“Interview with Fam” Series – Uncle Bobby Vennes

My Uncle is one of the most generous men I know.

Once I moved to California, he was the only blood relative closer than a few hours away and so in my adult years, we became very close. His house in Las Vegas was a much needed escape, and a welcome warm place to stay when going there for the weekend with friends or Thanksgiving when I couldn’t make the trek back to the east coast. He would often take me to restaurants and shows I could have only dreamt of going to whilst studying.  Indulgent dinners at the kitchen table with Emeril Lagasse greeting us and tasting the bottle of wine he brought, Country Club meals, Cirque du Soleil shows with VIP treatment, and gorgeous sceneries at Zion National Park and Red Rock State Park.

A few years after, when I was living in Paris, we met up in Munich for Oktoberfest, Prague and Dachau. Me, being a poor college student got my trip paid for by my amazing Uncle. He also bought me the much-needed backpack that every young American needs whilst traveling around Europe.

I’m sure he would hate the fact that I’m boasting about him right now. He remains humble and remembers where he comes from. He’s my Uncle Bobbers – Meet Bobby Vennes!

1. Tell us five characteristics of yourself for an introduction.

I am a 52 year old single, professional business man and have been living in Las Vegas for almost 14 years. I enjoy golf, food and wine, fishing, travel, and a variety of other things. I feel blessed in many ways with great family and friends.


2. What are your plans for Christmas and the New Year?

This year I will be spending Christmas at home. I have been invited to numerous family’s dinners and will visit a few. I will golf a little and catch up on some things around the house, exercise and watch some football. While we have some of the best fireworks in the world (I am told) I am not a big New Year’s Eve person. I will go to the Country Club early, visit with friends and come home by 8 or so.

3. The general opinion of living in Las Vegas is one of chaos, late nights, and lots of tourists. How do you keep a level head while living and working there? Has that changed over the years?

Las Vegas certainly has all you have said and lots more I am sure. I came to Vegas unexpectedly. I have worked for Boston Scientific Corporation for over 20 years. It is a manufacturer and developer of Minimally Invasive medical devices and has grown tremendously over the years. Part of that growth has required consolidation of acquired companies. In 1995 I had to interview to keep my job in San Diego. Good news- I still had a job, bad news- no longer in San Diego. I was offered Las Vegas and said yes.

Las Vegas had a reputation for many things including Mafia, Buffets, Shows, Unions, Gambling Sex and much more. Just before I moved here, the city was in a transformation. The city needed to change its image and started to become more geared toward a family vacation destination. The mafia presence disappeared on the surface. Water Parks were built and the shows and restaurants started going to another level. With this growth were jobs, many jobs. It became the fastest growing city in the US. Previously it was San Diego in the mid 80′s and early 90′s. This is a sales persons dream. It is easier to grow the business in a growing town.

The great restaurants and shows allowed me to entertain my clients often getting special treatment. Living here is no different that anywhere else, except the Strip is only 10 minutes away. The truth is I don’t go much unless someone is visiting or I am entertaining. I am glad I never had an inclination to gamble. I am the worst ( I didn’t get Mommy’s good luck!) so I am not one to do it except for the NFL football wagers. Work and a relatively busy personal life have helped me keep a level head.

4. Seems our family has a few people who enjoy traveling and learning about other cultures. What is your fascination with traveling? Why have you continued to do it?

I took my first flight as a Senior in college. I represented our school at an academic competition at Harvard University which we won. It was exciting! I took a year off after graduating to see the United States. I spent a ski season in Vail, Colorado then went west to Wyoming and California. I knew I wanted to travel abroad but decided to see our country first. I ended up traveling with my career jobs and earned lots of miles. Through out the years I have used those miles to get free airline tickets. I started to travel somewhere once or twice a year, usually abroad. I found it fascinating visiting different cultures, histories and experiencing different religions and cuisines. I continue to do it because I enjoy it. I have learned people are all very similar underneath. We all want to be comfortable, loved and feel a sense of accomplishment.

5. How did you come up with the idea for the traveling Santa Claus postcard you send out every year? How long have you been doing it now?

