Thursday, April 12, 2012

The Blasian Narrative

So as much as I love to give my two cents on certain issues through youtube and occasionally on here, there are times when I occasionally have to bite my tongue simply because you lovely viewers may not be able to relate or may be alienated by my words (which is never my intent). So with this post, I would like to announce that I am now a writer for the Blasian Narrative which deals more so with issues relegating to the Asiatic and Black community. So my posts are going to sound much like the video below.

I truely am blessed to be able to contribute to that blog and I would highly recommend that you check it out and subscribe to the posts as well for some insightful information as well as some entertaining hoopla as well (lol hoopla).

Click Here for my first post :)

Your favorite asian,
Chrispy AKA Kon

If you would like for me to contribute to your blog, please contact me on facebook and/or twitter. We can then proceed from there in regards to details, information, topics, etc.

The same applies for any collaborations on youtube. Please contact me through the above sites if interested.

God Bless.

Monday, April 2, 2012

New Job

So I've gotten a second job (soon to be my primary job) working at my church as a 'Youth Director' and I am already feeling the pressure. Normally I don't talk about my faith but for those that follow me or watch any of my videos on youtube (look up KonOfficialYT), I'm a pretty open person. I don't have much to hide and I'm particularly unashamed of my life thus far.

My personal worries are leading a passionate and potential filled group of young people in the right direction. My only hope would be that they would see their talents and passions as an extension of themselves in not only showing themselves creatively but possibly God in the same manner...

Life is always more challenging when your choices affect beyond your own being.

"Living is never a single person's own affair" -Jet Li in Fearless (english translation)



Note: This post is merely to inform, not in any intention to convert or offend any reader.

Friday, March 23, 2012

For a century, underground railroad ran south - Yahoo! News

By BRUCE SMITH | Associated Press – Sun, Mar 18, 2012 

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — While most Americans are familiar with the Underground Railroad that helped Southern slaves escape north before the Civil War, the first clandestine path to freedom ran for more than a century in the opposite direction.
Stories of that lesser-known "railroad" will be shared June 20-24 at the National Underground Railroad Conference in St. Augustine, Fla. The network of sympathizers gave refuge to those fleeing their masters, including many American Indians who helped slaves escape to what was then the Spanish territory of Florida. That lasted from shortly after the founding of Carolina Colony in 1670 to after the American Revolution.
They escaped not only to the South but to Mexico, the Caribbean and the American West.
And the "railroad" helps to explain at least in part why the lasting culture of slave descendants — known as Gullah in South Carolinaand Geechee in Florida and Georgia — exists along the northeastern Florida coast.
"It's a fascinating story and most people in America are stuck — they are either stuck on 1964 and the Civil Rights Act or they are stuck on the Civil War," said Derek Hankerson, who is a Gullah descendant and a small business owner in St. Augustine, Fla. "We have been hankering to share these stories."
Because there are few records, it's unknown how many African slaves may have escaped along the railroad. But the dream of freedom in Florida did play a role in the 1739 Stono Rebellion outside Charleston, the largest slave revolt in British North America.
Slaves likely started fleeing toward Florida when South Carolina was established in 1670, said Jane Landers, a Vanderbilt University historian who has researched the subject extensively. The first mention of escaped slaves in Spanish records was in 1687 when eight slaves, including a nursing baby, showed up in St. Augustine.
Spain refused to return them and instead gave them religious sanctuary, and that policy was formalized in 1693. The only condition is that those seeking sanctuary convert to Catholicism.
"It was a total shift in the geopolitics of the Caribbean and after that anyone who leaves a Protestant area to request sanctuary gets it," Landers said.
That promise of freedom played an important role in the Stono Rebellion, when a group of about 20 slaves raided a store, collecting guns and other weapons, in September 1739.
Mark Smith, a historian at the University of South Carolina, said the slave leaders were from what is now Angola in Africa. They were Catholic, because their homeland was at the time a Portuguese outpost. And they are thought to have been soldiers in their native land.
They would have known about the rumor of freedom in Spanish Florida and decided to start the revolt on Sept. 9, the Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
"They have a white flag, which is not a flag of surrender. It's a flag of celebrating Mary, and they shout 'Liberty.' They are not revolting just as slaves, but as Catholic slaves," Smith said.
At least 20 whites were killed in the rebellion. The militia later caught up with the slaves and 34 of them were killed. Some who escaped were found and executed later, although some apparently made it to safety in Florida because there are reports of more slaves arriving in St. Augustine in the ensuing days, Landers said.
Gullah creole is still spoken in churches in northeastern Florida, Landers said.
Hankerson, who grew up with stories of the Underground Railroad, said escaped slaves got help from American Indian tribes including the Creeks, the Cherokees and the Yemassee. They also advanced deeper into Florida and found refuge with the Seminoles.
Except for about 20 years when the British held St. Augustine between the end of the French and Indian War and the end of the American Revolution, the Spanish policy of sanctuary remained in effect until 1790 when Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson convinced the Spanish crown to end it. Many runaways escaped amid the chaos and violence of the revolution, and keeping that corridor open could have drained the Southern colonies of slaves, Landers said.
Unlike the Underground Railroad going north, the early network was more informal: Neither the slaves nor the indigenous tribes that helped them left written records, and there was no church structure like the Quakers organizing the effort, Landers said. It's unknown exactly how many stayed among the American Indians or how many died.
The British saw slaves as property and labor for their plantations and offered rewards for their return.
By contrast, Landers said, "the Spanish believe the indigenous people and Africans could be converted and as such were humans and had families and souls to save."

