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What's
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Reviews
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Legally
Speaking
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Driving
While Black
Racial
Profiling
On Our Nation's Highways
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Mayor's Column
From
The Office of
Mayor Thomas M. Menino
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CHAPTER 1
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Excerpt from
I Ain't Scared of You : Bernie Mac on How Life Is
Chapter One: Hard Times and Humble Beginnings
I grew up in the streets of 69th and Morgan, the south side of Chicago.
Rough as hell. We did all that bullshit -- fighting, cuttin' each other
with glass, shootin'. But back when we were coming up, we could joke
with each other hard. We killed each other with jokes, all day long.
And we didn't run and get no pistols or nothin'. Learning how to take
a joke, learning how to tell one on somebody -- that shit made you stronger.
People talkin' about you: "Ya hair nappy";
"You got on floods up to here."
Lint in ya hair? Shit, you had the teddis.
And it's always a guy that smells like piss.
"Black ass tar baby," they used to call me. "Spooky Juice."
I'm sitting up there, they laughing at me and shit. I went home mad,
can't sleep. Next day, I come back: "Motherfucker," I was
talking that shit, too. "Yeah, look at you..." You learn how
to fight back, man. I didn't go get no pistol. That's when I learned
to come back. "Look at you!"
Growing up, I laughed at stuff that people couldn't understand. I'd
be laughing at the craziest thing, and people would be lookin' at me
like, What the hell? Something wrong with that muthafucka.
I laughed at people's misfortune -- because I had so many misfortunes.
But I didn't look at them as misfortunes. I learned hard lessons in
life; I had to because I had so much happen: My mother died my sophomore
year in high school. The next year, same day, my brother dropped dead.
Two years after that, I got married because my girlfriend got pregnant.
The year after my wedding, my father -- who I had only recently met
-- died.
That was just life to me. So my mentality was, your misfortune wasn't
all that bad because that's the way I thought about mine. But on the
flip side, you were like, "This muthafucka laughing. I'm sitting
up here, house burnin' down, and this muthafucka up here laughing."
That's true. One time, there was this fire on our block, and everybody
had come running out this house. They was in they draws, hair all messed
up, and there go Ms. Lee screamin', "Aw Lord, our prop'ty, our
prop'ty!"
And I'm laughing. Ms. Lee snapped on me: "It ain't funny! It ain't
funny!" The more she screamed, the harder I laughed. But I wasn't
laughing at the fire. I wasn't laughing at the fact that their house
was burning down. I was laughing at their expressions.
I just kept seeing her face, all frowned up, eyes bugged out, raggedy-ass
headrag on, and she just screamin'. One side of her panties was in the
crack of her ass. Her old man -- he had lost a leg to diabetes -- and
this peg-leg muh'fucka was just kickin' at the air. Just kickin'. Talkin'
to firemen, talkin' 'bout, "Hurry up!"
I just couldn't hold it. I was falling out.
But like I said,
I could laugh at people's misfortunes because I had so many of my own.
Like a lot of black people, I grew up straight po'. Wasn't no question
about whether we was po', either. If you really wanted to know, all
you had to do was look in our refrigerator.
You go to some people houses and the kids got all kinds of cookies and
cakes and ice cream and shit. You know, snacks. But not us. We ain't
never have no good food, man, nothin' for kids to just munch on. Shit,
fuck around and ask my granddaddy 'bout some damn snacks.
KIDS: Daddy,
can we have a snack?
GRANDDADDY: Mm-hmm, yeah, you can have a snack. Put you a coupla
boiled eggs up in that pot in there.
Seriously, that
was a snack at our house. We'd put about three or four eggs in a pot,
boil 'em, then my granddaddy would cut 'em up in halves. I'd get a half.
My brother would get a half, and so on. Then you'd add salt and pepper
and hot sauce.
Maaaaan, you'd be farting all damn night.
Everybody would be in the bed trying to get some rest, my grandmama
and granddaddy in the next room, and then all of a sudden -- fffrrrrrppppppp.
"Man, why you -- why you -- why you do it by my face? Mamaaaaaa!
He fartin' in people's face!"
"Well, he just did in mine! He did it in mine!"
That's from eating all them eggs.
And it wasn't just snacks. You know you poor when you eatin' breakfast
food late. You fryin' toast? At nine o'clock at night? With bacon?
You're broke.
We'd have to get some baloney and fry it until the black forms a circle
around the edges. Don't even have no bread. Just roll it up like a hot
dog and eat it.
And don't let us really get some ice cream. Booooyyy. When we'd get
ice cream, my granddaddy would give us all one scoop each. I'd get mine,
stir it up, mash it, make it seem like I had a lot. And you know kids:
always examining what the other kids got.
My brother would be lookin' at mine, and then he'd start complaining
to my grandfather -- which was the wrong thing to do.
"Granddaddy, he got mo' than me!"
My granddaddy'd tell him: "Ain't nobody got mo'! Ain't nobody got
mo'!"
"Yes, he do! Everybody got mo!"
