A Drop in an Ocean

Finding Fulfillment

I just returned home from an eventful two weeks in NYC. I ate too much food at many great restaurants, saw a broadway show, got trapped in the most toxic air mass recorded in over half a century, and was able to spend some much needed time with friends and family I don’t get to see often. I visited my old neighborhood, embraced being a tourist in my former home, dodged some freakishly large rats, was accosted on at least three separate occasions, and nearly shit my pants once because trying to find a public restroom in New York City is akin to trying to find the fountain of youth. I also went to a Yankee game, but we’re not going to talk about them until they get their fucking act together. 

Anyway… while I was hanging out with one of my best friends one day in the city, we ended up having a bit of a heart to heart. The subject matter touched on something I’ve spoken about before, but I feel it is such a prevalent issue and there can never be too much said about its importance. I am drawing on memory several weeks old (and I may or may not have taken a hit of a joint before this conversation occurred), but we were speaking about how great it feels to watch other people succeed and find happiness in their lives, and then he said something along the lines of, “But it can be really hard sometimes because I haven’t found my thing / I don’t know what it is.” 

Let me preface the rest of this post by saying that this person is one of the most intelligent people I know. He has overcome so much in his life already to be where he is today. He has a good job and he’s living with his fiance in a great part of Manhattan and they’re both under 30 – he’s objectively killing it right now. I have seen this person demonstrate his determination and discipline in the form of grueling physical activity that most Americans wouldn’t even want to attempt, let alone be able to execute. I doubt he’s aware of this, but I truly admire his ability to dedicate himself completely to something and not stop until he’s accomplished it. And yet, deep down, he feels that there is something missing – he feels unfulfilled.

We spoke of the importance of trying new things and he mentioned that his job offers him an ideal work/life balance. He also conceded that he should be trying new things more often, but he appreciates his downtime and never actually gets around to it. I think I have to make a concession myself here – up until now I have felt strongly that everyone should seek meaningful work in their life. I felt that it was absolutely necessary for human fulfillment. Although I still believe that this form of finding fulfillment is under the most direct control of the individual, my stance has recently changed in that it is not necessary to experience fulfillment through work, granted that you can find it from some other means.

I just finished reading Man’s Search For Meaning by Viktor Frankl, and in this book he states that there are indeed three different ways a human being can derive meaning from their existence. They are: (1) By creating a work or accomplishing some task, (2) By experiencing something fully or loving somebody (aw), and (3) By the attitude that one adopts toward unavoidable suffering (the keyword here being unavoidable). I find myself fully accepting this theory. I still believe that human beings by design are created to solve problems, help each other, and contribute to the greater good and should therefore find their unique way of accomplishing these things through meaningful work. BUT, I also recognize that this is not realistic for everyone and therefore it would only stand to reason that there are other ways of meeting this human need.

Aside from meaningful work, the next option you have for finding fulfillment in your life is through experiencing love. When someone finds meaning in their life through loving someone else, I think it is more often a child rather than a spouse or partner. I’m sure some people have found a way to happily live their lives for their significant other, but I personally find that to be a recipe for disaster because most relationships based on a high level of codependency tend to be pretty…. troublesome. However, although I have no plans for children of my own, I can (and have) seen how bringing a human life into this world can absolutely alter the essence of one’s own existence. Those who take responsibility for their children and rise to the occasion to help them learn and grow and thrive in this challenging world suddenly find their own well-being coming in second place, behind that of their child’s. It becomes their mission to protect and provide. In this way, they are given a purpose to live for. 

The third way… by the attitude that one adopts toward unavoidable suffering – I believe means the way someone can interpret a meaning in their pain. It is difficult to speculate what might go through the mind of someone who has been given a terminal diagnosis, someone who has lost a loved one in a car accident, or someone who has been wrongfully convicted of a crime – but these are instances of unavoidable suffering. Should your suffering be avoidable, you should do everything in your power to alleviate yourself of it. But when the source of your suffering is unavoidable, it becomes an opportunity to find meaning in that pain. Probably the best and most recent personal experience I can draw upon is having spent the worst months of the pandemic in the epicenter of the world. Though the various sorts of suffering experienced were unavoidable, I developed a greater sense of empathy, compassion, gratitude and genuine appreciation for life itself because of it. I found meaning in that suffering. 

As it relates to my friend, I think having found an occupation that provides him an agreeable way of life financially and creates a desired work/life balance is excellent. Many people would do anything to have that, but it still doesn’t fill the uniquely human need we all have – the need for fulfillment. Perhaps his need for fulfillment can be quenched by something else he can pursue as a hobby… or maybe he is simply going to wait until he has children and find a greater meaning to his life that way. All I can say is that when one is unsure of their purpose and is searching for meaning, it is incumbent on that person to continuously seek out new experiences and to stay patient. To have found so much meaning early on in my life through my work is somewhat paradoxical because the most unfortunate event of my life turned out to also be the most fortunate. A “blessing in disguise,” if you will. Without having understood the mission that I was being called to during the depths of the lockdowns in NYC, I very well may have lost my mind. I leaned into my work and the value I was creating for others in their time of need became more important to me than my own struggles. That gave me purpose. 

That being said, I don’t expect everyone to take a philosophical stance to life and pull a highly rewarding job out of their ass like a cruise line magician. But I do expect people to be reasonable. And a reasonable stance to take is to understand that you do not have to be sure of the meaning of your life so early on. Some people don’t find it until their 50’s or 60’s or even longer. Unfortunately, many never find it at all – these are the people who refuse to try new things. The ones who accept apathy as a cure for longing. At some point you have to accept that this human experience we’re all a part of is as unique to each of us as our fingerprint or DNA. Putting emphasis on some imaginary destination or subscribing to the idea that your life “should be” some particular way is to miss the point of life itself – it’s the journey and the evolution of your being that you’re here for. It’s overcoming challenges, solving problems, and developing into the best version of yourself along the way that you’re supposed to be focused on. If you don’t find a way to go all in on that, then you’re just sitting around waiting to die. 

Maybe the most striking interpretation in Man’s Search For Meaning was the idea that we all believe we are asking what the meaning to our life is when in reality we are the ones who are being asked. This simple shift in your psychological orientation towards this dilemma can set you free. Rather than feeling like some hopelessly lost soul meandering around wondering why the world won’t show you the way, you can take full control of your situation and instead show the world what your life stands for. See, you can have/do just about anything you want in life if you have the audacity to believe in yourself enough and have the balls to go for it. Many like to think that there is some fatalistic predetermined order to the universe, but I don’t think so. I think that we are all here for a reason and that everything conceivable is available to each of us. It is our free will and how we make use of it that will ultimately determine the quality of our life. That’s the X factor in all of this. You’re here for something, but can you find it? Can you become the person you need to be to actualize it? 

Essentially, this means that there are myriad different paths each of us can take in life. It is up to us, based on the decisions we make and the actions we take, to influence and construct the path we want for ourselves. What tends to trip people up is the fear of choosing incorrectly. The crippling anxiety that stems from understanding each major decision we make can dramatically alter the trajectory of our life for better or worse causes a lot of people to freeze. However, I’d like to point out again that if you stand still, time continues to move along with or without your cooperation. To not embrace the power of making these decisions is still a decision. It is to voluntarily be swept away with time – to just sit around and wait to die. The finiteness and impermanence of your life should be all you need to discard this anxiety and hop into the driver’s seat. Time is going to carry you forward regardless, so you may as well steer the damn thing. 

If you’re stuck in the I-have-no-fucking-clue-what-I’m-doing-here stage or if you’ve made a series of bad decisions and just want to change direction in your life – then I think this simple equation can help. I’m speaking from personal experience here. My free will used to prioritize doing a lot of cocaine and guzzling cheap vodka instead of seeking out new opportunities and becoming a better person (more on that at another time). It wasn’t until I decided to really start doing what was best for me that my life began to open up in ways I never thought possible. If you’re feeling lost right now, I firmly believe you should focus on these two things: 

  1. Discovering what you like to do 
  1. Discovering what you’re good at  

The beauty here is that finding out what you like to do and what you’re good at involves the same process. The process of trying new shit. You have to be willing to try new things or you’re pretty much shit out of luck. This is where I’m going to lose a lot of people. Too often no one wants to put themselves out there and go through the elimination phase of figuring out what they don’t like and what they’re not good at – they don’t want to “waste their time.” The irony is that by not putting yourself out there and trying new things and exposing yourself to new ideas and new possibilities, wasting your time is exactly what you’re doing. Finding meaning and fulfillment in your life is not going to come to you – you must go out in the world and look for it. This is easier than it’s ever been because you don’t even have to leave the house anymore. Try new things online. It doesn’t matter how you do it, it just matters that you do actually do it. 

Once you’ve figured out what you like to do and what you’re good at, it becomes a matter of creativity. How creatively can you merge these two things together to give yourself a solid starting point on a new chapter of your life? In a perfect world you would be able to find a job opening with a lit up runway that was an exact 50/50 mash-up of these two things. The reality is that you might have to create the job or path you need to be on. It might not exist yet. You’re going to have to make compromises and deal with things that suck along the way. When it comes to life, dealing with bullshit is the price of admission. Just don’t stop trying new things until you have identified what you like to do and what you are good at. If you find and combine those two things together, you will swing the odds of being successful in whatever way is most meaningful to you and of finding fulfillment in your life solidly in your favor. On the other hand, if your willingness to try new things is contingent on knowing whether or not you will succeed, you’ve already failed. 

It should be liberating rather than worrisome to hear that your life and what you make of it is entirely in your hands, but it is an unfortunate reality that people want to believe this less and less nowadays. It is far easier to blame the conditions of your childhood, your parents, the government, the economy, the rich, your health, or whatever other reasons you can think of to avoid looking in the mirror and asking yourself the hard questions. Are you actually trying your best? Are you working on building better habits and destroying self-sabotaging behaviors? Are you seeking new knowledge and opportunities? Are you taking consistent action? If the answer is yes, then you’re dealing with a case of impatience. I, nor anyone else can make you any guarantees in life, but if you are truly doing all of the above things to the best of your ability and being consistent – you are as close to guaranteed as you can get to having a better life than if you are not doing those things. If the answer is no, then those are the questions you need to examine closely and interrogate yourself on. Why are you not doing them and what is getting in your way?

Another thing I want to stress here is that if you’re struggling to find fulfillment right now, you are not alone. There is a rampant issue of severe unfulfillment in our modern society. This is particularly true in the United States. If you look at the discontentment of the masses – suicide rates, substance abuse (especially opiates like fentanyl) and the epidemic of mass shootings, there is a common thread amongst them. All, most likely, can be traced back to an underlying feeling of meaninglessness. I’m aware that this is a gross oversimplification of these issues, but at their core, are we not dealing with a large population of people who are struggling to recognize the value of their life? Maybe the real epidemic we’re facing is a lack of purpose. It’s good to have ambition and to want your life to be better, but don’t allow that feeling to manifest itself as hatred for your life the way that it is at this moment. Don’t want to be different so badly that it hurts your self-esteem about being who you are right now. If things aren’t going well, judging your life in its totality when there’s still time on the clock does nothing to help you. It just demoralizes you and sucks the wind out of your sails. You’re supposed to fuck up. You’re supposed to be frustrated. Angry. Sad. Worried. You’re supposed to feel all of these things because you’re a human being. What you’re also supposed to do is find whatever gives your life meaning and chase it ferociously – in spite of it all. 

There is good news here. Human beings are blessed with an internal navigation system. Not in location, but in life. If you’re feeling lost, consult your mind and your heart (in that order) and follow what you know to be right. Rely on this system to find your True North and never stop walking in that direction. No one else can do this for you. You can have people who love and support you along the way, but at the end of the day, your life is solely your responsibility. No one knows what you need better than you do. Don’t shy away from the challenge of finding fulfillment in your life – it’s supposed to be difficult. Life is this uncertain, complex, chaotic and mysterious thing. It’s somehow irrational and logical, and dysfunctional and organized, all at the same time. I think the beauty of it is that there’s really no “right” answer. There’s only the answer that you provide. Once you’ve given an answer, you get to determine whether or not it’s the right answer for you. If it’s not, you can change your answer as many times as you need to. Because you are not the one that is asking what the meaning of your life is… you are the one that is being asked.

Passion is Purpose

It’s important to know where the line exists between practicality and wishful thinking. It’s equally important to have the capacity to do things you don’t necessarily want to do in order to provide for yourself when need be. I’ve had my fair share of jobs that I wholeheartedly despised in my life already and I’m prepared to have one again if push comes to shove. It’s an unfortunate part of life, but the fact is that sometimes you just have to suck it up and pay your dues so that you can pay your bills. That being said, if you hate your job and the work you do, you have got to put yourself in the mindset of understanding that it is temporary. I don’t know what it is about human nature that allows people to accept unending misery in the form of unfulfilling and understimulating work, but it literally pains me when I see people letting that happen to themselves. Sometimes I feel like people end up taking a job out of desperation and over time become comfortable with their pay, schedule, coworkers, etc. and end up trying to fit their life around those circumstances. “Good enough” becomes the mantra of the masses as you hit adulthood. It’s sad. We spend way too much of our lives working to give up on chasing our dreams and making a living doing what we love. 

No matter what job I had – whether it was pushing wheelbarrows full of rocks up the side of a hill in the sweltering heat, splitting wood outside in the frigid cold, or standing for seventeen hours straight in the corner of a dingy bar waiting to jump in the middle of two idiots boxing each other – not once did I ever think to myself that I was going to make them work for me in the long-term. Not once. On the contrary, I always felt more capable than anybody gave me credit for. I felt so underutilized, unappreciated and disrespected by the jobs I worked that it pissed me off. I didn’t even think I had to prove anything because I felt like it should have been obvious to the people I worked for that I could do much more if given the opportunity. Now I realize that most people in all industries are content with doing the bare minimum and are basically Stevie Wonder when it comes to spotting good workers in their businesses. Being in the position I’m in now where I run a company and have a hand in the hiring/firing process, it is unbelievable to me the amount of people in management positions who have their heads fully lodged up their asses. I used to suspect it, but now I know. Most of the jobs I’ve had in my life, I would have been more efficient running the whole business than whatever task-related position I was performing in. 

That might sound egotistical, but truth be told, we all have talents. Some people can sing, some people can draw. I can write and build businesses. In fact, I’m able to successfully leverage the first talent to bolster the second. But here’s the thing – it’s not just what I’m good at… it’s what I love to do. I’m currently working seven days a week and I’m sitting here writing this blog post at midnight hoping it offers something of value to one of the people who read it in the future and I’m doing it because I love to write and I want to help people however I can. I know that years from now, the fact that this blog was written and that it still exists will mean more to me than anything else I could be spending my time on right now. Similarly, the only reason I’m able to stomach working seven days a week is because I love what I do. It’s not just monotonous emails and stale meetings. It’s building something from the ground up. It’s learning how to combine the best of myself with the best of others to produce the greatest outcomes consistently. It’s strategizing. It’s problem solving. It’s taking risks. It’s the most exciting thing I’ve ever done in my life. Waking up in the morning knowing that I live or die by how accountable I am to myself is like breathing oxygen to me. Everything being my fault is the ultimate liberation. I don’t accept that other people have the ability to decide whether I win or lose anymore. In my mind, that power solely resides with me. If I accomplish great things, it’s because I earned them. If I end up broke and picking up the pieces again – at least I earned that too. I push myself every day because I know it influences the probability of me ending up on the side of those two options I want to be on. I show the fuck up for myself and my team because I wouldn’t rather be doing anything else – even when it’s hard.  

This is why I want to discuss passion with you. When you find that thing that really lights you up inside to the point that everything outside of working towards being the absolute best you can be at it becomes blurry to you, it’s like something just clicks into place. It ignites your passion and your passion becomes your purpose. It turns into a legitimate obsession – an internal driving force that sustains itself through the inevitable ups and downs. No matter what you want to be successful at, it’s going to require a lot of hard work. Not to state the obvious here, but you will be much more likely to work hard when you enjoy your job than if you hate it. That’s why pursuing your passion is so important. You can turn it into fuel. When you’re driven only by arbitrary accomplishments like money and a big house/dream car, you fizzle out eventually. That’s why most people never achieve those things even though they sincerely want them. But if you feel like you’re doing what you were created for – like you found the thing you were placed on this earth to do with your life – then you’re able to transcend your limits and those things end up falling in your lap as a natural byproduct of your efforts. When you encounter difficulties, you either go over, around, or straight through anything that gets in your way. Desire, especially if it’s directed purely towards material things, is a finite resource. It can only take you so far when things get hard. Purpose, however, is renewable. If you continuously dig deeper, you will always find more of it to carry you forward.

I see a lot of “success gurus” and social media influencers shitting on the idea of pursuing your passion lately. They make it seem silly or childish to think it’s possible to make a life worth living that way. They go so far in treating it with contempt as if to paint prioritizing your own joy as emasculating for men or purely stupid for anyone to believe it can be done. You have to be mindful of the role money plays in your life and how it factors into providing the life you ultimately want to live, but if you don’t prioritize enjoying how you obtain that money, you’re really missing out on a key component of living a fantastic life. There are plenty of people out in the world selling their souls for dollars and then drowning themselves in the empty things that money can buy. It’s another form of gluttony that our modern day society perpetuates, and in many cases, celebrates. Don’t be fooled into thinking that’s the answer. There’s a quote from Aristotle that I really love that goes, “Happiness is the meaning and purpose of life, the whole aim and end of human existence.” If someone offers you life advice that conflicts with that statement, make sure you believe they’re smarter than one of the greatest philosophers who ever lived before you act on it. It’s likely that they are not and that they are probably leading you down the wrong path. Don’t fall for it. 

Instead, explore your passions and choose a direction in life that is fulfilling to YOU. You can still desire material wealth, but challenge yourself to earn your way there by providing value to others and improving their lives and the world around you. Give your work meaning and make it something that feels good, keeps your conscience clear, and allows you to sleep well at night and look into the mirror without shame or disgust. The world wants you to give up on yourself and believe you can’t have success and genuine happiness. It wants you to believe the only people getting to the bag are the selfish, ruthless people who do it the wrong way. It’s bullshit. Success isn’t an either or and you don’t have to engage in shady shit, lie, cheat, steal, etc. to make it. You don’t have to compromise on your personal values to excel in life. You just have to do the work. If you understand the true nature of free enterprise, you’ll embrace the fact that it’s designed to create things that solve problems, reduce pain, increase convenience, and otherwise improve the lives of other people. If you love something and are passionate about it, I promise you there’s a way to tie it to one of those objectives and monetize it in today’s world. As an added plus, you will have to embark on a journey of personal self-discovery by pursuing it. A little creativity and determination goes a long way. 

Another point of emphasis when choosing your direction in life is this: if something doesn’t feel right, it’s not. No loopholes, no gray areas. There is right and wrong and you get to define them for yourself. Many people just don’t like their jobs, but many more work in companies or industries that make them engage in activities they don’t agree with. I know people who work in marketing and finance who try to justify their role in deceiving and exploiting others by claiming they’re just a cog in the machine. But guess what? No cogs, no machines. They’re there by choice because changing jobs, hitting the job market and facing pay instability is scary. People like to think they can deal in filth without becoming the thing they touch. But once you’ve made the conscious decision to do something wrong, you’re complicit in it. Corporate America takes many good people and compromises them against their own values. There is nothing admirable about a person who is smart enough to see wrongdoing, but too much of a coward to take a stand against it. It’s even worse when they rush into doing wrong willingly for personal gain. You can make a lot of money doing the wrong thing and buy lots of nice stuff with it, but you’ll always lack integrity. Just remember that we are all going to die one day, and the way you maintain your character will matter more in the end than the amount of money you accrue over your lifetime. 

The bottom line? When you don’t have meaning – when you don’t have purpose – the unhappiness it creates readily permeates through many other areas of your life. Think of your life as a canvas you get to paint. Unhappiness is like black water color on a paint brush being pressed firmly into the center of that canvas – it expands outward from its actual cause and bleeds into everything else. Happiness, on the other hand, inspires you and guides you in the right direction. It allows you to fall in love with the process of painting that canvas exactly the way you want it to be. You don’t feel rushed and you don’t care very much if other people see the beauty in your creation or not because it’s not for them. It’s for you. The best way to foster that kind of happiness within yourself, in my opinion, is by finding purposeful work first. Search for that thing that makes every moment you work on it feel intentional. The thing that makes you feel like what you’re doing really matters and is having a positive impact on other people and the world. If you find that, you will find the foundation to your happiness that you can then build something really beautiful on top of. Avoid being misdirected down the path that leads to nowhere. Follow your passion to your purpose and then walk that path wherever it may lead. You’ll thank yourself for it later.  

Focus on What’s Right

I’ve been so busy with work and travel lately that I’ve been making a lot of excuses for not dedicating time to write. In fact, as I write this, I’m currently sitting seaside on the island of Maui in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, listening to the sound of white-crested waves race across the open water and crash against the black volcanic rocks that litter the coastline. Being here is an incredible feeling. It’s one of those places I’ve always dreamt of visiting and I think most people have that dream. To actualize it and not only be here, but to be here for a full month, traversing multiple islands, and celebrating Thanksgiving Hawaiian style is amazing. Best of all, I’m here with my mom. Being able to share this bucket list trip with her after spending my childhood watching her work her ass off as a single parent to keep a roof over our heads is charged with so many positive emotions that truly outweigh everything else about the experience. But there’s another feeling I contended with the first few days on the island.

That other feeling, tucked way down in the back of my mind behind all the amazing feelings stemming from being in this moment where nearly half a decade of hard work has culminated in a real-life dream coming true is – “Is this it?” I’m not sure what the best way to articulate that feeling is, but I couldn’t help but hear whispers of that question echoing through the corridors of my mind. Is this it? Is this what I’ve been pushing myself so hard for? Is this all there is on the other side of sacrifice and patience? Is this everything I thought it would be? Am I really happy right now or are other areas of my life that need improvement more important? Are all of my troubles bigger than my triumphs?

Don’t get me wrong, when confronted between the choice of being my former broke and angry self and being me now with a level of meaningful success and the freedom to choose where I go and when, it’s not even close. I’d rather be thinking through this issue on a tropical island any day of the week than washing dishes, shoveling horse shit, or putting some drunk asshole into a headlock to pay the bills. But my expectation of how I was going to feel being here is way different than the reality. I thought there would be more clarity that came along with getting to this point. I thought I could at least hit the pause button on the stressful shit in my life and feel more at peace. The truth is, my life and my circumstances have changed dramatically, but I still feel the same. That truth carries over for when I change physical locations as well, no matter how wonderful or exotic those locations may be. Things that had bothered me in New York City followed me to Charlotte and they continue to bother me when I’m sitting in this tropical paradise. Maybe it was silly to believe that there’s a breakthrough point where certain troubles just vanish into thin air, but I think anyone who really goes 100% in on chasing success and a dream has just a little bit of hope in that possibility. It’s unrealistic.

I have so much to be proud of myself for and so much to celebrate in my life right now, but it’s as if my brain insists on clinging to the things that aren’t the way I’d like them to be. Without intentionally focusing on all the good – on all that’s going right in our lives – our minds will default into concentrating on where we feel dissatisfied or where we’re underperforming. The point of this blog post is to help you realize where this is happening in your own life, because if you trick yourself into believing that a big bank account or achieving whatever your idea of success is changes a lot about the inner strife you face as a human being, you’re going to be sorely disappointed even if you get it. I’m not going to lie – there was an element of shame involved when I realized how ridiculous it was to be feeling sorry for myself while on a trip of a lifetime. I’m not particularly proud of the fact that I allowed myself to feel bad while sitting in Hawaii, but I am proud of the fact that I caught myself and course corrected and that although it occurred, it was short lived. If nothing else, it’s a testament to how true happiness must come from within first and foremost. If you’re not happy where you are now, you won’t be truly happy on a tropical island. If you’re not happy by yourself, you won’t be truly happy with other people. If you aren’t happy with what you have, you won’t be truly happy once you get the things you want. The key isn’t to never slip into a bad mood or feel like shit – that’s just part of being human. The goal should be to reach a level of self-awareness that allows you to catch yourself and shift your way of thinking back into a positive and optimistic frame of mind as quickly as possible when you feel like that. Sometimes when you overlook all the blessings in your life and focus solely on the things you perceive to be undesirable, you just have to take a minute and ask yourself… Am I nuts?

This is a good time to remind you that if you live in the United States (or really any first world country) it is an undeniable fact that most other human beings on the planet would switch places with you in a heartbeat. As I write this and as you read this, there are millions upon millions of people like you and I who are facing famine, battling diseases and ailments that could be prevented or treated if they had access to the same resources we have, or they live in constant chaos while trying to keep themselves and their families alive in an active warzone. Billions of others lack reliable access to safe drinking water. I deal with a lot of pressure now that I’m leading a team of people, and I have to take full responsibility for everything that’s happening in our company – that’s my biggest source of stress and anxiety. How’s that stack up in the grand scheme of things? It’s really not shit. Whatever you’re going through right now, put it into context because perspective is everything. The fact that I was able to catch myself slipping into that negative mindset – focusing on all the bad and letting the days pass me by without enjoying the beauty of the moment – allowed me to center myself and lean back into the genuine appreciation for everything wonderful happening in my life despite any issues I’m currently working through. Yes, there are things I’m not thrilled about that I have to face and other things that I wish were going a different way in my life, but right now I’m enveloped in the warmth of the sun, the birds are singing all around me, and palm trees are gently swaying in the wind. It is peaceful. Only my thoughts are capable of removing me from this reality and it’s ultimately my responsibility to reject them when they try.