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The idea for the annual Santa Christmas card started when I first moved to San Diego. Sometime in the fall of 1983, I was talked into skydiving. The plane snapped a photo of the leap of faith for each of us. I happened to be in an all red jumpsuit with a red helmet with a white V on the front. I thought I would send that photo to my parents at Christmas that year to show their son had moved to California and completely lost it. I took it to the photo shop and the girl told me it would make a great holiday greeting card. I took her up on it and have continued the tradition for 26 years now. It has been a lot of fun.

6. You’ve already accomplished so much in your life – including making it to the Olympics, working for Fortune 500 companies, being named Director of the Las Vegas Country Club, traveling the world, mingling with the famous (and I’m sure many more things I don’t know about…) Is there another obstacle you’d still like to tackle? Do you have future goals for yourself?

Actually I did not make it to the Olympics due to getting injured practicing with the team in 1984 a month before the games. Also I am not the Director of the Board at LVCC but rather a member of the Board of Directors. Regardless, I feel fortunate to have accomplished these and other things. I am currently in the process of becoming a winemaker for the 3rd year. The first 2 years turned out pretty good. I wanted great!

This next year we are bottling what I think will be great wine. I am really not sure what I will try to tackle next.

7. Getting even close to the Olympics is what every competitive athlete aims for, and working for Fortune 500 companies is what every business person hopes to achieve. What kind of mentality do you need to have in order to make it to the top? How would you compare it to life?

I love the story I once read published by a Rabbi. He wondered why some young people who are highly successful in their high school years (athletically, academically…) . Their success seemed to come easy. For some unknown reason they never went on to become anything more that average. (I am sure you all know one of those people.) Others who were only average in high school went on to achieve great things. The common thread with the successful high school folks that never went on was how they first faced adversity. Seems that some of those who are a big fish in a small pond encounter a fish just as big or bigger decide to run. Others decide to win.

For me I was fortunate enough to have powerful role models in my Mother and Father which gave me the values to be a fighter, even against seemingly impossible odds. For me sports taught me so many valuable lessons for life. I was told by my coach of my Division 3 school I would never be anything but a big fish in a small pond when I announced I was going to a Division 1 collage. That is when I decided I would show him. It gave me a drive to go on to a level I never dreamed of achieving. I encountered a similar situation when I interviewed with Mobil Oil Corp.(#2 on Fortune 500 at the time). I was told I was fortunate to be granted an interview as they are very selective. I was told they hired 1 out of 500 interviewed. I got the job!! So that is the mentality it takes to get to the top. It has a very good correlation to life I think. Well enough about me.

8. Finally, tell us your favorite joke!

What did the Doe say as she came staggering out of the woods? I’ll never do that for 2 Bucks again!!


“Interview with Fam” Series – My Sister, Amanda Lee Lopez

Amanda Lopez is the much much MUCH older sister of mine. OK, she’s not that much older. Plus, I have to put that in in case you are like many other people who assume I’m older. So annoying!

Not Much Has Changed

Seriously, Don’t Ask

Amanda now lives in Baltimore, Maryland with her five-year old son Brayden who is probably the coolest five year old I’ve ever met. He seriously makes me look like Martha Stewart. Watch out ladies because he will be a heartbreaker!

She went to high school at a British International School in Mexico City called Greengates International while I stayed in Baltimore to study theatre. It’s there that she became fluent in Spanish (whereas I never learned), and developed her love for fashion and culture.

She now runs her own green realty company called style|house realty, and also delights every once in a while in the social media tool that is twitter. She goes by @style_house

She’s vivacious, driven and always makes me laugh. She’s my gorgeous older sister, it’s A-MAN…DUH!

1. What was it like to move to Mexico at the age of 15? How did you adapt to another culture? Did you find it difficult or easy? Do you feel it was easier being so much younger?

I guess the initial decision was pretty easy. without much thought, i kind of figured that ‘sure, why not?’ i mean i could always come home. actually getting there though and trying to fit in was a whole other issue in itself. i remember getting there and arriving to school and the instant icy looks from all of the girls who were instantly jealous that an attractive american girl was now their competition for the boys attention… needless to say, i HATED it when i got there. i couldn’t wait to come home. so that Christmas was my first chance at coming back to the states and that is when everything changed. I remember going back and seeing all of my friends and realizing at that moment that everyone was still doing the exact same things and here I was living in another country. So that is when i decided to come back to Mexico and make the most of it and I ended up staying for another 2 years. Perhaps it was easier being younger although i think i could do it again, have the same problems, realizations and really be fine with it again.