Then my granddaddy would just get mad at all of us. He couldn't just
get mad at one of us. He had to get us all.
"Ain't nobody got -- You know what? Go to bed! All y 'all, go to
bed!"
It'd be two o'clock in the afternoon. "Go to bed!"
We all laying up in the bed, the lights out. We just layin' there, eyes
wide open, mad. That was motherfuckin' torture. We all in the bed, can't
go to sleep. My granddaddy would peek in the room and be like, "Close
ya eyes! Close ya eyes!"
Two o'clock in the goddamned afternoon! You hear all the other kids
playing outside and shit: "One potato, two potato, three potato,
fo'..." We can't even look out the window. We just laying in the
bed, 'cause my brother done said I had more ice cream. Ain't that some
shit?
I used to go to
all kinds of lengths to get some snacks. I'll never forget the time
my grandmother took me and my sister with her to the market. We walkin'
around, and I saw this bag of marshmallows I wanted. And I kept asking
her to get us some marshmallows or something. She kept telling me no.
So I thought, Fuck it. I'll get some for my damn self.
Soon as she walked out of the aisle, I broke open a pack of marshmallows
and started diggin' one of them sum'bitches out with my fingers. Man,
it was good.
So I'm tryin' to eat that muh'fucka fast -- before my grandmother came
back and caught me.
Too late. She came walking 'round that corner, man, I got scared as
hell. I started tryin' to chew all fast. Big Mama saw me and was like,
"Boy, what you eatin'?"
I was like "mmnumphin'." I'm trying to lie, but my black ass
got white powder all around my lips. She walked up on me and was like,
"So what's that in yo' mouth?"
I couldn't just start chewing in front of her, so I just started to
suck on that motherfuckin' marshmallow, tryin' to get that bitch to
dissolve. My cheeks all sunk in and shit. I'm thinkin' if I suck it
down, she won't get me.
But you wasn't just puttin' anything over on my grandmother. She was
gon' catch my ass. "Spit it out!" she said. I'm still bullshittin'
like I don't have anything. Sucking, sucking.
Man, don't you know she just started diggin' in my mouth? Right there
in the aisle. Pieces of marshmallow all on her fingers and shit. "Gimme
that! Give it here, got-dammit!" I'm busted like a muh'fucka.
Boy, she tore my ass up when we got home.
I remember one time,
I stole a candy bar. I had wanted me some sweets, so I took it. I had
really went in there to steal this rubber ball. Me and my friends had
knocked our ball on the roof, so I went in to Stanle's Store to get
another one.
By me not knowing how to steal, I told on my damn self. I'm walking
all around the store. First of all, I looked like I ain't have no money.
Second of all, I ain't have no note. You know, back then, a lil' muh'fucka
wanted somethin' from the store, he had to have a note from his mama.
So I'm walkin' around. I see the ball. I put that ball in my draws and
tried to leave.
Now, the man who owns the store sees me, right? And he know ain't no
eight-year-old with a dick like that. So either I was stealin' or I
had the blue balls.
Anyway, I made it to the door. The man was gon' let me leave with the
ball, too. Now, I done made it to the door -- but I wanted some sweets.
So I turned my black ass aroun' and gon' steal me a Baby Ruth!
I put the Baby Ruth in my shirt, started walking toward the door. So
now, it looked like I had titties -- huge, deformed cancer breasts --
and a big-ass dick.
That old man caught me at the door. He said, "What you got?"
I said, "I ain't got nothin'." He knew me, so at first he
threatened to call my mama. But then he said, "Tell you what. I'm
gon' let you have the candy and the ball. But first, you gotta take
that ball out of your pants and the candy out your shirt and walk out
of here with it in your hand."
I walked out, and at first, didn't understand the message. But when
I got older, I understood: He had given me a break, but he didn't want
me hiding the truth. Own up to what you do. We all will get breaks,
but take advantage of the second chance. That's what I learned -- and
I never stole again.
Well, not from him anyway.
Yeah, snacks, man.
I wanted 'em, but couldn't get 'em. Even when we would go out, we weren't
going out for good snacks. Like fast food? We never had no McDonald's.
We had White Castle. Two hamburgers and three fries apiece, and two
drinks to split between me and my brothers and sisters. You'd take a
sip. He'd take a sip. You'd take a sip. He'd take a sip. And we used
to fight about who was going to have the last sip. We'd all be looking,
watching -- making sure nobody else got that last sip.
Then after we did all that fighting, it would always be my grandfather
who'd take the last sip. He'd just grab the cup, swirl the ice around
in it and say, "Aw, we ain't even gon' worry 'bout it -- Slllllrrrrrrrrppppp
-- Ain't no sense in arguin' over it. Buurrrpp."
We'd just be sitting there, looking at him like, "This nigga is
cheap!"
That's why I used
to say that when I got grown, we were gon' have snacks and food at our
house. 'Cause we ain't never have no snacks. No good food. Just beans.
Northern beans. Red beans. Lima beans. Pinto beans. That's all we ate.