As human beings, our minds are programmed to look for what’s wrong, and it can steal the joy from even the greatest moments in our lives. One of my favorite quotes I’ve ever read is, “Everything that’s wrong is always available, but so is what’s right.” I wanted to take the time to write this post to remind everyone who reads it to take inventory of themselves and their lives in a truly objective way. You’re always going to have something you feel is lacking. You’re always going to want something to be different about yourself or your existence. Don’t focus on that. Although there may be some truth to these thoughts, they are often distorted in ways that make us feel negative emotions based on a bigger picture that we’re filling in the blanks of with completely imaginary misconceptions. Or worse, you bring yourself down by drawing comparisons to other people when there’s literally zero value in doing so. That means you’re often feeling like shit for real because of something that’s only a half-truth at best. Instead, focus your mind on everything that’s going right and then build on the psychological momentum it gives you. Celebrate your wins, soak them in fully, and tell any conflicting thoughts that try to pull you down from that high to fuck off. That’s how you can find happiness and sustain it. That’s when the external gratifications like working for that big check and then digging your toes in the sand on a beach in Maui become the special moments they’re meant to be.

I needed this reminder to snap myself out of a funky headspace that was making me feel dissatisfied with being in Hawaii. Can you imagine that? Go ahead and roll your eyes at me because I’m still rolling my eyes at myself. Not only is that dumb at face value, but I know better. This is all rooted in mental disciplines that I have studied and understood for a while now. It just goes to show you that the work is never done. You must constantly provide your mind and spirit with nourishing thoughts and not allow your uncontrolled mind to direct itself in unwanted and negative ways. Once thoughts like that establish themselves it is much more difficult to rid yourself of them – so make it a practice to be mindful of choosing the healthiest, most positive thoughts about yourself and your life every day. Life is too short not to find appreciation in every moment, and the extreme of where I just was earlier this week in my own head is a shining example of how much power the quality of your thoughts have over the quality of your life. Choosing what thoughts inhabit your mind on a daily basis is critical to your overall happiness – and your ability to take control of shaping your life to be what you truly want it to be.

Too many people think that the answer to a great life is to change their external circumstances – their finances, their appearance, their location, etc. All of those things can add value to your life, but they are extremely limited – and they won’t make a difference at all if you’re fundamentally unhappy. The foundation of a great life has to begin by looking inward. It is built on your internal conditions – your level of self-love, your appreciation for life itself, and the quality of the relationships you have with the people you love and who love you back. Everything else is just icing on the cake and although you can make a shitty cake look good with a colorful exterior and sprinkles, eventually the truth comes out when you take a bite and realize it belongs in the trash. A lot of the curated versions of other people’s lives we see on social media that we think are so great are really just shitty cakes decorated well in a display case. If you were able to taste them, you’d discover you don’t actually want them that bad after all. Everybody has problems, and if you fall into the comparison trap – you’re measuring yourself up against 1% of what’s actually going on in other people’s lives. You’re extrapolating from that very small sample size to make assumptions about the other 99% of that person’s life and then comparing it against the 100% of your own life that you have to live every day. You don’t know what shit they’re dealing with, but you know your own shit inside and out. Comparing your life with an incomplete picture of someone else’s is apples to oranges – and that’s a recipe for lifelong unhappiness – not making a great cake.

When faced with your imperfections and the parts of yourself and your life that you don’t like, be careful not to overvalue the negatives in relation to the positives. When we play that trick on ourselves, it causes us to prioritize the things that don’t really matter much at the expense of the things that matter most. A goal like “I need to make as much money as possible” can replace a much better goal like “I need to make as many joyful memories as possible with the people I love” real quick if you aren’t paying attention. You need to be intentional about hyping yourself up and appreciating everything you already have and all you’ve already accomplished because life is a marathon, and it is way too difficult to sustain yourself on the climb if you’re knocking yourself down inside your own head. Lean into what you’re doing right, what’s going right, and fucking celebrate yourself. Don’t let other people, circumstances, or unrealistic expectations detract from how special where you are right now actually is. Expectations and desires are often much different than the reality of meeting or achieving them and if you aren’t careful, they can ruin something truly great by messing with your perception of it. Be rooted in reality, always. Do the work to reprogram your brain to find the good in every situation or moment.

If you really feel like things aren’t good enough as they are right now, or you struggle to find what to be grateful for – I would keep it simple. I could have just as easily snapped myself out of my mental funk by thinking to myself, “I’m healthy and able to travel – so many people can’t say that and wish they could be here right now.” Or “My family and all of my good friends are alive and well today – so many people can’t say that and would give anything to trade places with me because I can.” There is literally ALWAYS something to focus on that you can be grateful for that can put whatever is attempting to eat away at your happiness into perspective. If you don’t learn this truth about life and how to master it, no amount of money or things will be able to stop you from feeling lousy about yourself and your place in the world. You will just be rich and sad, in the best-case scenario. That might sound better, but you’ll quickly find out that being able to do and have more shit loses its significance quickly and being truly happy every day of your life is the most meaningful goal you can ever pursue as a human being. People who try to convince you otherwise are empty inside and fighting bigger battles within themselves that you can’t see – and they’re losing.

Like everything I write, I hope this added value to your life if you took the time to read it. I am going to try to be more consistent with this project again and will continue to provide my unvarnished thoughts and opinions that have helped me get to where I am and that I am going to keep using to get to where I want to go. If you take away nothing else from this, remember to focus on what’s going right at all times. Life will continuously challenge you and give you reasons to question yourself and the path you’re on. There will be times when it becomes easy to entertain thoughts that serve no purpose other than to prevent you from reaching your full potential. You have power over whether or not you accept them. You have the ability to choose the thoughts that flourish in your mind, and they will either help you or hurt you. They will either make you or break you. Choose them wisely. Always look for the ones that build you up and give you courage. Cultivate the self-confidence to keep moving forward in the face of adversity. Don’t give up on yourself or your dreams just because you fall into a temporary moment of despair. Making it to the other side of those difficult times will give you strength. The narrative you create for yourself and about yourself inside your own head is much more important than most people realize. Try not to compare yourself to anybody – only who you were yesterday, last week, last month, and last year. Don’t worry about how far you must go or what still needs to be done but look at how far you’ve come already and all that you’ve overcame to get to this moment instead. Don’t try to see far into the future – focus solely on the step that is directly in front of you so that things don’t feel overwhelming and cripple your ability to act. Remember what you’re capable of doing and who you are. Remember that nothing is impossible, and that the only thing that can stop you, is you. It may sound cliché, but the further I progress on my own journey, the more I realize that these are not meaningless sayings to make us feel better about ourselves – they are the core beliefs and building blocks we need to build an extraordinary life. Focus on what’s right.

Now or Later

I’ve been meditating nearly every morning for the past year and a half or so. It is now a crucial part of my morning routine. It allows me to ground my thoughts and center my mind before I let the external world bombard me with things outside of my control. Negativity, pessimism, cynicism, and overstimulation are all things we must contend with in the modern world on a daily basis. I’ve found that taking ownership of my mental state through meditation early in the morning allows me to better combat those forces. It’s not a magic bullet by any means, but I am consistently in better spirits when I take five to ten minutes to practice before I start my day. The problem is that I find it difficult to concentrate sometimes as my mind wanders easily. Meditation is a fascinating discipline in that one must master the act of bringing their own subconscious mind to heel repeatedly by actively controlling their conscious mind to that end. In order to help me try to better master this discipline, I took a meditation class last week.

The class was an introduction to Buddhist teachings, so it consisted of active meditation and also a lecture on the philosophy of it. The similarities between Buddha’s wisdom and that of the Stoics in Ancient Greece in regard to the importance of controlling your mind was striking. As a generally curious (and non-religious) person, I make it a priority to try to stay open-minded to all things and then search for the throughline between the advice/wisdom/information of those I consider reputable. I’ve only attended one class so far and I intend to finish the four-part series over the course of this month, but what stood out to me already was the fact that Buddhism seems to be much more of a belief in one’s own divinity and power than an indoctrination into fairytales. That is in stark contrast to most religions (that I know of). Its essence is rooted in empowering the individual by awakening them to their own internal strength and good nature rather than attempting to control their lives through fear of punishment or eternal damnation.

During the lecture, we learned about the Four Noble Truths, which in Buddhism, are considered the truths (or realities) for “the spiritually worthy ones.” The instructor spoke of only the first of these four truths in that class. It is “The Truth of Suffering,” and it basically states that although life is a gift, it comes with inevitable suffering. That experiencing pain is an innate characteristic of our existence. To live is to feel and to feel is to hurt sometimes. From my understanding, the whole religion is based on the idea of forming acceptance of this fact and then training yourself to endure your own suffering through developing love and appreciation for life and all other living beings. The Stoics of Ancient Greece weren’t quite as chill about it, but they had closely related ideologies. Suffering was considered part of the deal as a human being and although it cannot be circumvented completely, you can greatly reduce your suffering by controlling your mind and faulty qualities. The Stoics believed that virtuous behavior is the path to an agreeable existence.

As I sat there and listened, it became more and more apparent to me that there were many overlapping concepts being delivered in different messages between these two belief systems. When I hear two or more incredibly wise theories about life from honorable figures who lived in different parts of the world at least a hundred years apart finding common ground on serious topics – I pay attention to those theories. They weren’t emailing each other to compare notes, so the believability factor increases exponentially for me in these cases. I’ve sat in deep contemplation about this for a number of days now and without further ado, I’ll share my takeaway from this idea of inevitable suffering and what you can learn from it to better your life today.

I’m not going to sugarcoat this – life requires you to eat a certain amount of shit over the course of your existence. What do I mean by, “eat shit” exactly? For the purpose of this blog post, we’ll define eating shit as the act of experiencing the opposite of what we’d like for extended periods of time. Suffering, if you will. It’s an unavoidable fact and it doesn’t matter how rich, poor, short, tall, smart, dumb, pretty, plain, young, or old you are. It doesn’t matter where you come from, what god(s) you pray to, or what ethnicity you are – life doesn’t discriminate when it comes to handing out shit pies. At some point on this whacky journey, you will find yourself flat on your face contemplating the meaning of life and why the fuck it’s so unbearably difficult and painful. You’ll wish you could have a different one as you compare your life to a bunch of fake bullshit on a phone app while staring down a heaping plate of shit a la mode. You’ll sit and cry and feel overwhelmed and want to give up. But then you’ll have to wake up tomorrow and do it all over again anyway. Ouch.

We are incapable of choosing whether or not we eat shit (suffer) in life, but we can take an active role in determining the size of the portions and the duration of the buffet. How? By choosing to eat it now as opposed to later. What I mean by this is that you can choose to recognize navigating hardships, making sacrifices, and having the discipline to do things that aren’t the most fun or pleasurable right now as necessary parts of securing your idealistic version of the future. Likewise, on an internal level, you can realize that questioning the meaning of your life and experiencing the growing pains of maturing spiritually is essential to becoming the best possible version of yourself. Your acceptance of the inevitability of suffering allows you to set the foundation for the mentality needed to make meaningful changes and shape your behavior in a way that makes you actively seek out the difficulties of life. While everyone else is trying to run and hide from them, you decide you’re going to welcome them so that you can get them over with now.  

Here’s my theory on this: If you dive in headfirst and voluntarily eat the shit now, you can drastically minimize the window of shit eating you need to do as a total percentage of your life. Ask for the difficulties and the personal growth now. Pursue the knowledge of the world and the awareness of self now. Understand the inherent level of uncertainty and discomfort that is intertwined within the human experience now so that you don’t keep falling into a false sense of security. The alternative to this choice is of course eating the shit later (avoiding suffering). Avoidance takes many forms, and the truth is that even if you successfully avoid eating shit now, you’re still going to have to eat it later. The difference is that you’ll most likely end up eating It for the rest of your life. If you do it now, you can convert maybe half a life’s worth of shit eating into a significantly smaller, finite block of time. The choice is yours.

I’m pretty sure I heard this from a clip of Tony Robbins on Instagram, but it really drives my point home succinctly. He said, “There are only two pains in life. The pain of discipline or the pain of regret. Discipline weighs ounces and regret weighs tons.” I’ll talk about the topic of regret another time and discuss what I’ve learned about it over the years, but let’s just say that ounces to tons is not an exaggeration. What this all means is that you cannot become the person you need to be in order to achieve your dreams unless you are capable of regulating yourself. You have to be able to establish routines and be consistent in acquiring knowledge and sharpening your skills. You have to be able to hold yourself accountable to making the progress you want to see and not allow distractions to get you off track. You have to commit to your desire and follow it earnestly even though our culture today doesn’t really celebrate that quality anymore. It’s about having the courage and conviction to bet on yourself and then really putting in the work to get to that next level. Discipline, at its core, is voluntarily eating shit now so that you can eat less shit overall. It sucks in the moment, but it pays off big on the back end. A lack of discipline, on the other hand, leaves you vulnerable to being completely blindsided when easy street and lemon drops turns into treacherous terrain and shit sandwiches.

I’m going to use a fictional example to illustrate my point here – don’t feel triggered if any of this applies to you or hits close to home. This is a common situation that unfolds for people over time. Let’s say you’re a woman between twenty-four and twenty-eight years old and you work at a bank right now, but you actually love working with hair. You know you could have a successful business running a salon if you just put in an hour of work when you get home from your day job and stay home on the weekends to put in bigger chunks of time. You come home and even though you’re tired, you’re committed to your vision – so you practice mastering your craft, file for an LLC, design logos, build a website, and construct a social media and marketing strategy. Your friends make fun of you for being a hard ass, but meanwhile you’re saving a small fortune not going out all the time and are able to reinvest it into your business. You eventually turn your part-time side hustle cutting hair in the kitchen of your apartment into a full-time position and quit your job at the bank. Three years later, you open your first physical location in a major city you always wanted to live in. Ten years after that, you’re now the majority owner of a multi-million-dollar franchise.

Are you guaranteed to achieve that level of success? Of course not. But wouldn’t making $70,000 a year doing something you love and being your own boss be enough anyway? Either of those outcomes is only possible if you’re willing to have the discipline to go after your dreams. A lot of people think they’re going to pull it together in their thirties and get serious or “catch up.” Which is totally reasonable and possible to do – but they don’t. Why? Because an undisciplined person cannot form structured disciplinary actions overnight. A much more common occurrence is that they follow the same behavioral patterns throughout adulthood until it catches up with them. Let’s take a look at an illustration of how this scenario usually plays out for the vast majority of people.

You’re the same person with the same set of circumstances, but instead of having discipline, you work eight hours at the bank, and you hate it. When you get home, you know you should put time into building your business idea, but you just want to get into bed and watch Netflix. Your roommate “convinces” you to go out Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. You sleep in Sunday and go to brunch and then repeat your week over and over again on autopilot. You end up putting zero hours into your dream and remove every chance of building the life you want just by making those seemingly inconsequential decisions because they’re easy to make and they feel good in the moment. You settle for your paycheck even though you don’t like your job because it pays the bills and offers steady advancements that you find adequate enough to rationalize staying. Everything is going great until you wake up one day and you feel a sudden dread wash over you – your life is essentially the same as it was seven years ago except for a slight increase in pay. You start worrying about starting a family and settling down, but your social life and network revolves around activities that aren’t conducive to that. The lifestyle you lead is no longer harmonious with your wants and you feel trapped in a life you don’t truly enjoy. You settled on your career, so you end up settling for a partner too and eventually get married, buy a house, have kids, and then… you start to wonder “what if?” That’s the pain of regret – and it comes crashing down on you like a ton of bricks.

Maybe this is dramatic or oversimplified, but it feels pretty damn accurate to me for a lot of people purely based on observation. You can apply this to anyone who has a dream and 98% of them choose to avoid the discipline needed now to achieve it and end up suffering from regret later as a result. In the first scenario, all the woman did was voluntarily eat a few helpings of shit in the form of putting the work in and sacrificing some of the fun she could be having in that moment in order to achieve her dream. In the second scenario, the avoidance of suffering became the ultimate priority for her, and that choice quite literally crushed her dream. This is something that each individual person needs to confront themselves on. If something is holding you back from your dreams and causing you to allocate your time improperly and overextend yourself into having “fun” all the time – consider reevaluating. You don’t need to have a ban on fun and cut the world off, but you do have to have strict boundaries and a reason to keep yourself beholden to them. It’s the only way to avoid the much more severe pain and suffering of regret later on.

If you don’t want to end up in a position where you have to settle for less than what you really want out of life because you didn’t give yourself options – with a job you don’t really like, a spouse/partner you don’t really like… a situation and a life that you don’t really like – then listen up. You need to internalize the fact that you cannot escape the hard part. Life is going to test you and make you earn your keep one way or another. By attempting to deny that reality, you’re just setting yourself up to endure the unpleasant part of life much longer than necessary. My personal advice would be to analyze yourself and your decisions and get really honest about whether or not they are guiding you to where you ultimately want to be. If the answer is no, you need to take that seriously. Reaching the end of your life with what ifs and regrets is something I don’t wish on anyone. It may seem too daring a mountain to climb or too pointless an undertaking to bother with when you consider pursuing a dream, but those are just excuses.

I started this blog to say what I feel explicitly, and the truth is that the world is not going to change for you. You need to change yourself to thrive within it. Recognize reality for what it is, accept it for what it is, and then adapt to it. Your life will not get itself together for you. If you focus your energy fully on what is within your control and constantly push yourself to achieve better outcomes, you can actively shape your own reality. The idea that you’re going to wake up one morning a few years from now and suddenly feel capable of taking control of everything you need to be doing is incredibly flawed logic. Don’t defer the shit eating until later – it will only set you up for a world of hurt as you age. Put your bib on, grab a fork, and dig in NOW.

Do Well by Doing Good

I think it’s safe to say that all of us would like to improve ourselves and our circumstances. Our idea of what that may look like or ultimately what that means is unique to each of us, but the fundamental truth is that you and everyone you see is on a journey to achieve progress in some form or another. Some people may be trying to lose weight so that they can improve their confidence and their health. Others may be pursuing financial gains to improve their standard of living. Others may be trying to work on their emotional intelligence and mindfulness to improve their happiness and relationships with others. The ability to objectively audit ourselves, identify an area we feel needs to be improved, and then find a sustained motivation to change who we are is a special trait that only human beings have and are capable of utilizing. Dale Carnegie once wrote, “The desire to be great is what separates us from the animals and created civilization.” Whether it’s the desire to be great, desire to be important, or the desire to be better matters little. The point is that all of us have something within us that hungers for achievement. Monkeys do not sit around and chastise themselves for being lazy any more than your dog will develop depression over not looking as good as the neighbor’s dog.

This obsessive self-analysis can sometimes create unhealthy habits or destructive behaviors, but if channeled correctly they can provide the catalyst to great changes. The problem is that most of our ideas for self-improvement are entirely self-serving. From the examples I gave above, the motivation and the outcome are both rooted in a self-centered objective. There’s nothing wrong with wanting to improve a facet of your life by and for yourself, but I have noticed over the past few years that what you do for others without expectation of receiving anything in return actually has the biggest benefit to you. It seems void of logic and perhaps a bit counter intuitive, but it has nevertheless proven itself true over and over again in my life. It is my belief that through civic duty and charitable donations – through taking an active beneficial role in the world around you and assisting those who need help – you feed your self-esteem and find purpose beyond your own selfish desires that can carry you much, much further in life than your ordinary individual goals ever could.

This concept of “doing well by doing good” was first embedded in my mind through reading the autobiography of Benjamin Franklin. Funny enough, while still in lockdown in NYC during the height of the pandemic, I was sitting in my room one day, holding a hundred-dollar bill in my hand and studying the face of the man on it intently. It occurred to me that I knew a bit about Benjamin Franklin, but not enough to understand why he was chosen as one of only two non-presidents to be featured on American bills – and of all the notable figures in American history, he was chosen to be put on the most valuable piece of currency in the world. I knew he was one of the Founding Fathers of the United States of America and I remembered the infamous kite story from grade school – but I had no idea that he was also a brilliant inventor at the level I soon discovered, as well as an accomplished author and businessman, and statesman.

I wanted to know why he was chosen to grace the front of that c-note in my hand and that was the only impetus I had for ordering the book. What I discovered in the pages was an awe-inspiring story of a man who came from practically nothing and journeyed to America before the thought of a sovereign nation on this continent was ever conceptualized and who went on to become one of the most important and influential human beings to have ever lived. Benjamin Franklin invented everything from bifocal lenses to the lightning rod to public libraries to the fire department. As astonishing as it was to think a man who lived over 250 years ago invented so many things we still use and take for granted today, by far his most important accomplishment was his contribution to drafting the Declaration of Independence. Every American alive today who possesses the chance to improve their circumstances through their own free will owes a debt of gratitude to him and his relentlessly determined mind. He accomplished much more in his personal life as well, and as I read about this brilliant man, I realized that if someone living so long ago with much less opportunity and resources at his disposal could contribute so much to civilization and permeate history with his ideas and inventions, then I could at least hold myself to building a very suitable life by my own individual standards.

What really stood out about him though was that he championed his active citizenship above all else. His ingenuity was nothing more than a product of his genuine curiousness and ability to transform his findings into useful and practical ideas that could benefit humanity. He built schools for the poor, fed the hungry, and went out of his way to make purposeful positions to those in his community that were otherwise forgotten or looked down on. Benjamin Franklin believed that our interior wellness can and should be connected to our actions aimed at bettering the world around us. He believed in capitalism and free enterprise and was a successful man in his time – but believed that the beauty of free enterprise is that it allows every individual to add to his own happiness while also adding to the happiness of others. By being free to provide as much value to other people as you possibly can, you can make money when others voluntarily pay for that value. He believed that this pursuit of building wealth through true entrepreneurship is a fundamental human freedom and that those who enjoy the riches of their successful endeavors should then take on a larger responsibility to give back to those less fortunate in meaningful ways. My favorite quote of his from that autobiography that has reshaped my way of thinking is, “I would rather it be said ‘He lived usefully’ than ‘He died rich.’”

It is important to note, however, that you do not need to have excessive financial means to contribute to your community or to help others in meaningful ways. Nor do you need to make a massive impact for a large amount of people right away in order to experience the benefits of giving or to make a real difference in the world. Your time is more valuable than money ever will be, and thus, giving it to worthy causes is (and always should be) looked at as the most generous gift of all. It is necessary to support organizations that are doing good work on the ground financially, but from the perspective of healing yourself – of feeling intertwined with the world around you – then there is no substitute to being actively involved in that work in some capacity. To see is to believe – and to meet those who need your help and the ones who have dedicated their lives to helping them will be a much more powerful experience for you. Writing a check or clicking a few buttons will not have the ability to alter your perspective or develop your awareness in the same way… though it is always better than nothing. I recommend a combination of both, but always start with in-person volunteerism when you feel you don’t have enough yet to give by way of money.

Also, helping other people needs to be its own reward in order to work as I am outlining here. If you view it as putting yourself out or detracting from your own goals, then you haven’t figured out who you’re really helping yet. There’s a particular benefit I feel strongly about that can radically improve everybody’s life that directly results from committing to a role of active citizenship. This is the benefit of building your self-esteem and making yourself impervious to outside influences. Getting involved in your immediate community and helping other people who are struggling in an intentional way has the miraculous side effect of completely reshaping the way you view yourself. If you have a poor self-image or think particularly lowly about your personal worth, this is something I highly encourage you to think about. Whether it be a philanthropic endeavor or an environmental one (or perhaps something creative that you think up yourself) it will present a potential turning point to start anew by contributing to a better world around you. Why you ask? Because when you put yourself in a position to wake up in the morning and know that the world is a better place because you’re in it, you take away the ability of other people to damage your self-esteem.

Once you realize that other people can think whatever they like about you and you are capable of remaining whole and staying grounded despite it, the world becomes a lot easier to navigate. Suddenly you free yourself from the mental anguish of living to appease the opinions of other people. You start to feel like there is purpose in your existence and you discover that a large part of the best we can ever do as human beings in the pursuit of lasting happiness is to put effort towards alleviating the suffering of other human beings. Once you are able to move forward with this newfound confidence, it has a funny way of accelerating your success in other avenues of life which then translate to your ability to do even more good for the world. That is a ripple effect I recommend initiating and the only thing required from you in order to drop the first domino is to get out into the world and look for people who are hurting or a problem that is in need of fixing. I assure you that neither is in short supply.

