I’m not your steppin’ stone

 

I used to love The Monkees.

So tonight, a fellow Alpha Phi Omega brother and I were talking shop as we often do.  He is also a member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc., so we often discuss Greek life as a whole.  He’s been a Kappa for longer than I have been an Alpha, but we both crossed APO within about a year of each other.  (As a brief side note, a member of his APO chapter at Florida State came to Georgetown and gave birth to our chapter, so there’s a connect there, too.)

We’ve seen a lot in APO over the years, including a sharp increase in the numbers of African Americans who pledge and are initiated.  We think this is a good thing, obviously, because we believe more people of color would enjoy our Brotherhood if they gave it a chance.  But they can’t give it a chance without the proper introduction, and it’s tough for a majority culture to expose APO to a minority culture without coming across as pandering.

With a large increase in African American membership comes an increase in the numbers of APO members who are also in Black Greek Letter Organizations (BGLOs).  There are some, like my buddy, who pledged NPHC first and then APO.  The majority, however, pledge APO first and then become members of NPHC orgs, whether as undergraduates or through alumni chapters, as I did.

This, too, is a good thing.  I believe that if someone has truly been an active member of Alpha Phi Omega and utilized all the resources it has to offer, then they come to BGLOs with a deeper sense of service to humanity than the average prospect.  They should also already know how to run a meeting, how to plan a campus program, and how to coordinate a service project.  Basically, Alpha Phi Omega membership should refine you and prime you for the next logical step after service:  social justice.

Most BGLOs don’t just do service, they actually take an active interest in the uplift of people of color beyond Band-Aid solutions.  As Jamie M. Grant says in her article “Concept of Social Justice Goes Beyond Service:”

Many of us have heard the old saying — give a man a fish and he eats for a day, teach a man to fish and he eats for a lifetime. Some say, well giving a fish is charity, while teaching someone to fish is service.
Social justice leaders react to this proverb differently. We wonder:
Who owns these fish?
Why don't we all have access to them?
Is eating fish sustainable?
Who is this hungry man and what does he have to say about his situation?
And finally, where are the women?

Alpha Phi Omega (sadly, if you ask me) doesn’t often ask these questions in the average course of undergraduate membership.  Those members who are ready to answer those questions as alumni most likely find another avenue, whether it’s through BGLO as I have chosen, or whether it’s through their faith communities, or some other means like donating to an organization who has social justice values.

African Americans who perform service often have an uncommon sense of devotion to social justice.  We are not far removed from Jim Crow; our grandparents not that far removed from slavery.  It makes sense that African American APO members would be interested in BGLOs, and if they weren’t before, APO is often the starting point and connector.

BUT.

Let’s be clear.

Alpha Phi Omega is not a stepping stone toward membership in a BGLO.

Typically, an Alpha Phi Omega chapter will have a service requirement to maintain membership in a collegiate chapter.  Sure, you have to pledge and get service hours (or a certain number of projects) in order to cross.  But you also usually have to pay semesterly dues and maintain ten, twenty, or even thirty hours of service in a semester to maintain active status.

You probably already know that many BGLOs require letters of recommendation as part of the application package.  Not all, but some.  And of those organizations, some require a letter verifying that you have performed community service.

This is the crux of my problem.  An Alpha Phi Omega member may feel empowered to ask their Vice President of Service or project coordinator for a letter of recommendation based on their service in the chapter.  I don’t agree with this.

I don’t believe that service you had to perform as a condition of maintaining your membership in one organization should count toward your membership in another organization, particularly one which may take time away from your APO commitments in the long run.

Can you see how that’s a conflict?  I can’t ethically turn in a paper I wrote in one class for another class and get the same credit.  (Well, maybe I could, but I shouldn’t – the professor has an expectation that the work will be original.)

It also poses a conflict when you actually ask your own brother for the recommendation.  What if the quality of your service actually isn’t all that good?  Then your brother is forced to write a bad recommendation (I have seen this happen) or tell you they won’t write you one at all.  Then it spirals out of control, causes a rift in the chapter, and then it’s freakin’ anarchy.

