Ok, so no one is perfect. We all think we can be perfect, but we lack to know that perfection is inevitable. No one is perfect. I will not get into biblical proportions here and talk about god, perfection in the greatest of creations, because he is not sitting right next to my living each day as I do. I grew up going to catholic school. I was reminded everyday of his creations, sacrifices and blah blah blah. Let me again say, I will not go to biblical proportions, and to that nature, love him or hate him, Josh Peck gets 5 stars!
The boy went through the impractical lifestyle we have seen all childhood stars got through, and then some. He did not come out alive without his own fair share of trials and tribulations. He went through the same bullshit you do, the same curious childhood we all have, and the same heartaches, cuts and bruises and life experiences as any Joe Schmo. However, the difference between him and others is that he voiced it despite his IMENSE amount of anxiety. Anxiety, ha. Thats a common word for the average folk.
So the next time you say you don’t have anxiety, read a memoir (hypothetical mic drop).
I want to express too that he can write! Of the many different things he embarked on, writing is another adventure I am glad he took. Josh has a way of being very relatable, humble, funny and family oriented in, “Happy People are Annoying.” Life did not work out according to what he thought, but he did not let that stop him from who he wanted to be, or so he thought he wanted to be. As I mentioned before, he had drug issues. Not quite the “Drake Bell” issues, but he was a curious teenager (aren’t we all? D.A.R.E. Only made that worse lol). In a quote about his “addition” experience, I could not help but feel his analogy could speak to everyone, “Someone asked me what it felt like to be addicted to drugs, and this is how I described it: “Imagine you’ve spent your entire life trying to listen to a radio station, but every time you tuned in, there was static. You were certain you were on the right frequency, but the signal was never very strong. And then one day, you accidentally bump the knob and suddenly all the auditory goodness you’ve been waiting to hear your entire life fills your ears, in surround sound. You have been on the wrong wavelength but not anymore. That’s what drugs felt like to me, I wasn’t tuning out, I was tuning in.”
I do not give spoilers, but I do have some favorite points of this book. One quote came from an inspired actor and role model to Josh, “Ben Kingsley.” “Find the people who support you to be what you want to be, who push you to be your very best, and if you find yourself in a room with someone who doesn’t make you feel that way, leave immediately.” (Ben Kingsley; [Find your Apostles]). I guess this can be seen as a biblical proportion here, because “apostle” is used. Nonetheless, look the word up and tell me you don’t have people in your life like that? One particular apostle of Josh was his mother, and she shared some good advice for Josh when needed, “Pain is knowledge rushing into your brain with great speed.” (My mom, my first apostle).
As always, I want to leave you with some food for thought. Take this quote and think about it. Imbed it in your brain, for it is one that’s will never leave you, but always remind you where you have come from, where you have been, and where you are going.
The Greek philosopher Heraclitus said, “No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it is not the same river and he is not the same man.”