Monthly Archives: November 2008

Starbucks On Grandview Highway

Yesterday me and wifey went out to get some solar powered Christmas lights (haven’t put them up yet). We don’t live to far from Grandview Highway so we drove down to the new Canadian Tire on Grandview Highway. I ended up waiting in the new Starbucks, because I can’t stand shopping when there are big crowds. Long story short I had my digi cam (as usual) and started snapping photos in Starbucks, which is located right next to Canadian Tire. I have been playing around with the ISO feature on my Canon SD 750 for a few days. The ISO feature gives you less and more light depending on the amount of light in the room or area you are shooting in. You can set it to automatic but it’s more fun just to play around and experiment it. Anways you can see my amazing photos below, NOT… But, it’s something to do while I wait around for my wife to shop.

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Closeup of  Ginger Bread Latte, yum.

An avid reader?

Oooh a leather chair

shot of page inside a “postive thinking” book at Starbucks

shot of page inside a “postive thinking” book at Starbucks

shot of page inside a “postive thinking” book at Starbucks[ad#ad-1]

Graffiti Gave Me The Life Skills To Succeed

When I woke up, I seemed to be having a dream about Morgan Freeman being my friend. I have no clue why I had a dream about Morgan Freeman, I think he’s an awesome actor but that’s about it. Then even though I was awake I still wasn’t and my mind wandered and in this new dream I was reading a blog post I wrote about my previous graffiti life. This post doesn’t even exist but I will write it right now, enjoy.

When I started doing graffiti in Vancouver I was only 12 years old back in 1982. It was near impossible to find any type of graffiti photography anywhere, including the library. The year later I believe, a book called Subway Art came out that changed everything for my small world. That book was my bible and I had it with me all the time. I studied the New York subway graffiti pieces as if I was having a final exam on them.

As with all things in life practice makes perfect, so I would draw all the time and try to mimic the great New York graffiti masters of the time such as “Seen”, “Dondi”, “Duster” and “Skeme”. It was pretty tough to get where I wanted to be with my graffiti skills, but I never gave up. It pissed me off so much that my stuff looked like crap that I tried harder and harder. Eventually I had the graffiti talent I was craving. I had an interesting skill that very few people had outside of New York, let alone Canada or anywhere else in the world.

Eventually my paper practice got boring and I need to do the “real thing”. I started venturing around the Collingwood area in East Vancouver. Back in the early 1980s the SkyTrain wasn’t even built and there were no condo apartments on Vanness street which runs parallel to the SkyTrain between Joyce street and Boundary Road. There were tons of warehouses and I practiced my hand at doing a wall. It turned out pretty good for a little kid from Vancouver learning this stuff on his own.

Graffiti taught me many things that I never really realized would help until later on in my life. Everyone said that I was wasting my time. Realistically it depends on how you look at it. For me I never got in any real trouble for it, luckily. I however did learn some traits that I still use to this day.

  1. Never give up – Even though I was terrible at doing graffiti in the beginning I stuck it through because I really wanted it to work out. I wanted to be good at graffiti for some reason. Fast forward to 2008, I am the same way. When I want something not much can or will stand in my way, that’s an awesome trait to have. I never give up I just get pissed off, I mumble and I move forward. I hate being sh*tty at anything so I work long hours so I get good fast at whatever it is I’m into at the present time.
  2. Resourcefulness – I order to survive in any business and in graffiti you need to be resourceful and have some way to adapt. Many times police would find out about the “artwork” and we had to find new locations to paint on. Part of the process was to scour “spots” (places to paint), under bridges, abandoned walls and so on. I had a pretty good gift for finding graffiti spots all the time. I took that trait and I can usually find a way to make money from any type of topic I start researching from loans, car accessories etc. I can find what many other people cannot find,  and make it work. That is a huge skill in a competitive world.
  3. Dedication – I saw many kids come ago when I was a graffiti artist. Most people where never dedicated to getting good at graffiti, I like some others were. It was important to me that my “pieces” looked good. i tried to make them look as good as possible. I didn’t see the point in writing on walls if it looked like junk. Personally I really wanted to make the place look better not worse. I dedicated lots of my free time to drawing and also painting the “perfect piece”.

When most people look at graffiti art they don’t think of it the way the way I do. You need a certain type of person to be good at ANYTHING, sure you may have the “knack for it”. Even if you have the knack you still need dedication, resourcefulness and determination to name a few. For me I am thankful I spent my years doing an illegal activity that turned into something that guided me through my life and continues to do so. No, I no longer paint graffiti art, but the memories and the life skills I learned from those years are very much with me and I use them daily in my Internet business.