And let’s not talk about the number of men I’ve met in APO who send me that private message or phone call about wanting to become an Alpha.  How do I know your zeal for APO was genuine?  How do I know you really wanted to get to know me because I am your APO brother alone, and not because you wanted to know if I will sponsor you for membership?

Your pursuit in a BGLO should be discreet.  Not necessarily totally secret, but I think it opens a world of problems when you involve your APO chapter in your pursuit by expecting that they will recommend your for membership.

Keep them separate.  It will make your experience even more special.

So then, you may be asking me what a prospect should do if all their service is through APO.  How can they get a good, personal recommendation any other way?

Well, firstly, all of your service should not be through just APO.  If you want to be an Alpha, for example, and presuming we need that sort of recommendation, then I need to see you transcending the realm of service to approach a philosophy of social justice that is similar to our own.  Cleaning up garbage on the highway is not Alpha.  Cleaning up the garbage from a poor, mostly minority community, setting up a recycling program for kids, teaching their moms and dads about jobs in the green sector – now that’s Alpha.

Your service should be through organizations you’re passionate about.  Yes, you can be passionate about APO, but in that case, APO itself is the endgame.

By passion, I mean a cause you care about enough to devote your time to by yourself, if you have to.  You reach out to that organization, you schedule time to volunteer, and you do it over a period of time.  THEN you ask for a letter of recommendation.

And yes, you might discover that an APO program you already do will suffice.  If that happens, don’t ask a brother to write your recommendation.  Your service should be so profound, so meaningful and impacting, that the executive director or volunteer coordinator of that nonprofit should be glad to write your letter of recommendation.  That is far more impressive than your peer writing your letter.  And it means a potential contact for you professionally, whether you make it or not.

And won’t you be glad that your entire chapter won’t then be in your business?  Discretion will be intact.

These are just my opinions.  Most may not have that strong an opinion because it affects such a small segment of their chapter’s population.  But for me, I will always be an African American brother of APO and an Alpha, so this will probably be something I experience for the rest of my life.

I’m just saying that if you try your pursuit my way, you will maximize your total package and minimize the total drama.  Hopefully.

Alpha Phi Omega is not your steppin’ stone.  But it is there to help you serve and to begin the conversation of social justice.

If you’re searching, then good luck to you!

Edited to add: 

I forgot to mention that there are several notable members of Alpha Phi Omega who are also members of BGLOs:

  • Bill Clinton is an honorary member of Phi Beta Sigma and pledged APO as an undergraduate at Georgetown
  • Melody Barnes was the Director of the Domestic Policy Council under Barack Obama.  She pledged APO and Alpha Kappa Alpha while at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
  • Former President of Howard University H. Patrick Swygert and former Secretary of the Army Togo West, Jr. are both initiates of Omega Psi Phi, Alpha Chapter and Kappa Psi Chapter, respectively.
  • Current candidate for General President of Alpha Phi Alpha Roderick Smothers pledged APO at Louisiana State.

Remembering Crushes Past with Hot Mama

I have no children.

Ironically, there are many women in my life who have claimed me as their baby’s father.  Usually, these kids don’t really exist. As in, it’s a joke.  Sometimes there will be a kid who looks like me, so the joke is I’m their real daddy.  And other times, people just accuse me of being a closet heterosexual with kids stashed away somewhere.

One of my baby’s mamas (We’ll call her Hot Mama) came over to visit today for an alumni reunion meeting.  We looked through old yearbooks as a guide to figure out who would be likely to come to our reunion.  It was fun.  I pointed out a few guys I had crushed on and wondered where they were.  Much like the main character in Lazarus, Adrian Collins, I have had many crushes on many boys over a long period of time. It is only recently that I haven’t had a serious one.

Hot Mama asked me if I had been dating anyone.  The answer was no.  I guess you could say that I had a date earlier in the winter when I entertained a guy who was otherwise occupied in the intricacies of his own life.  It didn’t go anywhere, nor should it have.  And before then, it had been a year since I’d gone on a date.