Since being inspired by Benjamin Franklin, I have been able to accomplish more than I ever thought possible on my own path and rather than setting me back from attaining personal milestones, I feel incredibly confident that my philanthropy has propelled me forward. In 2019, before the pandemic started, I made less than $45,000. The following year when the world went to shit and I saw people who had suddenly lost their jobs and been flung into a sea of uncertainty lined up for food and basic necessities, I resolved to start making a difference the best I could. I knew I wouldn’t change the circumstances that led to all the suffering taking place, and I knew that whatever I could do would pale in comparison to the need that existed – but I also knew that allowing those truths to discourage me from taking action would be unacceptable. People needed help and many of those in positions of power who were supposed to be helping them were doing too little too late… or nothing at all. Through generating income with my business and donating money to Feeding America through the first two years of the pandemic, I was able to feed over 150,000 people. That is a significant number for me. It’s only the beginning, and I have a lot of time ahead of me to help many more people, but please understand that you are capable of doing big things when you recognize the pain of other people and decide to do something about it. The best part is that I hurt less myself because of what I did for those people. I also increased my earning potential inexplicably just because I felt I had other people relying on me to keep up and increase my rate of contribution, and the only way to do that without taking food out of my own mouth was to find ways to increase my income – and I did.

Since moving to Charlotte, NC in April of last year, I have started volunteering with an organization called The Relatives that seeks to feed, clothe, and empower children and young adults in underserved communities. I started out with the same mission to feed them by creating “snack packs” which were just one gallon Ziplock bags filled with various imperishable food items like chips, protein bars, fruit snacks, and cookies. I would create the packs in bulk and walk them over to the organization’s resource center and hand deliver them. It allowed me to ingratiate myself with the staff over time and sort of get a feel for what they were doing. In each pack, I would handwrite little notes of encouragement for the recipients, and it added a really personal element to the whole thing. It wasn’t until a year later that I met one of those recipients face-to-face at an event for the organization and she identified me by the snacks I was donating through the program. She looked at me with a big smile and said, “Oh yeah, I know who you are! You always put the fruit snacks in them. It’s a big help to have food I can take home with me. I really appreciate that.” Very few things I have done in my life have brought me more joy than that brief exchange.

I have also started attending mentor events for the young adults aged 17-24 that the organization works with. These are kids that have grown up impoverished, many of whom are actively experiencing homelessness. They come from environments that are dominated by gang violence and hard drug use and void of many opportunities that the rest of us take for granted. Similarly to what I hope to accomplish with this blog for you, dear reader, I am hoping to accomplish with this mentorship program – instill a new mindset shift in some of these young people and spark a desire within them to get out in the world and not accept less than what they’re truly capable of. To see and experience their own worth and to construct a life for themselves using their minds and their willpower. Working hands-on with these kids and hearing their stories sends me home with such a deep appreciation for all I have in my life, all I’ve been able to overcome personally, and allows me to tap into a sense of gratitude that had been absent for the first several decades of my life. It is through this renewed perspective that I empower myself to continue finding ways to have a positive impact on the lives of others and the world around me.

As you can see, although these activities and donations are considered acts of service on my part, they are returning to me the fuel and the inspiration I need to keep progressing in my own life. I hope some of you reading this recognize the truth and the power in this concept and put it to good use for yourself and for all those who need your assistance. Everything you can possibly achieve in your life starts with you, so it only stands to reason that dedicating time and energy to feeding your self-esteem is a very smart thing to do. Self-esteem should not be confused with arrogance or hubris – the delusional self-worth of those who think highly of themselves for having done nothing. Healthy self-esteem is earned, and the only way I’ve discovered that you can actively build it up with your own two hands is by helping other people and doing good things for the world. Little acts of kindness create big changes over time. They also plant seeds of hope in other people and inspire them to amplify the impact. The world can be ugly, but there is no excuse for feeling so demoralized by the situations around us that we absolve our individual responsibility to act towards change and setting things right. Look inward, dig deeper, and find the courage to move forward in the direction you need to go in order to live in a world that you are proud of. Know that there is still good in the world by becoming your own source of proof. Understand that there is nothing wrong with wanting to succeed in life, but that the dominating throughline amongst the most successful and admirable people in history is most often rooted in the desire to give and not to get. Do well by doing good.  

Uncivilized

Light infiltrated the narrow separation in the curtains of the bedroom where Ethan Abrams lay in a shallow sleep. It irritated him as the slits of his eyes peered open and he was blinded by the unobstructed beams casting from the sun. It was 7:08 am, indicated by the ancient digital alarm clock on his bedside table, but he had only been home for three hours after working his double shift at the restaurant. He muttered a few curses in his semi-conscious state as he flipped himself over and dragged the top of his comforter over his face, finding relief in the counterfeit darkness. His dreams had been keeping him restless lately. The recurring loop of listening to his father throw a fit in the kitchen of his childhood home robbed him of the rest that was meant to accompany his slumber. It began again as he drifted deeper into a doze. His facial expression contorted as the memory grew clearer in his mind.

The screaming between his father and his mother had started upstairs and then there was the slamming of their bedroom door followed by his father’s heavy footsteps down the stairs. Ethan sat at the kitchen table, eating his afterschool snack, and staring out the window, trying to subtly remove himself from reality. These boisterous fights were nothing new in the Abrams’ household. The police had visited their home on numerous occasions over the years for domestic disputes. Neighbors called them, mostly. Only once had his mother called them herself, resulting in the arrest of Jonathan Abrams and an overnight stay at the county jail before she decided to drop the charges against him. He had apologized to her the next day when she picked him up and everything had been relatively normal since that day. For the last six months, Jonathan Abrams had seen a therapist weekly and steered clear of alcohol and other vices that had been encompassing his life.

When he had returned home late today from his job at the fiberglass manufacturing company he worked at on the outskirts of Toledo, things had not been normal. The scent of liquor was strong on his breath as he came through the door rather aggressively and off kilter. He had tossed his briefcase onto the sofa in the living room and came up behind Ethan, roughing the top of his head and downing a glass of water before making his way up to where his mother had been putting away their dried laundry. It didn’t take long before Ethan could hear the argument brewing between them from his seat. He heard his father storming down the stairs with quickness. When he reappeared in the kitchen, his anger was painted on his face. His eyes burning with rage.

His father tended to become violent during these altercations, but never more than a firm smack across the face which usually left an unsettling tension within the house as his mother would retreat to their bedroom with her silent whimpering. His mother had come down in pursuit of his father, following him into the kitchen determined to have the last word. She said something to the likes of him never being there when they needed him, and that he always chose alcohol over his family and responsibilities. That he always loved alcohol more than his family. He spun around in her direction, erupting in a fusillade of insults and then came down across her face with his right hand. Ethan had turned and looked at them then, his eyes widening. It wasn’t the first time he had witnessed his father strike his mother, but the sight of it never became any less awful. Overtaken with his emotions, but feeling removed from the situation, he waited for her to make a brisk exit as she always had in the past. But his mother did not retreat this time. Instead, she brought her own hand across his father’s face and with watery eyes and trembling lips, mustered the courage to tell him to go fuck himself. The fear crept through Ethan’s bones for her. His father was always intimidating when he was angry, but Ethan felt like he had never seen him as angry as this before.

His father stood in utter disbelief for a moment. He then turned to his right and looked at the drying rack next to the sink where the plates and silverware were waiting to be stacked away in their respective homes within the cupboards. He removed one of the large porcelain dinner plates from the set they had owned Ethan’s entire life. They had a vaguely oriental design running full circle around the outer rim. An exotic floral pattern was depicted directly in the center of each plate. He remembered that plate so vividly in his mind’s eye, burned into his memory until death or dementia removed it from him. His seven-year-old eyes watched in horror as that plate came down on the top of his mother’s head and shattered with such force that he wouldn’t expect a man of his father’s stature to possess. The blood flowed instantly. His mother shrieked in pain and the sound was like nothing he had ever heard before. Her hands raced instinctively to the side of her head in a futile attempt to stop the bleeding. His father’s face still cemented in rage showed no signs of remorse or empathy for his actions.

Ethan, standing in complete shock, watched as his father leaned into his mother’s now crimson-colored face and said, “You’re lucky I don’t kill you for that, you fucking bitch.” The words snaked through his teeth with every bit of malice he had.

“No!” Ethan cried, running to his mother’s aide, and helplessly trying to shove his father away from her.

“Ethan, go to your room!” he barked at him, little droplets of spittle showering Ethan’s face as he did. “This is between me and your mother.” He added the last word coolly.

“Leave her alone!” Ethan protested and gave another shove with his hands into his father’s midsection.

He felt his father take a step back this time, but it was too late before he realized it was to throw a full punch at him. The pain shot through his left eye in a lightning strike. He didn’t even make a noise as his head throttled back and his body collapsed on top of his mother. Full consciousness evaded him for an unknown amount of time as the sounds of his mother screaming his name sounded far off. It was as though his head were enveloped in a glass jar and the world was swimming around him outside of it. His mind and his thoughts trapped in a fishbowl while his body was in some other, distant place. He was already to his feet when his vision started coming back to him. His mother was pulling him hard by the wrist and screaming at his father to stay away from them. He watched the fuzzy silhouette of his father following them slowly through the house, demanding that they come back to him.

“You’re going to get what you deserve one way or another, Doris. Don’t make me chase you.” The words were matter of fact from his lips.

She had rushed Ethan with her into the master bedroom and locked the door behind them, squatting down and shielding him in her arms as the blood from her face soaked into his shirt. “It’s going to be okay,” she said to him with the hair on the side of her injury matted against her face, little jagged pieces of porcelain still embedded in her skin. She was shaking violently as she held him by the shoulders, fixing his hair with one hand in a display of common motherly affection, but her eyes told him something else entirely. Her eyes were wild, and as they darted around the room searching for something that could be used to defend them, they negated her attempts to comfort him. They listened to the slow, steady creaking of the steps under his father’s feet as he ascended the stairs. Ethan began wailing then, his eye puffed out from his face and sealed shut, the pain drumming through his head with the rhythm of his heart. The saltiness of his tears mixed with the metallic flavor of his mother’s blood as they traveled through the patches of it smeared along his cheeks on their gravitational journey towards his mouth. He could taste it so distinctly.

“Doris don’t do this to yourself. Come out here and get what you deserve. You’ll only make it worse if I have to come get you,” he said from the other side of the door. His voice was eerily calm and even-tempered.

His mother grabbed the carafe from her nightstand that she filled with water and brought with her to bed each night, ushered Ethan into the closet, followed him in, and closed the door behind her. She pulled the drawstring of the light above them, filling the tiny space with a murky, yellow glow. She gripped the glass carafe painted in brightly colored polka dots firmly in both hands. The blood running down her face had slowed considerably since she was struck in the face but was still flowing and dripping down to the floor by her feet. His father pounded on the bedroom door hard with the side of his fist, filling the room with a deafening percussion. 

“Open this fucking door right now, Doris!”

“Just leave us alone, Jonathan! Haven’t you done enough already?” she pleaded with him.

“Leave?! This is my fucking house. I pay for this fucking house. You think I’m going to let some ungrateful bitch treat me like this in my own fucking house?!” he snapped.

“I’m badly hurt and so is Ethan, Jon…. Please leave us alone. You’re going to kill us.” The words came out of her mouth in uneven pitches as she choked back her tears.

“I’m going to kill you, you little cunt!”

His father was now bombarding the door with blows, attacking it like a raving lunatic. Jon Abrams wasn’t a large man, but what he lacked in size, he made up for with pure aggression. He was screaming so loud that the words seemed to lose all meaning and were merely sounds that mirrored the feelings of rage within him. His mother’s back was against the wall in the closet and she slid down it choppily until her butt hit the floor. She was sobbing now, her eyes closed tightly, with her face directed up towards the ceiling as though she were asking God for help with her thoughts. She grabbed a blouse from the rack above her and held it against her bloody face, letting the carafe roll from her other hand along the floor until it came to an abrupt stop at the base of the closet door. Ethan held her tight and they cried together, listening to the incessant banging on the door and the unintelligible screams his father was emitting. Ethan had no idea how long it had really been since his father had bloodied his mother’s face and sent the late afternoon of this otherwise ordinary Thursday into a life-altering tailspin, but the faint sound of sirens floated through the window in the bedroom now. That sound made his father even more irate.

“These fucking cocksuckers never mind their own god damn business in this fucking town!” he shouted as he flung his whole body against the door, finally getting the thick mahogany to give a little. It creaked in protest against the force of his impact. He began stepping forward and kicking the door then, the echo of the blows against it changing subtly, yet distinctly. They became even louder as the bottom of his father’s black Oxford work shoes connected squarely on each kick with the full momentum of his weight behind them.

The sirens were now blaring directly outside as officers pounded on the front door below. His father was putting everything he had into breaching the room now, successfully weakening the hinges at the top of the door. The cracking sound of the wood splintering along the doorframe was unmistakable, and his mother covered Ethan’s left ear with her free hand, pushing the right side of his face into her breast as she screamed in horror.

“I’m going to fucking kill you, and no one is going to stop me, you stupid little bitch!” he roared.

There was the sound of glass breaking downstairs, followed by that of the police screaming as they entered the house.

“Police! Police!” accompanied by the marching of several pairs of heavy boots along the hardwood floor in the hallway directly below them.

“Please help us! Oh god help us! We’re upstairs! I have a little boy!” Doris Abrams screamed through her tears. Ethan could feel her chest heaving beneath his head and the sound of her heart racing was so loud in his ear that it reminded him of the way it would sound through a doctor’s stethoscope.

 “Get out of my fucking house!” his father demanded.

The stairs led to the second-floor landing and directly ahead was his father’s study, followed by Ethan’s room to the left. His parent’s bedroom was around the wall that ran parallel to the staircase and down the hall to the right before the bathroom. Two officers ascended the stairs and hooked a left around the bannister, weapons drawn and trained on Jonathan Abrams.

“Put the knife down and step away from the door! Now!” an officer shouted at him. Ethan could feel his mother shudder under him in an almost convulsive way when she heard this. As they would soon find out, his father had grabbed the big kitchen knife lying in the drying rack before he followed them upstairs.

“Fuck you!” he retorted.

“Drop it, motherfucker!” the second officer ordered.

There was a short pause for a moment and then a disgusted grunt from his father, followed by a war-like bellow that sounded nothing short of maniacal. His father raised the knife over his head and charged at the officers, screaming like a savage, the cords of his neck protruding like cables of a strong bridge. His eyes were wild with hate and his jaw resembled that of a beast more than of a man. Four gunshots rang out quickly through the house, followed by the sound of something heavy, like a bag of sand, falling several feet onto the floor. It was then that Ethan realized how determined his father had been to access that room and harm them as the gunshots had been nearly indistinguishable from his blows against the door. He didn’t fully understand what was happening, but his mother must have as she squeezed him so tightly in that moment that he could hardly breathe.

“We have shots fired at 18 Jackson Street. Requesting medical services to the scene now. No officers injured. One suspect has been neutralized.” The officer’s voice floated to them much clearer now that the madness and shouting had subsided.

“10-4. Dispatching medical services now,” a robot-like voice responded from the radio speakers clipped to both of the officers’ shoulders simultaneously.

There was a banging on the door again and his mother, still clutching Ethan to her in a death grip, jumped suddenly at the sound.

“Police! Come out with your hands up!”

“We’re here!” she cried. “Me and my seven-year-old son. I’m bleeding very badly.”

“We have an ambulance on the way, ma’am. Please open the door slowly and come out to me with your hands where I can see them,” he responded much more calmly.

She finally loosened her hold on her son then and whispered into his ear. “It’s alright, Ethan. Everything is going to be alright.”

They made their way out of the closet to the bedroom door, which she opened slowly as instructed and raised her hands above her head. Ethan stood beside her with his good eye opened wide with terror. The drying streaks of tears were still visible down his cheeks and his hands clutched at his mother’s shirt as the door opened.

A uniformed officer was standing as far from the door as possible, his service weapon pointed at them as Doris Abrams opened it. His expression changed instantly as he saw them. A frail woman, half of her face drenched in blood that had started to darken and harden along its path from her right temple almost all the way down to her feet. A little terrified boy, his left eye swollen completely shut, a dark hue of purple steadily approaching black, with his mother’s blood smeared and splotched on his shirt and face. The officer holstered his weapon immediately, ushering them forward with his hands.

“It’s alright now. You’re going to be okay. Come on out,” he said.

His mother staggered forward and then fell onto the officer, draping her arms around his shoulders as she began crying hysterically again. Ethan shuffled his feet forward with her, never letting the cloth of her shirt leave his hand. He was silent now despite the pain in his head and the sounds of his mother’s agony filling the space around him. He watched as the officer hugged his mother gingerly, turning his attention to him then and telling him it’s okay.

“Everything is over now, little man. It’s going to be okay,” he said to him.

His voice drifted to Ethan. It sounded like the words were floating from somewhere distant again, like the glass jar had been placed over his head once more. It wasn’t from a solid hit to the head this time, but rather his inability to cope with the situation and the lack of realism that accompanied the whole thing. Ethan felt like he was watching the world through someone else’s eyes at that moment, and although his bottom lip quivered slightly, he stayed utterly silent. He focused on nothing but clutching at his mother’s shirt.

The officer guided them towards the stairs and as they went, they passed the other officer who was squatting beside the body of Jonathan Abrams. His mother grabbed the officer that had ordered them out of the room and muffled a cry into his shoulder at the sight of her husband’s motionless legs.

“Don’t look. It’s going to be okay,” the officer said as he tried to move them past the gruesome scene more quickly.

Ethan almost lost his footing as the pace quickened in front of him and he was yanked forward by his mother’s movements. As they approached the steps though, he did look. He saw his father lying there, a pool of blood slowly expanding beneath his lifeless body. One of his hands was contorted by his side, reminiscent of the way the hand of the crippled boy in Ethan’s class always was. The second officer made eye contact with him briefly and then dropped his head back down as if too ashamed to acknowledge his gaze. His good eye transfixed on his father’s face then. The unadulterated rage was frozen there. His eyes were wide open still and his mouth was agape in a silent scream. There was still an empty threat in those soulless, hollow eyes and the last image of his father that Ethan ever saw, was that of his face when he had meant to murder him and his mother.

“Fuck!” Ethan shouted as he was jolted out of his dream. His pulse was throbbing in his throat and he could feel his sheets damp with sweat beneath him as they always were when he broke free from the memory that haunted his sleep. He let out a long breath as the present resettled itself around him. He lay there on his back, studying the ceiling above him and allowing his breathing to return to normal as the image of his father’s face began to fade away. He had had this nightmare often as a child in the years after his father had died, but it had recently begun again over the last several weeks. The anniversary of that day was drawing near and with it, the merciless loop of reliving it every time he closed his eyes. The lack of sleep was beginning to interfere with his daily life. He had seen a doctor at the walk-in clinic and was given a prescription for some sleeping pills, but they worked a little too well for Ethan’s taste. He wouldn’t have the dream, but he also wouldn’t wake up for about twelve hours when he took one. He had made plans to visit his friend Eric later today and see if he had something else that might help without turning him into a complete zombie. Eric was a low-level drug dealer on the side, and although Ethan hadn’t seen him for quite some time, he felt confident he would have something that could help him. For now, he decided that five hours was about all he could have hoped for and that being tired would be better than seeing those dead eyes staring back at him again.

He groaned as he swung one leg over the side of the bed and then the other. Hunching over with his elbows resting on his knees, he placed his hands over his face and gently massaged his eyeballs. He grabbed his phone and looked at the time. 9:17 now. Eric wouldn’t be close to being up. Ethan sent him a text message telling him to give him a call when he awoke and placed the phone back on the night table beside him. Standing up and cracking his neck side to side, he made his way to the toilet. He groped for the light switch along the wall, flicked it on and took a piss. After shaking off the last drops, he grabbed the sides of the sink and looked at himself in the mirror. His face looked even more tired than he felt. Large, discolored bags supplanted his eyes, becoming the most notable feature on his otherwise plain face. He noticed he was getting thinner, the skin of his cheeks drawn in the way of a terminally ill person. He ran cold water through the faucet, cupping his hands beneath it and splashing his face. He felt the prickly stubble of his beard course over his palms and knew that he was overdue for a shave, but the prospect of grooming himself felt like more trouble than it was worth. The cold water on his skin zapped some life back into him and he studied his face once more as it trickled its way down his bony chin and dropped into the basin below.

At twenty-eight, Ethan looked quite a bit like his father now. He had been born with his mother’s slender, pointed nose, but the remaining features of his face were all but an exact replica of his paternal inheritance. He had the square jawline that jutted out in a slightly unnatural way from his face and his hair was the same jet-black color his father’s had been. It seemed to have its own innate sheen in the absence of products. His father had been balding by the time his life was cut short, but Ethan still had a full head of hair and for that, he was thankful. The most distinguished thing about his face that he shared with his late father were the eyebrows. They were thick and bushy, almost unruly, requiring regular maintenance to prevent him from looking like a mad scientist in a children’s cartoon. They were fixed above his tired eyes like two woolly bear caterpillars. He had been ridiculed as a teenager for them but figured there were worse things to be bullied over. As he stared at himself, the memory of his father’s face was hard to shake. He cupped more water from the flowing tap and drank it, feeling refreshed as it made its way down his throat. The thrashing and sweating that accompanied his nightmare always left him dehydrated.

Ethan walked back through his room, picking up a pair of undershorts from the floor and holding them to his face to see if they were not yet too ripe to salvage another day from. He was satisfied by the merely faint odor of his manly stench and put them on, losing his balance and nearly doubling over as he snuck his second leg into them. He walked into the kitchen, ignoring the mess of it. The sink was filled almost to the top with dirty dishes. He had to remove a pan caked with pasta sauce from it so that he could fill the coffee pot with water. Ethan religiously started each day with three cups of black liquid energy. He topped off the mountain of carefully measured grounds with a tablespoon of espresso, enjoying the extra bite it added to each sip. As he waited for the coffee machine to brew his lifeforce for the day, he dragged his feet into the living room and snapped on the television. There was an overweight woman wearing a dress about three sizes too small for her on the screen, claiming that her estranged boyfriend had taken her car without permission and totaled it while he was high. As the camera panned out from her face, an equally large man in a wrinkled bright blue button-up shirt was standing behind a podium adjacent to her, looking rather amused and shaking his head in disagreement. Ethan always wondered what the motivation was for people to take their civil lawsuits into a televised courtroom for the entertainment of the public. He imagined that they were willing to take any attention they could get, but he still felt embarrassed on their behalf. Clearly there was no law against exploiting poor and stupid people for ratings. He was just astounded by how many there were to fill the timeslots each day.

He changed the channel, sitting in his underwear with one leg up on the sofa. As he scratched his balls, an elderly woman was claiming to have reinvented a planting pot that would change his life. The magic behind it was that it somehow monitored the condition of whatever plant you put inside it and would alert you on your smartphone if the plant needed to be watered, or if it was too hot or too cold, or if it wasn’t getting enough light. For $30 a pot, Ethan figured a lot of gullible assholes watch television on Saturday mornings. He changed the channel again and the local news came on. There was a large truck overturned on I-80 outside of Elyria. The truck had caused a chain of accidents on the highway and a young mother and her two children had died in the collision. Ethan shook his head, wishing just once he could turn on the news and hear something positive first thing in the morning. He figured there was enough coffee in the pot now to pour himself a cup and he went back to the kitchen. Ethan owned exactly four coffee mugs that had all come in a set he bought at Ikea when he first moved into his apartment. All four of these coffee mugs were dirty and strewn about the sink. He picked up the one that looked least mucky to his naked eye and ran some hot water over it. Taking his fresh cup back to the living room with him and placing it carefully on the glass table that was centered before the sectional, Ethan plopped down in his spot across from the television again.

He reached for the remote and saw that his phone was flashing green. The signal that he had a missed call from someone. When he checked, he saw that it was Eric who had called him exactly two minutes ago. That seemed odd to him, because Eric typically spent every Saturday morning of his life confined to his bed after a night of excessive drinking and partying. He hit the call back option and placed the phone to his ear. It rang a few times before Eric’s jovial, albeit intoxicated, voice came through the other end.

“Ethannnnn! What’s up, man?”

“I’m surprised you’re up. Never thought I’d see the day you became an early riser on the weekend.”

Eric laughed heartily and then said, “Of course I’m up. I’m still up.”

“You haven’t gone to sleep yet?” Ethan asked curiously.

“Nah. Me and my man Mike have been going hard all night. Just went and picked up some more blow so I think that option’s out.” He laughed again.

“Jesus, Eric. You’re going to kill yourself one of these days with that shit.”

“Yeah, yeah. I’m a big boy, Eth. Anyway, I’m going to be home in a few. You want to come by?” he asked.

“I was planning on later, but I don’t have anything going on so I can do that,” Ethan responded.

“Sounds good, man. See you soon,” Eric said before muttering something unintelligible to another person just as the phone clicked off and the call dropped.

Ethan took a long sip of hot coffee and leaned back on the couch to stretch. He started laughing at the thought of Eric being up all night. Ethan had done cocaine a few times over the years, not coincidentally every time being with Eric, but he never really understood the appeal of it. It made you feel good for a little bit, then made you feel like absolute dog shit for a long time. The only way to beat the latter half was to spend every dollar you had keeping the party going and that made it a habit only a rich man could enjoy. Then again, Eric wasn’t the best decision maker in the world. Once upon a time he had been going to Michigan State on a full-ride scholarship as one of the best college recruit baseball players in the country. Eric never had the best defense out in the field, but he could smoke one out of the park on any given pitch. He was on a roll at the collegiate level too and might have even made his way into a Major League Baseball farming system if he had stayed the course, but his off-field trouble and partying cost him that dream.