2. Once you moved back to the states, you decided to go to University. Did you find the reverse culture shock any harder or easier? Were Americans all of a sudden strange creatures? Explain.

yes, coming back was a huge shock! being in Mexico, i had gotten used to people dressing up for every occasion and wearing nice clothes. and then coming back here i was seeing people grocery shopping in their pjs! and wearing old flip flops, hair messy and just plain bad fashion all the way around! it took me awhile to stop judging people on their overall sloppy appearance but that was probably one of the most noticeable things. i guess too the overweight issues and just people not really caring about their health and well being and the clothing was ultimately a reflection of this. i did however enjoy coming back to a place where the mail was delivered daily, people showed up for their work when they said they were going to and the much more high intensity at which expectations of the work life were made. i did greatly miss all the social aspects though like parties, mariachi’s, going to clubs at the ripe old age of 18 too!

3. You’ve mentioned that you’d like to continue to travel a little bit every year. (As we did with you this past February going to Spain.) However, now you have a five year old son, and many people would say it’s much harder to travel with children, and especially as a single mom. Do you agree or disagree? How did you do it and how will you continue to? Any advice for other single moms out there with an interest to travel.

of course it is going to be different, but i guess it’s what you get used to also. no, you can’t sight-see the nightlife, bar hop around town or things like that. but you can still have nice meals, as long as you don’t give in to your child only eating pizza, but that is another blog entirely! i tried not to cater completely to him and everything that he wanted to do because afterall, it was me paying for this trip and i wanted to do things that both of us would enjoy. you also realize that being in the same place, children experience things that perhaps you would never had paid attention too. like every playground that was passed, or the colors on the walls of buildings.

so it is also interesting to see the world through the eyes of the children and they make you go slower as to where you HAVE to pay more attention to your surroundings.


i will surely continue to travel. we went to Washington DC a few weeks ago and are spending Christmas in NYC just the 2 of us. We plan on seeing the Rockettes show on Christmas day, ice skating in central park, the natural history museum with the dinosaurs, FAO Schwartz, Rockefeller center and much more!

Advice? just do it. be prepared with some games for the travel time, but you are the adult, make the decision to travel and your child will learn. that that is the way of life and that’s just what you do.

4. You run your own business now as a realtor. (You can see style|house here!) Explain the challenges (good and bad) you face as a business owner. Do you prefer it over working for someone else?

i love working for myself! not because it’s any less work, and often times it’s more, but i had too many ideas swirling around in my head as to what i wanted a company to be like and maybe it’s a control thing i have going on but I had nothing and everything to lose and well… i decided to jump ship and go out on my own. time will tell as to whether or not i am crazy but in the meantime, i am super happy!

5. Where do you see yourself in five years? Ten years?

in five years…i plan to grow my business up to a point where i am mostly managing and opening up new offices and attracting awesome people to come work for the company. i want to franchise my brokerage firm and have style house realties all over the country. ie style house nyc, style house dc, etc.

in ten years… i plan to have several offices that i have either sold off and am recieving residual checks from or a much larger company will see my vision and buy me out and i can enjoy my life and continue to travel the world and provide the best education for my son.

6. As a fellow Lopez sister, what would you say the best thing about being a Lopez is? And, you can’t say being related to me because that’s too obvious!

damn meagan, you stole the words right out of my mouth!! haha. best thing about being a lopez? well, it’s really just about being me. and whether i was a lopez or a jones or whatever, i think i’ve always found my place because i have a strong sense of me. and you do realize that lopez is really the ‘smith’ of the latin last names don’t you? i mean the only thing that makes us different is that we are PALE and lopez!

“Interview with Fam” Series – Judy Vennes (aka Momma)

My mom.

Judy My Mom

She is an incredible woman who has taken many different paths, sometimes the hard way and sometimes the easy way, but she always seems to come back stronger than ever. She raised my sister and I in Baltimore, MD (amongst a few other places), and did an unbelievable job. We were never uncertain as to whether she loved us or would be there for us.