I don’t feel single.  I generally feel fulfilled and accomplished and I don’t have a desire for children.  Yes, I get lonely and some nights it’s worse than others.  But it is not a chronic loneliness.  Recurring.  Acute.  But not chronic.

For some reason, I got out one of my Georgetown yearbooks and flipped it open to the [sport redacted] page.  I paused.  No, it wasn’t a pause.  It was a full stop.  And this wave of euphoria just came over me.  Hot Mama noticed it immediately.

“Well who the hell is that?” she asked.

“This right here…..this is the face that launched three novels.”

I’m of the opinion that most great works of fiction start with the question “What if?”

I won’t describe him here.  I won’t tell you the sport he played.  I won’t tell you anything else, really.

The events of Lazarus and Covenant and Epiphany are completely fictitious.  They really are.  But the people whose faces inspired the characters…the men whose eyebrows and noses and cheekbones…..and their walks and their smells and their smiles….. those guys are real.

Over the years, they became other people.  “Adrian” became Adrian.  He had his own story to tell and he chose me to tell it.  “Savion” became Savion, and he used me to share with you the anguish of being unlucky in love, to be misunderstood as clingy and stubborn when all he wanted was his enchanted love.  And “Isaiah” became Isaiah, passionate, loyal, humble, and flawed.  And he used me as the medium to let you know the depth and breadth of his love for Adrian.

The aesthetic inspirations for these characters have all gone on to other, better things I suppose.  From time to time, I encounter them and feel lucky to have known them then, and grateful to know them now.  I support who they are.  I celebrate who they became.  And I’m thankful for what they gave me, for as a 19 year old Sophomore at Georgetown, my “Savion” and my “Isaiah” were the seeds to my “what ifs.”  Those seeds became a play, first called “Behind Closed Door” then “Discretion” about a fraternity man and a varsity basketball player.  And then my characters said no, tell the whole story, and tell it right.  And I gave birth to Lazarus, and the characters didn’t even look like the seeds anymore.  And then came Covenant and then came Epiphany, and the next thing you know it’s over a decade later and my babies didn’t remotely look, talk, or sound like their inspirations anymore.

My “what ifs” became “what is.”  My crushes became “what was.”

My crushes launched three novels.  Imagine what my loves will launch.

An update for the facebook and twitter-less

It’s a beautiful morning here in the nation’s capital and unfortunately I am at home, eating oatmeal and trying to nurse myself back to health after an overnight migraine and subsequent upset stomach.  But I figured it would be a good time to pay some attention to my often neglected diary.

My diary (I have rarely called it a blog) used to be the hot shit back in 2004-2007.  To this day, people ask me why I don’t write in it like I used to.  One brother of Alpha recently gave me the kindest, sweetest text message ever, telling me that he had so much respect for me before he crossed because he kept up with my life through my diary.  That respect carried over when we finally met face to face and became friends.  I honestly either never knew he was a “fan” of my diary, or I didn’t understand then the weight that it held for people.

Now, I get it.

When you’re in a fraternity like Alpha, you will encounter dozens, if not hundreds of men, old and young, who join because of the status they wrongly predict it will bring them.  Yes, being an Alpha carries weight in certain circles.  In DC, I think being a member of an NPHC fraternity or sorority means something to most people of color here, and even among some white people.

But the weight means nothing if you have expectations of it.  It’s sort of like being a Georgetown graduate.  I might say, for shits and giggles, that I went to Georgetown *hair flip* and anything else is beneath me.  But that’s just for fun.  I actually don’t expect any perks from being a Georgetown grad and I am surprised when I get them, be it a closer look in the hiring process for a job, or being able to connect with alumni from our peer institutions more quickly, like Syracuse, Duke, Stanford, and Johns Hopkins.

Being an Alpha, to me, was never about the heft of the honor.  It was about the brotherhood.  In other words:

  • Membership in Alpha is a responsibility: paying dues, showing up for meetings and programs, doing service, going to conventions.
  • Brotherhood in Alpha is a courtesy:  giving someone the benefit of the doubt, a second look, a helping hand.
  • Friendship in Alpha is another matter entirely.