Oh yeah I also learned tons of design skills from my graffiti art… If I never did graffiti, I’m not really sure where I would be today, it’s pretty crazy but it’s true. It’s weird how graffiti guided me to where I am today and then of course now it’s veering off into real estate. Life is funny that way, you never know where it will take you.

I’m not really sure why I wrote this post but like I said it came to me in a dream, while I was kind of awake…. weird yeah.

LandLord & Daily Pains

I haven’t blogged in a minute, for a few reasons. My Escalade had engine troubles and it’s still in the mechanic shop. Apparently my catalytic converter needs to be replaces, and it going to run me about $500-$600 labor included. It’s nice to have cousins who marry mechanics, lol. If I didn’t know a mechanic personally it would cost me about $1,000.  So…. I am without a car kinda. I use my pops GMC SUV Blazer at night to get to point A and B, in the daytime I bike ride to the coffee shop as usual.

Besides the car repairs I am trying to get the second condo in Burnaby I bought rented. I have a few people interested and by next week that should be out of the way. Oh and I need to meet the tenants from my first condo in Port Coquitlam to give them the keys so they can start moving for November 1 (tomorrow night).

Having 20 rental properties can keep you pretty busy I’m sure. This is part of the reason that I am investing in condos, less maintenance to worry about. If I had 20 rental houses I would probably have a heart attack, condo properties are much less time consuming.

Overall with Craigslist.com renting out places has become free and way less time consuming.  Again I would probably have a stress attack if Craigslist wasn’t around.

I really don’t have to much to say, I just felt like taking a little break from my online business. I find that blogging relaxes me and it’s free of charge…

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More Photos Of San Francisco

I took about 140 photos while I was down in San Fran. Since buying film hasn’t been an issue for many years now (because of digital cameras) it’s cheap and fun to snap basically anything you see and then delete the the images that look lame. We ended up walking around San Francisco 1 day from our hotel to China Town to Little Italy, up to Telegraph hill down to the piers and back to our hotel. The walk took a good 4 hours or maybe a bit longer (at least 5 miles of walking). Below are some of the shots I took. Some shots are of the affiliate dinner as well. The guy below “New York Tony” who was from San Diego kept us laughing for hours, one hell of a funny guy.

Enjoy the photos..

New York Tony and his wife from San Diego

New York Tony and his wife from San Diego

Tom a local artist

New York Tony’s wife and another affiliate from Calgary

San Francisco walking around shots:

crusty local smoker in San Fran

shot of Bay bridge from  near Telegraph Hill, San Fran

China Town, S.F.

Starbucks fiend?

Little Italy, San Francisco

“No pictures please”, probably hiding from FBI?

9-11 Memorial flag in China town

Oops!

walkerbys near Pier 9

On the ferry to Alcatraz

Shot of San Fran from ferry

China town, local resident

Alcatraz cells

closeup of plant near Telegraph Hill

closeup of flower near Telegraph Hill

closeup of really cool flower near Telegraph Hill

Back From San Francisco, California

San Francisco was a hell of a time. The trip started off warm (20 c), by the end of the trip the weather was just as cold as Vancouver. The weather in S.F. is known from changing drastically from day to day, cold to hot and back and forth.

We met a ton of cool people  from all over the USA, quite a few from Canada, and other affiliates from France and Germany. These were all the top affiliates and it was interesting to see how they promote and market the same products that I do.

We ended drinking way too much and eating too much, and I guess that was the fun of it. I took a ton of photos of S.F. and a few of the guys we met down there.

Now I’m back in rainy, dreary Vancouver blogging from Waves coffee on Commercial Drive in East Vancouver.

I leave for 3 days and now I have all this sh*t to do:

  • final closing of Port Coquitlam condo, sign lawyers papers etc..
  • go exchange American money at the currency exchange (get 3 cents more per dollar that way).
  • inspection of 2nd condo in Burnaby tomorrow morning at 10 am.

On a little side note. With all the gloomy news it’s hard to remain positive, but fear is the biggest obstacle that makes us do stupid things. I for one am not going to be a p*ssy and fall victim to the media hype. Yes the economy is going down. Even a year ago the news was bright lights and smiles, at least in Canada it was and now we are down in the dumps. The rough times will pass, use this is an opportunity if you can.

If you have your health , your job and a roof over your head then keep smiling.  Don’t let the media get you down, think of the good points, cheap gas, cheaper housing prices, more deals at the mall.

I took a bunch of photos while in San Fran, here a few of them for now..

shot of California from plane

shot of San Francisco from plane

shot of San Francisco from plane

shot of San Francisco from plane

shot of San Francisco freeway

shot of San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge

shot of San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge

Happy traveler

shot of  convertible trolley in downtown San Francisco

shot of Alcatraz

mob guy locked up

shot of San Fran from ferry

This part 1 of my San Francisco photos, more to come…..