anymore because they can’t stand you.Let people in for God’s sake.

3) We forget that life is a musical:. 

I know what you are thinking, for the most part musicals are incredibly annoying and people who like them are either demented or lying to themselves. But no – they are in actual fact, brilliant! So with that in mind you should live your life as a musical if you really want to find true happiness in your day to day life.
“Fifty-fifty!? Fifty-fifty?Fifty-fiiiiiiftyyyyy for condoms – you must be having a laaaaaaaaugh!” No matter the scenario everyone loves a good sing song, and they will likely join in. Especially at funerals. The best tip I can give is to narrate every single detail…it takes a bit of practice but eventually you will get the knack, and soon enough you will be the life and soul of every party. People will even throw things at you, sometimes even flowers. Which brings me to my next bit of advice…


4) We throw eggs at elderly people whilst shouting strange internet jargon at them:

It’s so ingrained in Western culture to do this that I will probably lose some followers just by suggesting it…but stop, stop it right now. These people should be treated with respect, so may I suggest that instead you use those eggs to create a delicious cake. Spend time with them and hear their stories…you can actually pick a lot of perspective. You also get to eat cake in the process – doesn’t that seem a healthier way to spend your time? Sure there’s no laughter but who needs humour in this hilariously positive world. No one.
AND DON’T THROW THE CAKE. DON’T!!

5) We dig holes in the side of hills in a bid to become a real-life Hobbit, and then give up half-way through:
You’ve had a hard day at work, or an easy day slacking off at school, and you are worn out. It’s understandable, your mind starts to wander and you think “what if?” You watch a few YouTube videos and some American guy tells you that you need to live in the now, and that if you want something you should just do it, go for it, RIGHT NOW. You nod to yourself and grab a shovel – find a nearby hill – and get to work. But you didn’t really think it through…I mean how do I support the ceiling? Do I have to pay city council tax? Where will my post be delivered to? How do I even…
You return home defeated, and people start calling you a “Halfling” in your local area…not because you were almost a Hobbit – but because you did half a job, and are essentially a waste of space. Listen, I have been there, and it is a hard one to beat…but the best thing to do is to just not try at all. Perhaps try and be an orc instead? That would probably be easier…all you have to do is smoke 100 cigarettes a day and inject meth into your eyeballs every hour. Good Luck. and dance to the music ...

Thursday, January 19, 2017

The Morning

I have often struggled with the morning – it is such a dramatic time. You find yourself lying there in a toasty marshmallow, your comfort levels at a crazed inordinate level – just lounging with the cosy satisfaction that you are sleeping past your alarm…and you don’t even care…time strolls by, and thoughts circle around – illusory conversations; people telling you that you’re great, interviews with people you will likely never meet, groundbreaking specials featuring the one and only…you know, the usual…but then…

BRAAAAP! BRAAAAP! BRAAAAP!



The alarm signals again – and it’s evil is similar to that of a debt collector…leaving you alone for just enough to get comfortable again, and then all of a sudden its back again, banging at your door – but this time with even more ferocity. This time maybe it’ll smash stuff up, and break your knee caps…or at least that’s what it seems like, because stepping out of this world of comfort into the frosty real world sounds just as bad.

Every morning I really want to do an Office Space – that is just ignore the alarm quite literally, and just not care about the adult consequences. Just not turn up, and not care. But every morning I argue with myself…that is two sides of me battle it out in my brain. The lazy one, and the anxious psychopath who worries about everything – they’re not the best team…they say opposites attract or whatever – but not in this case.

It’s like I am in one of those three legged races, and they are strapped to each other…one is lifeless, and snoozing away, the other desperately berating, and beating the other – demanding they at least reach that finish line…but I can’t, I won’t…I don’t…



“GET UP, GET UP, GET UPPPPPP!” I say aloud, somehow this gives it more power, more meaning…and I listen…

Every, single, morning. I’m toying with the idea of sleeping on a bed of nails – so that I want to get out once that alarm rings – but I bet I would still get comfortable somehow