She is a searcher, and whenever she finds inspiration, she makes sure to send it our way.

She’s the best woman I know. But I’m a bit biased. She’s my mommy.

Here is her version. Enjoy!

1. Where did you grow up and when?

“I grew up in the suburbs of Baltimore in a middle/upper middle class area in the 1950’s and 1960’s.  It was an era of “baby boomers,” kids who were born of parents who had lived through World War II and the Korean War.  It was the beginning of suburban living in neighborhoods of mostly tract housing.  I lived in the town of Timonium for the first 8 years of my life and then we moved to Lutherville into a home that my father and grandfather built together on the corner of York Road and Haddington Road.  My father was a professional photographer and he built the home on York Road because it is a major thoroughfare and the intention was that it would be good for his business to have a commercial location on the edge of a residential neighborhood so that we could have the best of both worlds, a combination business/home building .  I don’t think he or my mother thought about the constant noise of traffic or the dirt it would produce inside the home, but it was home to my parents, two brothers, sister, me and my paternal grandparents during the summer months as they escaped the Florida heat for the summer.”

2. You’ve had many careers in your lifetime. What spurs you on to keep recreating yourself in business as you do?

“Great question!  One that I have asked myself many times.  I think because my father was an entrepreneur for as long as I can remember and always had his own business, he modeled for me the concept of being my own boss.  I guess the bottom line is that I keep searching for a career where I feel that I can not only make a contribution but also be able to pursue something that I am passionate about.  Ah, my life quandary, I believe!  When I began working after high school, I fell into the insurance industry.  I went to work for a local insurance agency and within the first year I had studied for and passed my property and casualty insurance license so that I could be promoted within the agency.  I stayed in the insurance industry with several other agencies over the course of the next five years.  It was mundane work and I knew that I would not stay in this industry for very long.  The predominant portion of my working years has been office/administrative even though I was never really happy with any of those jobs.  Secretarial skills are what I learned in high school, so it was what I did.

When I decided to become a custom picture framer, it was at a time of my life when I knew I would have to become independent again because my marriage at the time was failing and I knew I didn’t want to go back to office work.  So, I found a custom picture framing school, learned how to frame and then opened my own business which I ran for about 10 years.  It was fulfilling because I was able to take a piece of art and enhance its beauty by matting and framing it.  I used my hands and my creativity which made me happy.”

3. What made you decide to enter healing as a profession?

“After so many years in the corporate/business arena and feeling unfulfilled, I knew I needed another story.  Then I attended the Hoffman Process in 2003.  Everything changed for me after that experience.  I reconnected with Spirit, remembered why I was here and knew that whatever my chosen field was going to be, it would be helping people.  I began seeing an acupuncturist, who is also a Hoffman graduate, and I had great experiences during our sessions and I loved the whole process of our sessions.

“I decided that I would finally declare a college major since I had begun taking a few classes in 2001 and accelerate my studies by becoming a full-time student so that I could more quickly become an acupuncturist because I needed to complete my bachelor’s degree and then on to acupuncture school.  Along the way, I realized that I could incorporate a massage therapy degree and begin to practice sooner rather than later in the healing arts as a massage therapist while continuing on towards my master’s in acupuncture.  But somewhere along the way, I decided that if I loved massage that I would give myself permission to stop and pursue that career.  And that is exactly what happened.

“I loved massage and am now beginning to pursue a full-time career in that field.  Again, I am using my hands in this career, and also my intuition and knowledge of the body and creating a style that is my own.”

Mommy

4. You decided to go back and get a University degree recently. What made you decide to do that and since receiving it, does it feel any different?

“It was a lifelong dream of mine to be able to go to college and obtain my bachelor’s degree because I was told that the only reason to go to college was to find a husband, so I wasn’t exactly groomed to head in that direction after high school.  Once both of my daughters were raised and attending college themselves, I thought that that would be the time for me to get the rust out of my mind and head off to college and take some classes, still not knowing what I wanted to study.  I knew I liked art and had always wanted to see what medium of art would resonate with me so I decided to take one general studies class and one art class each semester.