Chicken and noodles. Chicken and fries. On Friday, we'd have fish and
spaghetti. Saturday we ate in church, 'cause they sold dinners. Sunday,
my mama made a big dinner. Roast. Mashed potatoes. Hot butter rolls.
She made a cake. I couldn't wait for Sunday to come. Every Sunday, we
had a good dinner.
Monday? Beans and rice.
That's why with
me, it ain't about money. I'm doing great. I was doing great when I
was poor. You couldn't tell me I was poor. I didn't know what poor was.
We ate oatmeal and oatmeal alone. We'd eat cereal, and my grandmother
would pour milk into my bowl, but you couldn't slurp that muthafucka.
When you got through eating your cereal, you had to pour your milk in
the next bowl for my brother n'em. And when he got through, he'd pour
it in the next bowl. I ain't lying. We ain't think nothing was wrong
with that.
We ate party meat -- everyday. Party meat. I ate the shit out of party
meat. Party meat, vegetables, alphabet soup. That was our lunch. Shit,
I used to write sentences in the soup: "Help! Please, help!"
I ain't lying. I was trying to send a message, man.
When you opened our refrigerator, all you saw was light. Lightbulb and
butter, that's all you saw. But we was happy as hell because I never
had a sense of doubt as a little boy, I never had a sense of worry.
I guess that's why right now, I'm not a materialist cat because I never
had those things around me. Suits? Cars? Shit, I didn't have a key to
the house until I was a senior in high school.
We used to have
this station wagon when I was a kid. And when we'd go somewhere, we'd
all pop in the station wagon. That was when people could still sit on
your lap. Now, you can't sit on no laps -- but back then, there'd be
eleven of us kids in one goddamn seat. And the windows didn't let down
in that muh'fucka, either. We'd look like the Beverly Hillbillies, everybody's
face all smashed up against a window, complaining to my granddaddy.
"Grandddaddy, his knee in my side!"
"Move ya gotdamn knee! Move ya knee. Move ya knee. Move ya knee.
Move ya knee!"
That was the thing about my granddaddy: Whenever he warned ya, he would
always tell ya things four, five times.
"I ain't gon' tell ya no more. I ain't gon' tell ya no more. I
ain't gon' tell ya no more. I ain't gon' tell ya no more. Let me have
to tell ya again."
He ain't never say nothing once.
"You kids, don't let me come up there! Let me come up there. Let
me come on up there. You want me to come up there? I'll come up there.
But you don't believe it, though. You don't believe it. You just don't
believe it. Don't believe it. Hmmph, he don't believe it."
We'd be like, Why does he always have to say the same shit four, five
times?
Like if I was messin' up in school, he'd tell me, "The teacher
wants me to come up to your school. If I got to come up to school, I'm
gonna bust your ass wide open. Wide open. W-i-i-i-ide open. You gon'
be wide open. Everybody gon' be able to see inside you."
And he'd slap you in a minute, slap the shit outta ya. He just liked
hurtin' you.
POW!
"Now, didn't I tell you something? Didn't I tell you? Didn't I
tell you? I told you. You heard me tell him?"
Then my grandmother would say to him, "Don't say it again. Don't
say it again. Please don't say it again."
"Naw, I ain't gon' say nothing. I ain't gon' say nothing. I ain't
gon' say nothin'. I ain't saying nothing. Hmmph, see if I say something."
My grandfather used
to give us baths. That whole scene was crazy. First, he'd spend 'bout
15 minutes trying to get the hot water to work 'cause our pipes would
be frozen.
You'd hear him bangin' on the pipes for a long time. Every now and then,
he'd stop to yell to us.
Tink, Tink, Tink.
"Is it on yet?"
"Naw, grandaddy, it's still cold."
Tink, Tink, Tink.
"What about now?"
"Not yet."
"Well, let me try this back end."
Tink, Tink, Tink.
"Yeah, grandaddy, it's getting warm now...Yeah, now it's boiling
hot."
He'd get that muh'fucka to where it'd be like the damn swamp, steam
just coming up off the water.
Then he'd just throw yo' ass in there.
You like, "Aaagggghhh!" Skin comin' off yo' ass from the heat
and shit, and my granddaddy talkin' 'bout, "Hurry up and get you
ass in there before it get cold."
Then he'd wash us. Man, he would scrub us until we niggas was raw. You'd
be bleedin'. I used to have scabs from where that muh'fucka used to
be scrubbin' on my black ass.
And then, after you took your bath, you didn't just let the water drain.
Hell naw, not with all them kids. You got out, and somebody else got
they ass in.
You'd be cryin', talkin' 'bout, "The water dirty!"
My grandfather'd be like, "Aw, shut up, boy. A lil' dirt ain't
never hurt nobody. Ain't hurt nobody. Ain't nobody ever got hurt from
a lil' dirt."
Man, my grandfather
came to school with me one time. I was so embarrassed I didn't know
what to do. And you know kids. They parents come to school lookin' all
fucked up, people are like, "Who mama is that? Who daddy is that?"