One night during the spring semester of his sophomore year at Michigan, he had been arrested after driving a Jeep onto the University’s football field and tearing it up while very drunk and very high on acid. Ethan never really understood how he escaped the financial liability of that fuck-up, but Eric still reveled in telling the story whenever he was in earshot of a woman. Since being kicked out of school for destroying the Spartan’s field, he had been living back at home with his mother and working low-paying jobs that he never held onto for long. Eric didn’t have a strong work ethic and he certainly wasn’t a punctual person. His overall lack of responsibility and prioritization of getting as high and drunk as possible in his free time had caused their relationship to falter over the years. Ethan worked more than full-time most weeks and was attending school part-time. Eric spent most days getting high and lying around his mom’s house. Ethan had set him up with a few jobs when he could, but Eric always ended up quitting abruptly or getting himself fired, so he stopped sticking his neck out for him.

When they were little, they had been inseparable. Their friendship started when they were two little boys in Miss Simmons’ kindergarten class. A few years later, after Ethan’s father was killed and his mother’s emotional and mental health started to deteriorate, Eric’s family took him in so he wouldn’t have to change schools. Eric had been the closest thing to a brother that Ethan ever had and when he thought about it, he supposed he still was. He felt guilty, but he couldn’t spend as much time with him anymore. Ethan had aspiration for his life, and watching Eric go down the path he was on was too difficult for him to bear.

He had tried talking to him about it on several occasions, but Eric isn’t the easiest guy in the world to have a heartfelt conversation with. His quick temper and general lack of caring for anything that doesn’t give him a buzz is far from conducive to an intervention. He had started smoking and drinking when he was fourteen, around the time his father picked up his things and left him and his mother high and dry so that he could start a new family with a woman he had been secretly having an affair with for a number of months. That was a tough year for Ethan. He watched Eric go through a series of rage-induced fits and fall deeper into a dependency on drugs and alcohol over that summer between their last year of junior high and first year of high school. Eric assumed the identity of a cocky jock, flipping his long blonde hair out of his face to swoon the high school girls with his baby blue eyes and bad boy attitude, while letting the foundation of his adulthood erode from lack of attention. As Ethan excelled in his classwork, Eric’s grades slipped, and he began the first of his annual summer school dependent years to graduate on time. When Ethan tried to help him, Eric would ridicule him for caring so much about school and tell him to fuck off. Eric’s mother, Shannon, didn’t have many answers for her son’s problems either as she struggled to keep a roof over their head in her husband’s absence and developed her own issues with alcohol.

The precipice of Eric’s anger and out of control behavior came during their lunch period at school one day their freshman year of high school. He and another boy had gotten into a heated argument over the value of a baseball card Eric was trying to sell so he could buy more drugs. The boy had sneered at him and said, “I guess your dad never told you how much it’s really worth… oh, that’s right.” Eric’s face had turned magenta in a flash as the ooh’s and ah’s and laughter of the other students around them filled the cafeteria. He closed his fist and swung at that boy the way he swung at pitches on the baseball diamond. His feet planted, his hips twisted into it and Eric broke his eye socket without much trouble. He then pounced on him, wrapping his hands around the boy’s throat, screaming in his face “Say it again, fucker! Say it again!” He looked crazed in that moment and when Ethan tried to stop him, Eric shoved him so hard he flew into the table behind him and staggered over it. By the time the teachers were able to loosen Eric’s grip and send him to the principal’s office, the other boy’s lips had started turning blue and he cried hysterically as he gasped for air and clawed at his throat. Ethan had not seen terror like that on a person’s face since he was a little boy, looking up at his mother’s face while they hid inside the tiny closet of his parent’s bedroom.

At that point, Eric had been mandated to attend a special state-sanctioned school for students with behavioral issues. Between the military-style routine of his schooling and his weekly therapy appointments, Eric was able to get his act together just enough to rejoin Ethan at their public high school the following year. He still partied and he still didn’t give a shit about doing well, but he did just enough to skate through his classes, welcoming Ethan’s help on some of his more intensive projects throughout the years. Despite his lackluster GPA, Michigan State couldn’t help but fall in love with Eric’s homerun power and that was really the only chance he ever got to make something of himself. Now he was a deadbeat party boy just shy of thirty with no hope in sight.

Ethan made his way back to his bedroom and grabbed one of the polyester t-shirts hanging in his closet and pulled it over his head. There was a pair of Ralph Lauren shorts crumpled on the floor in the corner and he put them on, yanking at the pantlegs in a futile attempt to rid the myriad wrinkles that spread across them like mountain ranges on a topographic map. Making his way to the bathroom to inspect himself in the mirror once more, he noted that despite coffee’s ability to make him feel more alive, it lacked the magic to make him not look like shit. He splashed himself with more cold water and reached for the hand towel hanging on the wall next to him. He looked at the soiled fabric in his hand, wondered if he had ever washed it since he bought it, then shrugged and used it to pat his face dry. Once he finished getting ready, he checked his pockets to make sure he had the essentials. Running down the mental list of (phone, wallet, car keys) in his head as he fondled the outline of each item through his shorts, he made his way out of the house. He flipped the switch on the coffee machine to the off position on his way by the kitchen, feeling pained at the sight of how much would be going to waste. He really needed to invest in an on-the-go thermos, he thought to himself. As he was standing in the kitchen, he heard the loud and obnoxious melody that signaled breaking news was about to be reported from his television. As annoying as that sound was, he’d be damned if it didn’t grab his attention.

He turned the corner into the living room as a man with a serious face and a mustache that appeared to sprout from his nostrils began filling Ethan in on the breaking development. MASS SHOOTING IN PROGRESS AT KANSAS CITY MALL was printed along the bottom of the screen in large letters as the man spoke.

“We have reports at this time of a mass shooting in progress at Oak Park Mall in the Kansas City area. People are fleeing the scene as police arrive. We will hope to have live footage of the event coming to you soon. Early reports are that multiple gunmen with rifles have entered two separate entrances of the mall and have opened fire on the shoppers there. Please stay tuned as we will be bringing you detailed coverage as we learn more.”

Ethan stared blankly at the television, hearing the words but not reacting to them. This sort of thing had become so frequent that it no longer shocked him, but rather disgusted him. He knew there was going to be plenty of time to hear all about the details later tonight, maybe all week depending on the body count by the end of it. Grabbing the remote and cutting the monotone man with the thick mustache off mid-sentence, he walked to the front door of his apartment. He doublechecked his pockets again, forgetting whether he had passed the initial inspection. When he was satisfied that he had everything, he stepped out into the cool air of a fall Ohio morning.

Eric lived about fifteen minutes from Ethan, and he pulled up to the curb outside of his house a few minutes past 10:30. He looked at it for a moment, noting how nothing had changed about the outward appearance since they were children. It was dirtier, and the lawn was poorly manicured compared to when his dad had been around to care for it, but it was still the same faded yellow color it had always been, and the same pair of white rocking chairs graced the front porch of the home. When they were younger those rocking chairs had seemed inviting in a way, but their filthy exterior and chipping paint made them seem more like haunted house decorations now. Ethan noticed Eric’s decade-and-a-half-old Honda Civic parked in the driveway. His mother’s car wasn’t there. He figured she was probably working an overnight shift at the hospital where she had been a CNA since long before they were born. Ethan got out of his car, closed the door behind him and hit the lock button on his keys twice out of habit until the horn went off signifying that it was protected from theft. He didn’t want any bad guys making off with his cupholder change or the breath mints in his center console.

“No one wants to break into your shit box,” he heard Eric’s voice drift down from the second story window above the porch. His face was concealed behind a black screen and the shadow that the sun was casting across the front of the house, but Ethan could feel his grin all the same.

“You’re one to talk. I can’t believe that hunk of trash still runs the way you drive,” he responded while motioning towards the Honda to his right.

“Door’s open, dickhead. Come on up.” 

Ethan opened the gate that separated the stone walkway to the front door from the sidewalk and stepped through. The hinges squealed dramatically as he pushed it open and then closed it behind him. As he approached the house, he could see the silhouette of Eric’s dog, Daisy, dancing behind the screen door and chirping gleefully.

“Hey Daisy,” he said in his quietest baby voice as he reached for the handle on the door. Daisy hopped up on his thighs, her tail wagging ferociously behind her. She was a pit bull, either eight or nine years old now, Ethan reckoned. Eric had taken her when she was just shy of a year old from a random man he and Ethan encountered while they were vacationing in South Carolina. It was their first road trip and they had made the spontaneous last-minute decision to go for spring break. They were partying on the beach and were pretty drunk by that point, tossing a frisbee back and forth with some other guys they had met earlier in the day. Daisy came running in like a bat out of hell and snatched the frisbee out of midair. Catching a case of the zoomies and refusing to return it, a man had come over hollering at her at the top of his lungs. Ethan couldn’t remember what the man had called her back then, but Daisy dropped that frisbee fast and had gotten low to the ground, her tail receding far between her legs at the sound of his voice. He walked over to her and slapped her hard across the face, from which a high-pitched yelp of pain and fear followed.

Eric kicked that guy’s ass pretty good that day he thought as he stared into her big brown eyes and massaged behind her ears. Besides the way it started, the rest of that situation was comical. Eric was shit-faced in a pair of ridiculous swim trunks he was coaxed into purchasing the day before by a group of cute girls that were hanging out on the boardwalk. They had tiny beach umbrellas, pink flamingos and ice cream cones printed on them, and they were hugging his nuts so tight that Ethan wasn’t even sure he had any. But there he was, storming up the beach towards a middle-aged man in his tiny trunks, screaming while transferring his beer to his left hand so he could deck him with his right. And deck him he did. The guy doubled over on his back and then tried jumping up to tackle Eric, catching a knee straight to his bird beak of a nose. He let out his own high-pitched yelp of agony and Eric stood over him, tossing his beer into the sand and pointing at him. He told the guy that if he was going to hurt an animal, he wasn’t going to keep it. That if he didn’t intend to care for her with love, that he would be happy to do it for him. The guy studied him cautiously for a moment and then told him if he wanted her, he could take her for a hundred dollars.

They had pooled together the cash they had on them and borrowed the remaining ten from one of the guys they had been tossing the frisbee with, who was thoroughly impressed with Eric’s heroics. And that was that. Ethan bent over slightly and kissed her on the top of the head, feeling her tongue frantically trying to reach his face. He heard footsteps upstairs and looked up. Eric was standing at the top of the staircase shirtless, smoking a cigarette and holding a can of beer by his side.

“Alright, Daisy. Let him alone, girl,” he said, chuckling at the sight of her enthusiasm.

“It’s a little early to be drinking, no?” Ethan said to him concerned.

“You don’t come around much for someone so worried about my health,” Eric quipped.

“Yeah, sorry. I’ve been struggling to keep my head above water for a while and I don’t see or talk to people as much as I should.”

Ethan climbed the stairs now and extended his hand to Eric. He stuck the smoldering cigarette into his mouth and grabbed it, pulling Ethan towards him in a half hug that lasted less than a second.

“You look like shit, Eth,” he said to him frankly while staring at his face.

“You do too,” Ethan responded with a half-smile.

He looked at Eric as he said it and noted how his eyes had seemed to sink further into his face since the last time they had seen each other. Dark circles surrounded them, and he was aware he had been up all night, but he looked as though he hadn’t slept in five years. His lips were dry and cracked on his face, the corners of his mouth showing two little spots of dried blood on either side. His nostrils were caked with white residue around the rims and his pupils were rather enlarged. He looked less like a guy who liked to party on the weekends and more like a full-blown crackhead. As he turned slightly to make room for Ethan at the top of the stairs, Ethan noticed a tattoo on his left shoulder. It was a bland tattoo. An isosceles triangle pointing downward, creating a “Y” in the middle where the lines originating from the three points of the triangle intersected. Ethan was curious as to what it meant.

“New ink?”

Eric looked puzzled for a second and then took a glance down at his arm. “Oh, yeah. It really has been awhile since I’ve seen you, huh?”

“At least six months,” Ethan said. “What does it mean?”

Eric had a weird look in his eye when Ethan asked him that. Then he smiled and said, “Ah, it’s nothing. Just one of those pre-drawn tats they had at the shop I went to. Thought it looked cool I guess.”

Ethan had known Eric his whole life and as much of an immature degenerate as he could be, he never struck him as the type of guy who would get a permanent tattoo of something that didn’t mean a great deal to him. He also knew when Eric was lying, and when he told him about it, he knew he was telling him a load of bullshit. He figured maybe he was embarrassed about it or it was something deeply personal and let it go. As he opened his mouth to speak, something clattered to the floor behind the door of Eric’s room down the hall and there was a muffled curse.

“You good, Mike?” Eric said seriously.

“Y-yeah, man. I’m good,” a shaky voice responded through the door.

“We’re coming in in a second, so wrap it up,” Eric said. A twinge of anger mixed into his voice and Ethan watched him curiously. He sucked air through his nose, making a sickly sound as snot accumulated and traveled into his mouth. He made a choking noise and then swallowed, taking a drag of his cigarette afterwards.

“God damn that’s some good shit!”

Ethan forced a laugh. Eric looked at him and punched his arm playfully and then motioned with his head towards his bedroom. They walked up to the door and Eric knocked on it with three dainty taps.

“You can come in,” the squirrely voice said.

Eric opened the door and the pungent scent of hard liquor and stale cigarette smoke hit Ethan in the face instantly. There was a slender white guy in a dark green windbreaker and Levi jeans sitting on Eric’s futon. He appeared to be a few years younger than Ethan and Eric, probably in his early twenties. His skin was very pale, and he had short brown hair, with a cleanly shaven face and glasses. There was a large duffle bag on the floor beside his leg. Eric walked past him and sat in the swivel chair at his desk where his laptop was. The rest of the desk was cluttered with various things, mostly stationary items. The entirety of it was covered in a thin layer of ashes that seemed to be everywhere but the ashtray on the corner, which was filled with old cigarette butts. There were empty liquor bottles and beer cans all over the floor and a half-full bottle of Jameson Irish whiskey atop the desk with its cap missing.

“Mike, Ethan. Ethan, Mike,” he said as he turned away from them and opened the top drawer closest to him and took out a pack of cigarettes.

“Hey,” Ethan said, trying to sound friendly.

“Hey,” Mike responded, but without looking at him.

“You got everything?” Eric said to him without turning. He had shaken the pack of cigarettes over the top of his desk and a plastic bag with a considerable amount of cocaine had dropped out. He picked it up and studied it, flicking it with his finger several times to settle the contents into the bottom of the bag.

“Yeah, I got everything,” Mike said. He was chewing at his lower lip. His eyes were bloodshot, and his pupils were also exceptionally dilated.

“Good. Take that down and put it in the trunk and then go home and rest. I need you to be fresh tomorrow,” Eric said with his back still turned to them. He was pouring cocaine out on the desk now in a pile, being extremely meticulous about it and looking incredibly focused as he worked.

“It’s pretty heavy, but I think I can handle it,” Mike said timidly. His eyes darted to Ethan and then back to his hands, which he was fidgeting together between his knees now.

“You want a couple more lines before you go? I know it’s a bit of walk for you,” Eric said, finally breaking his concentration and looking in their direction.

“Yeah,” Mike said without any hesitation. “Please.”

Eric pulled out his wallet and removed what looked like a gift card from a department store and cut two generously large lines from the pile. There was a piece of a straw lying on the desk, the kind they gave you with thick milkshakes, that was cut down to about four inches in length. Eric picked it up and held it out for Mike. Mike took it from him as he got to his feet and walked to the desk, snorting one of the lines up his left nostril. He exhaled unnaturally with his eyes closed as the sudden euphoria washed over him, then bent down again and snorted the second line through his other nostril. He brushed the back of his hand across the bottom of his nose and sniffed loudly when he was finished.

“Thanks, E,” He said much more surely than Ethan had heard him speak since he arrived.

“No problem, man. Just take that down with you and I’ll give you a call tomorrow morning,” he said.

Mike walked back to the futon and bent down, grabbing the handle straps on the side of the large duffle bag and hoisting it up with his legs. There was a rattling sound in the bag, like metal on metal and then it was silent. He walked past Ethan, still not making eye contact with him, his body weight shifting to one side to compensate for the weight of the bag.

“Nice to meet you,” Ethan said, hoping his voice didn’t sound as suspicious as he felt.

Mike walked out of the room hurriedly without saying anything. When he opened the door to the hallway, Daisy slunk through the crack and trotted in with her tail wagging. Ethan sat down on the futon where Mike had been and Daisy jumped up next to him, placing her head softly in his lap. Scratching the side of her neck with his left hand, he looked at Eric carefully. He had turned toward the desk again as Mike exited the room, preparing two more lines for himself.

“You want one, Eth?” he asked without turning around.

“I’m good, man. Thanks though,” Ethan responded.

Eric laughed and then repeated the same sacrilegious procedure as Mike had done, exhaling emphatically between doing each line. He turned to Ethan when he had finished, licking his finger, and dipping it into the remaining pile of cocaine and then rubbing it on his gums before facing him completely. He regarded Ethan, who was staring at him skeptically, his eyes wired and hyper-alert now.

“What was in that bag he took with him?” Ethan asked cautiously.

“Oh that? Just some tools and supplies for a project we’ve been working on,” he said smoothly, as if he had rehearsed the answer to Ethan’s question ahead of time.

“What project?”

Eric grinned at him arrogantly and plunged his hand in his pocket, removing a pack of Marlboro red label cigarettes and a miniature lime green Bic lighter. He unsheathed a smoke with the tip of his thumb, lifted it to his mouth and grasped it with his lips. He lit the cigarette calmly, not rushing himself to speak. He took a long, exaggerated drag from it and blew the smoke out slowly in a foul-smelling jet stream. Leaning back in his chair, he studied Ethan with his eyes.

“I could tell you that, Eth… but then I’d have to kill you.”

He took another puff of his cigarette, squinting his eyes as the smoke trailed up his face from the burning end. They stared at each other for a few seconds, and Ethan could feel his muscles tense up. Then Eric burst into hysterical laughter.

“The look on your fucking face! Man, that was a good one,” he said, still chuckling to himself madly.

Ethan let his shoulders relax a little bit, smiling at Eric and laughing halfheartedly with him.

“Yeah, you had me for a second there,” he said, wondering to himself if maybe he had been a little paranoid about the whole situation. Whatever was in that bag was probably harmless, or harmless enough, he thought. He shook his head in disbelief at himself and started to feel a little better.

“I actually wanted to ask you something, Eric,” he said and looked at his feet.

“What’s up?”

“I’ve been having that dream again lately. For weeks. The one where my dad’s face is looking at me. I tried sleeping pills, but they knock me out for way too long. Do you know if anything would help? Not sleeping is killing me, man.”

Ethan picked his head up to look at Eric when he finished speaking. Now the smile faded from Eric’s face as he took another drag of his cigarette and then pressed it into the ashtray on the desk, leaving it still partially smoldering and trailing thin streams of smoke. He became serious, a stern look blooming over his face.

“How many times have I told you to try smoking weed for this, Ethan?”

Hearing Eric use his full name while addressing him was strange. He looked at him and smirked.

 “How many times have I told you I don’t like weed, Eric? It makes me anxious.”

Eric grinned again and nodded his head up and down, thinking to himself. He looked across the room past Ethan at the dresser near the foot of his bed. He raised his arm and pointed at it.

“Second drawer down and to the right. I have some pills I don’t take anymore that might help you,” he said, turning back to his desk and his tiny mountain of cocaine. He flipped his laptop open and turned it on.

Ethan patted Daisy’s side and moved her head off his lap as he stood up. He walked over to the dresser and pulled the knob on the second drawer. It began to open and then snagged onto the drawer below it, partially opening it as well. Ethan looked to the right side in the drawer, seeing nothing but a long sleeve shirt folded there. He stuck his hand inside and felt the pill bottle hidden underneath the shirt and pulled it out. It was filled with large white tablets. He spun the bottle in his hand, and studied the label printed on it.

“What’s Seroquel?” he asked without taking his eyes off the bottle.

Eric was typing on his laptop and he looked up at Ethan for a moment and then lowered his head again.

“My therapist gave them to me. They’re supposed to help level me out or something, but they make me tired and I only take them sometimes when I’m coming down off a coke bender. You can take them.”

Ethan continued looking at the pill bottle in his hand as he pushed the dresser drawer closed. The drawer below it stayed open a crack and he had to bend down to close it. As he did, he noticed the black grip of a handgun in the corner of the drawer and his blood ran cold. He pushed it closed and turned around quickly. Eric was still occupied with his computer, typing rapidly in his coke-fueled stupor. Ethan felt his heart start pounding in his chest like a triphammer. His mind raced to the duffle bag that was on the floor and the way Mike had been fidgeting the whole time before he left. He thought about the clattering he heard before they came in the room, and the metal-on-metal sound the bag had made when Mike took it with him.

Ethan’s heartrate elevated further as he started to feel as though something awful was going on. He stuck the pill bottle in his pocket before turning and walking back slowly to the futon where Daisy was still lying on her side. He stared at the back of Eric’s head as he continued typing rapidly, seemingly enveloped in writing a novel. Trying to calm his breathing and summon the courage to speak, Ethan stroked the top of Daisy’s head softly and deliberately. After a few moments, he finally felt in control of himself again and inquired about Eric’s rampant typing.

“What are you working on?” he said as casually as he could muster. 

Eric stopped typing immediately and turned to face him, a sneer across his mouth and a piercing sharpness in his eyes.

“You’re a really nosey motherfucker, Eth. You came here to ask me for my help, and I helped, didn’t I? Are you staying just to pry into my business now?”

Ethan felt the side of his neck twitch involuntarily as his body began to tense up again.

“Sorry, I was just trying to make conversation,” he said feebly.

Eric’s face softened then, and he turned slightly to his left to close his laptop and then back to look at Ethan. He regarded him for a moment in a studious sort of way before he spoke. Watching Daisy fall asleep next to him as he lovingly stroked her head. He clasped his hands together between his legs and lowered his eyes to the floor and then said, “I need you to do something for me too, Eth.” He looked back up at him now, making direct eye contact as he did.

“Um, yeah… sure. What is it?” Ethan asked him nervously.

“I need you to take Daisy with you when you leave today,” Eric replied somberly.

“What do you mean? Why?” The alarm in his voice was no longer concealed.

Eric chewed at his bottom lip with force and seemed visibly unsettled as he thought of how to answer the question. He opened his mouth for a moment, exposing a bright red bead of fresh blood starting to emerge from his inner lip, paused, then closed it again and looked back down at the floor.

“Eric, what is going on? You’re really starting to scare me, man,” Ethan said with legitimate concern.

“I know. I can smell the fear on you,” Eric replied softly.

Ethan ignored how disturbing and creepy that response was and instead chose to push forward on his quest for clarity.

“Well?”

“I’m… I’m not going to be able to care for her anymore and she loves you the most and I know you love her too,” Eric said without raising his head.

“You can’t care for her anymore?” Ethan said in shock. There were very few things in life Eric had shown considerable love and attention to in all the years Ethan had known him, but Daisy was one of them. In fact, she was probably the biggest commitment Eric had ever made and followed through on. She was, in a way, the most important thing in life to him.

“No, I can’t. And you’re the only person I would trust to care for her in my absence. Will you please do this for me?” He said it in a way that almost sounded desperate but had an underlying tone of impatience to it.

“You mean permanently? I can’t even have a pet at my apartment, Eric. You know that.”

“I know, I know. But you’ll find a way, Eth. I know you will. There’s really no one else I can ask. Please? I’m begging you.”

“Eric, are you in trouble or something? I don’t understand what the fuck is going on and everything has seemed off here since I showed up. Please talk to me,” Ethan pleaded with him.

Eric raised his head and a little grin reappeared across his face, though it was void of any humor or genuine happiness. He looked as though he was emotionally vacant, trying to find the words to arouse Ethan’s cooperation without explaining anything more to him than he deemed necessary. He looked utterly checked out from reality and Ethan had to fight the urge to jump up, grab him by the shoulders and shake him violently. He didn’t like any of this, but he had no idea what to do about it. He felt helpless, and as he started thinking about what he was going to say next, Eric broke the silence first.

“I’m not in trouble. I just have something I need to do, and I won’t be coming back after I do it,” he said. He took a breath, exhaled in a deep sigh the way a man who pities himself would do, then continued.

“I know we haven’t been as close lately and we both drifted apart from each other over the years, but you’re still the best friend I’ve ever had. The best friend I ever will have. I know I’m asking you to take on a lot of responsibility that you don’t need on your plate right now, but I wouldn’t ask if I had any other option.” He looked at Ethan to read his facial expression, trying to identify any indication of surrender.

Ethan was still stroking Daisy’s head and he looked down at her then, almost feeling envious at how peaceful she was despite the tension emanating all around her. He looked back at Eric and his shoulders slumped in defeat, knowing he couldn’t say no. Not because he felt like he had an obligation to Eric, but because he knew he couldn’t live with being the one to send Daisy into a life of displacement and unfamiliarity. Possibly even death.

“Fine. I’ll do it,” he said reluctantly. “But what are you doing and where are you going? You owe me those answers at least.”

