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STTS 126: Out of the Darkness and Into the Light With Quan Huynh

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Manage episode 231610201 series 1150830
Content provided by Mark Goblowsky. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Goblowsky or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The Face of Incarceration

The movie Trading Places is a comedy that stars Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd as a homeless man and a wealthy cultured man respectively. Being a comedy there are multiple instances for laughing, however, it was thought-provoking for me the first time I saw it.

The two men are unwittingly transposed into each other’s lives. They in turn start to make different types of decisions that reinforce their new circumstances.

The poor man who is now in a wealthy lifestyle grew in self-respect and higher expectations of himself.

The wealthy man who found all his resources taken away turned to anger and feeling sorry for himself and indulging in petty crime.

Was it Nature, their personality or Nurture, their surroundings.

I interviewed a man last week, Quan Huynh (pronounced-Hhhhwen). Quan experienced a pivotal event in his life at the age of 13. A painful event. The hurt and the resulting anger from it stayed with him. And over time it grew into rage and violence. It climaxed in a violent night for him as an adult when he took the life of another person.

The events prior to him taking that man’s life shaped him into the person who was capable of taking life.

In the span of one minute, both families would be changed forever.

One minute. One choice.

If the story ended there, it would just be a sad story. A painful story. And a story that you might argue for both Nature and Nurture.

The story didn’t stop there though. Quan went to prison. And though he went in angry and violent, there was a day when he started to ask himself questions about himself. Important questions. Hard questions.

One of them was, “Can I be somebody very different than the person I have been?”

Quan’s story is about many things. Pain, Anger, Violence… Guilt, Possibility, Hope… Transformation, Redemption, 2nd chances and how does a person carry on after taking another person’s life.

I’m grateful Quan shared his story with me. It’s a difficult story for obvious reasons. There were a couple of things that I struggled with that I share at the end of the episode.

Yes, there is residual pain in his story. A life is gone. Nothing will change that.

But Quan has become somebody else. He is no longer a man who is a slave to the anger and rage and bitterness that shaped him into a person who took another’s life.

Quan chose a different path as his time in prison progressed. He chose to make conscious choices. Hard choices. Painful choices.

Choices that have changed his heart.

And by changing his heart, he has changed the future of his life and all those he comes in contact with.

While he was convicted of murder, he is choosing not to be defined by that moment or his old life. He is choosing not to be trapped in a cycle of pain and violence. His choices are no longer about the past and a hardened heart. They are about the future and the choices of a new heart.

As our heart goes, so goes our life.

Quan made choices to not be forever framed in by his previous choices. He has made new choices that create a new future distinctly different from the other life he created. Choices to help and not to hurt.

Choices that can create a life that can brightly outshine the dark moments of his past.

  continue reading

100 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 231610201 series 1150830
Content provided by Mark Goblowsky. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Goblowsky or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The Face of Incarceration

The movie Trading Places is a comedy that stars Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd as a homeless man and a wealthy cultured man respectively. Being a comedy there are multiple instances for laughing, however, it was thought-provoking for me the first time I saw it.

The two men are unwittingly transposed into each other’s lives. They in turn start to make different types of decisions that reinforce their new circumstances.

The poor man who is now in a wealthy lifestyle grew in self-respect and higher expectations of himself.

The wealthy man who found all his resources taken away turned to anger and feeling sorry for himself and indulging in petty crime.

Was it Nature, their personality or Nurture, their surroundings.

I interviewed a man last week, Quan Huynh (pronounced-Hhhhwen). Quan experienced a pivotal event in his life at the age of 13. A painful event. The hurt and the resulting anger from it stayed with him. And over time it grew into rage and violence. It climaxed in a violent night for him as an adult when he took the life of another person.

The events prior to him taking that man’s life shaped him into the person who was capable of taking life.

In the span of one minute, both families would be changed forever.

One minute. One choice.

If the story ended there, it would just be a sad story. A painful story. And a story that you might argue for both Nature and Nurture.

The story didn’t stop there though. Quan went to prison. And though he went in angry and violent, there was a day when he started to ask himself questions about himself. Important questions. Hard questions.

One of them was, “Can I be somebody very different than the person I have been?”

Quan’s story is about many things. Pain, Anger, Violence… Guilt, Possibility, Hope… Transformation, Redemption, 2nd chances and how does a person carry on after taking another person’s life.

I’m grateful Quan shared his story with me. It’s a difficult story for obvious reasons. There were a couple of things that I struggled with that I share at the end of the episode.

Yes, there is residual pain in his story. A life is gone. Nothing will change that.

But Quan has become somebody else. He is no longer a man who is a slave to the anger and rage and bitterness that shaped him into a person who took another’s life.

Quan chose a different path as his time in prison progressed. He chose to make conscious choices. Hard choices. Painful choices.

Choices that have changed his heart.

And by changing his heart, he has changed the future of his life and all those he comes in contact with.

While he was convicted of murder, he is choosing not to be defined by that moment or his old life. He is choosing not to be trapped in a cycle of pain and violence. His choices are no longer about the past and a hardened heart. They are about the future and the choices of a new heart.

As our heart goes, so goes our life.

Quan made choices to not be forever framed in by his previous choices. He has made new choices that create a new future distinctly different from the other life he created. Choices to help and not to hurt.

Choices that can create a life that can brightly outshine the dark moments of his past.

  continue reading

100 episodes

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