“After a few years of attending college on a part-time basis, I then had the goal of fulfilling my bachelor requirements much more quickly as I stated above.  Since receiving my double AA degree this past May, one of which was my massage therapy degree, I have stopped attending classes but expect to finish sometime in the future.  It feels really good to have finished at least my AA degree but I now do not feel compelled at this point to go and finish my bachelor’s degree; although I know I will graduate with that degree sometime in the future.

“I now know that I can complete anything I set out to do and that is the biggest, most fulfilling lesson that I learned.  I had never really completed anything like that before in my life and the fact that it had been something I had wanted to do all my life and then was able to realize that dream was an amazing feeling.”

5. You’ve had both your children move out of the country at some point. Was this something you’ve ever considered doing?

“No, it isn’t.  I have never considered moving out of the country as a conscious thought, but I have always believed that if the opportunity presented itself, anything is possible.  As much as I love to travel and explore different countries and cultures, I have never thought about moving to another country, other than maybe Canada some day since it was just brought to me attention that I qualify to be a Canadian citizen since my father was born in Montreal, Canada.  So, I am pursuing that option at the moment but have no concrete plans to move there.  I think what would ultimately keep me from moving to Canada would be the winters.   BRRRRRRR!!!”

6. What’s it like to be single and in your 50′s? Any advice you’d like to give other women who are single and your age?

“I truly believe that the 50’s are the best years of my life so far.  These years have been about knowing myself, trusting myself and not depending on a man to take care of me for the first time in my life.  That is not to diminish however for even one minute the years of childbirth and raising my two beautiful daughters!!  The only advice I can offer to other single women in their 50’s would be to not settle for less than you deserve, not to take yourself seriously and not to take anything personally.  When you can let go of expectations and outcomes, life is so much easier and less stressful.”

But then, that could be advice for anyone at any age!

7. If you could leave one legacy or lesson about life, what would it be?

“To love unconditionally, live from your heart and to be joyful as often as possible.  To live in the present moment as often as you can remember to and remember that when you are present, everything is perfect.  I have been very blessed with many lessons throughout my journey and as the years pass I realize there is not too much we need to be happy.

The other lesson I have learned is that if we can remember that we are one – one with each other, one with nature, one with Great Spirit – it is that connectedness that allows us to love unconditionally.”

Thanks, Meggers, for allowing me the forum to express this to you and anyone else who wishes to read this.  Namaste.Mom and Me

Thank you Mom!


“Interview with Fam” Series – Sir John (aka Grampy)

A few notes on my Grampy before I start this interview. He is my mom’s father.

When he heard I was starting a blog, this is what he had to say:

One or three questions -  what the hell is a blog?  Do you have to clean up afterwards?  You must remember to write using simple English for us seniors!!!  And what on earth is MWAH???   Again – only simple stuff.  Also what is text – I write using text, don’t you?

This is what he wrote to me to when he heard I was dating the Englishman:

A couple questions – I never had the good fortune of meeting Jocko -
What does he look like?
Does he have only one eye in the middle
Is his mouth very crooked
Do his ears hang very low
Does he have horns on his head
Is he 5′ 3″ and weigh 300 Lbs
Do his hands extend to his knees (when he stands)

And, he and his lovely wife, Cora, in Peru: Grampy and CoraNow, for the interview!

Please tell us how you became a Sir.

I’ll save that for last as it gets lengthy.

What’s it like to be a Canadian? (I’m waiting on an answer to how he has dual citizenship. I have no clue how he got it!)

Being Canadian is not any different than an American (I’m both)  Both countries are great countries with very similar customs, etc. They can’t explain Boxing Day any better than anyone else!!

How he became both: To fill in the blanks on citizenship – I was born in Canada of American parents and registered with the American consulate in Montreal. I was therefore  a natural born American.  When I moved back to Canada to buy the campground in Prince Edward Island (when he was much much older…inserted) I applied for permanent residency.  The answer came back, you are still a Canadian having been born in Canada.  I said OK thank you, and here I am with both.  Of course I am trully worthy of being both!!!

You have recently begun traveling the world with your wife more than ever before. Do you think you appreciate travel more now, as opposed to in your younger years?