On tomorrow, I will have been an Alpha for nine years.  For most of those years, I have been a member.  I do not feel badly about the years in which I was inactive.  For all of those years, I have been a brother.  And to perhaps less than twenty, or even less than ten Alphas, I have been a friend.

When you’ve been through the things I’ve been through as a member, you tend to keep the circle small.  For the long-term readers of my original site, you will recall the things that fellow members have done to me which were disrespectful and repugnant.  My friends know even more.  But somehow, I always made time to be there for an aspirant or two, as a sponsor, special, or just a friend.  And I’ve been lucky to meet more recent initiates who gravitate toward me when they see me in Alpha-only forums giving some ignorant, homophobic Alpha a good dressing down.  (A read, if you will.)  I suppose they see in me an “I don’t give a fuck” attitude that they find entertaining, or maybe courageous.  I don’t know.  Maybe I will ask.

I know what Alpha says about being active.  I know what I was taught about being active.  And I understand that my presence is missed when I am not around, at least to some, sometimes.  But ultimately, for me, being an Alpha meant being somebody’s brother for the first time – to extend certain courtesies to strangers because I knew we shared the same values, and to perhaps have those courtesies be extended to me.

Over the years, I have made it my point to share news about Black fraternal organizations, positive and negative.  I’ve discussed hazing in particular an awful lot – it made its way into my novels and unfortunately has not subsided over the years.  I’m hoping that one day, Lazarus can be looked at as a relic from the past and our children can read it – with horror – and wonder why generations of black men and women subjected ourselves to the brutality.

But perhaps more importantly, I have also posted about various allegations of wrong-doing on the part of the leadership of African American fraternities and sororities.  Indeed, since the publication of Lazarus, there have been three scandals involving NPHC leaders that I’ve discussed.  I care because I have strong convictions regarding the black fraternal commitment to the public and how we earn the public’s trust.  I will not be shying away from discussing any public allegations which may befall even my own beloved APhiA.

Don’t get me wrong.  I am not Mo’Kelly.  I will not be doing any investigative journalism or original reporting.  But I do believe I need to be fair as a diarist and pundit of fraternal matters.  What’s good for the sorors is good for the frat, even my own.

I will be committed to a tone which is temperate.  I will approach any matter discussed with dignity and in the interest of the public’s trust and faith in our organizations.  We are here to serve them, not each other or ourselves.  I understand the responsibility of my diary: to be authentic in my truth and honest in my opinions.  These truths and opinions were not a deterrent for those interested in Alpha and not distasteful to those who support Alpha.  It has been proven that the brotherhood needs strong dissension – which in and of itself is part of self-examination.  And I do believe the public appreciates us more when we show we’re real people with diverse ideas and strong opinions about ethics and values.

On a final note, my third novel, Epiphany, has a story line which interweaves some of the issues I’ve mentioned above.  There is a chapter advisor whom the boys are not sure has their best interests at heart.  But you’ve got to read it yourself to see in which direction the story is taken.  I think you’ll enjoy it, aside from the great main plot.

So thanks for your support over the years!  Don’t forget that my books are all available through my website, oldgoldsoul.com (which you’re probably reading this entry on), Amazon, and pretty much any bookstore on special order.  My novels are also available on Kindle readers and through Kindle apps – which means you can read my novels on your Kindle, any computer, and even your cell phone.

Have a great day…see y’all around!

Line Names of the Jewels

On a message board I am on, one of the Brothers of Alpha asked what we thought the founders line names would have been.  Below is my response.

Henry Arthur Callis
1-A-06
“The Phys-ICY-ian”

Charles Henry Chapman
2-A-06
“Lost & Found”

Eugene Kinckle Jones
3-A-06…
“P.S.A.L.M.S.”*

George Biddle Kelley
4-A-06
“Dap”

Nathaniel Allison Murray
5-A-06
“Head of the Class”

Robert Harold Ogle
6-A-06
“Cross Colors”

Vertner Woodson Tandy
7-A-06
“The Blueprint, Vol. 1”

PSALMS = “Please send a last minute substitution”

Happy Saturday! – Lazarus Playlist

Hey everybody!