And you could always tell whose mama it was because whoever her child
was, he'd be the only muh'fucka in the class lookin' at his paper and
writing, tryin' to pretend like he was doing some work.
So my grandfather comes up to the school to talk to my teacher. "Uh,
I'm Mr. Mac. I'm here for Bernard Mac." Then he'd try to use big
words while he was talking to the teacher. "So, uh, what seems
to be the calculation?"
Everybody was looking around like, What? Then the teacher told him,
"Well, Bernard's being a disruption in class. He laughs a lot."
"He laughs a lot? I done told him about laughing. Didn't I tell
you about laughing? Didn't I tell you about laughing? I done told you
about laughing. Keep on laughing. Laugh one mo' time."
Kids all teasing me and everything. I'm just sitting there all humiliated,
like, "This ign'ant sum'bitch!"
And it wasn't just
in my school when he did that. My grandfather always tried to use big
words, and was always fuckin' 'em up: "See, boy, you know, when
you get the job and it's inferential, what happen is, it rederdefried
itself."
What?
When I got older, I'd challenge him. He'd get tight with me -- get really
mad -- when I asked him about a word. He'd be offended that I questioned
him.
"See," he'd say, "first of all, you gotta abstract yourself
from all the inferentials."
So I'd ask, "What you say?"
He'd get tight. "Don't play with me, boy."
"What you gettin' tight for? I don't know what you talking about."
Then he'd really get tight. "Don't worry 'bout it. Don't worry
'bout it. Just-just don't worry 'bout it. You ain't gotta worry 'bout
it. You all worried 'bout it."
He'd just get mad at you because he was making up words.
There was plenty
of moments like that, too. I'll never forget one time when he was sittin'
on the porch with his fan. It was scorching outside this day -- I mean,
really, really hot. A neighbor pulled up. We all sittin' there. (You
couldn't just run around when my granddaddy was around; we had to sit
on the porch.) The neighbor comes by, says to my grandfather, "Hey,
Brother Mac."
Granddaddy spoke back, "Hey, man, how's it goin'?"
"It's a steamer today, ain't it?"
"Yeah, man...It's about 100 degrees centipede."
Ain't nobody even say nothin'. We all just looked around. Centipede?
What the fuck is some centipede?
My granddaddy was
a hard-working man, and wasn't scared of a lot. But one thing he was
scared of, boy: my grandmama. Big Mama ran things back then. She wasn't
scared to fight him. They'd always be fighting about something. All
night long, just fighting. The police used to come to our house so much
that when they would just roll past the neighborhood, my friends would
be lookin' at me.
We'd be at school, hear the siren -- waaaahhhwaaaaaaahhhhh -- then somebody'd
say, "Bernie, they gettin' ready to go to yo' house, ain't they?"
The police stayed at our house, talking all nice, trying to calm my
grandparents down. "Mister, Missus Mac, y'all stop."
Granddaddy'd go on in a corner: "Hmmph. That's her. That's her.
That's her. Her be startin' all that. Her be doin' all that."
Grandmama would just be sitting there. "Yeah, I'm gon' show you
what her be doin'."
"Oh, yeah, we gon' see what's g'wains on." That's where I
got that from -- "g'wains on" -- from my grandmama. Then she'd
be like, "Tell ya what: it's gon' be a new day in the week when
I get up on ya. 'Cause on the eighth day, I ain't gon' get off ya."
Then she'd get tight-lipped on ya -- and she'd always close her eyes
when she was threatening him. That meant she serious. Her eyes would
close real slow and tight, and she'd always have to add: "I'mma
cut yo' ass in two."
I asked her once why she always closed her eyes when she said stuff
like that.
"Baby, so I can say it with conviction," she said.
Scared the shit outta me.
But most of us came
from that. That's what was real. That was how our families were back
then. But that's also when families were strong and were upright. You
got pregnant, they sent you down South. They hid you. It was an embarrassment
to the family. You were a bastard.
And families took care of each other. When somebody got old or had something
bad happen, they didn't go to no doctors. There was always that sick
uncle or aunt that you kept in the attic or somewhere.
We had an uncle like that, my grandmother's brother, was crazy as hell.
He had had a couple of nervous breakdowns. You never saw him. They kept
him in the back.
All you'd hear is him hollerin' "Hhaaaggggghhhh!"
You'd be eatin, hear that shit, look around...
Big Mama would be like, "Don't worry 'bout what's back there. Eat
ya supper."
You'd start eatin' again -- and all of a sudden he'd break out again:
"Haagggggghhhh!"
Big Mama: "Didn't I say eat yo' supper?"
I'm thinkin', How am I supposed to eat with that crazy muh'fucka back
there hollerin' and shit?
And we couldn't go in the back either. They had a skeleton key where
they kept the door locked. That nigga would be back there going crazy.
And they'd go and knock on the door and slide him his food. We never
could go back there.
One day my grandmother was gone. (And you always knew when your grandmother
was at home because her wig had the little styrofoam stand. If her wig
was on that styrofoam she was in the crib; if that wig was gone, that
mean she was gone.) So I got my brothers and them and said, "Come
on, y'all, I got the skeleton key. Let's see who back there."