Cora and I have been doing a fair bit of traveling in the last 5 or so years.  It’s no more or less appreciated now- everything (almost) in life hinges around how much money is available!!  Believe me!!  We have both enjoyed our trips immensly.  Includes Australia, NewZealand, China, Peru, Part of Mexico, Canadian Rockies, Jolly old England (Wales, Scotland, etc), Essex and Dundalk.

You’ve also had many varied careers in your lifetime. Photographer, Pilot, Campground Owner… What did each of those careers fulfill for you? Why did you switch careers when you did?

I never could figure out what I wanted do do in life after I grew up, thus a lot of variety  All of them were greatly enjoyed, but there comes a time for change and change is good!!

What gives you the most pleasure out of life? Has that changed over the years?

Pleasure -  getting the most out of every day (I read that someplace!)  Not taking anything or everything  too seriously,  good friends are real important and having a really great wife (finally) is the most important.

What is something left to do before you die?

Something left to do before I die – take a last breath!!

7 Any advice for the youngun’s out here? (this answer was stolen from an email he wrote to me in February 2008)

The most important ingredient for trying to figure life out – intellect or mentality.  Never lose sight of brain power – with out that none of the above amount to much.  You do seem to have a pretty good amount of all the above!  I like your drive toward whatever it is that you end up with and doing.  Just keep going and the right thing will come, but pay attention to the details – the devil is in the details someone smarter than little ole me said.

Now the good part – How I became a sir!!!

This has nothing to do with the common “sir” awarded in England,  My “sir” comes from the Norwegian royalty way back in the middle 1800′s.  Seems my great (or great great grandfather) fell in love with a farm girl named Anne Martha Vennes.  His  name was Jorgen Roel.  He married Anne Martha  in 1834.  They lived on the Vennes Gaard which was Anne Martha’s family home.  He changed his name to Vennes because her parents had had no sons to carry on the family name.

Jorgen’s father in law was extremely grateful, had some connection to the royal family, and it was agreed that the title “sir” could be used by Jorgen and then passed done to future heirs, oldest son to oldest son, etc.  And I am one of those!!!  Apparently no one used the title (a bit presumptious) much, but I may be a bit presumptious at times so I latched on to it.  Thought it might earn me some respect!!!  Doesn’t work!  Oh well!!

Seems there are other versions of this story, but I’ll stick with this one!

Lastly – I am very proud of all my kids and most of my grand kids.  Life is good!!!

Peru 2009 Grampy and Cora

“Interviews with Fam” – Daddy Lopez

Carlos Lopez is my Dad. He was born in Sancti Spiritus, Cuba either on April 26th or sometime in November, 1951. There was some dispute about this matter some years ago.

He now resides in Guadalajara, Mexico with his girlfriend Karina. This is him as a Marine looking very cool. My friends call him the Cuban George Clooney. I call him Daddy.

Carlos

1. What was it like to leave Cuba when you left? What were the circumstances surrounding your leaving and how did it come about?
I WAS 10 YEARS OLD, SO, IT WAS STRANGE AND DISORIENTING. I REMEMBER THE DATE WE LEFT, IT WAS JUNE 13TH, 1961 AND CASTRO HAD BEEN IN POWER SINCE 1959. I WAS ALREADY STARTING TO BELIEVE THE COMUNIST PROPAGANDA AND THAT THE U.S. WAS AN EVIL POWER, SO I WAS NOT VERY HAPPY WHEN MY MOM TOLD ME WE WHERE GOING TO VISIT MY AUNT JUANITA IN THE STATES. IT WAS NOT UNTIL MANY YEARS LATER THAT I FOUND OUT THAT MY MOM AND DAD HAD SEPARATED AND SHE WAS ACTUALLY FOLLOWING HER BOYFRIEND TO NEW YORK TO START A NEW LIFE. SILLY ME!

