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40 Things I Learned On My Way To 40

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  1. It’s only a dog eat dog world if you’ve convinced yourself you’re a dog.
  2. The only substitute for patience is frustration.
  3. There is no such thing as a bad day. Just a bad interpretation of a good one.
  4. There’s nothing wrong with who you are. There is something wrong with remaining that person.
  5. You can only be yourself if that’s who you plan on spending the rest of your life with.
  6. Love yourself enough to love those around you just as much.
  7. Love yourself enough to know who to keep around you.
  8. Love yourself.
  9. If you think you don’t have insecurities, it’s probably your insecurities telling you to think that way.
  10. What’s the point of having a V12 engine with a terrible navigation system?
  11. Direction is as relevant as speed.
  12. Control is as relevant as direction.
  13. Don’t be afraid to get behind the wheel.
  14. Read the manual before you get behind the wheel.
  15. If I knew then what I know now, I still wouldn’t have listened.
  16. You’ll know if what you’re doing is working if you get the results you desire. If you don’t, it ain’t.
  17. How many people would call you if you didn’t call them?
  18. Life gets easier if you’re paying attention.
  19. The cost of success may be relationships.
  20. Being alive has as many constraints as it does freedoms.
  21. No one ever works as hard as they think they do.
  22. Being an asshole in response to an asshole only reaffirms their train of thought…and eventually turns you into an asshole.
  23. Whoever said “ignorance is bliss” was ignorant.*
  24. Children get the gifts of love & friendship. Adults get the opportunity to earn it.
  25. Things you take for granted will eventually get taken back.
  26. Why do we assert our individuality over those who accept us for who we are and conform to those intent on changing us?
  27. Fight your boss, not your spouse.
  28. Fight your boss, not your friends.
  29. Don’t fight your boss. Just get a new job.
  30. Everything I have ever accused others of, I have done myself.
  31. The people least likely to forgive tend to be the ones most likely to screw up.
  32. The hard part is defining success. The easy part is getting there. Good luck with both.
  33. Selfishness is the only disease that is also its’ own cure. When you take it at face value, you take. When you truly are a self-preservationist, you quickly realize you cannot survive for, or by yourself and give.
  34. Men are just as emotional as women. We just cry with our fists.
  35. Why is an opinion just an opinion until it’s your opinion?
  36. You’re a weirdo too. You just think you’re cool because you hang out with other weirdos.
  37. Faith belongs in places other than your Ipod playlist.
  38. Looks fade. Books fade. Respect doesn’t.
  39. Under promise and over deliver. That’s why you’ll be reading 45 things when the title says 40. Feels like you got something for free don’t it?
  40. Your head and your heart are not enemies.
  41. Under promise and over deliver.
  42. There’s nothing wrong with repeating a lesson until you get it right (see 41). No worries if you don’t learn your lesson however because…
  43. Life has a funny way of showing you the same photos until you get the picture.
  44. You can fight fire with fire but you’ll probably end up burning everything down.
  45. At some point, you have to stop being a victim of circumstance and start being a victim of deliberate intent.
  46. I still don’t know anything.
  47. Writing it down allows you to see how stupid you would’ve sounded had you said it aloud first.
  48. Life is short.
  49. Smurfs are shorter.
  50. Laugh a lot.

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Rest Easy Eric Curran a.k.a M.C Krispy E

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Almost every year for the past 6 years and on the same day, I’ve posted the same pic of me in the hospital  during my temporary and untimely demise  in 2015. A few weeks after I was back to “normal”, I asked Eric “Why’d you take the pics?” And he said, “I knew you would want to write about it if you lived.” Eric was right. Eric was often right and Eric always had my best interest at heart. I am going to miss my friend.

You ever meet someone and become friends immediately?! Well this was not the case with Eric. Before he was my manager at Morgan Stanley, I would often see this 6’4″, giant white guy walk up to the only black woman at work, say something then walk away without any hint of human emotion. Naturally I thought he was a jerk until I asked her “Yo, is that dude bothering you?” She laughed and proceeded to tell me he was a great person, which I ultimately got to experience first hand. Little did I know this Italian from Staten Island was more Brooklyn than most Brooklynites.

