Picture this: A 38 year old African American man (yet
looks like he’s 28) eating at On-The-Border on a sunny Monday afternoon. He’s dressed
in straight leg slacks, button up pinstriped shirt, and sporting a Michael Kors
big face watch, with black rimmed reading glasses. While reading from his iPad
he sips on water with extra lemons, and takes full advantage of the chips and
salsa. White ear buds connect from his ears to his iPad as he bops his head
lightly to the music and looks deep in thought, yet approachable. We’ll call
him TJ.
Spoiler Alert! He’s not listening to rap music. A few
years ago he decided that gospel music makes him feel more peaceful, and now
listens to it regularly. Ok ok he’s not a saint; he mainly listens to it on
stressful work days. Today he’s prepping for a work meeting that needs to end
in his favor.
As he prepares for work, he lets his mind wander to his
other responsibilities. Work. Wife. Son. Church. He recently got married and
saying he’s happy feels like an understatement.
A happy family unit has always been what counted most to
TJ. In his mind, holidays are about family, work is about providing for a
family, and being married meant his house was a home.
Being married also gives
him a sense of stability and purpose that he’s never experienced, but always
yearned for.
Financial stability is important to TJ in the short and
long term. The long term benefits are obvious, but the short term situation is
more unique. TJ and his wife are living apart for the next year due to
circumstances and one of his major pain points is traveling time and costs. At
$400 per ticket and 3 visits per month the credit card bill is steadily
increasing.
His obstacle is the cities they’re flying between have
small airports and there are no direct flights. Travel time ranges from 6-10
hours each time they fly to see each other, so he spends a hell of a lot of amount
of time in airports. An optimistic attitude and the butterflies he still feels
when the plane lands is what gets him through.
Although genuinely happy, his life does not come without major
worries. He has a son from a previous relationship, and TJ worries how to bond
with his son who lives with the mother for the majority of the time. Two-part
homes are the norm for a lot of kids, but it’s wasn’t how TJ grew up and he
knows he over compensates by giving his son EVERYTHING. But now that his son
has everything materialistic, he’s started to value things over quality time
with TJ – how to course correct?
Another major
concern is how to expand his sales territory which is what brought him to
On-The-Border. Growing up TJ’s parents were only able to provide the bare
necessities and that motivates him to push himself harder. Expanding his
territory in the medical field is one way that he can secure his family’s
financial future and his role as the head of the household. Staying smart,
working out and (mostly) eating healthy give him the confidence and energy to tackle
these challenges.
As TJ looks around the restaurant he notices a young
family – mom and dad look happy and tired as they manage the task of having two
young children at a restaurant. He’s overcome with the sense of gratitude
thinking of the handful of gracious mentors who eased his burdens throughout
his life and is compelled to use that moment to “pay it forward.” As TJ
prepares to leave for a work appointment, he signals the waiter and anonymously
pays for the young family’s lunch – leaving with the type of satisfaction and
excitement that only comes from such kind behavior toward others. It wasn’t the
first time he’s done something like that and sure won’t be the last.
As he gets to the parking lot and opens the door to his
freshly washed silver Mercedes Benz, he silently laughs to himself, though not amused,
as he sees an older white couple stare at him a beat too long with quizzical
stares. Probably wondering what occupation this black guy had to have to afford
such a luxury – Must be something in sports.
Although he’s used to seeing that reaction, it’s still one
of his main frustrations and harshest realities of being a successful black man.
The combination of his earlier good deed mixed with the
feeling of being inaccurately judged is too much to hold in. TJ is never one to
play the victim, so he chooses to post positive words to over 850 friends on
Facebook before pulling out of the parking lot.
“Make good decisions” has deep meaning to his hometown
friends who know that the consequences of even the smallest wrong decision can
be jail time, unemployment, or even death. TJ sometimes feels like an anomaly
as his hometown neighbors tell stories about how he has always been different
from his peers. He prides himself on building discipline at an early age to stay
focused, and heed good advice.
On his drive back to work TJ almost stops by the mall to
check out a new watch. A couple of the doctors he works with are sporting
lavish watches and he has the urge to at the very least look… maybe purchase
one.
He justifies it in his mind, but at last minute changes his mind. His wife
is a big influencer and he thinks about how she would react. The watch suddenly
feels unnecessary.
TJ
calls his wife as he pulls into work and playfully brings up their imaginary
daughter. Even though they just got married, he wants a child, like yesterday, and frequently imagines what
it would be like. His ultimate picture of success is his family peacefully together,
enjoying and respecting each other with no worries. He’s confident about
solving new obstacles like figuring out how to manage an interfaith marriage,
and incorporating his son from a previous relationship into a new family.
As he gets off the phone with his wife and heads into
work, they make plans to FaceTime that evening after his sons soccer practice,
and his workout.
Walking into the hospital – where he works – he’s
friendly with the admins, and the female nurses innocently flirt. To his mind comes
the title of an old Chris Rock movie “I Think I Love My Wife,” and he confidently
talks back in his head - I KNOW I love my wife.
Nice post Sonia. Nice knowing TJ. I have a pretty good idea of him through your blog.Like the pictures.
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