Eric’s face turned to stone at that, almost resembling the way soldiers look as they stand at attention awaiting orders. His eyes, with their giant pupils, seemed to be a portal into some vast darkness that contained an evil Ethan never recalled seeing there before. It made the hairs on his arms and the back of his neck stand straight up. The image of his father’s face frozen in his murderous rage popped into his head and he shut his eyes tightly to ward it off.

“I’m going hunting,” he said matter-of-factly.

“Hunting?” Ethan echoed immediately like a confused parrot as his eyes popped back open again. Eric was many things, but a hunter was not one of them. None of this seemed to make sense to him and it was almost dizzying trying to process the way the day was unfolding.

“I’m going hunting,” Eric repeated.

“Hunting for what? Is that what that gun in your dresser drawer is for?” Ethan asked him timidly.

Eric was already about as pale of a white guy as you could find, but he turned paper white when he heard that. He snapped his head left in the direction of the dresser and little droplets of sweat started to appear across his forehead.

“Motherfucker,” he whispered under his breath.

He turned back to Ethan and closed his eyes in a Zen-like way, taking in a deep breath and exhaling slowly before opening them again and digging the pack of cigarettes out of his pocket. He pulled one out, lit it, then took a puff and started chuckling to himself while shaking his head side to side.

“It is so hard to find good help these days,” he said to no one in particular.

Ethan didn’t require any clarification on that. He knew he was referring to the squirrely little nervous kid he had met briefly just a short time ago. Mike. He knew that gun was supposed to be in that big duffle bag he had carried out of the room with him when he left. He stared at Eric sitting there smoking his cigarette and felt the pallor of his own face setting in as waves of nausea washed over him. His anxiety climbed to new heights by the millisecond as he sat in utter stillness. His mind started whirling in all directions and it felt like the sound of a freight train screeching to a sudden halt was coursing through his veins.

MASS SHOOTING IN PROGRESS AT KANSAS CITY MALL flashed across his mind’s eye a hundred times.

“What are you going to do, Eric?” He was barely able to find the air to get it out, his lungs filling with each breath but seemingly not absorbing the oxygen.

Eric seemed to forget he was there as he pondered to himself and looked surprised at first when he heard his voice. He sat up straighter, leaning back in his swivel chair and looking smug, if not chipper. His body language exuded an arrogance that had been previously absent. Almost as if to communicate the charade was over, but that it didn’t matter. That he viewed Ethan as non-threatening, even as he had become more aware of his intentions. That Ethan was powerless compared to him. That he thought himself somewhat of a god among men.

“If you must know, I’m hunting for the truth. For generations, the vast amount of society has walked around ignorantly blind to the fact that filth has crept into and infiltrated the highest levels of power in this country. Quietly seeking to undo the natural order of things as the citizen-slaves generate their profits for them. Too distracted with their material things and individual wants to see what is happening. It is up to those of us who can see through their bullshit and tyranny to pull the curtain back and expose their vile affronts. We must restore order, Ethan.” His eyes gleamed as he spoke, the way a proud father would look as he reveled in the story of his son’s first homerun or his daughter’s first appearance on the school honor roll.

Ethan squirmed in his seat, opened his mouth to talk, but Eric put his finger to his lips in a shush gesture and Ethan followed the instruction swiftly.

“We have nothing left to talk about. You already know too much, but it won’t make a difference either way. Daisy’s food and bowls are on the kitchen table and her bed and toys are in the living room. You’re a good man, Eth. Don’t ever change.” Eric said this so casually to him that Ethan remained speechless. He just stared at him with wide eyes.

There was an awkward silence between them now which made the seconds feel like minutes. He stopped petting Daisy and just looked at Eric’s face, which didn’t tell him much as it was frozen in a deadpan state, his eyes staring back at him without so much as blinking.

“It’s time for you to go now,” he said, finally.

Ethan knew it wasn’t a suggestion and he stood up slowly, trying to feel his legs beneath him as his face started tingling and the sensation of possibly fainting overcame him. He took a step toward the door and Daisy raised her head. Ethan looked at her and then at Eric, who still hadn’t moved. Then he patted his leg and she jumped down quickly and happily led the way out of the room. He turned to walk out and then paused for a moment in the doorway, speaking without turning around.

“Please don’t do this, Eric,” he said in a way that lacked any confidence at all.

Eric continued sitting in silence for a moment and then responded without looking his way.

“It’s bigger than me, Ethan. It’s bigger than all of us.”

Ethan felt his heart sink in his chest, and he took a step out of the room and then stopped as Eric said his name again.

“Oh… and Ethan.”

“Yeah?”

“Try not to feel too bad about ratting me out. I know you have to try, but they’re not going to be able to stop me. I don’t want you to live the rest of your life thinking you could have changed anything.”

Ethan picked up his pace, quickly descending the stairs and grabbing Daisy’s leash off the end of the bannister. He affixed it to her collar and started out the door but stopped and ran into the living room to grab one of her toys first. He would worry about the other things later. She galloped alongside him to the car, her tail wagging frantically behind her once more as she jumped into the backseat of his Jetta with little convincing. He circled the car and hopped in the driver’s seat, key already in hand, and had the car rolling away within three seconds, foregoing his usual habit of fastening his seatbelt and checking for oncoming traffic. He sped off down Eric’s street, his knuckles turning white as he gripped the steering wheel with crushing force. He blew by the stop sign at the intersection and a commuter came to an abrupt stop and swerved slightly out his way to avoid a collision while laying down on their horn. Ethan didn’t even register what had happened until he was halfway down the next block. He did stop at the next intersection, his heartbeat thudding through his head as his face started to take on the fuzzy feeling that used to accompany his panic attacks as a teenager.

He pulled the car over to the side of the road, threw it in park and punched his steering wheel hard multiple times until the flesh tore loose on his knuckles and a dark red stream began flowing from them. He was crying now, and Daisy poked her head over his shoulder and gently licked his cheek. He pulled her face close to his and squeezed tightly as he tried to compose himself. After a few minutes, he was able to breathe easier and he fished his cellphone out of his pocket. His hands were shaking erratically as he unlocked it and scrolled through his contacts. The first call he made was to Eric’s mother, but it went straight to voicemail.

“Shannon, it’s Ethan. Call me back as soon as you get this… it’s urgent,” he managed to say through trembling lips before ending the call.

He squeezed the phone in his hands and tapped it gingerly against his temple as he tried to prepare for the next call he had to make. Knowing that every second was too precious to waste, he dialed 911 and waited for the operator to pick up.

“911, what is your emergency?” A soothing voice said from the other end of the line. It sounded to Ethan like an attractive young woman, which felt void of logic to him, but he imagined an exceptionally pleasant face anyway.

 “I need to report a threat,” Ethan replied weakly.

“What kind of threat, sir? Are you in danger?”

“No. I… my friend… I think he’s planning to hurt people.”

“Okay, sir. Can you explain the situation to me? Is there an active threat where you are?”

“No, I just left his house. Something wasn’t right. There was another man there when I arrived, and he left with a big duffle bag and then I saw a handgun in his room, and he was talking like… really crazy. I can’t explain it. I just… I think he’s going to shoot something up,” Ethan said. He was pinching the bridge of his nose, frustrated that he couldn’t find the words to convey how imminent the situation was.

“Okay. Where are you now, sir?” she replied with genuine concern and curt professionalism.

“I just pulled over on the side of the road a few streets from his house. I had to get out of there and I don’t know what to do. I was on my way home, but this couldn’t wait.”

“Okay. Where does your friend live and what is his name?”

“Eric. Eric Davis. You have to get to him before he slips away. It sounded like whatever he has planned is happening soon.”

“Okay, sir. Can you tell me Eric’s address? We will send officers there right away. We will send officers to speak to you as well.”

Ethan gave her Eric’s address as well as his own and pleaded with her to be quick again before hanging up the phone. He let out a long breath as he sunk into his seat, feeling like the weight of the world was being lifted off his shoulders a little. He looked at Daisy and told her it was going to be alright, but he was really saying it for his own benefit. He put the car in drive again and started off down the street towards home to meet with the police.

When he arrived at his apartment complex about fifteen minutes later, there was a police cruiser already parked outside of his building, adding to his reassurances. He pulled up to one of the spots near them and lowered the rear window a few inches for Daisy before stepping out of the car. Ethan walked towards the cruiser and saw two cops, an older white man who looked as though he hadn’t passed a physical in about a decade and a Hispanic woman, who appeared much younger than her partner, but also much more rugged. He waved at the officers and they exited their vehicle.

“Are you Ethan Abrams?” the male officer said while gripping the sides of his belt like a sheriff in an old western movie.

“Yeah, that’s me,” he said with a forced smile and extended his hand to them.

The officer reached for Ethan’s hand and then noticed the blood covering the back of it that had partially seeped between his fingers.

“What happened there, son?” he asked while retracting his hand.

“Oh shit, I’m sorry. I had a bit of an episode in the car. Before I called you guys. I didn’t realize I had cut myself,” Ethan replied, now visibly embarrassed.

The officers introduced themselves as Hanson and Garcia. Daisy whined in a high-pitch squeal and let out a few chirping barks from the backseat of the car as they spoke to Ethan. Officer Garcia looked at her and smiled as Daisy tried to fit her oversized head through the tiny crack in the window and was thrashing her butt around behind her in excitement.

“Who is this?” she said kindly while approaching the car and offering the back of her hand for Daisy to sniff, but she instead tried to lap at it with her giant tongue.

“Daisy. That’s Eric’s dog… my friend that I called about. He told me to take her with me.” The last sentence came out through a lump in his throat and his eyes lowered toward the ground.

“Do you want to do this out here or would you rather go inside to talk?” officer Hanson asked him, motioning with his head towards a window above them from which one of Ethan’s neighbors was peeking out behind the blinds at them.

“We can go inside, just let me get her out of the car.”

Ethan walked around to the other side and grabbed Daisy’s leash as she made a mad dash from the backseat, with her stuffed bunny which at some point had forcefully lost an ear, firmly in the grasp of her jaws. She nearly pulled his arm out of its socket trying to jump up on the officers to say hi, but he was able to wrangle her in and bring her to the door. Once they got inside his apartment, he offered the officers a seat on his couch, which they declined, and put Daisy in his room. He closed the door behind him, which she immediately began protesting from the other side of. 

He returned to the living room and slumped onto the corner of the couch and the police began questioning him in a rudimentary sort of way. They asked him to recount his visit with Eric and he told them about how he looked sick and cracked out. He told them about the heavy drug and alcohol use he witnessed and about the little nervous wreck of a man named Mike that had been there when he arrived. He told them about the bag that had looked overburdening with its weight and rattled when it was taken out of the room and the handgun that had been in Eric’s dresser drawer. He explained that he had not seen Eric in a considerable amount of time and that something had seemed distinctly different about him since they had last hung out. He told them about the vacancy in his eyes and the things he was saying about undoing the natural order of things and going “hunting”. He told them everything he could remember about the encounter, except the part about him being there to get drugs from Eric. Ethan looked at their faces while he spoke and noted that their seriousness, which made him feel good, was also mixed with an element of confusion as well.

“Did he name any locations or make a specific threat on a person or place?” Officer Garcia asked.

“No. He just said I wasn’t going to be able to stop him and that he was going hunting.”

“Did you notice anything while you were in the home that might indicate any violence that had taken place or give us an idea of what he might be planning?” Officer Hanson asked this time.

“No,” Ethan said again.

“Do you know if Eric has a pistol permit or if there’s any documented reason, aside from the drug use, that he wouldn’t be legally allowed to possess one?” he followed up.

“I don’t know,” Ethan said shortly this time. All the hope he had had after reporting Eric to the police was beginning to evaporate as the line of questioning continued. He was getting a pretty clear idea of where this was heading, and that place was nowhere.

“I understand your concern, Mr. Abrams. I assure you that we are treating this as a credible threat to the public, but we do have to ascertain all of the information so that we can act effectively,” Officer Hanson said to him as he rehearsed his script for telling people they were shit-out-of-luck in cop talk, courtesy of the academy.

Ethan was opening his mouth to quip back at him with something smart, but a cellphone started ringing in Officer Hanson’s pocket and he pulled it out, looked at it and held a finger up at him before he had the chance. Officer Hanson took a few steps away from them toward the door and appeared to be listening intently.

“Nothing suspicious on the premises either?” he asked.

He nodded his head up and down as he listened again and then said, “Alright, copy that. Thanks for the update, Chip.” He then hung up and put the phone back in his pocket.

“That was one of our officers that went to your buddy’s house. They knocked on the door for a while, but it sounds like no one is home. No vehicles are parked in the drive and they couldn’t see anything out of the ordinary through the windows or around the house that would have given them probable cause to enter. One of his neighbors said she saw two young men leave close together, both speeding off in opposite directions. They did get a description of his vehicle and they are trying to locate it now,” he said, but without much hope. Not even of the artificially manufactured variety.

“You need to send a manhunt after him,” Ethan declared authoritatively. “He said he needed Mike to be ‘fresh’ for tomorrow morning. It’s happening tomorrow.”

“Look, son,” Officer Hanson began to say when Ethan cut him off.

“My name is Ethan.”      

“Ethan,” he corrected himself with discernible annoyance on his face. “I really do believe that your friend is intending to do something terrible and that we need to catch him, but the Chief of Police isn’t going to sanction off a city-wide manhunt based on what we’ve got here. It would help if we could search the house for clues, but we have rules to follow and I’m going to need more than a guy who owns a gun was sniffing coke, speaking cryptically and sent his best friend home with his dog to get a judge to sign a warrant to go turn his place upside down. The best thing we can do is try to locate his car and bring him in for questioning. Which, by the state he was in according to you, shouldn’t be difficult if we catch him behind the wheel. We are going to look for him.” He looked Ethan in the eye as he finished speaking and Ethan could see he meant what he said.

“Alright,” Ethan replied reluctantly. He knew there wasn’t much use in arguing with a cop who already thinks he’s John McClane. He also knew that this wasn’t going to be sufficient. Overcome with a strange mixture of contempt for their ineptitude and the fact that if not for a police officer, he probably wouldn’t be alive today to be pissed off at one, he conceded on the issue.

“Would you like to give me your cellphone number? I probably can’t offer much in the way of details on an active investigation, but I can notify you if we locate Eric. It would be helpful if we need to follow up with you, also,” Officer Garcia chimed in. She looked at him as though she was guilty of something and he sensed that they both believed him, but that they didn’t have the pull to persuade the necessary action from the right people.

After he exchanged numbers, Officer Hanson and Garcia left his apartment. Ethan shut the door harder than he intended to behind them and flipped the lock over immediately. He closed his eyes and rested his forehead on the cool metal with his hands flat against the door. He was scared and exhausted and just as he was about to scream on his own accord, Daisy barked loudly from his room and forced it out of him prematurely.

“Jesus Christ!” he shouted as he nearly jumped out of his skin. He put his hand over his heart and then started laughing at himself on his way to the bedroom door. As soon as the door opened, Daisy pounced on him, barraging him with kisses and affection. He closed his mouth tightly to avoid an unpleasant situation while ruffling her ears around and patting her sides. It didn’t register in the moment, but this was the happiest Ethan had been in a long time. It was going to be the happiest he would be for a much longer time too. He just didn’t know it yet.

Ethan got up off the floor and made his way into the kitchen. He opened his fridge and surveyed the contents, hoping to find something that would be suitable for both him and his new roommate. Grabbing the remnants of some about-to-be-expired cold cuts and sliced cheese, as well as a less than half-filled bag of stale pretzels, he made his way to the living room and onto the couch. He pulled two pieces of ham out and tossed one to Daisy, which she inhaled so fast it looked like an optical illusion. He stuck the other piece in his mouth and reached for the remote, clicking the television on.

There was still a large graphic in the bottom left corner of the screen declaring breaking news. The anchor with the thick mustache had been replaced by a younger woman with curly blonde hair and spectacularly green eyes. Her face was solemn as she began to speak.

“There are at least fifty-two people dead and thirty-four people injured after what appear to be militant-style terrorists opened fire on shoppers at a Kansas City Mall. We are hearing that four gunmen in full tactical gear with assault rifles and handguns entered the mall through two separate entrances at approximately 10:15 this morning. One witness has told our crew on the ground that the shooting started coming from two directions within the mall, forcing a large crowd of people attempting to flee into the open food court area in the center of the structure where these gunmen unloaded what is believed to be over a thousand rounds of ammunition on their victims and the police. Multiple explosions were heard when police first arrived on the scene and our initial reports are that some sort of IEDs were involved and that several officers are among the dead and wounded. At this time, we are told that all four gunmen have been killed and that the situation is now under control.”

Ethan sat there emotionless as he listened to her describe the events to him. His mind was overloaded by the magnitude of his reality. Eric’s face as he sneered at him from his chair invaded his thoughts and he knew it was the face of a demented man. One capable of doing something as heinous and evil as what he was watching from the sofa in his living room right now. It was unthinkable to him that someone could see such little value in the life of another human being. Or none at all, he supposed. But there was no choice but to think about it now. The news anchor continued talking as images of the mall showing utter carnage and devastation were being rotated across the screen. Broken glass and shell casings littered the floor. There was blood spatter visible everywhere and a thick smoke hanging in the air. Some of the photographs were intentionally blurry, concealing the identities of the dead and sparing the viewership of the mental trauma that would accompany any detailed glimpse of them. A man of Mexican descent appeared on the screen now, his eyes watering profusely while his whole body was shaking, and his left arm was hanging awkwardly by his side.

“It was a massacre,” he said as tears began to fall freely down his face.

“I can see you’re extremely distressed, but you weren’t shot. You appear to be injured though,” a reporter holding a microphone said to the man. They were standing in a parking lot across the street with the mall in the background.

“I wasn’t shot. It was just absolute mayhem in there. I think I broke my arm when I fell trying to get away. People were pushing each other and jumping over things looking for anything they could find to hide behind. I was just trying to get away. I didn’t want to die.”

The view changed back to the female news anchor in the studio and she promised more pain and sadness after a brief consumerist grooming session. Ethan felt his stomach tighten as he struggled to fight off the desire to vomit. His heartrate had a quickness to it as the anxiety settled back in, nestling itself into its dwelling place within his mind. He grabbed his phone and called Eric’s mother again. Straight to voicemail. He didn’t leave a message this time.

Hunger was the last thing on his mind, but he forced himself to split the last of the deli meat and cheese with Daisy. A few commercials for unbelievably low rates on car insurance and breathable jockeys shared the spotlight before the news came back on and announced that the Chief of Police and Mayor of Kansas City were holding a press conference. Ethan scooped a handful of pretzels and turned the volume up.

The Mayor came out first, ascending the little steps of a platform that held a lone podium adorned with multiple microphones. His face was noticeably pale in the well-lit room of city hall. The tie around his neck was sloppily fastened and too loose, revealing a patch of his impeccably white shirt between his collar and chin. His hair was unkempt atop his oddly square-shaped head and his glasses amplified the size of his eyes to the point that they looked disproportionate to the rest of his features. Ethan had never seen a mayor of a city that looked like his life was in total shambles before and it made him consider if maybe holding a public office was in his future. He made his way to the podium and dropped his head for a moment, clearing his throat before beginning to address the crowd of news cameras and presumably, the millions of people watching around the country and the world.

“We have suffered a great tragedy here today,” he started. “The people of Kansas City are mourning the loss of a great many individuals after an unspeakable act of terror and violence occurred at the Oak Park Mall. The investigation is in early stages and I do not have much that I can share with you in the way of specifics, other than that I understand that at least fifty people have lost their lives today in this despicable deed inflicted upon our community. I wanted to hold this press briefing immediately to let the residents of Kansas City know that the police have this situation under control and that there is no suspected ongoing threat to the public at this time. I will now hand the podium over to Police Chief Alan Swartz.”

The Mayor exited the stage in a hurry as an older bald man with a bulging midsection concealed within his decorated uniform stepped up to the microphones. His beard was stubbly, and his face looked hardened, as though he had seen some real action in his heyday. The skin of his face looked like leather to Ethan through the television. A combination of wear and tear from decades in the sun and a steady drinking problem all the while. He stared around the room for a moment, allowing the incessant clicking of cameras to fill the silence. Straightening himself and tugging at the front of his jacket, he finally spoke.

“What has taken place here today is an act of pure evil. Many lives have been lost, and our city will never be the same. I am beyond proud of the Kansas City Police Department and their efforts in saving as many lives as possible and engaging with these terrorists head-on. I have been told that five officers are among the dead and another three are fighting for their lives right now at St. Luke’s. We ask that everyone keep them and their families in your prayers tonight.”

His eyes shifted around the room again as the sound of a thousand cameras going off at once flooded the audio. Ethan noticed that despite the occasion and the fact that this press conference was impromptu in nature, the Chief of Police did not seem emotional or distressed whatsoever. He seemed incredibly calm and deliberate under the circumstances. It made Ethan feel uneasy watching how businesslike he was managing to treat the situation.

“I am told that our brave officers have killed all four of the gunmen involved in this heinous crime. They acted swiftly and with the utmost bravery to commandeer the situation and their heroics will never be forgotten. I want to assure the great residents of Kansas City that we have full control of this situation and that there is no further danger posed to the public in relation to this attack. There is no known association with any established terrorist organization. I ask that you all remain vigilant and report any suspicious or concerning behavior to the police right away. We will find any and all additional persons responsible for the events that occurred today and bring them to justice. We will restore order.”

The last sentence hit Ethan off guard and a pretzel fell from his lips onto the floor as his mouth dropped open and Daisy raced between his legs to eat it. We willrestore order. We must restore order, Ethan. The words were nearly identical to the ones Eric had spoken to him just a few hours earlier. Spoken with the same conviction. The same… intention. Ferocity. Ethan stared into the television, watching the man’s face as he stood there. Nothing had changed, but there was something menacing about him now. It was nearly imperceptible, but it was there. He could sense it. There was a darkness befalling his face and Ethan knew that if not for the bright lights in the room reflecting back off his corneas, that evil vacancy would be in his eyes. Like black holes leading into the depths of madness. His eyes continued to bounce around the room beneath his furrowed brow as reporters began asking questions. Most of them were expected and currently incapable of being answered. Who? Why? Were the guns legal? The usual politics of mass shootings in America.

After about five minutes of Chief Swartz dancing around the basics, a small female reporter towards the back of the room stood up and projected her voice clearly through the circus act performing around her.

“Do you know if there is any legitimacy to initial reports that each of these men had identical markings on them, sir? A tattoo of some kind. I’m told that it is called the Dragon’s Eye,” she said.

Chief Swartz regarded her in an unhappy way, seemingly unamused by the question. “I cannot answer that at this time,” he responded plainly. “I ask that you all, as reporters, use your best judgement to decipher fact from fiction regarding this tragic event as our investigators do their jobs. Speculation of this sort could inflame the situation and create undue stress and anxiety for our already shaken community. I doubt that information was obtained by any credible source and it is imperative at this time that we do not allow our imaginations to run wild.”

The woman began speaking again and sounded as though she was about to add an element of authenticity to the claim, but the Chief held his hand up abruptly in a dismissive gesture at her. “As you can all imagine I have a lot of work to attend to right now. Kansas City PD will keep you all informed on any and all further developments regarding this situation. Take care and thank you for being here,” he finished and then walked off the stage as reporters began shouting over each other and the flurry of cameras shuttering and flashing took over once again. The view switched from the press conference back to the news anchor in the studio who added a less than insightful recap of the event before announcing that surveillance footage of the attack was obtained by their network.

“What we’re about to show you is extremely graphic and disturbing. Viewer discretion is advised,” she said instructively. Ethan grabbed the remote and snapped the television off before the video started. His discretion told him that he couldn’t handle seeing it. He sat there for a moment, thinking to himself. His thoughts were whirling around within his skull at a hundred miles an hour again and he wished he could turn them off for just a minute or two, but any form of respite seemed like wishful thinking. As he sat there, the female reporter’s voice kept popping into his head over and over again. The Dragon’s Eye.

Grabbing his phone and opening up his internet browser, he typed the words into Google and hit the search button. Links for actual dragons and fantasy novels dominated the results at first. He clicked on the images tab and sifted through pictures of the mythical beasts and nerdy games, figurines, and other unrelated things he wasn’t interested in. After what felt like a considerable amount of time, a picture flashed through his screen quickly with the pace of his scrolling and his heart stopped. He pulled the page back down slowly with his thumb and his eyes grew larger as he steadied the screen on the picture that had stricken him with a sudden dread. There he saw, depicted on his phone, an upside-down isosceles triangle with lines extending from each of its points intersecting in the middle of it, creating a “Y”. It was the exact same thing as the tattoo that was on Eric’s shoulder.

Ethan could feel his stomach turning as he hesitantly clicked on the picture and was redirected to a webpage that contained a more thorough description of the symbol. “The Dragon’s eye,” it began, “is an ancient Germanic symbol. An isosceles or equilateral triangle pointing downward, with a ‘Y’ in the middle connecting the three points of the triangle together. It combines the triangle meaning ‘threat’ and the ‘Y’ meaning a choice between good and evil.” He held his phone in his hand, not realizing that his arm was trembling involuntarily now. If the terrorists in Kansas City all had that tattoo on them and Eric did too, he thought… the phone dropped out of his hand and fell to the floor as he sprinted to his bathroom. He vomited all the meat, cheese, and pretzels he had just eaten into the toilet, the bile from his stomach stinging the back of his throat as he did. There were several more painful dry heaves, the violent retching of which made his spine feel as though it were trying to break through the skin of his back. When the sickness subsided, he spit into the bowl and flushed it, picking himself up shakily while wiping his mouth with his forearm.

