Chris Gardner Homeless To Happyness
When Chris Gardner talks about homeless
people, his words resonate; he has walked in their shoes. He knows what it’s
like just trying to survive.
“Remember these are still people,” he
says. “They are not invisible. They each have a story.”
In his lifetime, the successful
against-all-odds stockbroker who inspired the Academy Award-nominated The Pursuit of Happyness has accomplished many
things—overcoming a violent childhood, rising out of homelessness, being a
single father who broke the cycle of abuse with his children. Yet his story is
much more than one of accumulating wealth and overcoming adversity. And he
never forgets his past or the people who’ve touched his life.
In San Francisco in the early 1980s, Gardner
earned a meager living selling medical supplies. He got the idea to pursue a
career as a stockbroker from a man in a red Ferrari he met one day. Gardner
said he’d let the man have the parking spot he was vacating if he would tell
him what kind of work he did to afford the car. The man was a stockbroker.
Although Gardner lacked a college degree, and
the pedigree and social connections for any white-collar job, he knocked on
doors for several months and finally landed a spot in the Dean Witter Reynolds
training program. The trainee’s stipend barely paid for food, let alone rent.
Meantime, his girlfriend left him and their toddler, Chris Jr. With
determination, Gardner clung to his goal of financial independence, working
hard during the day while spending his nights trying to arrange for child care,
food and shelter. When they were lucky enough to find space, they slept at the
Glide Memorial Church shelter; otherwise, they huddled in a locked bathroom at
an Oakland subway station. At the conclusion of the training program, Gardner
was the sole trainee chosen for a permanent position with Dean Witter Reynolds.
“Staying motivated isn’t a challenge for me,”
he says today. “When I think about all I want to accomplish, despite all my
successes, I haven’t even made a dent in what’s possible. Opportunity is as
vast as the sky.”
After a couple years with Dean Witter
Reynolds, he took a position with Bear Stearns & Co., where he became a
top earner. In 1987, he founded his own brokerage firm, Gardner Rich &
Co., in Chicago, which he since transformed into Christopher Gardner
International Holdings, an institutional brokerage firm that also directs
projects overseas, primarily in South Africa.
With dreams as big as the sky, Gardner now
looks to his children for inspiration, but walking the line between personal
and professional obligations is sometimes a challenge. “I continually plead for
understanding from my family and the people I love,” he says. “I am so
passionate about what I do that personal time tends to get filled by business.
It makes me happy, but can get exhausting. There are days when I just need to
take off and check out. No calls, no e-mails. Just downtime.”
Always trying to make the most of every
minute in business, Gardner developed one ironclad rule: “Always be on time,”
he says. “And if possible, be aggressively early. Whatever meeting you have to
cut short, even if you have to run those last five blocks, get there on time.
Being late projects the wrong image and makes people lose faith in your ability
to prioritize.”
Now, Gardner is more acutely aware that time
is “the ultimate luxury,” he says. “At a certain point there are more yesterdays
than tomorrows. So, I plan on spending all my tomorrows very carefully and
appreciating every one of them.”
For the present, Gardner still basks in the
afterglow of his 2006 best-selling autobiography and the movie it inspired
starring Will Smith. He’s at work on a second book and in the process of
forming a foundation to assist with such problems as homelessness and domestic
abuse. He is actively involved in giving back on a local level, and still gives
as much as he can to Glide Memorial Church in San Francisco. “There wouldn’t be
a Chris Gardner today if there wasn’t a Glide back then,” he says.
Some of his favorite projects include the
Chicago-based CARA program, which offers comprehensive job training, permanent
job placement and supportive services to homeless and at-risk populations. The
Cara Program administers Cleanslate, a transitional jobs program in which
participants learn critical work and life skills as they perform neighborhood
beautification projects. In addition, Gardner is active in Peace Over Violence,
a Los Angeles social-service agency working to prevent violence against women
and children. “Giving back when you are successful should not be seen as an
obligation; it’s a privilege,” he says. He also shares his story as a
motivational speaker all over the world.
Over time, the many people who have
touched Gardner’s life have helped bring his successes to fruition—from his
aunts and uncles who helped raise him to the stockbroker with the red Ferrari
who gave Gardner his first glimpse at his career dream to the business
associates who taught him along the way. But the person he admires most is his
mother. She endured hardships of her own, including a lifetime of domestic
abuse and a prison term for trying to burn down the house with Gardner’s
abusive step-father inside, he says.
Gardner says he inherited much from his
mother—her ability to sit absolutely still when the world seems to be
crumbling, her appreciation for public libraries, her devotion to her children,
her innate ability to endure.
“I owe so much to my mom, Bettye Jean
Gardner, including the moment that got me pointed in the right direction,” he
says. “I was a kid, watching a college basketball game on TV, and one of the
announcers said that someday one of the best players might make a million
dollars. I whistled and said, under my breath, ‘Man, a million dollars!’ And my
mother, who was in the next room, said, ‘Son, if you want to, one day you could
make a million dollars.’ With that one sentence, she convinced me that in spite
of where I came from, I could attain
whatever goals I set for myself. That one day I, too, could be world-class at
something.”
Gardner also has the same unshakable
faith in Chris Jr. and a younger daughter, Jacintha, both in their 20s. The
successes of his children have brought him the most joy. “No business success
could rival the pride I have in my children,” he says.
Gardner says his greatest achievement
is breaking the destructive cycles his children could have inherited. “I was
there for my son, so I know he will be there for his children, breaking the
cycle of absentee fathers in our family. I have taught him that being a man
means being responsible. I have taught my daughter how she deserves to be
treated, breaking the cycle of abused and degraded women in our family,” he
says.
About the future, Gardner believes the best is yet to come. He
knows that through his children he has positively influenced future generations
of his family he will never meet. “Hopefully, my legacy and what I’ll be
remembered for has not happened yet,” he says. “I don’t want to sit on my
laurels. There’s still too much to achieve.”
Source : http://www.success.com/article/chris-gardner-homeless-to-happyness
Source : http://www.success.com/article/chris-gardner-homeless-to-happyness