Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Rogue Entrepreneurs Get Second Chance

“What would it be like if you were known for the worst thing that you ever did in your life?”
This is the question that Catherine Rohr asked herself and others when she founded Defy Ventures, a nonprofit organization that seeks to break the cycle of incarceration in the US by equipping men with criminal histories with the power to leverage their innate entrepreneurial skills to create profitable, sustainable, legal enterprises.  
During a prison visit with a Christian outreach program, Catherine observed that former inmates who ran powerful gangs or profitable drug rings have similar skills to those of successful business people.  They tragically channelled their skills toward illegal activities, but fortunately, they were caught and paid their time, and Catherine recognized that they could put these same skills to productive use, create profitable businesses, and become contributing members to society.  
In my business, I often look for the outliers who don’t fit the traditional definition of a real estate partner.  My first big partner was the guy who I bought pizza from a couple of times a week.  Catherine has taken this concept to a whole new level and has found promise, potential, hope, and success in a group of human beings that would most likely not have been given much of a chance beyond menial minimum wage jobs.  
Catherine has taught me that there is always a bright side to every situation, and we need to search for it and nurture it no matter how hard it may seem.  
Check out defyventures.org to learn more about this fascinating initiative.
Have you given someone a second change today?

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

The Day After Boston

As our country’s leaders work to figure out who carried out the horrific act of terrorism at the Boston Marathon yesterday, as well as why and how, I feel helpless, angry, scared, and desperate to figure out what we can do to move on in the face of such senseless violence and death. 
On September 11, 2001, my wife was pregnant and at a doctor’s appointment when the Twin Towers fell.  As she sat there wondering why she was bringing a child into this crazy world, her doctor asked if she really wanted to bring a child into this world.  What ensued was a baby boom.  Rather than retreat and give in to the terrorism, people became more family-focused and aimed to populate the world with more good people, the anti-terrorist movement.
Who knows what life will bring us with each passing day?  Plan for the future, but live in the moment.  Teach your children ethical values and ensure them that you will do everything in your power to keep them safe.  What else can we do?