I am preparing to travel to New Orleans for about a week on business, so my updates will be sporadic.  I will only have my blackberry – my laptop is no longer operational and my next computer was a desktop.  Which is generally fine since I wasn’t traveling all that much, but now I do/will sorta feel naked without a dedicated laptop.

I will have internet access through my phone, of course.

Lazarus had what I consider to be a strong re-launch.  Amazon listed it at a little more than three dollars off the cover price, which is good for those of you wishing to save.  As always, of course, I would prefer that you purchase my books through my site because I get more royalties that way.

I will remind everyone once again that if you pre-ordered Covenant, you will be contacted to confirm your shipping address.  Please do not email me unsolicited with your contact information.  I have to go through PayPal FIRST to verify who paid, then contact each person individually.  That will be a painstaking, all at once process that I will begin NEXT weekend, after I return from New Orleans.  If you send me your info, it will get lost in the dozens of emails I have already.  Thanks for understanding.

Neil is working hard on the cover of Epiphany, which (I’d also like to remind you) has already been written and typeset.  The last pieces of the puzzle are the cover design, uploading the cover and internal documents, ordering a proof, and approving the proof.  If the going is good, Epiphany could be ready within a week of me getting the final cover from Neil.

I am thinking this will happen in time for Christmas, but don’t quote me on that.  🙂

Finally, I wanted to leave you with the 2011 Lazarus Playlist.  Many times, when a writer is working on a piece of fiction, he/she will have a song in mind that is playing while they’re writing or reading.  For me, I envision the film version of Lazarus in my head and choose songs to match the most meaningful scenes.

It’s fun.  Almost as fun as fantasy casting.

Without further ado, here is the Lazarus Playlist:

Make That Whistle Blow (Go-Go cover)
My Humps (Go-Go cover)
Poetry Man – Phoebe Snow
Slow Love – Prince
Don’t Let Me Down – Randy Crawford
Wholly Holy – Marvin Gaye
You Better Run – Dorothy Love Coates
Mary Don’t You Weep – Aretha Franklin
Eyes on the Prize – The Sojourners
Lily in the Valley – John P. Kee
I Wish U Heaven – Darren Hayes
Lazarus – Porcupine Tree

I will save my rationale for another blog post.  But for all the die-hard readers, know that the list is chronological to the events in the novel.  Check out the songs on YouTube, iTunes, or your favorite bootleg man.

Lazarus has risen again

As expected, the proof of Lazarus arrived in today’s mail and it looked damn good to me, so I approved it for publication.

Yay 🙂

Lazarus proof – on its way

As you know, my second novel Covenant debuted last Friday, October 28.  🙂  Please click “Books” in the link above to purchase it.  In the case of my books, as well as any other novelist who publishes through Create Space, we get more royalties when you order from the CreateSpace website.  But if you insist, you can also purchase Covenant through Barnes & Noble and Amazon.

The re-release of Lazarus will, in all probability, be available by the end of this week.  It’s even possible that it could be ready this evening!  It depends on whether I receive the proof today at work and whether the proof is to my satisfaction.  I made some minor changes to the interior and the cover is upgraded, so I just need to double check.

So far, my novels are more-or-less on target.  Epiphany will likely come out in December rather than November, only because me and Neil are working hard to create THE BEST cover in the Old Gold Soul brand.  If all goes well as we hope, this will be the first wrap-around cover that he makes – meaning art on the front as well as the back.

Happy National Novel Writing Month to all of you who are participating!  As you may know, NaNoWriMo is how I finally got over the hump of finishing Epiphany.  I had already had two chapters written for years but I wasn’t motivated to finish it.  Thanks to the peer pressure of some great colleagues, I dove right into NaNoWriMo (unofficially) and just wrote every day.  I made my 50,000 word target with days to spare and I believe I finished the principal writing by the end of the year.