Ethan walked back to the living room slowly, feeling weak and disoriented. He picked his phone up and looked at the picture again, which vindicated all the fear and angst he had felt throughout the day beginning in Eric’s bedroom that morning. He pulled up the contact he had saved for officer Garcia before she and officer Hanson had departed earlier and allowed his finger to hover above the call button for a moment before eventually committing. It only rang twice before she answered.

“Ethan?” she said with a little twinge of surprise in her voice.

He said nothing. The shock of his new discovery was still holding a firm grip on him.

“Ethan? Is everything alright?” she said more sharply this time and it snapped him out of it.

“Yeah… I mean, no,” he said confusedly.

“What’s up?”

“Did you hear about the shooting in Kansas City today?”

“Yeah, it’s awful. Why?” she responded curiously.

“The police chief just held a press conference and one of the reporters asked about tattoos on the shooters and she called it ‘the Dragon’s Eye.’ I looked it up and Eric had that same tattoo on his left shoulder when I saw him. I asked about it, but he lied to me and said it was just some pre-drawn thing he got at a shop one night,” he said dully.

There was silence on the other end of the line.

“Hello?”

“Yeah, I’m here,” officer Garcia said quietly. “You think he’s connected to what happened today?”

“I don’t know,” Ethan said, closing his eyes tightly as he did. He did know. He just didn’t want to accept it.

“Alright. Well, that sounds a little farfetched to be coincidence to me. I was actually going to call you soon. We found his car.”

“But not him?” Ethan asked, already knowing the answer.

“No. He left a note for us on the driver’s seat.”

Ethan felt the hair on his arms and the nape of his neck stand up again as gooseflesh spread over his body.

“What did it say?”

She hesitated for a moment before answering him.

 “It said, ‘Too late.’” There was a brief pause and then she added, “’Society had their chance.’”

Ethan’s heart sank again, but further this time. Seemingly dropping out from the safety of his ribcage and through a trap door to where his intestines should be. The rest of the conversation between them was awkward and unproductive. Officer Garcia tried to reassure him that they could still catch Eric before he was able to hurt anyone, but it was an unsuccessful attempt at consolation. The tension was tangible and both of them knew deep down that Eric had the ball in his court now. Whatever the police could do was almost guaranteed to be reactionary as opposed to proactive or preventative.

“So, what now?” Ethan asked for no reason other than that he had nothing else to say.

“We wait,” officer Garcia replied. “We’re going to keep looking for him all night, Ethan. There is still hope.” She said it, but the doubt she had in her own words was evident in her voice.

“Yeah. I hope you find him,” Ethan said unconvincingly and then hung up the phone.

He sat there staring at his palms in his lap for a long time, transfixed on nothing in particular. Reliving the day in his head was tormenting him and he really wanted to just curl up and die at that moment. Feeling helpless and not knowing how to cope with the merciless task of sitting there and waiting for whatever was going to unfold to happen, he remembered the pills he had taken from Eric’s dresser drawer. He pulled the bottle out of his pocket and studied it again, then twisted the top off and tapped not one, but two of the thick white tablets into his hand. They were horse pills, but he swallowed them without water, perhaps secretly hoping he would choke on them and have a shot at a merrier day in the afterlife. No such luck. He laid on his back, staring at the ceiling with his hands clasped on his chest, waiting to be taken into the comforting arms of unconsciousness. About half an hour later his wish was granted as he drifted away into a deep sleep.

Eric Davis sat behind the wheel of his mother’s gray Volvo V60 station wagon in the parking lot of Big Rob’s Burgers ‘n Brew. It was a hopping spot in the city, especially on Sunday afternoons when they offered a buy one, get one half-off special for lunch. He had been watching the restaurant for approximately fifteen minutes and estimated between forty and fifty people were inside, depending on how many workers were in the kitchen. Mike sat in the passenger’s seat beside him, fidgeting with one of the straps of his tactical vest. Continuously ripping the Velcro open and refastening it so he could rip it open again. Eric was beginning to grow irritated with him.

“Everything alright?” he asked coolly.

“Huh? Oh yeah… I’m good.”

“Stop doing that then.”

Mike did as he was told immediately. Eric could smell the fear on him now, the same way he had smelled it on Ethan the day before. It wasn’t a literal scent. God knows he probably would never be able to smell anything again after the amount of cocaine he’s done the past week, but that was the closest thing he could equate it to. Once you accepted you were going to die, you were able to pick up on those who hadn’t yet accepted their own imminent demise. Not only did Eric know he was going to die today, he also knew he was the shepherd of an early death for everyone inside Big Rob’s Burgers ‘n Brew on this crisp, fall afternoon. There was a little boy sitting in a booth along one of the big plate glass windows with an elderly couple across the table from him, shooting the tip of a straw wrapper at what Eric presumed was his grandmother. He felt more than human sitting there, peering through the windshield at his prey. His heart was fluttering lightly underneath his bulletproof attire and his palms were beginning to sweat a little. It could be the drugs, he thought. No. It wasn’t the drugs. It was… stage fright. Yeah, stage fright felt more like it. He chuckled to himself and tightened his grip on the steering wheel. His adrenaline was starting to take hold of him now. There was a lot of preparation and hard work put into getting to this moment. A lot of training. A lot of sweat. Even tears. He had traded away his entire life for this moment and it was finally here. Today is the big day. It’s showtime.

He pulled the Marlboro Reds out of his pocket. There were five cigarettes in the pack and one of them was upside down. Every time Eric bought a pack, he would flip the front and center cigarette upside down and save it for last. He called it his “lucky cig.” Knowing there wasn’t going to be time to wait until last, he picked that one out and put it in between his lips. He then offered Mike one by extending the pack to him. Mike reached for it and Eric noticed his hand was trembling as he pulled one out for himself. Eric lit his cigarette, inhaled deeply and then tossed the lighter without looking into Mike’s lap. He struggled to light up as the tip of his cigarette bounced around and danced away from the flame with the spasmodic shuddering of his body. Trying one last time to steady himself unsuccessfully before giving up, he let his head drop.

“I can’t do this, Eric,” he said in a small voice.

“I know,” Eric replied smoothly, cigarette smoke puffing out from between his teeth as he talked.

“Are you mad?” Mike asked him like a frightened child.

“No.” 

Eric reached over and grabbed the cigarette out of Mike’s hand and stuck it in his mouth. He used the lit end of his own cigarette to light it as he took a few drags while touching the ends together. Then, he handed it back to Mike and reclined his seat and closed his eyes. He wanted to clear his mind and be relaxed on his way inside. There were few people better prepared than him for what was about to go down and even Toledo PD was in for a day with him when they showed up to the party. Eric had enough toys and enough bullets with him to facilitate a real skirmish. He was smiling to himself and savoring his last smoke when Mike started intruding on his meditation.

“I’m sorry, Eric. I really thought I could do this.”

“It’s fine, Mike. I can handle it myself,” Eric said without opening his eyes.

“You’re not going to kill me, are you?” he squeaked the last two words out about three octaves higher than the rest of the sentence.

Eric popped one eye open and smiled serenely while looking at him, then closed his eye again but continued grinning.

“Nah man, I’m not going to kill you. But where do you think you’re going to go now?” he asked.

“I know they’re going to catch me. I’m just going to do my time, I guess. I won’t say anything about the group… about Patrick. Any of it. I promise.”

Liar, Eric thought to himself. How dare you sit here and lie straight to my face you spineless, miserable insect.

“I trust you,” he said flatly. “It’s not going to be of much concern to me anyway after today.”

Mike let out a sigh of relief that made him appear to be a human-shaped balloon deflating. He raised the cigarette to his mouth with his still trembling hand and took the first puff from it since it had been handed to him. There was a brightness on his face and Eric could feel the solace radiating off of him. He straightened his seat and looked at Mike while pulling the pack of cigarettes out of his pocket again. Flipping it upside down and shaking it out, the three remaining cigarettes and a plastic baggy of white powder fell into his lap.

“One last time for the road?” he asked with a sly smile.

“Sure,” Mike said with his own cheerful grin spreading across his face. He still looked extremely uncomfortable, but he was looser. The way a man would look after escaping near certain death, but still knowing he wasn’t quite out of the woods yet.

Eric untied the knot in the baggy and pulled it open, placing the whole thing gently in his left hand. He then leaned forward and popped open the leg sheath wrapped around his lower right leg and removed the seven-inch, solid black steel KA-BAR knife that was holstered in it. Mike’s eyes grew large at the sight of it and he instinctively scooched himself closer to the door of the car. Eric gently dipped the tip of the knife into the bag of cocaine and balanced a neat little pile on the point of it, which he then transferred to his nose and snorted. Mike’s shoulders fell again, looking as though a semi-truck barreling down on him had hit the brakes and slid to a stop half a foot before making impact with his frail body. Eric dipped the knife again, the finely sharpened blade gleaming in the sunshine that penetrated the windshield as he did and snorted another pile of coke with his other nostril. After he finished, he repeated the process twice for Mike and then dropped the baggy into the cupholder next to him.

“I’m ready now,” Eric said, sniffing obnoxiously to get every last particle of illicit substance into his system.

“Alright. I had better get going then. Good luck, Eric. I know you’re going to make everyone proud,” Mike replied and reached for the door handle.

Pop.

All of the doors of the vehicle locked as Eric hit the button from the driver’s side master control panel. Mike pulled on the handle and pushed the door, but it didn’t budge.

“Hey E, you have to unlock the door,” he said nervously.

“You forgot to pack the Browning Hi-Power yesterday.”

“What?” Mike turned back to look at him now.

“You left it in the bottom of the dresser and Ethan saw it after you left. You almost destroyed everything we worked for the last six months. Every. Fucking. Thing. I was going to let it go, but now you’re trying to bitch out too?” Eric’s mouth had taken on a sneer and his eyes were piercing through Mike, as if he had x-ray vision and was sizing up the inner workings of his cardiovascular system, choosing a target as he clenched the grip of his combat knife tighter. Mike’s eyes started to water, and he put his hands up in a pleading gesture.

“Eric, I am so sorry. Please don’t do th-“

Eric swung the knife back while fully extending his arm at the elbow. It slid through Mike’s esophagus with ease all the way down to the handle. The width of the blade was enough to slice through both the internal and external carotid arteries on the left side of his neck, with the end of the knife emerging through the other side of the headrest by about a quarter of an inch as blood began to spew out around the sides of it and cascade down Mike’s chest. His hands reached at first for the blade, then he grabbed hold of Eric’s wrist. His eyes were shifted as far as they could manage to look at Eric and Eric looked back at him, smiling. He tried to say something, but the only sound he managed to make was a high-pitched wheeze.

“Shhh. You take the day off,” Eric said, still holding the knife firmly in his hand. He started to twist it and it offered some resistance. Probably caught against Mike’s vertebrae, he thought. He moved it back to its original position and then put some oomph into it. There was a snapping sound as the blade broke through bone and tore through the surrounding ligaments and tendons rather than slicing through them. Once the knife had been rotated a full ninety degrees within his neck, Eric ripped it out with the same force he had inserted it with. A torrent of blood followed the knife out and splashed the dashboard as Mike’s head flew forward and left his body hunched over his legs. He continued twitching slightly as the remaining life spilled out of him and Eric wiped both sides of the knife on the back of his shirt before re-holstering it on his leg. He sat there and finished his cigarette while listening to the sound of Mike gurgling as some of the blood filled his lungs.

When he was done smoking and Mike had fully expired, Eric opened the door and stepped out into the parking lot. His camouflage pants were tucked into heavy duty, black leather steel-toed boots. Underneath his ballistic vest was a plain white t-shirt, the right sleeve donning dark red stains from his first victim. He circled around the back of the car and opened the hatchback. There was the large duffle bag filled with his equipment. He unzipped it and removed his sidearm holsters and then stuck his 9mm Browning pistol on his left side and his 9mm Uzi carbine on his right. Also in the bag was a Winchester 12-guage pump-action shotgun, locked and loaded. The rest of the weapons weren’t needed now that Mike had been relieved of duty. There was a smaller bag in the trunk area filled with hundreds of rounds of ammunition. He stuck loaded clips for the handguns into the pockets on the front of his vest and stuffed shotgun shells into his pant pockets before he slung the smaller bag over his shoulder and closed the hatch. He whistled a lighthearted tune to himself as he strolled towards the front door of the casual eatery that he was momentarily going to turn into a morgue with milkshakes.

Eric walked into the front of the bustling dining room, shotgun in hand and looked around at the oblivious patrons enjoying their last meal. A young employee was walking by him with the dirty dishes of a recently vacated table and he pointed it at him. 

“Hey, John, look out!” someone shouted from the far side of the room. The boy turned and looked at Eric and took a step back from him. Eric pulled the trigger, but nothing happened. Looking unamused, as though someone just tried to play a distasteful prank on him, the kid started to walk away. Eric felt himself beginning to panic as he inspected the gun in his hands and the employee who had shouted at him started marching towards him.

“I am going to call the police,” she began saying.

Eric unjammed his shotgun and fired it towards the ceiling, capturing the attention of everyone inside and then removed the Uzi from his right hip and fired a single shot into the woman’s face, just beneath her left eye. She died instantly. He then raised the shotgun at the pimply-faced boy holding the dishes again and fired it, striking him in the chest and arm. The boy sprawled backwards onto the floor in a mangled and bloody mess, the pint glasses from within his arms crashing down around him.

“Everyone get on the ground!”

People began screaming from all directions as hysteria took hold within the restaurant. Some put their hands up to the sky and the sound of plates breaking and silverware clattering to the floor filled the room as others huddled beneath tables.

“If anybody moves, they fucking die,” he declared while stepping over the body of the teenage boy he had just shot, who was still writhing in pain.

“Please don’t shoot anyone else,” a voice came from behind him. Eric spun around with his weapons aimed and ready. There was a Hispanic man in his mid-twenties with his hands up and palms facing outward.

“What did you just say?” Eric asked him nastily.

“No one else needs to get hurt. Please just let these people go,” the man said.

Rage welled up inside of Eric in a fearsome tide of emotion. He pointed the Uzi at the man and started unloading rounds into his body while walking towards him and yelling at the top of his lungs.

“Shut up! Shut up! Shut the fuck up!” he roared over the gunshots and the man screamed in pain before eventually falling silent. The Uzi held fifteen shots at a time and Eric unloaded the fourteen remaining in the clip, only stopping his relentless squeezing of the trigger when bullets ceased to fire. The feeling of power he was experiencing was euphoric and his eyes had turned wild now. The effects of the cocaine paled in comparison to his newfound drug of absolute authority. He felt like some supreme being, with the ability to choose who lived and died, divinity coursing through his veins now as the underlings of society cowered in their corners from him. 

Eric turned his attention to the group of people who were with the man he had just murdered. Two women and two children, including a girl he suspected to be about ten and an infant of less than a year old, were sitting in the booth. The woman closest to him was crying hard, covering her mouth while shouting the name of the now dead man across the table from her.

“Victor!” she shrieked in unadulterated horror.

“Victor!” Eric mimicked her while making exaggerated expressions with his mouth and moving his head side to side in a cruel, taunting manner. He reloaded the Uzi as he moved towards them and shot her in the chest once. Her body recoiled back against the red leather cushion behind her and her eyes went blank. There was more screaming from all over the room and Eric closed his eyes momentarily and soaked it in, breathing in deeply through his nose.

“Why are you doing this?” the other woman asked him through the babbling of her tears. Mascara was leaking down her cheeks in black rills and he looked her in the eyes, crouching lower so that their faces nearly touched. 

“Because you don’t get to push us out without a fight,” he said. “People like me are here to make sure people like you don’t continue to pollute the population and steal this country from the ones who fucking built it and who they built it for.”

He proceeded to fire upon the woman nine times, striking her in the stomach, cheek, thigh, hip, leg, chest, back, armpit and head. She was later identified as 19-year-old Maria Torres and she died between her 11-year-old niece Aurora Rodriguez and eight-month-old son Carlos Torres. The girl had been murdered after her aunt with a shotgun blast to the chest. The infant was shot in the back with a single bullet from a pistol. Survivors would go on to tell investigators that the boy had sat up and began wailing after his mother and cousin were savagely killed and that Eric Davis had screamed a slew of racist and anti-Hispanic insults at the child before shooting him.

Eric walked further into the dining room after that. He stopped by the booth he had been watching through the window in the parking lot and shot and killed 62-year-old Laurence White, his wife Rebecca, and their grandson Nathan. He continued walking around the perimeter of the dining area, firing indiscriminately at his helpless victims. Justin Weaver, an Iraqi war veteran and long-haul trucker was shot six times in his stomach, chest, arm, hip, shoulder, and head while shielding his son’s twelve-year-old friend Keith Fishwick whom had accompanied the Weaver family to the burger joint for lunch today. The boy was shot in the shoulder, arm, wrist, and left elbow, but was not critically injured. Justin and Keith survived the shooting, but Justin’s wife Gloria and their son, Robert, were both killed by multiple gunshots to the head. 

It had been approximately five minutes now since Eric had initiated his homicidal rampage inside Big Rob’s. The first of many calls to police was placed at 4:02pm, seven minutes after the first shot was fired according to surveillance footage later reviewed at the scene. Due to a miscommunication error, and one that remains cloudy and lacking a satisfactory explanation, responding officers were originally dispatched to an incorrect location. When all was said and done, that monumental fuck-up gave Eric Davis an additional ten minutes to walk around the restaurant unobstructed while shooting, terrorizing, and murdering. He shot as many people as he could find. The only ones who were inside at the time that remained uninjured when it was over were a few people who had been eating at tables in an alcove near the back of the restaurant and six employees who had hid themselves in a utility room in the basement of the building. Before police arrived, witnesses said Eric Davis had walked into the kitchen and discovered more people crouching behind the service counter.

“Oh, there’s more!” he exclaimed. “Are you trying to hide from me?!”

There was screaming and someone began shouting “don’t kill me!” in Spanish. A radio was playing music near the front of the kitchen where the five cooks and the dishwasher were huddled together, and he walked over to it and cranked up the volume. The sound of Evil Ways by Santana filled the entire restaurant and Eric danced a jig to it. Playing the air guitar on his shotgun and spinning in circles to the rhythm of the song, he began shooting them one-by-one.

This can’t go on,

Lord knows, you’ve got to change, baby, 

Shots rang out between the words for all to hear.

Baby, when I come home, baby,

My house is dark, and my thoughts are cold,

Bang. Bang. Bang.

He stepped over the fresh bodies towards a service window that operated as a drive-in for the restaurant. The sound of a man shouting outside was coming through the glass panes to him.

“Don’t go that way! He’s shooting! Go back!” he heard in muffled spurts. He turned his head the other direction and saw a group of three boys on bicycles cruising towards the window. David Coleman, the only one of the three to survive, said they had traveled the half mile from his house to purchase sundaes when he was later interviewed. The boys stopped peddling as they heard the unintelligible commands coming from the older man wearing a ball cap who was frantically waving his arms at them from across the street. Eric fired two slugs from the shotgun at them first, sending two of the boys flying off their bikes and onto the pavement. He then opened fire with the Uzi, unloading an entire clip on them. David watched as his friend Joshua Hernandez was slain with a bullet to his frontal lobe. His other friend, Alonso Coleman, convulsed and vomited on himself while bleeding out in the parking lot, as a gaping hole through the middle of his torso where the slug had torn through him leaked blood profusely into a large puddle. David himself had been critically wounded in the back, arm, and leg.

Police sirens were starting to grow increasingly louder and Eric stopped for a moment to pull more loaded clips from the bag on his shoulder and secure them in the pockets of his vest. As he did, the bell atop the front entrance signaled the door had been opened and he turned to look that way. An elderly couple in their mid to late seventies were attempting to make an escape. A sick grin played at the corners of Eric’s mouth as he ran towards the service counter and vaulted over it with his shotgun in hand. The old man was reaching for the second door to open for his wife when Eric interceded them. He raised the Winchester towards the side of the woman’s face, blowing it clean off and mutilating the man’s arm as well in the process. He crawled to his wife and cradled her in his arms, wiping blood from around the massive cratering wound that had been her face a moment before.

“You god damn son of a bitch!” the man shouted at Eric as he wept. “I hope you burn in hell for this!”

“How would I end up in hell when I’m doing God’s work? You’ll be the one burning with the rest of the niggers and the Jews,” Eric responded before pulling the Browning off his left hip and shooting the man between the eyes. A squad car pulled in near the front entrance then. Eric didn’t skip a beat before opening fire on the car with his shotgun. The officer slammed the car into reverse and peeled out backwards through the parking lot and into a bush out of sight from Eric’s location.

“One white male, blonde hair, camo pants, shooting off a shotgun at Big Rob’s off Jefferson Ave. Looks like there are at least a few DOA,” he shouted into his radio before exiting the driver’s side door and circling the vehicle for cover. Within minutes, the entirety of the police force had descended on the area. A lockdown was imposed on a six-block radius from the restaurant and 175 officers were deployed to strategic locations, surrounding Eric and removing any possibility of escape. The SWAT team rolled in a few minutes later and joined the containment protocol.

Eric had now jumped back to the other side of the service counter and was firing bullets rapidly at them and alternating between weapons. Rounds started striking and ricocheting off police cruisers as law enforcement struggled to identify how many shooters were present. During a momentary ceasefire in which Eric was reloading, a SWAT member peered through binoculars at the restaurant. The shimmering glass from the broken windows reflected a glare back at him and ruined his view. He was yanked back by the collar of his vest a second before a bullet from another frenzy of shots whizzed by his face. It was now 4:15pm and the standoff would continue for another fifty minutes before chain of command would authorize all responding law enforcement to kill any suspects if given a clear shot. 

Eric fiddled with the portable radio for a minute while sitting on the floor, trying to see if he could find news coverage of his mission in progress. He was curious what they were saying about him right now, wondering if they knew his name yet. If they didn’t, it wouldn’t be long, he thought. The name Eric Davis would live on forever after today, enshrined in history alongside other righteous American warriors. Patriots that had made the ultimate sacrifice.He sucked in air through his nose and the sickly sound of snot accumulating escaped his face again. His high was starting to fade, and it caused his mind to wander to the bag of cocaine in the car. He now wished he had pocketed it before coming in. When he couldn’t figure out how to find a news station on the radio, he turned it off and threw it across the room where it crashed and clattered along the checkerboard flooring.

He cocked the Uzi and the Browning and started firing shots at the police again. This continued for a while until he grew tired of them not shooting back. He reloaded once more before standing up brazenly and walking towards the sound of a person moaning from the dining area. Not a single shot had been fired from the outside in yet and Eric decided if he was going to have a chance to take more people with him, he was going to do just that. He turned the corner into the main room and saw a fire truck through a big rectangle in the wall where one of the oversized windows had already been blown out. Pulling both pistols off his hips, he fired repeatedly at it, piercing the vehicle with bullets before it sped off. Then, he noticed a young man in one of the booths along the far wall holding his shoulder, the arm of his shirt drenched in blood as he was groaning in pain. There were two girls across the table from him, one was lying down on the seat with her blouse pulled up, exposing her stomach as the other attempted to stanch the bleeding from multiple wounds with paper napkins. Eric walked over and executed them all with a gunshot to the head.

He turned around towards the kitchen again and spotted a young Latina girl attempting to hide beneath a dead body. Grabbing a bag of french-fries from an unfinished meal sitting on a tray beside him, he hurled them at her and screamed racist remarks.

“Fucking spic!” he shouted before storming off into the kitchen and reemerging a second later with his shotgun. He shot her in the jaw and neck and although she would end up surviving, she would remain permanently disfigured from the incident. He made his way back to the kitchen, firing shots out the windows towards the street as he did. By this time, it was ten after five and the police had been instructed to kill on sight. A SWAT sniper had taken position on the roof of the post office directly across from the restaurant and was aiming through the drive-in window. Eric gave him his chance a few minutes later when he walked towards it and presented an unobstructed view of his body from the neck down. The officer fired a single round from thirty-five yards out and the bullet entered Eric’s neck right below the chin and exited through his spine. His lights were cut out instantaneously, and he was left dead on the checkered tiles of his self-made mausoleum.

A little over a month had passed now since the day of the shooting. Twenty-one people had died and another nineteen were injured. In the wake of the chaos and devastation, the city had become engrossed within a perpetual state of mourning. Other similar incidents started occurring around the country with alarming frequency, all of which ended in the perpetrators being killed by law enforcement or taking their own life before they could be captured. Each and every one of them had the Dragon’s Eye tattoo placed somewhere on their body as wind of the existence of a secret society became less of the talk of rumors on social media and hearsay in the corners of coffee shops and more of legitimate concern. The police scoured Eric’s home for multiple days after he was killed and found digital evidence of what amounted to an ultra-nationalist extremist training program. Some pundits were quick to label the group a domestic ISIS. Tons of reading material on far-right political agendas and beliefs which contained dangerous racially charged and violent ideas were recovered from Eric’s laptop. The police also recovered the remains of Shannon Davis from the shed behind the house during their raid. She had been stabbed fifty-two times, thirty-seven of which had been inflicted posthumously. Her body had been cut into fourteen pieces before being thrown into large black trash bags and stuffed into the corner of the shed next to a neglected lawnmower.

