The day I met Toothpick, aka LaCharleston
White was more than memorable. Toothpick came to The Farm
several years ago looking for a job. I
can remember him saying, “I can do anything you need me to do and all I need is
$50 a week. I will work hard for you.”
I wish I could remember how he got the nickname
“Toothpick.” I can only imagine he was a
tall, skinny little kid growing up in Minden.
Well, I hired Toothpick and he did do anything I needed. Not
that he knew how to do anything I needed but I came to learn that he would
‘try’ and try with all of his heart and being.
I came to love Toothpick. I loved his optimism. Toothpick grew up in Minden and graduated
from high school. Trapped in a city with few opportunities for
young black males to succeed, I quickly saw how his life became one of simply
trying to survive.
Toothpick was in and out of my life as I spent my days
volunteering at the Farm in Minden. The
Farm is a four-acre tract of land located in a black neighborhood that was
donated to a nonprofit I co- founded some 25 years ago.
The Moess Center for the Arts & City Farm was fondly known simply as 'The Farm.' The land was originally owned by the Camp family and was donated to Cultural Crossroads in 2000 by Zenobia West.
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This four-acre piece of heaven would become
home to the parish’s largest arts festival for children. It would also become the place for many summer
events aimed at children. And Toothpick would often come even when not assigned
to, just to help me out.
Toothpick fell in
love with the Farm just as I had. He spent many of his days there with me
working side by side, planting and caring for the gardens. He spent many days
on his own time picking up the trash along the highway that led up to the Farm.
You could tell he found great pride in that.
Toothpick did have a drug problem. And without judgement, I tried to talk to him about it only to discover that many of the encounters he had with the police were intentional. His life of living on the streets had brought him to a point of despair when the only relief was three meals a day and a cot…in jail. I never had to bail him out. He wouldn’t let me do that. He would spend his time and a few months later and sometimes a year later, I would see him walk up to the Farm and offer his help to me once again.
In the more than a decade that I came to know and love this man, I saw
him in and out of jail several times. I saw him struggle for a meal or a place
to lay his head at night. And I saw him struggle for acceptance. I think he
found it with me. And I think he realized that I loved him unconditionally and
I believe he loved me.
Getting close to someone who struggles daily to make ends
meet was difficult at times. Toothpick had been married and had children. He had since been divorced, I think. I say
that because I tried hard not to judge him nor to nosey in on his personal life
too much. So much of what I learned about him came from observing him and those
who were also a part of his life at any given time and would venture up to the
Farm while we were both working. His
estranged wife would come back into his life later and he eventually ended up
living with his ex-wife and their daughter.
The last time I saw Toothpick was at my retirement party
this past December. The organization that I founded generously offered up a
retirement party for me as I decided to step out of public life as a community
organizer/volunteer/administrator for Cultural Crossroads. It would be the
first big event that I had no part of except to simply walk in, sit down and
enjoy.
Toothpick was there. He had heard about the party and came
to help. With garbage bag in hand, he stepped right in where he had left off
and took the job of making sure that there was no trash on the grounds. I cried
when I saw him. I couldn’t help but wonder what he was doing now. How was he taking care of himself? I asked him how he was doing, he answered,
“great.” He would always say ‘great,’
even when I knew it to be a lie.
I have so much respect for him. I admire his perseverance. I
admire his optimism. I admire his willingness to do anything for you, no matter
how small or insignificant…. because he didn’t see any of it as insignificant.
I do love Toothpick. And because I love
him, I worry about him. I can still remember the day I told him that I loved
him and I worried about him. “Don’t
worry about me, Miss Chris. I will make
it.”
And ya know…he’s right…he will make it. He has made it. He
is a survivor. I just wish with all my heart that life had dealt him a better
hand because he deserved it.
I saw his heart and it was good.
I saw his heart and it was good.
Beautiful Friendship!
ReplyDeleteIt was a rare and beautiful friendship. I have so many great stories that he shared with me about his early memories of living around The Farm. He knew the two spinsters that lived in the house at The Farm. They were hilarious. I never got tired of hearing them.
DeleteUnconditional friendship is a rarity these days... I love recounting of this story .
ReplyDeleteByron Cage
It is rare and I am the lucky one to have experienced it. He enriched my life. <3
DeleteREST IN LOVE MY FRIEND
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting that. I am so glad that I got to hug his neck one last time during my retirement party and tell him how much he meant to me.
DeleteHe was my brother ..!
ReplyDeleteA GOOD friend...hard-worker,a true survivor.
May God Bless your..SOUL
You picked each other as friend, what a great PICK!!!!!
ReplyDelete