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Thoughts and Updates (2/18/12)

Here are some thoughts and updates about some current events and where I've been recently.

1st.
Much love to Jeremy Lin and congrats on all of his success with the Knicks. I'm even more happy that all of his humility is rooted in his faith and that alone speaks louder than words.


2nd.
RIP Whitney Houston
I can't speak I was directly moved by her passing because in all honesty, I'm not familiar with her as an artist nor as a person but I do know that when someone passes from this world, we should all have respect for the recently deceased. Much love goes out to the families and friends around her and to all of those that have already jumped on the bandwagon of insensitive jokes, don't worry. Karma will pay a visit real soon.


Finally 3rd.
I know I have to apologize to those that follow me online through my youtube, twitter, facebook, etc for not updating things as consistently as I'd like. School, work, as well as other commitments are currently taking up a good bulk of my time but I do want to again give you all love for the support. I promise to try to update all my sites as much as possible. 

With love,
Kon

Monday, January 9, 2012

Let Love Reap Love

There is so much hate out there. Especially for those that try to better themselves.

Where does this hate come from?

Where does it start? Where does it end?

In this life, it is so easy to spread hate but it takes so much more strength to devise love unto others.

Hate reaps Hate.

Can Love follow suit and do the same?

Let Love Reap Love, by spreading love within ourselves exuding that intention to those around us...

With Love,
Kon

Monday, November 28, 2011

Self-Respect


If you are a woman, if you’re a person of colour, if you are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, if you are a person of size, if you are a person of intelligence, if you are a person of integrity, then you are considered a minority in this world.
…And it’s going to be really hard to find messages of self-love and support anywhere. Especially women’s and gay men’s culture. It’s all about how you have to look a certain way or else you’re worthless. You know when you look in the mirror and you think ‘oh, I’m so fat, I’m so old, I’m so ugly’, don’t you know, that’s not your authentic self? But that is billions upon billions of dollars of advertising, magazines, movies, billboards, all geared to make you feel shitty about yourself so that you will take your hard earned money and spend it at the mall on some turn-around creme that doesn’t turn around shit.
When you don’t have self-esteem you will hesitate before you do anything in your life. You will hesitate to go for the job you really wanna go for, you will hesitate to ask for a raise, you will hesitate to call yourself an American, you will hesitate to report a rape, you will hesitate to defend yourself when you are discriminated against because of your race, your sexuality, your size, your gender. You will hesitate to vote, you will hesitate to dream. For us to have self-esteem is truly an act of revolution and our revolution is long overdue.
Margaret Cho


I had read this and could not agree anymore than what was stated. I originally planned to do a video rant on my youtube but felt it to be more appropriate to write in a post. This life has so much negativity, sometimes for myself personally, I wish to join the Peace Corps, go to a country that most people read about, and live in a society that is primitive yet essentially happy in all respects and simplicity. Its weird seeing people around me, especially kids with all the latest gear, tech, etc and seeing how unhappy they still are yet knowing my family back home and in countries and places where they may not have access to these things still be happy is weird to me. Its funny how my parents came to this country for a "better" life yet are we really better living in a place that will only bring us down as human beings? Is it worth working and searching for a means to be able to buy a persons acceptance?

A revolution is certainly overdue...

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Life, Quality.

The quality of your life will be in direct proportion to the degree of uncertainty you can comfortably live with.

-Anthony Robbins

Saturday, September 24, 2011

A little rant on "grown people"

Note that I am breaking character to write this.

It is not necessary frustration that I write this but rather sadness that I am writing this. When you are "grown" and  you have children that look up to you, is it truly unreasonable that you serve to be a role model of sorts to them, at the very least, be a positive example?

I am saddened to say that this post is based on the actions of one individual previously from my iMusickk dance group.

If you don't know, I work with children using dance to reach out and minister to kids. The fact that he was upset because my pastors have told him to take responsibilities for himself when nobody else will is his own problem and that's fine. If this person wants to stay in that child-like mentality, more power to him and God Bless. The fact that he is going out of his way to talk shit about a church that tried to help him when nobody else would, is a little pathetic to be honest.

In the small chance that you come across this sir, know that these kids that you are deterring from maybe the only positive environment that they can be a part of just so you can have a friend or two, or by revealing things that are unbecoming to children just to feel accomplish, know that in the chance that they may fine Christ or in the very least come out better then where their parents are at right now, you're leading them down  
a path of self-destruction though I doubt you honestly care about your 'friends' and their well-being.

Honestly, God Bless and I am constantly praying for you because you seem like an upstanding role model and leader.

Sincerely,
Christopher.
"Dance Teacher, Youth Pastor, and friend.

Monday, September 19, 2011