One of the most prominent figures in alt-right internet entertainment, Patrick Oliver, was particularly popular and dominating the authorship of the literature they had confiscated from Eric’s home. He had previously held a position within the White House back in the day and as he became increasingly a person of interest to multiple probes surrounding the emerging wave of terrorism, scrutiny intensified on the connected administration as well. Within weeks, a sophisticated and complex funnel for identifying and attracting recruits had been uncovered and linked to a number of politicized internet personalities. The leading theory was that they would first find those who sided politically with their general party affiliation and slowly introduce more radical and absurd ideologies to them over time, sending the ones who were most receptive to these absurdities further down the rabbit hole of extremism and keeping tabs on them all along the way. A psychologist Ethan had seen on the news one day when they were discussing the topic had called it an extremely intelligent and deliberate tactic. Tying belief systems that the individual holds sacred to their identity with much more wild and extreme ideas until the person can no longer associate one without the other in their head. For instance, tying pro-choice beliefs to an assault against one’s entire faith. Then it was instilled in the person that they were being persecuted by whomever they identified as the political, racial, or religious opposition, stoking the rage factor within them.

“It’s like panning for gold,” the man had said. “You take the mass of the earth you’ve excavated, or in this instance, the millions of people who click on your video or article, etcetera. Then you start shaking them down to find who is willing to keep clicking further through as the scope of the content becomes more ridiculous and violent and you see who continues falling through the cracks. Except instead of ending up with a golden nugget, these people are looking for vulnerable individuals that meet the criteria for what we call the devoted actor paradigm. These are the ones who are willing to give up everything – the totality of their self-interests for whatever cause they believe they are fighting for. Once they have been found, that initiates a sequence of events where the recruiter reaches out to the recruit and establishes contact. If all goes well there, then comes the financing, arming, and training portion and by the end of it you’ve turned someone who started out a perhaps troubled, but albeit normal person, into a full-blown terrorist.”  

As investigations started tying these mass shooting and mass casualty events together, a whistleblower within the FBI released documents confirming the existence of radicalized individuals in key state and federal positions within law enforcement and the government, completely eroding the public confidence and trust in American institutions that had already been weakened in recent years, creating fresh chaos within the halls and chambers of the Capitol. Security had been tightened since the Trump Insurrection of early 2021, but the potential existence of members of Congress being involved with this newly emerging group fanned the flames further. What had once been symbolic of the strongest democracy the world had ever seen, started to look much more like the Senate House of Pompey. Paranoia took hold as accusations and charges of conspiratorial behavior ran rampant. Names hadn’t been dropped, but shortly after the announcement, Mr. Oliver vanished from public eye. About a week after his disappearance, he was found dead at his desk in one of his vacation homes. A single shot to the back of his head had removed his left eye. Where it had been, a coin with the Eye of Providence had been pressed into the socket. Spray painted on the walls around his body were Hate Has No Place Here and We Are Always Watching. The Eye of Providence had also been painted on a wall of the home and speculation arose that a sort of resistance was beginning to emerge just as quickly as the right-wing terror had washed over the land. The terror attacks continued unabated even in the wake of Patrick’s death.  

Fear gripped the entire nation. Somehow terrorist attacks on American soil evolved into a polarizing subject as more and more people relocated to the fringes of the political spectrum. This resulted in more violence erupting in the streets of American cities en masse, as those who once shared communities together began jumping at one another’s throat. The Age of Rage had fallen over the strongest empire the world had seen in the last quarter millennium with remarkable quickness. The free world started to feel as though it were hanging in the balance as the country teetered on the edge of collapse.

But nothing seemed to rattle Ethan Abrams anymore. Ethan had isolated himself from the outside world since Eric’s horrific act of violence for the most part, leaving the house only for work and to replenish what little food he could keep down, or to walk Daisy. He had lost even more weight over the past weeks and was beginning to look dangerously thin, approaching emaciation. Today was the first time he had felt the sun on his face in quite a while after deciding to take Daisy to the park, her insistent gaze spurring him into guilt-propelled action. He sat on a bench with her curled on the ground beside his leg and watched as an old man with fine white hair tossed a baseball back and forth with a young boy that appeared to be a few years shy of the double-digit mark.  The man looked as though he had once been tall, but now had a slight hunchback and a trained eye could see his movements were all made with a deliberate cautiousness. Still, Ethan found it impressive for a man his age to move as well as he did. He shuffled himself to the left and scooped a grounder up and then tossed it to the boy, but it sailed over his glove. The boy trotted over gleefully after the ball, which ended up skipping off the side of Ethan’s shoe before spinning to a stop in a patch of dirt. Daisy raised her head and started beating her tail against the ground as Ethan leaned forward to pick up the baseball. The little kid had blonde wavy hair and blue eyes under a vintage Cleveland Indians cap. He stared expectantly at Ethan with his glove raised by his face. Ethan felt his stomach tighten when he realized the little boy looked a lot like Eric had at his age. The ball slipped from his hand and plunked back down on the groundas he started to cry into his hands. A perplexed expression blossomed across the boy’s face then. His grandfather walked up behind him, removing his glove while eyeing Ethan carefully.

“Hey Cameron, why don’t you head down there by the water and play for a bit. I’ll get the ball back. You stay where I can see you, ya hear now?” he said to him while touching his shoulder tenderly. There was a thick Southern twinge to his voice.

“Sure, pop-pop!” the boy said while beaming back at him.

Eric tried to stop his tears, drawing in breath in choppy rhythms while wiping his sleeve across the underside of his nose, leaving a streak of secretion along the length of it.

“I’m sorry,” he said while reaching for the ball again.

“Are you alright?” the man asked.

Ethan looked up at the man’s face then. He had kind eyes that looked down on him in a genuine gaze of empathetic concern. Ethan’s eyes flicked away at once and his lips pursed across his face to prevent another bout of hysteria. He cleared his throat exaggeratedly before replying in a voice that was forced out deeper than his natural one.

“Yeah… I um. Your grandson reminded me of somebody I lost recently,” he said.

“Mind if I take a seat?” the man replied while motioning towards the bench with his hand.

“Sure.”

“I’m Clint by the way,” he said and stuck his hand out towards Ethan. He showed a confident smile, despite his teeth being in pretty rough shape.

“Ethan,” he replied and grasped his hand with a firmness he thought was appropriate. 

“Who did you lose? If you don’t mind my askin’,” the man asked before letting out a hacking cough. It was definitely an old man’s cough, Ethan thought. One that seemed deep in his chest and married to some sort of serious illness. The old timer’s hand went for his pant pocket with a slight tremor, removing a handkerchief with bright pink spots on it which he used to wipe his mouth. He glanced at Ethan who had now assumed the empathetic gaze in the acquaintanceship.

“Lung cancer,” he said to Ethan as though he read his mind. “It’s a real bitch. If you don’t smoke, make sure you keep it that way.”

Ethan nodded his head at him to show he appreciated the advice and then looked straight ahead toward the pond where little Cameron was pulling the stalks of Japanese Knotweed that had sprouted up around the edge of the water. He thought a bit before answering the man’s original question.

“I lost a childhood friend about a month ago,” he finally said. He continued to look into the distance, rather than risk another intimate moment of eye contact with this stranger. It was the first time he had really spoken to anyone other than a few follow up interviews with the police since everything had happened.

“Oh, I’m sorry to hear that. How?”

Ethan glanced at him then, quickly. His eyes fell to his hands as he started to knead them together between his legs.

“He was shot.” The words left his mouth matter-of-factly and it seemed as though he had no emotion in them. The man regarded him with those empathetic, caring eyes again and seemed to start putting together where the story was heading for himself.

“Was he shot during that yahoo’s shootin’ spree?” he asked in a tone that made it sound like he hadn’t expected to walk into such a morbid situation. I was really hoping your mom had died of old age or something. Not sure I’m cut out for all this it seemed to say.  

Ethan let out a deep sigh and his shoulders hunched forward as his head dipped lower from above them. “He was the yahoo.”

“Jesus,” the man said in an almost whisper before his sickly cough sent him into another fit. Ethan closed his eyes and felt the numbness that had seemed to overcome him since the shooting take hold. It was as if he had reached a level of maximum sadness that plateaued into an ethereal emptiness. He sat there and listened to old man Clint’s lungs unsuccessfully try to force out the disease from within them. After a few minutes he recomposed himself.

“Apologies,” he said almost embarrassedly. “I… I don’t know what to say. That is real heavy, friend. I am very sorry to hear that.” He looked at Ethan who was still sitting with his eyes closed. Ethan managed to curl his lips in what would have been considered a soft smile if the indescribable pain of the last month plus of his life wasn’t painted on the rest of his face along with it.

“Don’t be,” he said. “I don’t want you to think I’m crying because he died. He deserved to die for the awful things he did to those people. I wish he was the only one who had died.” He opened his eyes then to look at the man’s face, who was now staring out towards the water, watching his grandson play. His head rocked back and forth a few times and his lips thinned out in a flat line across his face as he turned to look at Ethan and there was another brief instance of commiseration between them.

“Why are you cryin’ then?” he asked with genuine interest.

The sky had begun to take on hues of red and orange as the sunlight of the day waned towards dusk and there was something calming about the mood it set. Ethan felt as though he was supposed to be here talking about this, but he couldn’t quite put together why he felt that way. There was an inviting presence in the atmosphere and an openness about this strange old man with his youthful sidearm and finite life expectancy. He felt like he could be honest and that was everything he needed right now. He trusted that there was no ulterior motive, but rather, only a friendly and sympathetic listener at his disposal and he decided to let out what he had been holding inside.

“I’m sad because I still remember the person he was before it, I guess. Eric was never a model citizen or anything, but he was a decent person, you know? The guy I grew up with… my best friend… he wouldn’t do that. I just don’t understand what happened. He had his problems, but he was never racist or hateful. Someone turned him into a monster,” Ethan finished as his lower lip quivered and fresh tears began to well up within his eyes.

The man looked at him woefully now. “I know a thing or two about those kinda monsters myself,” he said.

“You do?”

“Sure,” he replied in his accent that made it come out sounding more like shore. “I grew up in Sherman, Texas. Little ways north of Dallas. As I’m shore you can imagine, being from the South at my age, I’ve had my fair share of experiences with racism.”

Ethan nodded at him but said nothing.

“My father,” Clint continued, “was not a nice man and he suffered from that affliction. Hell, I did too before the war,” he added, reflectively.

“Which war?” Ethan asked.

“I know I look old enough to have fought in the Alamo,” he started while cracking a smile at his own joke, “but Uncle Sam decided Vietnam was where I was headin’.”

“How was that?”

Clint’s eyes winced a little bit at the question as bad memories washed over him. Then he seemed to relax and said, “Same advice as smokin’.”

They looked at each other and laughed then. Ethan dabbed at his eyes with the back of his hands as he remembered how good it felt to laugh. It had been a long time now and that period of cessation seemed to have starved his sense of self of a kind of unspoken nourishment.

“Well thank you for your service, Clint.” The old man waved him off dismissively with his hand before he could even finish the sentence. “What changed in the war?” he then added inquisitively.

Clint looked at him fondly, almost as if to thank him for being interested in his life, then took as deep a breath as he could manage before talking again.

“Well, growin’ up in Sherman, everything was mostly segregated,” he started. “Wasn’t more’n two colored families in the whole damn town and the little ones were homeschooled on account of not bein’ welcome inside the schoolhouse. So, me, like most people my age back then, had little to no experience talkin’ to or interactin’ with any black people. We were taught that they were of lesser standin’ than ourselves. My father would tell me, ‘make sure you don’t get yourself caught up with any of them niggers’. Told me they were dangerous. That they were jealous of our way of life and wanted to take it from us. He made me hate ‘em by makin’ me scared of ‘em.”

Cameron’s voice floated up to them from down by the pond then, breaking his concentration from the story. “Pop-pop, look!” he exclaimed. Both Ethan and his new friend glanced towards him as the little boy half threw, half shot-putted a large stone into the water that was marked by a magnificent splash!

“Wow! You’re gettin’ real strong, Cam! Be careful not to fall in though!” his grandfather shouted down towards him in a genial voice as he and Ethan both clapped for his remarkable feat. “I won’t!” he shouted back with a big grin blooming across his face.

“Where was I now?” the old man asked while wrinkling his forehead as he wracked the inside of his brain to find the correct tracks on which to place his train of thought.

“Your father tricked you into being racist,” Ethan said rather quietly, feeling as though it were a slightly insulting way to phrase it.

“Oh, right. Well, I went about believin’ all that nonsense the entirety of my childhood and into my early adulthood. But when I turned eighteen in ’56, a little less than a year after the war started, I joined the service and things changed. See, this was the first war in American history where black and white soldiers weren’t segregated. Now, that’s not to say there was equal treatment among the ranks, cause there sure as hell wasn’t. But we were expected to live and fight alongside each other.” There was a twinkle in his eye as he cocked his head up slightly towards the sky in a state of reminiscence.

“It sounds like that probably wasn’t easy for you,” Ethan said intrigued.

“Hell no, it wasn’t,” he said while grinning. “Unfortunately, that is, thinkin’ back on it nowadays. Wasn’t easy for me or any other good ole southern boy comin’ to fulfill his patriotic duties at the time. We weren’t just mad at the accommodations, we were disgusted by ‘em,” he said the word disgusted with distinguished emphasis.

“Well how did you do it?”

“I’ll give you the short of it. When we first got to ‘Nam the whites and the blacks stayed in their own areas for the most part. One night, me and one of the black grunts got into an argument over a couple of smokes. His name was Carl Owens. I accused him of stealin’ my cigarettes after drinkin’ more than I should’ve and I convinced myself he did it because of the way he looked. I cracked him upside the head and a few other boys rustled up his friends and we told them not to wander on to the white side of camp again or else. Split his brow open real good, I did. Well, it turned out I had drunkenly slipped my smokes into a different pocket than my usual and the ones I had seen next to him really belonged to him, just like he had said they did. I tried ‘pologizin’ the next day, but he wasn’t havin’ none of it. Just stared at me like a god damned statue.”

Clint laughed in a bewildered sort of way, like he could hardly believe his own recollection of events.

“About a week later, we found ourselves in a bit of a pickle. We was crawlin’ through the jungle, dodgin’ snakes and all sorts of other ungawdly creatures and the damned Viet Cong fighters ambushed us. Bullets were flyin’ from everywhere and people were droppin’ like flies all around us,” Clint said as his gaze trailed off into a blank stare. He became immersed in his thoughts as he spoke.

“I started blastin’ back at the bastards as my men tried to retreat. I made it across the area they had entrapped us in, going the direction most of my guys had went, but I was lookin’ behind me shootin’ still and fell backwards right into one of their god damned punji stick traps. I was lucky that I didn’t get impaled around my organs, but one of the sons of bitches pierced right through my leg,” he said while tapping down at his left calf.

“Ouch,” Ethan said with a matching face.

“Yeah, that’s one word for it,” Clint said with a chuckle. “Anyway, I’m lyin’ there in this hole screamin’ my head off, bleedin’ all over the place, prayin’ to god, you name it. All of a sudden, a head pops out over the side of it and who other than Carl Owens. Eye still swollen, stitches still in and all. I almost shot him too he came flyin’ over the side of that wall so fast. I could see it in his face when he recognized me that he thought about leavin’ me down there for a second. Shots were still going off everywhere and our guys started chuckin’ grenades. He could have left, and no one would have been the wiser. But he slipped down in that hole with me and ripped my leg off that bamboo stake and hoisted me up out of there. He dragged me by the back of my uniform so I could sit and shoot, and he was shootin’ one handed over my shoulder while pulling me. Took a bullet to his right shoulder for his troubles too.”

Ethan’s eyes were large and mystified by the old man’s story. “Are you serious?” he asked in amazement.

“Honest to God,” Clint said and held his hand over his heart and then up to the sky.

“What happened then?” Ethan asked, even more intrigued now.

“Well, we made it out alive obviously. I was pretty much out of commission at that point, but Carl and I became good friends during our stay in the infirmary tent. Started talkin’ an awful lot and eatin’ together. He showed me how to smoke grass out of a shotgun!” Clint proclaimed in a if you can believe it or not type ofexcitement. “Hell, Carl was the best man at my wedding and I’m the godfather of his children,” he added proudly.

“So… him saving you made you not racist?”

Clint looked at him and thought, puzzled for a moment. “It cured me,” he said finally.

“Cured you?”

“Yeah, I think that’s more what it was like. It wasn’t until a black man who didn’t even like me risked his ass to save my life that I realized we all got a lot more in common than we got different with each other. And as I got to know him better, the more it proved the point to me. All the stuff my dad had told me growin’ up was exposed as phony and that evilness left me. I became more openminded and appreciative of all people, you know? It dawned on me that those black soldiers loved this country just as much I did. Loved it even more, tell you the truth. Back then they didn’t do all this sneaky stuff to keep colored folk down. Businesses printed it right on the door, lawmakers signed it into law with a ceremony and a round of applause. That racism was right in your face at all times back then,” he blew out air through his mouth and raised his eyebrows like he was listening to a story that he couldn’t see having a happy ending.

“Imagine how it must have felt to go fight and die for a country that didn’t respect you worth a damn,” Clint said to him. “Could you do it?”

Ethan shook his head no. “I don’t think I could.”

“Me either,” Clint said before hacking again. “That’s when I realized I had been all wrong. That the things I thought and felt were bad. I resolved myself to treat everyone with respect after that and it’s done me a lot of good in my life.”

Ethan smiled at him again, but genuinely this time. “You keep referring to it like it’s some kind of a disorder,” he said, and Clint returned the good cheer from his own face.

“Caught that, did ya?” he replied admiringly.

“Yeah. Why is that?”

“That’s how I think of it, I s’pose. It’s just as nasty and cruel as the stuff growing in my lungs,” he said tapping at his chest now with the tip of his index finger. “Except it’s even worse. Racism is like cancer of the soul, and unlike the cancer I got, it can spread from one person to another. Passes down through generations like a family tradition. It was developed for the very thing it’s so effective at. The same thing that’s kept it alive all these years. This country has been trying to cough that sickness up for a real long time,” he said pensively.

“What thing is that?”

“Keepin’ white folk like us ahead,” he replied.

Ethan watched him observantly. He was still extremely enveloped in listening to the old man speak, but the melancholy of his truths began to settle in. The thought of Eric the last time he had seen him crept into his mind. He pictured those black vacant eyes leading into something monstrous beneath the surface. A black mass, or expanse of a sticky black substance with a consistency like tar pulsating under his flesh. Racism is like cancer of the soul. He watched the apparition of Eric sitting in his chair, staring at him with that piercing malice. Visions of the blackness stretching itself throughout Eric’s limbs like tentacles of some alien creature appeared in his head. It encapsulated Eric’s heart and squeezed it until it shriveled and died under the pressure. It all converged within the depths of his abdominal cavity in one grotesque glob. Then, it snaked up Eric’s throat and into his brain, which also became coated and engrossed in this black, viscous… thing. Suddenly, Eric’s head flung back, and his mouth fell open as the stuff started to ooze out of his eyes and mouth and nose and ears. Leaking down the sides of his face and trailing down his arms. Then the image of his father began to overlap Eric as they both looked like translucent ghosts showing through each other while the thick sludge kept flowing from every orifice of their faces. Ethan was startled by Clint touching him gently on the shoulder and he broke free from the trance he was in and its subsequent imaginings. 

“You okay?” Clint asked him timidly. “Didn’t mean to spook you.”

“Yeah, sorry,” Ethan replied in a daze. “It’s just so terrible.”

“You ain’t wrong,” Clint said while nodding in agreement with him again. “For a while there it seemed like we were makin’ real progress, but things are out of hand these days. Almost like it was bubblin’ up underground or wherever it had ran away to hide.”

“I was going to ask what you think about everything going on right now.”

“I think it’s sad. I ain’t got but six months left on this Earth and I am sorely disappointed I have to go out during this state of affairs.”

Ethan’s eyes fell from Clint’s face down to his feet when he said this. He felt like he had let him down personally even though he knew it wasn’t his fault.

“You said it’s worse because it spreads, but lung cancer doesn’t have a cure and it sounds like you cured your racism though,” Ethan said partially for the explanation and partially to change the subject.

“I didn’t cure myself. What cured me was understandin’. Real understandin’. Clearly books ain’t cuttin’ it for everybody and you can’t well expect everyone to share a life-or-death situation with somebody they dislike for bullshit reasons they’ve made up in their head,” Clint stated with backwoods philosophy.

“I guess that’s true.”

“It is true. There really ain’t no cure for it that we know of. Can’t go get a shot in the arm the way we beat that god awful virus. See, people are so wrapped up in their individualism these days that they forget they belong to something greater by default too. They go around being selfish not realizin’ that they’re as much a part of the broader community we all share as each cell in my lung makes up the organ itself. When you start gettin’ that sickness, that soul cancer, it starts spreadin’ through society. Growin’. Like a tumor. And I promise you that is not a benign condition.”

“But if we can’t cure it, what is there to do about it?”

Clint paused and contemplated the question. Then his eyes lit up in an aha! moment as he raised his finger in the air declaredly. “You can’t cure it, no. But you can do things to prevent it. The way you’re s’posed to eat your fruits and veggies, take your vitamins and break a sweat every day to help ward off the type of sickness I got, keepin’ a generally healthy society prevents people from becomin’ susceptible to that sickness. Does that make sense?”

Ethan nodded his head up and down as he continued processing what he had just heard. “Yeah, it kind of does. But how do you have a healthy society?”

Clint rolled his eyes and then flashed a sarcastic grin at him while motioning towards the water where Cameron was prodding the marshy earth with a stick he had found, turning in circles as he did. “See that? He doesn’t have a care in the world right now. Just outside enjoyin’ himself. In a few years that boy’s life is going to get very competitive. Academically, financially, socially. And after it starts, it may never end. I imagine you can relate to that. Everything is designed to pit us against each other and see who is willin’ to exhaust themselves to get ahead of the next guy. If you’re not generatin’ dollars, you don’t mean squat to the system. But the system ain’t exactly setup to encourage free thought or do much other than condition us for our adult lives, which are expected to be spent chasin’ that American dream like a heroin junkie chases the dragon.”

He paused and gave a deep, dry cough that sounded painful. “The people, the cells of the fabric of society, some of them start gettin’ sick and mutatin’,” he began again. “When they get those dark thoughts and feel like there’s no one to turn to, bad people find ‘em and give ‘em a bad purpose in life. Tell ‘em black people or Mexicans or Muslims are to blame for all their problems, not themselves. Make ‘em feel justified walkin’ into a movie theatre or shoppin’ center and shootin’ it up.”

“Yeah,” Ethan said glumly.

Clint gave him a remorseful glance before continuing his speech. “All I’m sayin’ is we gotta start livin’ for the good of the people or our own greed and recklessness is going to be our downfall. If you have a lot of people walkin’ around that feel the need to take innocent lives for the way they look or where they come from or what they believe in, that right there is an indication to me that somethin’ is wrong. Because people ain’t born like that, understand? That’s a product of what we’re doing here,” he said while motioning his hands through the air around him.

“People want to sunder the nation, thinkin’ their side is pullin’ all the weight anyway, but they don’t realize this country thrives on the balance we achieve when we all share basic principles. Those basic principles were betrayed, and it opened pandora’s box on all of us. You get the good with the bad on both sides of the coin. See, I think it’s more like cuttin’ a quarter in half down the middle, as opposed to takin’ a half of a cake or somethin’. Once you split it, the two halves don’t retain their value and if you do manage to put it back together, it will forever bear the scars of the separation it endured and it probably still won’t be worth a damn anyway. People let their differences get in the way so much they forget that our differences are mostly those of method and not of purpose.”

Ethan regarded him with serious thought for a moment. “I don’t think that’s ever going to change, do you?”

Clint sighed heavily and looked at Ethan before turning to look straight ahead of himself. “No, I guess I don’t. Wish I did, but I don’t. However, that’s no reason to fall through on your obligations, follow?”

Ethan shook his head, confused. “No, I don’t follow,” he said truthfully.

“I read it in one of those yuppie Harvard guy’s books once. We got a responsibility to the ‘underlyin’ fraternity of ordinary men everywhere’,” he said with air quotes.

“Meaning what, exactly?”

“Meanin’ the world might go to hell in a handbasket no matter what you do, but you’re still liable for whatever you can do. You stand up for what’s right, you treat people right, you do what you’re in control of doing to make things right,” Clint said. “I can’t cure what’s killin’ me either, but I’m doing what I can to enjoy spendin’ time with the people I love and indulgin’ in some of the simple pleasures of life before I’m gone.”

Ethan looked down towards the pond at Cameron again who was now fully occupied with trying to capture a moth with his bare hands and he smiled. “And doing good deeds along the way, clearly.”