So went back there, banged on the door.
He went, "Haaaaggghhh!"
I went, "Haaaaahgggghhh."
"Haaaaggghh."
"Haaaagghh."
Then I said, "Who back there?"
He ain't say nothin'.
I said, "Why don't you come out?"
"If I could come out, I'da been gone."
I said, "You want me to open the door?"
Then I heard my brothers, "Here come Big Mama, here come Big Mama."
I ran. Put the key back. My grandmother came in, asked us what we wanted
for dinner, then went back there where he was.
And don't you know that crazy sum'bitch told on me?
He wasn't that damn crazy. He knew my name and everythang.
"Bernie came back here, tried to let me out."
My grandmother ain't say nothin' for a coupla hours. We was sittin'
at the table. We all eatin'. Then she started talkin' to me, real calm
and quietly.
GRANDMAMA: So, ummm,
you went back in the back, huh? Tried to get your uncle to escape.
BERNIE: Who?
GRANDMAMA: I'mma ask ya one mo' time. Did you go back there and try
to get him to escape?
BERNIE: Naw, I heard him -- I heard him -- I -- I heard sumthin' fall
and I went back there and I asked him if he was all right. That's all
I asked him. That's all I asked him. I asked him if...
GRANDMAMA: He say you tried to let him out.
BERNIE: Naw! I -- How I'mma let him out? I don't even know how!
GRANDMAMA: Ya lyin' to me, ain't ya?
BERNIE (head down): (sniff) I -- I'm lyin'. (sniff)
I mean, I knew to
tell 'cause she had that look on me, right?
Man, she whooped me with an ironing cord. I hollered. I screamed. I
ran all around the house.
But that sum'bitch used to run track. She was dead on my ass.
The next day, she
was gone. I went back there again, stood outside that door. Maaaan,
I cussed his butt out.
"Oh, you's a punk sum'bitch, you know that? Wit' ya -- ya -- ya
trick ass!" I'm all up in the keyhole talkin' shit. "I hope
ya go crazy. I hope it ain't no lights on in that muthafucka. I hope
ya go blind."
He on the other side of the door, "You, too! You, too!"
"That's why ya locked up in there....Hhhhhaggghhh!"
Grown folks stayed
on us 'bout everything. Always tellin' don't do this or that. Let them
tell it, everything was gon' "put yo' eye out."
MAMA: Boy, don't
be runnin' with them scissors. You gon' fall down, put yo' eye out!
Put yo' eye out?
How come it was always yo' eye? How come you never heard, "You
gon' cut yo' ear off?" Or "Boy, you gon' lose yo' nose?"
Nope. It was, "Carry the knife by the handle. And walk wit' it!
Walk, before you mess around and put yo' eye out!"
But what happened to those kind of injuries you had when you was a kid?
Lil' kids don't have those kind of injuries now. They don't fall down
the stairs. We used to get cut up, bruised, scarred. One time, we had
a board holding up our window and I knocked it away, and the window
smashed my hand. My nail was all black, hurtin' like a muh'fucka.
Those were the old injuries. Kids don't have those no more. Now, they
just continuously get shot. They can't just hurt themself no more.
BYSTANDER: Man,
you heard what happened to that nigga Pierre?
BYSTANDER 2: Naw, what happened?
BYSTANDER 1: Got to arguin' with a nigga, and he got shot.
BYSTANDER 2: Whaaat? Damn, dog, how old was he?
BYSTANDER 1: Eight months.
What happened to
the kid shit? Worst happened to us was, we'd get burnt. "Get the
butter!"
Now? "Shot."
I always tell people
how I had it hard so they'll understand my hunger, my desire to succeed.
That's why I'm not complacent. I'm not settling for less. I ain't never
been picked first to do a damn thing. Even when I was a young dude and
we played ball -- and man, I was an athlete. I played baseball, football,
basketball. I boxed for four years. I always had to earn it. Always.
When we picked teams before we played ball in the street, folks used
to look over me all the time.
CAPTAIN NO. 1: Give
me Jacobs.
Look dead at me...
CAPTAIN NO. 2: Give
me Bob.
CAPTAIN NO. 1: Give me Raymond.
I'm just standing
there...
CAPTAIN NO. 2: C'mon,
Pete.
CAPTAIN NO. 1: Gimme Michael.
I'm the last one.
CAPTAIN 2 (rolling
his eyes): (sigh) C'mon, nigga.
I got cut from my
high-school basketball team four times. We had practice early in the
morning, six o'clock. We had two sides in the layup line. I was on one
side, did a layup, shot a jumper. The coach looked at me and said, "You
can go." Shit, I went...
...on the other side of the layup line. Did the same thing over there,
ran a little drill, layed up the ball. The coach tapped me on my shoulder
this time: "You can go."
I came back the next day.
Got in line. Blended in. Did my lil' shit. The coach lookin' at me --
leaning down, squinting. He said, "Didn't I cut you yesterday?"