2. What were your first couple of years like in America? How did you adjust?
IT WAS HORRIBLE. REMEMBER THAT I WAS AN ONLY CHILD AND SPOILED. WE MOVED TO NYC AND MY MOM HAD TO GO TO WORK IMMEDIATELY, SO I WAS LEFT ALONE AT THE AGE OF TEN FROM MORNING TILL MY MOM ARRIVED FROM WORK AT 7PM, EVERYDAY. I WAS SHY AND AFRAID ALL THE TIME, DID NOT SPEAK THE LANGUAGE AND LIVED IN AN ITALIAN/IRISH/GERMAN NEIGHBORHOOD, SO, BEATINGS WERE FREQUENT. IT TOOK A COUPLE OF YEARS TO START HITTING BACK, BUT ONE LEARNS. LOOKING BACK, I WOULD NOT CHANGE A THING, BECAUSE IT’S TRUE WHAT THEY SAY ABOUT WHAT DOES NOT KILL YOU, MAKES YOU STRONGER, NIETSCHE, I THINK.

3. When did you finally start feeling American? Did you ever?
GREAT QUESTION, NOT SO SIMPLE TO ANSWER. THE U.S. SCHOOL SYSTEM IS JUST AS GREAT AT PROPOGANDA AS WAS CASTRO’S DICTATORSHIP. IT IS SINGLEMINDEDLY DESIGNED TO PRODUCE GOOD, OBEDIENT, UNQUESTIONING CITIZENS. THAT’S WHY WE CAN CONTINUE TO ELECT PEOPLE LIKE GW BUSH. TO THAT END, IT FAILED MISERABLY WITH ME, SORT OF LIKE RELIGION, ACTUALLY. HOWEVER, THE AMERICAN STORY IS HARD TO DISMISS AND NOT FEEL SOME PRIDE IN HAVING A GROUP OF HIGHLY DISFUNCTIONAL, UNWANTED PEOPLE COME TOGETHER AND CREATE SUCH A COUNTRY, OF THAT, I AM PROUD.

4. Why did you choose to move to Mexico to live?
IF YOU EVER REALLY THINK YOU GET TO CHOOSE EVERYTHING IN LIFE, YOU’RE IN FOR A SAD AWAKENING. I DIDN’T CHOOSE, MEAGAN, I CHASED THE MONEY. I WAS MADE AN OFFER I COULDNT REFUSE, AS GRANDPA HARRY WOULD SAY, AND WHEN I TRY TO PULL OUT, THEY PULL ME BACK IN, AS THE GODFATHER WOULD SAY. NOW THAT I’M HERE, I HAVE TO ADMIT THAT I ENJOY THE FREEDOM OF NOT HAVING GREEN, ORANGE, YELLOW, AND RED ALERTS FLASHED AT ME ALL THE TIME AS THEY DO IN THE STATES. ACTUALLY, I DON’T EVER RECALL A GREEN ALERT. I WONDER IF PEOPLE IN THE STATES ARE ACTUALLY AWARE OF THE CONSTANT FEAR LAVISHED ON THEM BY OUR OWN GOVERNMENT AND NEWS AGENCIES. THAT’S HOW IT ALWAYS BEGINS, PEOPLE USUALLY DESERVE THE GOVERNMENT THEY HAVE.

5. Do you think you’ve become accustomed to always being “the foreigner” in some way? How has that shaped your life?
NO, I NEVER FELT LIKE THAT. I ALWAYS FELT THAT I BELONGED NO MATTER WHERE I WAS. THAT WAS OBVIOUSLY SHAPED BY MY EARLY YOUTH, YOU ADJUST. JUST REMEMBER HOW MANY TIMES I’VE MOVED.

Wedding Day Carlos

6. What gives you the most pleasure out of life? Has that changed over the years?
I KNOW IT SOUNDS CORNY, BUT SEEING HOW YOU KID’S ARE HANDLING YOUR LIVES AND HOW PROUD I AM OF ALL OF YOU GIVES ME GREAT PLEASURE. THAT’S ALWAYS BEEN A CONSTANT. OH, OF COURSE, THERE IS GOLF, READING AND WAKING UP IN THE MORNING, BUT YOU ALREADY KNEW THAT.

7. And, finally, what would you like your children to learn from your mistakes? A piece of advice.
WHAT MISTAKES? I’VE MADE NONE THAT I KNOW OF OR I’M ABLE TO CHANGE, SO THERE IS NO POINT IN DWELLING ON IT. THAT’S MY ADVICE, DO THE BEST YOU KNOW HOW AND LIFE WILL TAKE CARE OF THE REST. LOVE YOU TOOTS!

Dad and Daughter Lopez