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  • Hey what's up you guys it's Travis and today I'm gonna be telling you guys--

  • I don't know how I'm supposed to start this.

  • I never really liked the holidays.

  • The reason why I never liked the holidays is because

  • they kinda reminded me of something that I never really had, which was a family, and a

  • home, and a place that I belong.

  • In one of my previous videos, I told you guys that I ran away from home when

  • I was 15 and though that's true, it's not the entire story. I was actually kicked out

  • my house with I was 15 by my parents.

  • The night I was kicked out of my house, I walked to a gas station with my duffle bag. That's

  • all my dad would let me take, and I went to the bathroom and that's where I was planning

  • on staying the night.

  • I lied down and put

  • my head on the duffle bag and when I did that a quarter fell out of my pocket. Back then

  • we didn't have cell phones. Nobody had a cellphone. If you had one you were doing something

  • right and obviously I didn't have one, but had a quarter; and with that quarter

  • I could use a payphone that was at the gas station. So what I did was, I went to that payphone

  • and I called a girl from school, Kristen who at the time was one of my best friends.

  • And

  • I told her what had happened and she put her mom on the phone. And her mom, Tina, right

  • away was just like, "Come here now. You come to our place, no questions asked."

  • So from there I walked to Tina and Kristen's place and because of

  • them I had a bed to sleep in that night and I didn't have to sleep in the bathroom at a gas station.

  • The family didn't know me at all. They didn't

  • know anything about or where I had come from, but they took me in regardless and that's

  • that's something I will never really forget.

  • I said I wasn't going to cry in this video. Eventually, after a few days my parents tried

  • to intervene, because of that the problems that I had dealt with my whole life

  • were spilling into this family's life and I didn't want that to happen. So I decided

  • then that I was going to run away.

  • After a few days, I took off and I left town and I never

  • looked back.

  • I left because I knew that if I was going to survive I couldn't go back.

  • So though it was tough to leave them and it was really scary, it was what had to happen.

  • and It's a good thing, I don't know why the fuck I'm crying right now. The thing I didn't

  • anticipate about running away from home at 15 was that leaving home, as bad as

  • it was, would leave me searching for a new one and a new place that I belonged and in a

  • way I think I've been searching for that place ever since.

  • I've just come to anticipate that every year around the holidays I'm gonna get sad

  • because when everyone else is going to go home I'm going to be staying here and because

  • of that I've kind of always felt left behind.

  • Fast forward to this year. It was kind of tough year.

  • A lot of things started falling apart all at once. I had to let go of a lot of things

  • and I had to move on in some ways that really made

  • me feel pretty sad for a little while. And so when everything

  • started falling apart, I was like, "Oh shit the holiday season is coming around

  • in just a few months," and I knew that if I didn't do something I

  • was going to carry that depression throughout the rest of the year, but I

  • didn't want to do that. So instead of feeling sorry for myself. I made a deal that I would

  • save up some money so that I could get out of LA.

  • So what I did was, I work at a cafe and I make tips weekly at my job. So, I made a deal

  • with myself that every one dollar bill and every five dollar bill and every bit of

  • change that I got from my tips I would put in a bag. This bag actually.

  • So the past couple of months, I've actually felt pretty excited about that because I was working towards

  • something. The thing was though, when the holidays started approaching, it was time

  • for me to decide what I was going to do with that money, and I didn't think that far.

  • Now because I didn't have a plan of what I want to do that money is started making me feel

  • sad again. I could go on a vacation by myself, but I didn't want to go by myself. I wanted

  • to go somewhere where I belonged. So one day I'm driving to

  • work and to this apartment that I was looking at, and I was kind of breaking down a little bit.

  • So I called my friend and I was like, "I think saving all that money was pointless."

  • I was definitely just feeling sorry for myself. As I was sharing this story, I was driving

  • to work and I tried to take a shortcut through downtown and as I was driving I somehow ended

  • up on the street where there were homeless people lined up on

  • both sides of the street, for blocks.

  • I've never seen so many homeless people in one place in my life.

  • So there I was complaining

  • that I didn't have a home and that I didn't have a place where I belonged. And then there

  • are people around me who literally don't have a place to live. They are going to spend their

  • holiday season on the streets hoping that they are going to stay warm enough to make

  • it through the night. And so when I'm sitting there seeing all of this. I literally stop

  • mid sentence because I'm looking at all these homeless people around me and suddenly everything

  • that I'm complaining about seems kind of silly, because regardless of my story and where I

  • came from, I was still going home to sleep in a warm bed that night and that's the

  • thing they didn't have. After talking to my friend for a little bit longer we decided

  • that whatever I was looking for I wasn't going to find by leaving LA but I still had

  • this bag of money that I had saved up that I still wanted to use for something special.

  • So I took a little time to think about what

  • I want to use the money for, and it didn't take me a very long to decide what I wanted to

  • do with it.

  • Man that was awesome!

  • Yeah.

  • This is amazing.

  • I know.

  • The thing with the holidays is that it's really not about what you are looking to get out

  • of them. It's about showing appreciation for the things that you already have. I was kicked

  • out of my house when I was 15 and I could have easily been on the streets had it not

  • been for Kristen and her beautiful family that took me in when I had no place else to go.

  • They're the reason that I am able to sit here and made this video for you guys right now.

  • So, yes I gave some cheeseburgers to some homeless people downtown and yes I realize that they

  • need more than cheeseburgers but this video isn't about raising money. I want this

  • video to be for anyone that's watching it right now to remind you that you

  • really do have a lot to be grateful for. We all do and sometimes the holidays can remind us

  • of the things we don't have, but its really important to focus on

  • the things that you do. I think a great way to demonstrate that gratitude is to do

  • something for someone else.

  • As for me, it looks like I'm gonna be spending the

  • holidays in LA again this year, but for the first time in a long time I think I'm okay with that.

  • To see the homeless people downtown taking

  • the food from me and how much joy and laughter and life they had just for receiving a cheeseburger

  • from a stranger on the street. That was really special and that kind of put things into perspective;

  • because if they can find happiness in the situation they're in just

  • from getting a $2 cheeseburger, why can't we do that?

  • Thank you guys again for being a part of this journey with me and I'll see you next time.

Hey what's up you guys it's Travis and today I'm gonna be telling you guys--

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A2 初級 美國腔

十五歲時被踢出局--我的故事。 (KICKED OUT AT FIFTEEN - MY STORY)

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    Rodrick west 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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