I'm looking all surprised and shit. I said, "Naw, you ain't cut
me."
He stared at me some more, thought about it, then he said, "Go
on, man. Get in line."
I got in line, did a little drill. Then the coach nodded and said, "You
cut now."
So I went back on the other side. I'm in line and everything. The coach
came over to talk to the assistant coach about something. Then he looked
at me.
COACH: Come here!
I came over.
COACH: Didn't I
cut you yesterday?
ME (voice high-pitched and cracking): Naw. I...I thought you had tol'
me to come over...come over here...That's why I came on over here.
COACH (exasperated): Psshhh...maann...You gon' sit here and lie?
ME: Unh-unh. I ain't lying. You tol' me to come over here. That's what
you tol' me to do.
COACH (Shaking head): Let me see what you got, man. You taking all this
doggone effort. Lyin' and shit.
I made the squad.
I had to work harder than everybody. I didn't start. I was sitting on
the bench, just sitting. Everytime he'd say a name -- "Frank"
-- I'd scoot down. Just trying to get close so he could see me. I started
stickin' my head out real far so he could just get a look at me.
But I wouldn't play. I'd go to the locker room, take a shower, guys
teasing me: "Ain't no need in you takin' no shower, man. You still
fresh." I'm the Minute Man -- it'd be a minute left in the game
and the coach'd put you in.
And when you get in, you ain't gonna pass that ball either. I ain't
passin' shit. Everybody on your team out there yelling: "Bernie!
Bernie! Berniiiieeee!"
Man, shit, I'm out there shaking and baking on myself. I'm puttin' moves
on and shit. Ain't nobody even checkin' me but I'm pump-fakin', takin'
the ball through my legs, behind my back.
Shit, I had to get two points. At least I'd get in the paper.
ME: When I was about
14, 15, we moved away to a nicer neighborhood. It was almost like the
suburbs. I went to CVS High School. I went to high school and started
playing ball and liking girls. I started combing my hair. I started
getting lines every Saturday. I started creasing my slacks and polishing
my shoes. I just went into a hygiene fit. I started getting manicures.
Got into smell-goods. I started noticing fashion and shoes. I had to
be clever. People were starting to say, "Mac smooth, man."
Now, before that, I was a nasty muh'fucka: Type of nigga who'd turn
his draws inside out instead of putting on a new pair. Wear the same
socks and shit. Rub my ankle, and dirt used to just roll off that muh'fucka,
man.
Butter over there is my brother-in-law. We been knowing each other for
years. He knows. We done talked about that shit. Ain't it the truth,
Butter?
BUTTER: Oh yeah, I know how it used to be. I was a lil' chubby muh'fucka
growing up. Take a bath? Fuck it. I'd just wash my socks or something
in the bathtub, make the water dirty, come out and I'd be dry than a
muh'fucka. My mama'd be screaming: "Get your fat ass in that bathtub,
you lil' nasty muh'fucka!"
ME: You know how you was musty and you ain't think it was you? Swear
up and down it wasn't you; shit, it'd be you like a muh'fucka. That
was back when you'd get up in the morning and just put ya slacks on.
Don't brush ya teeth; just get up in the morning and wipe your teeth
off. Take your nail and scraped your teeth and wiped that plaque off.
I mean, just a nasty muh'fucka.
I remember the first
girl I liked. I had had girls I liked before, but they weren't real
girlfriends. They were those girls you just fire on, hit in the mouth
when you were younger, just to be stupid.
Pow!
That meant you liked her.
She talkin' 'bout, "You play too much!"
The girl I liked was built. She was built like a woman. She had quads,
a small waist, her hair tapered and cut fine. She was cinnamon brown,
had some fat, red lips. She was one of them fast-ass heifers, too fast
for me, but I liked her.
The most we'd ever done was kissed. But one night, we were in her house.
I told her I was getting ready to go. She told me her mother was working
nights and that I didn't have to go. I put my deep, sexy voice on and
said, "Well, I'll stay a lil' bit."
We got on that couch, man, and she moved her panties to the side. This
my first real piece, okay?
I said, "Daaaaaamnnn." I was rubbing her, and it was like
somebody turned the water on my hand. That's how wet it was.
She laid down, man. This is true shit. I took my pants off, man.
...and exploded. I mean, soon as my dick went in that muh'fucka, man,
all I remember is, "Ugggghhhhhhhhh...rrrrrrggggggghhhh...uuugggggggggh."
Man, I shook so hard.
She just looked up at me and said, "No, you didn't."
I couldn't help it. That muh'fuckin' nut was so damn good, I wish I
could've saved it!
Not long after that,
I started going steady with another girl. First time I bust a nut in
my slacks was with her. I was going steady with her. Her father was
a minister. I grew up in the church, too. I really dug her.
We talked about sex. We'd grind. But her big fear about sex was, she
didn't want to have sex and God come down. Her mother and them had instilled
that in her head. "If Jesus come while you're having sex, you're
going to hell." She really had that concept in her head. That was
her belief.
