Friend #50 - Derek
I was picking up tacos for a
business meeting. The restaurant didn’t
have them ready so I stood talking with the guy working behind the window. He was a nice-looking young man with an easy
way about him. I gathered he was the
restaurant owner’s son. While we were
chatting, I mentioned my mission to meet 52 new friends this year. His eyes widened and sparkled. “I want to be number fifty,” he declared.
So, we agreed to meet up for
coffee. But in order to understand the
son, I quickly learned I would first have to know about the father.
Derek’s father grew up in a
small, poverty-stricken town in a Mexico.
By the age of 6, he was already leading a herd of sheep across the
Mexican terrain on a daily basis and working as a sheep herder. His father loved soccer as boy, but there was
never any money to buy him soccer shoes.
By Derek’s account, his grandfather was an alcoholic. It was a bad situation for Derek’s father so
at the age of fourteen, he illegally crossed the border into the United States
with a group of twenty-year-old young men.
They were all looking for a better life.
Derek’s father found work in a
restaurant in San Diego. He was a smart
kid. He was a hard worker and he saved
his money. In 1988, he bought a failing
Mexican franchise restaurant. It was in
a rough neighborhood, peppered by gang violence, Bloods and Crypts, but Derek’s
father stood up to them in a way that earned the gang’s respect. Instead of folding, the restaurant flourished
and in 1991, Derek’s father dumped the franchise name and changed the signage
to reflect his family name.
Derek’s father went back to
Mexico as a success, wanting to be an example to his people but his own father
condemned him saying no one could earn that type of money unless they sold
drugs. Derek’s father was deeply hurt. He’d become successful despite the odds and
his own family had turned against him.
But instead of dwelling in
defeat, Derek’s father carried on. He
moved the family to Arizona to open more restaurants. In fact, Derek grew up in the
restaurant. At first, he observed by
sitting on crates in the backroom. As he
got older, he learned how to take orders.
Then, he learned how to cook.
Then, his father took him under his wing and taught him how to
manage…but some lessons are best learned on your own.
Derek went to ASU and graduated
with an accounting degree becoming the first member of his family to do
so. He got a job working for an accounting
firm, which was exciting at first, but as time went on, Derek realized his
company wasn’t really paying him what he was worth. He became disenchanted with corporate
America. His father always told him if
you put a lot into your business, you will get a lot out of that business…but
no one at the accounting firm was putting much into Derek.
Derek knew his father owned
rental houses so if any of his employees found themselves in a spot without a
roof over their heads, his father would step in and give them a place to
stay. If an employee was having a hard
time getting to work, Derek’s father would buy them a car and let them make
payments. His father’s philosophy rewarded
hard work, gave those employees a chance at a better life and inspired their
loyalty. Derek’s father is beloved by
his employees because he cares about them.
So, when Derek was called in for
a performance review at the accounting firm, there was a mutual parting of
ways. Now, at 28, Derek owns his own
marketing company that has given his father’s restaurants a boost in customers
by revolutionizing them with modern marketing concepts. There are now five restaurants in total, and
Derek and his father have plans to open more.
I don’t want to give off the impression that this has been an easy road for
Derek’s family. There have definitely
been big highs and devastating lows. But
Derek’s dreams are so much larger than his father’s dreams ever were. He envisions a future growing the restaurant. He wants to expand
his marketing business and open his own accounting firm. He’s smart and understands people, probably
very much like his father.
And as Derek was talking, all I
could think about was how the current political climate claims only criminals
come illegally through our Southern border.
When I think of Derek’s father and Derek, as an extension, I see only a
family committed to working hard, providing good jobs and being kind to those
who need a helping hand. Isn’t that the
type of people we WANT in this country? Isn’t
that the American dream?
And as we sat there, Derek
casually mentioned how much tougher it is to illegally cross the border
now. When his father crossed many years
ago, the average price of passage over was $200. Now the average price of passage is between
$8,000 and $20,000. The cartels are the
only ones able to get anyone through. As
I sat there, a thought entered my little white-bred mind. The reason we are seeing so much criminal
activity surrounding illegal immigration is because the criminals are the only
ones who can afford the price to get through.
By being so restrictive, we have essentially blocked out the good.
I felt my jaw go slack. I’d never thought about it before.
Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great success story!
ReplyDelete