Monday, October 28, 2013

The Good, The Bad, The New Yorker.


When I tell people that I am a writer/actress residing in New York City, they are immediately impressed and think I am filthy rich.

The truth is I have been forced to work in an opposing industry that requires me to channel the majority of my focus and energy toward something other than my ultimate “calling”.  This other industry is baby sitting for Manhattan’s Elite.

As I write this, I am laying in my bed at a decadent townhouse in the Upper West Side of Manhattan where I baby-sit a minimum of six hours a day, four days a week. As soon as the highly successful parents get home from working at their multi-million dollar careers, I hand the kids off to them, then go to my room, and use all of the energy I have left over to put towards the steps I need to take in order to acquire my multi-million dollar career.

While I have booked a few acting and modeling jobs that paid my rent in the past, there is no way to predict when I will book the next one or when the paycheck will clear the bank.  I am also beginning to receive sales from the eBook I published this summer, but with my eBook retailing at $2.99 I have to sell a lot of copies for it to benefit my checking account.

Now don’t get me wrong. I am incredibly happy in New York and I have had several experiences here that I would not have otherwise, and that’s what keeps me going. But, I do wish someone had sat me down and told me that while New York City is filled with opportunities I will never have elsewhere, I have to work those opportunities around making a living.

As soon as you get off the bus, train, car, plane, motorcycle, spaceship, or Learjet, that transported you here, you are immediately granted four forms of freedom:
1.     You can wear whatever you want to wear. The 2am Wal-Mart dress code is acceptable in broad daylight here.
2.     You can do whatever you want to do. The NYPD are actually quite lenient, they care more about arresting protesters and catching financial criminals than they do your marijuana possession.
3.     You can be whoever you want to be. That includes your sexuality. I swear a new brand of sexuality is born on a daily basis up here.
4.     You can say whatever you want to say. This goes beyond free speech. In New York if we don’t like you we tell you straight to your face; unlike those snobby west coast and southern folk that treat you like gold then talk trash about you behind your back.

However, while the idea of the city’s immediate liberties can be intoxicating, there are two downsides that the city leaves out when it solicits you to make the move.
1.     You have to make the money you need to make, in order to take the time you need to take to turn your dream into a reality. It becomes an internal battle between your stomach and your soul. Your stomach cries out for food to survive while your soul cries out for the initiative that drove you to purchase the one-way ticket. September of 2011 I experienced this war first hand when I went the entire month only eating bananas, peanuts, and free gold member coffee refills at Starbucks, as an effort to save money on food and put more money toward my modeling portfolio. At the end of the month I was not a pretty sight just ask my former roommate.
2.     Your best is often not good enough. Whether it’s something as miniscule as making a Usain Bolt dash for the bus that still leaves without you or belting your lungs out the best you can at a Broadway audition and still getting turned away, the city of dreams will make every attempt to diminish yours on a daily basis. This is why you must overcome the onset of depression that easily creeps in and hold your head high above the others. This is also why New Yorkers become cenacle over time.

So this is why New York City is the city that never sleeps. It’s filled with people working forty hours a week to feed their stomachs and another forty hours a week to feed their souls. It’s the only island that you will feel all alone in a sea of nine million people and the only place where you will feel complete creative freedom while feeling trapped in a concrete box.

Many people applaud my bold decision to drop out of college, quit my job, and buy a one-way ticket to New York City at twenty. What I did was incredibly brave and very few people have the courage to do what I did, and I applaud myself for my efforts along with them. They say if you can make in New York City you can make it anywhere, and I am living proof that, that statement is true. There’s six billion people in the world and only nine million of them live in New York City, which means, most people cannot and/or choose not to make it here and I count myself blessed to be one of New York’s chosen ones.

One subway car in New York City is filled with more diversity, culture, and art than the entire state of Florida. With that said, despite the downsides, I will never regret leaving the orange state for the apple city. It only took me two decades to squeeze all of the juice out of the orange, but it will take me much longer to eat my way to the core of the apple. 

Monday, September 23, 2013

The Opinions of Others Are The Enemy’s Line of Defense


Think of a time you broke a rule to help someone or told a white lie to keep your friend from finding out what you got them for Christmas. Now, think of all the times you threw a few dollars in the tithe bucket because “that deacon” was collecting the offering or you showed up to the Habitat for Humanity site not to work, but to be seen. God’s favor will likely go better towards the white lie you told your friend to keep their Rolex a surprise until Christmas day, rather than the three hours you spent “impressing” people at the expense of Habitat for Humanity.

We care what people think when we do something that is considered to be immoral and we care what people think when we do something that furthers the kingdom of God. We don’t want to be thought of as despicable, nor do we want to be thought of as too religious. We tend to forget that God knows our motives better than we do and doing the right thing for the wrong reason is worse than doing the wrong thing for the right reason. Paul certainly wasn’t afraid to break rules. His jail time was a result of his willingness to do the wrong thing by law for the right reason by God. Had Paul not broken the laws of his society, the Gospel would not have spread like it did. Paul did not allow the opinions of others hold him back, nor did he let the laws of society hinder him. God knows if the motivation behind our action is to please Him or to please others and when our motive is to please others we are not honoring Him. God judges us by the motivation behind the action, not the action itself.

Proverbs 29:25 (NIV) says, “Fear of man will prove to be a snare, but whoever trusts in the Lord will be kept safe.” Snares are the line of defense of the enemy and he places them in many places throughout the earth to trip us, stops us, and entangle us. If we are not aware of his snares, they will overtake us. God intended for us to find liberation in following Him. Not constraints on how we demonstrate our faith to a world full of critical men and women.  This Proverb warns us that the greatest snare of the enemy is found in our fear of man. Why should we fear man when He neither created us nor sent His Son to die for us? What is there to be gained in the favor of anyone other than our Father in Heaven? When we are setting out each day to seek His favor through our actions, the snares the enemy places in the opinions of others will no longer hinder us. We will live freely and fully striving to please God and God alone. We will no longer be held back by what our boss’ expectation, or our classmate’s snide remarks. If we overstep the snare of the opinions of others, we will enable our faith to move in mighty ways. We are the ones who have placed a stigmatism on the opinions of others and we are the ones that must overcome it. 

Monday, April 29, 2013

Faith



Without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to Him must believe that He exists and that He rewards those that earnestly seek Him.
Hebrews 11:6 (NIV)

Our faith comes to us through receiving salvation. Salvation, by definition, is the deliverance from the power and effects of sin. The Lord promises this deliverance to us when we allow Him to come into our hearts and invite the Holy Spirit to transform us from within. Once we have received salvation, we must learn how to develop our newfound faith in God. We must realize that our faith is a muscle. If we want to increase it’s endurance we must exercise it daily. If we do not use it everyday it will grow weak and then when we face trials, it will not be as strong as we need it to be to face them without defeat. How do we ourselves know how strong our muscle is until we test it outside the gym? How can we know that our faith is in God and not in the fleeting things of this world without putting our faith to the test? That’s where the trials that test our faith come into play. As we strengthen our faith muscle in God we in turn greater our trust in the Lord.God knows how strong our faith muscle is and He will not give us a task that our muscle cannot handle.