She got to me with that shit. I'd be like, "Yeah, I believe in
the Lord, too, and I -- I -- I don't want to die on a piece of pussy."
I didn't want to go to hell smelling like pussy.
So we would just grind. Man, I bust so many nuts in my slacks messing
with her that I broke out in a rash. We used to be on the floor before
I'd go home, grinding like a muh'fucka. I'd get that nut and it'd be
so strong it'd have my motherfuckin' voice changin'. But I dug her.
As I got older,
I got into all kinds of things in the streets -- but for some reason,
I never got caught up with the gangs growing up. Everybody dug me, man.
I never had problems.
Well, actually, I had a couple of incidents, but they weren't that big.
I once had a situation where they tried to draft me. They just walk
up on ya and try to recruit you.
One day, I was in the alley with my friends, playing football. I was
quarterbacking. This one play, I told my receivers to go for the bomb.
I said, "Hut one, hut two. Hike." And they took off running
-- but then those muh'fuckas kept runnin'!
I turned around and there was about five members of this gang, the Seven-Oh
Gangsters, standing there surrounding me. They said, "G-thang"
and put their hands across their chests. Then one of 'em said, "You
in a gang, nigga?"
I said, "Naw."
He said, "Well, you is now."
They took me to a basement and jumped on me. That was part of their
recruiting ritual; they beat yo' ass, then you were a part of the gang.
But I was cool with the leader of this gang, and he knew I ain't have
no business in that bullshit. So the next day, he told me not to worry,
that he wasn't going to let them force me to be in the gang.
It was a good thing, too, because two days later the Seven-Oh Gangsters
had a falling out with the Mafia Gangsters. They had been allied, but
now they was enemies. You know: Nigga shit.
Man, they was shooting each other, coming into the build-ings popping
each other. The Mafia Gangsters had a dude whose name was Sam. Crazy-ass
nigga, but he was more cockeyed than a muh'fucka. One night, he caught
the leader in an apartment building and was gon' kill him. He had a
shotgun up to the leader at point-blank range. He pointed and fired
two times.
Chk-chk...blam! Chk-chk...blam!
Ed turned and flinched, but the shells only hit the two sides of his
jacket.
Sam missed him! Twice! Cross-eyed sonmofnabitch.
When I was real
young, we lived above a church, Burning Bush Baptist Church. We was
also members. It was one of those small churches. You know the kind:
they got three members -- and all of 'em are relatives.
Maaaaaan, we was in church all damn day, every day. Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday Bible class, rehearsal. Sunday, I used to
set up the church. Had to clean the benches, set the hymns out. Run
the Baptism pool. Sunday evening we had Bible Training Union. Then there
was Young Deacon Night.
And because we lived right above there church, we had to be there. You
know how you wanted to miss school, so you played like you was sick
the day before or that night? Or you go to bed early so they'll figure
you're sick. That next morning you get up and ya mama tell you, "Time
to go to school." You tell her "I don't feel good. It's my
head, my stomach, something." She tell you to go lay down.
And I used to really act out: I would chew some food or drink some water
so -- bllleuuch! -- I could throw it up and make it look like it was
vomit.
Couldn't do that on Sundays.
Sunday? "I'm sick! Bllleuuch!"
"Just sit your ass in the back. You going to prayer service."
You'd have to sit right in the damn back. You couldn't miss no church.
If the kids was upstairs, we used to slide our feet across the floor
to keep from lifting them up walking. If they heard you walking, my
grandfather would come up from the church: "I'ma whoop your ass."
Preaching, praying, and everything -- and he'd come upstairs and beat
the fuck outta ya.
That was them: They'd cuss your ass out and then pray.
"Bernie, sit yo' ugly-ass down, ya black bastard!
"But you know, the Lord been good to me..."
I talk about 'em,
but my family didn't know any better. They used to whoop my ass. I was
always put down. I was always told, "You too black." I was
always told, "You ugly." I was always told, "Sit your
ugly ass down."
But I guess I was too ignorant to listen. I didn't know the validity
of what they were saying, I just kept on laughing. "All right,
okay." That's how my mind was, I didn't dwell on it.
I'd go sit down and start amusing myself. And that's another way I learned
to act and do voices and be creative on my own. I'd play with pencils
and shit. I'd have 'em talkin'. I'd have a GI Joe doll, take my sisters'
Barbie dolls and make my own stories. So Ken was screwing Barbie, but
so was GI Joe and Captain America. Later on, they all pulled a train
on her.
That's how I was playin'. Lil' sick muh'fucka, you know.
There was plenty
of shit I got into as a kid, but because I was an athlete growing up,
the one thing I really didn't get off into was drugs. I tried. But very,
very seldom.
I had a bad experience with marijuana, man.
Back when I was in high school, I used to play like I was high all the
time. I'd be slurrin' my words and shit: "Ha-ha. Yeah, niggaaaa."
Cats would say, "Bernie, fuuuuucked up, man."