Clint laughed and it made him cough again, this time producing little drops of blood on his lips which he patted with his handkerchief. “I’m trying to do all the good I can on my way out. Do my part to give the next generation the best chance it can have by passin’ along some useful wisdom to that little one down there. Helpin’ people who look like they need a friend when I can,” he looked at Ethan with that deep empathy again as he finished speaking.

“Well, you’ve certainly helped me today, Clint,” he replied. “I haven’t felt this good in a long time and you had everything to do with it.”

Clint smiled at him and then down at Daisy, who was now sitting up with her head on Ethan’s lap. “And who is this?” he asked excitedly.

“This is Daisy. She belonged to Eric. He gave her to me the day before he did it,” Ethan said with a croak.

Clint stroked Daisy’s head gently and looked at Ethan with a profound sadness. “She’s going to be part of this healing process too. Man’s best friend was no exaggeration. Just havin’ that reliance factor will keep givin’ you a reason to get up every mornin’. Hell, she got you out here today, didn’t she?”

Ethan gave him a quick grin and nodded his head. “Yeah, she sure did,” he said while patting her on the head. Her tail started bushwhacking behind her as he did.

“Well, Ethan, it was a pleasure to meet you,” Clint said while extending his hand and flashing his yellowed teeth again. Ethan clasped it and smiled back at him.

“You too, Clint. I really appreciated this talk.”

He nodded dutifully at Ethan as though acknowledging his work were done and stood up slowly, favoring his left knee as he did so. “Hey, Cam! Come on up, it’s time to head home for supper!” he shouted down at his grandson.

“Okay, Pop-Pop!” the boy replied gleefully before dashing up the slight gradient of the field towards them.

“Clint, don’t forget your ball,” Ethan said realizing he had been holding it the entire time.

“Thank you,” he replied softly. “And you don’t forget to do your part.”

“I won’t,” he said. And he meant it.

The Freedom in Failure

What is the first thing that comes to mind when you hear the word, “failure”? If you’re like most people, it’s probably other words that carry extremely negative connotations. Defeat, disappointment, losing – things that make us feel inadequate or deficient in the eyes of the world and as a result, our own eyes. But what if you could train your brain to feel indifferent towards failure? To recognize it for what it truly is – something that is neither good nor bad by itself. Experiencing failure is necessary for us to gather data so that the next time we attempt something, we do it with a better, more informed approach. We try again and do it slightly better, but if our goals are worthwhile ones – then we’ll most likely fail again. You repeat that process over and over again knowing that each time you analyze what went wrong or what could have been done better, you get to regroup and come at it again with a different and improved strategy. When you take the time to examine yourself, your shortcomings, and your process – it enables you to seek new opportunities with confidence that the next try will be a success because of what your prior failures have taught you. In that way, the act of failing has an important purpose. Each failure, viewed through the proper lens, contains a lesson that gives you another piece of the puzzle you need to assemble your ideal life. This hopefully leads you to the goals you envisioned, but if not, it is guaranteed to lead you to other alternatives that will still leave you better off than when you began your journey towards achievement. Failure is an inextricable component of progress – and continuous progress is the whole game. Therefore, fearing failure is not only wholly irrational, but it is also holding you back from moving your life in the right direction.

I happen to think a lot of people end up settling into a level of comfort with their lives and never trying to achieve what they really want because of their fear of failure. People love to mask that fear with the guise of “practicality” or “realistic expectations.” But if we really dig a little bit below the surface, most people don’t push themselves towards their dreams because there’s always uncertainty, and uncertainty leads to doubt. They doubt their ability to succeed in the undertaking and the idea of putting 110% of their effort into something and having it not work out scares the shit out of them. As a result, most people end up living a life that requires 50% of their best effort but that offers them what they consider a safe place to be. Nothing glamorous, but enough – and that’s fine. The only time I think it’s not fine is if you’re suffering through the monotony of life not enjoying what you do every day. If your intuition is really sending you constant signals that you’re not where you’re meant to be – or that life could be so much better and that there is so much more out there waiting for you – then it’s a problem to settle for less than pursuing that possibility. You’re going to die one day and win or lose, succeed or fail… you’ll be happy later on that you had the courage and audacity to try. Unfortunately, people often sully their childhood dreams for a paycheck. As life goes on, responsibilities pile up and it becomes a necessity to establish financial security for themselves and their families. That’s why it’s particularly important for younger people to recognize how important it is to try new things and allow themselves to fail as much as possible without giving a fuck. The beauty here is that you are capable of redefining failure for yourself the same way you redefine success. Find the courage to tell society to take its idea of what your life should look like and shove it – and never let your decisions or actions be dictated by other people’s opinions of you.

When I think back to my younger self, I have a lot of regrets, but my biggest one is confidently that I didn’t let myself fail enough. I was always very self-conscious – I cared way too much about how I looked and what people would think of me. It stopped me from giving new things an earnest chance and who knows what kind of memorable life experiences I missed out on because of that. I’m fortunate to have fallen into a situation early in my life that put me in the driver’s seat of my destiny. I’m also fortunate that at 25 years old I was smart enough to see it that way and really sink my teeth into it. But when I go over what it took to get to this point in my life, I realize that it was a never-ending series of failures that paved the way to this moment. No matter how bruised my ego was or how low I felt about all my failed attempts to start making a life for myself or trying to be successful out in the world, I eventually healed enough to gain the courage to go and do it again. If you’re reading this blog right now, this is a perfect example of me going for it without being concerned with the outcome. Your relationship with, and perspective of, failure, will permeate every aspect of your life. If it’s a relationship and perspective characterized by fear, you won’t be able to make a move on anything you want to do. You will remain frozen in a state of inaction. If it’s one of indifference or the acceptance of failure as a vital part of success, you will free yourself up to take your shots in life – and some of them will eventually hit the mark. I want to walk you through how failing repeatedly created the path forward for me in my own life.

A little over seven years ago I was living in a one-bedroom apartment with two of my friends in Boulder, Colorado. I worked as a dishwasher and a fry cook for $10.50 an hour and slept on a couch that we got for free on Craigslist that multiple people had vomited on during house parties. The neighborhood squirrels found a way in and out of the apartment so I would frequently be woken up by the sound of a frantically panting tree mouse scurrying around the living room. One of my roommates worked as a line cook at the same restaurant I did and lived in a crawl space under the stairs like Harry Potter. It was a mess. After my stint in the restaurant biz, I went back to my roots in manual labor as a landscaper and mover. As I write this, I am overwhelmed with gratitude that in order to live I no longer have to push wheelbarrows full of rocks up steep inclines in sweltering heat or carry refrigerators down six flights of narrow stairs. I’m going to resolve not to complain about anything work-related from this point forward. Anyway, the whole reason I lived like this for a year was because I took a chance and dropped out of college to move to Colorado where I was absolutely certain my future was going to unfold as a successful marijuana grower and that I would become known as the “King of Cannabis” – it’s okay, you can laugh. It was goofy.

When I turned 21, I immediately got my paperwork done to work in the recreational cannabis industry. I was over the moon excited, beaming with optimism, and super fucking naïve about what was waiting for me. In no way is my personal experience with the industry indicative of all experiences (or even most) working in it or reflective of the industry as a whole. I still fully support the industry and have met wonderful people through pursuing that career path – but there’s a lot of bullshit too. With no prior experience, I ended up encountering the same issues I had in any other line of work I applied for as a college drop-out with no real discernible skills to speak of. I was offered $10-$15 an hour to sit in a chair for 8 to 10 hours a day and trim weed. So, it ended up sucking just as bad – and quite honestly even worse – than the other jobs I had been working. The only difference was that I got to hold, and smell weed all day… and I cannot tell you how quickly the novelty of that wore off. I wanted a shot to prove myself and after gritting my teeth through three months of working menial jobs for numerous dispensaries – no one seemed interested in giving me one. In true 2015 Nicholas fashion, my impatience led me to going a more unconventional route.

I ended up working for a large grow operation in the southern part of Colorado. I got hands-on experience with growing the plants and was able to learn first-hand the entire process that goes into producing cannabis for wholesale. There was only one catch… it wasn’t exactly legal. It started off great and I was trying to ingratiate myself with the crew and do my part to bring value to the operation as much as possible. I even got the chance to be fully responsible for 16 plants of my own from start to finish in the outdoor season to see what I could do. The problem was that I was young and stupid and broke. Growing cannabis properly costs a considerable amount of money, and I didn’t have enough to cover the resources I needed (soil, pots, nutrients, materials for a greenhouse, etc.) for the growing season. I ended up making a deal that was terrible for me just so I could get a solo grow under my belt and after all the sweat and months of demanding work I put into my plants, when I had to give up what I owed – I realized I had been taken advantage of. I got screwed. It wasn’t nefariously done per se, but they used my lack of experience and knowledge against me, and I paid the price for it. It really fractured my trust with the group of people I was involved with, and I wasn’t emotionally capable of looking at it the way I do now. At the time, I was pissed off and was confronted with making $10 an hour again and not being able to pay my bills or moving back to the East Coast to cool off and collect myself and try something new. I ended up choosing the latter. Now, after reflecting on the whole situation in hindsight, I realize that was my first crash course in the art of negotiation – and I failed badly at it. That has turned out to be one of the best lessons I have ever learned.

When I got back to New York I felt defeated. I was despondent to the point that I really thought my whole existence was defined by moving out to Colorado and having my dreams trounced and ending up back near my hometown in upstate New York looking for work. I felt like a complete and total failure – and I really believed life was never going to get better again. I split wood outside in the middle of winter and worked as a farm hand literally shoveling shit for a living. I was sleeping on a different couch, this one in my grandparent’s basement, and waking up at 5am every day to work tough jobs just so I could make enough to afford gas, cigarettes, and booze. I was physically exhausting myself and getting nowhere at the same time. When they say life is a series of ups and downs – I was halfway to China at this point.

The following spring, I had the opportunity to move to New York City. I really didn’t think of myself as a city person, and the proposition seemed daunting – but when I looked around me and observed my life in its present form – it made the decision pretty easy for me. What the hell did I have to lose? It turns out that that decision ended up being one of the best I ever made… and it still took about half a decade for the ROI from it to materialize. I absolutely loved NYC (particularly my neighborhood on the Upper West Side), I got to reconnect with several of my closest childhood friends who were also living there, and it ended up leading me to the job opportunity that has evolved into a total transformation of my professional and financial circumstances. But it was a grind to get there. When I first got to the city, I was still broke as shit. Being broke anywhere is tough – being broke in Manhattan is torture.

I went all over the city turning in resumés hoping to get a shot to bartend because I knew the pay was relatively good and I knew there were other perks to the lifestyle that I was still interested in at the time. I don’t drink anymore, but when I first got to NYC, I was like a kid in a candy shop… or an alcoholic in a sea of endless bars, clubs, and taverns. I offered to start as a barback with the possibility of working up, offered to take expensive classes I couldn’t really afford to get up to speed on how to make specialty drinks, and followed-up with every place I applied to – and I got a whopping zero calls back. As it turns out, people aren’t particularly interested in a 6’7” 250+ pound barback or bartender. As in most instances in my life when my back was against the wall and I really needed to find work, I relied on my size advantage to get employment. I applied as a bouncer at numerous bars and was hired quickly.

As you can probably imagine, bouncing in New York City gave me a lot of stories and a unique experience. I met tons of people I liked that I worked with or that were regulars at our establishments. I worked for a company that owned eight different bars around Manhattan, so I was shipped around different neighborhoods and really got all the bang for my buck out of the job. Truthfully, I’m glad I did it because it eventually led to me getting sober – even though it initially led me to being worse than I was originally (because free booze). But spending 50+ hours a week standing on your feet in bars and being the designated confronter of assholes really weighs on your spirit after a while. People threaten you, call you names, spit at you, and try to fight you. You have to escort people out who are vomiting all over the place. You have to deal with people selling drugs. You have to break into bathroom stalls while people are actively fucking. I had someone take a shit on the floor once. Trying to maintain a level of decency in New York City’s nightlife scene is like trying to be a sheriff in the wild west – you just end up settling for not having dead bodies everywhere. You couple all of this good stuff with the ever-present possibility that you might get shot, stabbed, or jumped by a group of people for the cost of a corner bodega sandwich with chips and a drink per hour and it starts making you think that you should close this chapter of your life sooner rather than later.

I’m still not ready to divulge the details of my current job for numerous reasons, but the gist of it is that I ended up buying into someone else’s vision for an intellectual product they had created. I believed that I was savvy enough in business and had the intuitive skills to leverage along with teaching myself the operational ins and outs of an online enterprise to help them really ramp up what they were doing. When I first came up with the idea to work together, they couldn’t even pay me $500 a week – so I started by helping to write copy for newsletters, website edits, and miscellaneous things for a few hundred dollars here and there on the side of my bouncing schedule. I would get home at 5am, wake up at noon, do some work, and then get ready to go back out on sheriff duty. Eventually, I leaned into my lesson from my failed negotiation in Colorado to help me present an offer that I felt was fair to both of us. It allowed me to put my fulltime focus and effort on this business venture while also working around their inability to guarantee me income. I put myself in a position where I was either going to deliver results that greatly benefited both of us, or I was going to fail and have to hit the job market again. I rolled the dice on myself once more despite the unfavorable outcomes of the past – I tried again without fearing the possibility of failure.

Needless to say, that decision did work out for me this time and continues to do so. But even that was a series of failed attempts before it really got going. My revenue target for the business the first month I started working full-time on it missed the mark by 80%. It was demoralizing and I questioned myself after bringing in way less than the minimum requirement I needed to support myself financially. But I felt conviction that I would get it right – so instead of dwelling on that failure I analyzed what went wrong, poured over information I found on Google, YouTube, and in books – and then I tried again. I committed to studying and applying simultaneously and sure enough, things started improving month over month, and year over year. To this day, I am always trying to teach myself something useful to do my job better. I try to learn something beneficial that can be used in my personal or professional life every single day. It sucks when an idea doesn’t work, but I no longer let it discourage me at all because I understand now that failure is another way of learning what I need to know to do things better the next time I try. I am all-in on making progress continuously and never worrying about anything being perfect. That’s been the secret sauce to this whole transformation. In fact, most of the best performing aspects of our business today are pieces of other things we tried that flopped initially and that we spliced together or came up with more inventive ways to deploy.

My point is this – if you dig into the self-help sphere or study any admirable businessperson who has found success in life in an honest way, you will undoubtedly hear something about the importance of failure. Some say, “Failure is the mother of all success” and others say, “Fail forward.” This blog post is essentially me using my life story to try to illustrate that same premise. If you fear failure, you fear success. Because you are never going to get one without the other. If you can internalize that truth and find the courage to reframe your mindset around failure so that you can experience it with indifference and channel your intelligence to use it to create a better opportunity to succeed on the next attempt, you will find yourself getting closer to your goals. Little wins compound over time into big wins, and when you approach life with the right attitude, your losses can actually set you up for much bigger wins down the road. There is freedom in failure when we recognize it as a temporary setback to learn from, rather than something final that crushes us. It can be painful, but all forms of growth are painful. Accept it, embrace it, utilize it. If failing is the worst outcome, realize that you can’t lose because failing doesn’t really mean anything. It only has as much power over you as you choose to give it. You have the ability to take every obstacle, every challenge, and every setback in your life and turn it into raw material that you can use to achieve your wildest dreams.

Remember: Failure is an inextricable component of progress – and continuous progress is the whole game.

Be Your Own Best Friend

I don’t think any of us can understate the value of genuine friendship. It’s one of the great joys of life and something we should always cherish when we find it. But relocating across the country away from my existing social network and not having the time (or frankly the desire) to create a new one has taught me an enormous lesson about the value of being emotionally self-reliant – or “being your own best friend.” I’m extremely fortunate to know I have some of the greatest friends in the world living in other cities and make every effort to see them when my schedule permits. I get that needed interaction with them in spread out blocks of time now since we can’t just meet up whenever after work these days. There’s a mutual respect there that, no matter how much time elapses between seeing each other, it feels just like yesterday and nothing changes.

A lot of us are still readjusting to the nuances of socialization as covid-related things seem to cool off or just become less concerning to us. I for one know I did everything possible to make my life fit within the dynamics of pandemic living and I’ve been finding it difficult to break that routine – mostly because it’s highly effective for me. My day to day is literally curated for maximum output and productivity while avoiding physical and mental burnout. It’s a balancing act – one that I’ve gotten particularly good at the last ten months. However, I couldn’t incorporate everything I would have liked into this approach, and as a result, had to make some difficult choices along the way. The easiest thing to give up in order to make more time so that I could sustain my work schedule while still prioritizing physical exercise and seven to eight hours of sleep each day was my social life.

I don’t expect other people to forfeit their entire social lives to build a business with the type of fervor I have. I think it would be unappealing at best for most people. I also don’t think it’s particularly healthy or sustainable in the long-term. But I want to be as straightforward as possible about the process of ascension in the entrepreneurial landscape and with the stage that we’re at with our company, that is what’s required of me right now if we want to go the distance. Since March 2020, I have been working like a man possessed by the devil himself – and results don’t lie. I have an awesome group of people around me (virtually) that has grown larger this past year and helps me move the ball forward consistently. That is what keeps me energized and makes it all possible – seeing my long-term ambitions in the distance and understanding the sacrifices I have to make right now in order to attain them. I’m voluntarily trading near-sighted pleasure for long-term freedom. Nevertheless, I’m human, and this lifestyle can be difficult to maintain and some days the voluntary solitude feels like it might be slipping into isolation territory – and that can be a heavy feeling. So, I want to talk about loneliness and how to overcome it.

I’ve had a tendency to isolate myself throughout periods of my life, particularly when I was abusing drugs and alcohol in my teens and early twenties. Although what I do now somewhat shadows those moments, I find that they’re related but quite different. See, this is the first time I’ve been able to forego regular socialization for a purpose – not because I feel like shit or because I’m sad, but because I have a goal. A goal that’s going to require me to role my sleeves up and work harder and more diligently than many other intelligent and talented people in the world if I want to have a shot at reaching it. A goal that has to be top of mind every single day and cannot be secondary to anything else if I want it to become reality. A goal that has given me purpose, and that I give back my attention, energy, and heart to in return. I’m so determined to accomplish this goal that it prevents me from falling into a depression where I then feel the need to self-medicate with substances or search for other forms of escapism – I’ve been alcohol free for over three years now and I’ll take a hit of a joint every so often but haven’t touched anything more than that in even longer. That’s the power of purpose. I plan on covering substance abuse (alcohol in particular) at some point, but today I want to stick with this idea of learning how to be your own best friend. It’s something I’m still learning how to do, and some days I really suck at it – but it’s an important relationship to develop and foster over time if you want to have a chance to pursue your passions and change the trajectory of your life in a meaningful way. It’s been a central component of my ability to push through the toughest times in my life psychologically.  

I love all of my closest friends dearly. Asking me who my best friend is feels like you’re asking me which one I love more. I really don’t want to answer that question, and I’m proud to say that I legitimately don’t think I could…. so, I’m my best friend instead. I know you’re thinking this is probably going to be a big ego thing and are rolling your eyes already, but bear with me here. I’m not talking about having a grandiose sense of self or being a jackass. I just mean being fully comfortable with yourself – being able to relax and think positive thoughts about yourself when you’re alone. Genuinely loving yourself. I have humility and I don’t think I have the right to judge anyone else… but I also realized that I can’t be so quick to judge myself either. If you think it’s acceptable to talk badly about somebody else’s way of life or judge them for their current position without knowing their story or ever walking a day in their shoes, then you need to stop right there because you have another step to complete before getting to what we’re discussing next. You need to unpack whatever part of you is so unhappy or insecure that it makes you want to pull other people down into that dark place with you.

But here’s the deal – you can’t be the best version of yourself until you reach a real level of self-acceptance and self-love that far too many of us are neglecting. If you’re a good person, you know exactly how leniently and nonjudgmentally you approach other people’s problems. You’re empathetic and you never want to exacerbate anybody’s negative feelings about themselves – and from the outside looking in, you know most of the time it’s way worse in their head than it is in reality. You probably approach these situations in a gentle manner and offer support to those people. But when it comes to yourself, do you offer that same kind of grace in your way of thinking? I know I didn’t.

Somewhere along the line I noticed that I was having a lot more patience and understanding for everybody else, but if I screwed things up or had an off day where I didn’t produce at the level I’d like for whatever reason – I would judge myself really harshly and beat myself up about it. I would kick myself when I was already down, and it would make course-correcting and getting back on track all the more difficult to accomplish. I was handicapping myself. If there’s one thing I’ve learned about success thus far in my journey, it’s that it doesn’t matter how many times you get punched in the gut – but how fast you can recover from the hardest hits you take impacts your chances a lot. Just keep moving forward has to be your mantra, and I promise you that no solution exists that involves beating yourself up. It took me a long time to identify this fault in my way of thinking and behavior, but I’m really glad I did because ever since I shifted my perspective on my own humanity, I’m able to push myself just as hard each day but also cut myself a break when things don’t go according to plan. Because the reality is that if you hate on yourself, you’ve got no shot at achieving anything in life. That’s just the truth. It’s game over before you even lace up your cleats.

If you struggle with this internal hardship too, I want to give you a new way to approach your faults and flaws: Start asking yourself what you would do if a stranger or one of your closest friends came up to you and told you they were feeling the way you feel right now about whatever it is that’s causing you pain or distress. Whether it’s shit that happened recently that’s causing you acute pain, or if it’s stuff you don’t like about yourself or your past that you’ve been carrying around for a long time – ask yourself that, answer it honestly, and then have that same level of consideration for yourself. Give yourself that gift because you’ll find that it’s an extremely practical and effective method of processing your troubles and coming to terms with them. That’s the only way you’re going to be able to turn the page and make forward progress – and the ability to do that is essential if you want to have success doing anything in life.

We tend to be our own worst critic and judge ourselves unfairly in ways we wouldn’t dream of doing to other people – so start looking at yourself and the things that are weighing down on you right now from an objective standpoint. You’re too close to them and you need to step outside of yourself and look at them from another angle. Other people are going to judge you throughout your entire life, and it’s really important to understand that that doesn’t matter. At all. You have to realize that nothing that goes on in anybody else’s mind can hurt you, but what goes on in your own mind absolutely can. You need to build up your self-esteem and see your best friend when you’re looking in the mirror so that you can have a gentle, supportive approach with yourself when things go awry and so you can find peace and strength when you need it most. Otherwise, it leaves you vulnerable to the bullshit negativity other people impose on you – and trust me, they will.

The funny thing is that judgmental people are actually showing you how they feel about themselves. They’re deflecting attention from their own flaws and insecurities because they live in fear of being exposed for who they truly are (or how they perceive themselves). Once you know that, you realize it doesn’t matter what they think, say, or do anymore – and that opens the path to an extraordinary life for you to pursue your passions without being held back by anybody else. It creates tranquility. The second you hear someone start talking shit about somebody else’s life or dragging them through the mud for their problems, understand what that is telling you about the person speaking and immediately stop listening to them. Chances are that if they’re saying it to you about somebody else, they probably say it about you to somebody else too. Tune those people out and limit your interactions with them. Do things that feed your self-esteem instead. If you do, you’ll find that you’ll be way more interested in building other people up than tearing them down – and that’s just a better way to live.

You don’t necessarily have to be dealing with feelings of loneliness to experience the benefits of being your own best friend either. You can have a great support system and I would still say this is worth your time to understand and work on. People are finicky creatures full of irrational and finicky emotions… and even the people who love you most won’t always see eye to eye with you or understand what ignites your passion. Also, success by definition is excelling others in some area of life and some people can’t handle it when they see you excelling them. It may be a hard pill to swallow, but if you’re serious about changing your life for the better you need to be prepared to see your circle get smaller, at least initially. Success can be lonely, and not everyone you start your journey with will stand with you as you continue to climb. Whether it’s a forced situation or not, you need to be comfortable walking alone if you really want to reach your full potential and live your truth. Happiness is an inside job no matter what, so understand that you’re not pushing anybody away by becoming self-reliant – you’re just developing an invaluable internal environment that can help you weather any storm.

You also don’t have to be pursuing financial success or want to be great at business in order to gain a lot of value from this approach. Success is a subjective term to me, and I think it’s imperative that you define it for yourself, so you know what you’re aiming at when you start moving towards it. That helps you dictate where your energy is best expended and what actions and habits are going to be most beneficial to helping you get there. Regardless of what success means to you, it’s going to be an arduous journey to achieve it. If it were easy, everybody would be successful… and all great or worthwhile things should be hard. The more difficult it is, the more you’ll savor the process of getting to your goals. You’re going to need to be your own best friend to make that trek because as you encounter adversity, obstacles, and challenges – you’ll be confronted with the desire to quit and give up on things. If you can’t look within yourself and find that inner hype man or cheerleader to pull you up out of that mental funk, you’re not going to be celebrating many victories along the way. Nobody has ever accomplished anything difficult if they didn’t believe in themselves to do it first. So please start cultivating a healthy and supportive relationship with yourself today – it will carry you to great heights and there’s really no better feeling than knowing you don’t have to rely on anybody else to get the motivation needed to keep going and to keep pushing forward when things get tough.

In Summary:

You don’t gotta fuck with me, I fuck with me.” – Russ, Utah Freestyle