Even though I haven’t participated in NaNoWriMo since then, it’s still a great time of year for me.  So many novelists are getting it in!  It’s like a month long holiday of work and creativity.  We “fast” in a sense – fasting from procrastination and other obstacles toward writing.  We use the holidays in November as big chunks of time available to us to write without distraction.  And if all goes well, we celebrate the end of the month with the accomplishment of knowing that when we really want to, we can write a whole damn book!

So if you know a novelist, wish them a happy NaNoWriMo and offer them some support:

  • Hey, I’m working on my dissertation at Panera.  Want to work on your novel with me?
  • Hey, I’m going out of town for Thanksgiving.  Would you like to stay at my place for four uninterrupted writing days!
  • Hey, I know you’re busy this month, so I totally understand if you can’t attend [random event].  Could I bring you a plate after it’s over so you can focus on your novel?

Etc, etc.  Just be a good friend.

I hope you all are having a great week.  Be good to each other!

Where we at now

So there was a short list of like four things which needed to be improved to the covers of Lazarus and Covenant before they went to press.  People who own the original Lazarus, hold on to them because they are going to be collector’s items.

Neil (my cover designer) and I made some decisions about the font we’d be using and we discontinued the use of the original Old Gold Soul logo.

The Epiphany cover is  still in the works.

All in all, if the cover review process keeps going this well, Lazarus and Covenant will be available to the public in less than two weeks.  Again, I can’t pinpoint a date — just stay tuned.

 

—-

 

Yesterday wasn’t a terrible day at work, but it wasn’t my most productive, either.  I just had somewhat of an epiphany (see what I did there?) that I would really rather just be writing novels.  This is not exactly a new realization, but I don’t think I’ve internalized that before as much as I do now.  So I am officially on my grind like never before.

If you’ve happened upon this page for the first time, please know that this right here is my official facebook page.   I really want people to “like” that instead of trying to friend my personal page.  I prefer facebook to twitter, however I’ve got an account there, too.  Please spread the word.

Well, I’m already late for work and I’ve got to show my apartment this evening to some potential roommates.  You all be good.  And if you can’t be good, just be yourselves.  (With thanks to Jonathan White.)

The Proof for Covenant is here

 

The proof for Covenant has arrived.  Wow.  I can’t really explain what this moment means to me.

The re-release of Lazarus, the delayed debut of Covenant, and the debut of Epiphany….just a few weeks away.  Maybe even days.  I can’t pinpoint it, so please don’t ask for a date.  And for those who pre-ordered Covenant years ago, please especially don’t ask when you’re getting it.  I don’t know.  I will be fulfilling those orders myself, by myself, and there’s a few dozen people to contact, but hopefully everyone who pre-ordered will get it by Christmas.

But back to me.  Wow.  I wrote this.  Whether you traditionally published or self-published, I think every novelist understands the meaning of this moment.

 

Less sick, more stressed

I had a very fitful rest last night.  I kept waking up, tossing and turning.

I dreamed that I was at a very small Best Buy.  Freddy Kruger was there (!) and I wasn’t afraid of him.  It was sorta like “Oh, Freddy.  You’re a has-been.  Go away.”

As I was leaving the Best Buy, which was adjacent to a hotel lobby, I ran into my friend Sharnell who was on her way to an Omega function with a bunch of other people.  She was wearing what seemed to be an Omega sweetheart tiki.  I gave her a hard time about it, but then let her pass.  Hell, clearly I was just jealous.  lol

I had a bad weekend because I was sick and because I found out my roommate would be leaving.  Today.  At 5pm.  So now I have to find somebody.  This is not what I needed in the final days of preparation for these novels dropping.

But the good news is I feel a lot less sick.  I think I “broke” whatever cold I had yesterday when I slept the day away.

I’m making a point to blog every day now, btw.  If I’m going to take over the world again, it starts here.

I don’t want to work a traditional full-time job anymore, although I really, really like the one I have and do a good job at it.  I just think ultimately, who I was born to be is a novelist.

Not much else to say about it.