A cat named Joe, he knew I was bullshitting. He trapped me. He came
to the lunchroom and said, "Gimme a dollar on a bag." That
was when reefer was five bucks and you'd get 15 joints. I would put
money in, but I would never show up. So word got around that Bernie
be bullshittin'.
But this time, they got a dollar from me and came and got me. They took
us over to the west wing of the high school.
Man, they had me doing everything: shotgunning me, had me firing up
shit. They gave me the joint with instructions.
JOE: Okay, puff.
Now, hold it. Hold it. Hold it. Hold it. Keep holdin' it. Hooooold it.
Let it go. Nowtakeanotherone!
Whooo! I was so blowed! And my chest, I could hear my heart racing.
My heart was pumpin' so hard it was hurting. It felt like something
was pulling my esophagus down. My eyes closed.
Then I just took off!
People just started bustin' up laughing. I was running so fast. I jumped
on the bus. I sat next to this lady. I was sweating profusely. My heart
was going bump, bump, bump, bump.
I said, "Lord, please!" I felt like if I closed my eyes I'd
die.
The lady said, "You all right, son? Bus driver, slow down. Something
is wrong with this man!"
I jumped off the bus and took off running again. I ran from 87th Street
to 69th Street in four or five minutes. Cars almost hit me and everything.
I got home, my grandfather asked me what was wrong. I just started trippin'.
Next thing you know, they rushed me to the hospital. Man, my whole nervous
system was shot!
They had angel dust in the weed. That was my sophomore year. I was on
medication 'til my senior year.
So, ah...I'm kind of...ah...anti-drugs.
After that, I was
never really no marijuana guy. It took a while for my body to be strong
enough to even be around marijuana. I would have flashbacks.
My buddies would do powder. They would always try to get me to do powder.
I ain't gon' lie: I did a line or two.
Every time I came around, they wanted to try to get me high. By you
not gettin' high, muh'fuckas always want to get you high. Now, if I
got high, they'd have been talkin' about, "Put it up! Put it up!
Here come that muh'fucka!"
But I didn't know what I was supposed to feel when I did it. I'd seen
all these cats spending all this money. But the shit was like an inhaler
to me. It just opened up my damn sinuses.
My vice used to be cigarettes. I smoked cigarettes for years before
I quit about six years ago.
I started off puffin' a little bit in high school. I'd puff just a lil'.
Cool Daddy, you know.
I used to like to smoke so that smoke would come out of my mouth when
I talked. It would make you look real cool: "Yeah, I tol' that
muh'fucka" -- you laugh, a whole bunch of smoke comes out -- "hahahahaha."
I started off smoking
Kools. Then I started smoking Salems. Then I left Salems and went to
Newport. Then I went back to Kool Mild. Then I went to Newport Long.
Then I started picking up the habit for real.
When I started going in the clubs, I started smoking after shows. I
was going to four clubs a night. I'd wind down, have a beer, and smoke
a square. A pack would last me a week. Me and Big Nigga. He'd have a
pack, I might have a pack. I went from ten to a pack a day. Then I went
from a pack to a pack-and-a-half. When I quit, I had been smoking two
packs a day.
When I finally quit, I just up and did it. I didn't need anything except
myself saying it was time to stop. It had gotten to the point where,
every time I'd breathe, I would whistle.
One night, I'm in the bed with my wife, and I just keep hearing tweet,
tweeeettt. I'm lookin' around, all out the window and shit. But it was
me.
That next day, I couldn't even walk up the stairs. I would cough and
nothing would come up. I thought I had a cold. I was takin' short breaths.
I asked my wife to take me to the doctor.
My lungs were closed. I wasn't getting air. The doctor sprayed a mist
in me and opened my lungs back up. I had bronchitis of the worst kind.
When I walked out that hospital, I had a pack of squares in my pocket.
I said, "Mac, you dyin', man. Is this what you want to do?"
I grabbed those cigarettes and threw them as far as I could. And I haven't
smoked since.
I was never an alcohol
cat either. I sipped some wine; I threw up on myself.
When I first started drinking beer, I was out of high school. I was
playing in the summer league after school. A brother said, "Great
game" and threw me a beer. Now, they're smoking marijuana, and
I'm having flashbacks. I'm trying to be cool.
I had two beers. Between the contact I was gettin' off the reefer and
the beer, I was high as a Georgia pine. It was like somebody injected
propane in me. But I think it's good I can't do all that. Plus, that
was a motivational thing for me, watching people who did drugs. I keep
saying entertainment is a bad business, man. Cats be wanting you to
fall. I used to be around a lot of athletes, and I saw how cats were
jealous and were constantly giving them shit. You would see how their
games would just diminish. That was drugs, man. Even in the comedy clubs.
I saw it all in the comedy clubs.
I'll drink some brews, but that's the strongest I do.
Plus, anything stronger than that and I'm givin' you a lap dance.
Copyright © 2001 by Bernie Mac
From I Ain't Scared of You : Bernie Mac on How Life Is, by Bernie Mac,
Darrell Dawsey. © October 2001 , MTV Books used by permission.
Copyright © 2001 BayState Web Technologies, Inc.
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