Eric was not with the shits!! If there were ever someone who lived their life in direct, honest and no uncertain terms, that would be Eric. He would ask me questions at work like “Why are the other consultants making more money than you?” I knew the answer to that question and so did he. Eric then proceeded to increase my salary by 15K. After arguing with all our managers that “You need to hire Alfred!”, they eventually did 1 year prior to the 2015 incident. In the hospital, one of my friends asked me, “What if you didn’t have health insurance when this happened?” I would be in debt for the rest of my life is the obvious answer. I still am in debt for the rest of my life but at least, it is to those who made sure I had a more enjoyable life and for that, I will gladly repay.

My mom loved to tell me the story of how she met Eric. After they told her I was going to be in the ICU for some time, she told the doctor “Well I’m not going anywhere.” She then hears a voice from that back of the room that says “Well I’m not going anywhere either!” That was Eric and in true form, he was at that hospital every single day until I was discharged.

Eric passed away in December 2021 of stage 4 cancer. After feeling faint on his way to my bbq, he went to get checked out and was diagnosed. During the past 5 years, Eric lost his mom, twin brother and dad. I can’t even begin to imagine what that must have felt like but I’m glad that pain he was feeling is no more.

It’s been a bit difficult to deal with it to be quite honest and I’ve been writing this in my head for years but never had the bravery or grace to accept that my friend wouldn’t be here soon. I also can’t imagine what it must be like to lose your entire family nucleus unexpectedly. In true Eric fashion however, I would like this to not be about me but whomever has lost someone and has been coping. I’ve always intimated that my life would not be as enriched as it was were it not for the people in it. The problem with that is there is also no way to deny that it feels empty without those who helped craft your path. Rather than focus on the negative, I would rather focus on the examples of duty, family and emotional intelligence. All concepts reinforced by Eric that have led me to have successful relationships since I’ve put them into practice.

From being my manager to my business partner, writer, book editor, artistic director, and most importantly, my friend, I am going to miss you MC Krispy E a.k.a “Enrique Pollazo!” And although you told me Enrique means Henry in Spanish and not Eric, it was too late!

Sidebar. The day I was discharged, while everyone was deciding what was best for me, no one had remembered that I would need clothes in order to leave the hospital. Eric shows up (unasked) with all the clothes I had on the day I coded, laundered and ready to go. I don’t know what I’ve done to deserve friends like this but i need to keep doing it! Sidebar complete.

Rest in Peace Eric. “Be Good.”

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Writing Your First Book / Should I Self Publish?

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I had the distinct pleasure of  participating in a panel discussion on writing your first book, presented by the Harlem chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc.  Alongside Jim St. Germain, Author – A Stone of Hope: A Memoir and Dr. Keneshia Nicole Grant, Author – The Great Migration and the Democratic Party: Black Voters and the Realignment of American Politics in the 20th Century.  We opined on pain points, benefits and strategies regarding our inaugural voyages into authorship. Feel free to watch for your self and I hope this provides some insight to all those looking to make the same voyage. Enjoy!

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What the NFT is a BEEPLE?

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On March 11 this year, the digital artist Beeple sold a collage of digital images from his “Everydays” series for nearly 70 million dollars as an NFT, or non-fungible token. And if that sentence confuses you, you’re not alone.

A non-fungible token is a unit of data on a digital ledger called a blockchain, where each NFT can represent a unique digital item, and thus they are not interchangeable. NFTs can represent digital files such as art, audio, video, and other forms of creative work. While the digital files themselves are infinitely reproducible, the NFTs representing them are tracked on their underlying blockchains and provide buyers with proof of ownership.” – Wikipedia

Still confused? Let the artist himself explain it, and learn how he went from NFT newbie to making the third most expensive artwork by a living artist in three months. Not to suggest Beeple is an overnight success. The “Everydays” series alone involved creating a piece of art every day since May 1, 2007 – and he hasn’t missed a day.

Check out some of Beeple’s amazing and controversial work below.

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