Heavyweight - #64 Kevin

Episode Date: November 20, 2025

Kevin's childhood was a hard one. But it was made bearable by his neighborhood friends, Jason and Gerald. Then, one afternoon, the boys just vanished. Over thirty years later, Kevin still hasn't forgo...tten them. Get ad-free episodes of Heavyweight by subscribing to Pushkin+ on Apple Podcasts or Pushkin.fm. You'll also get an exclusive bonus episode where Jonathan, Stevie, and Kalila remember how the beloved Jackie calls came to be and share a never-before-aired opening that could have started the show in an alternate Heavyweight universe. Thanks for your support—and be sure to check out the other offerings available to Pushkin+ subscribers, including ad-free episodes, full audiobooks, and exclusive binges of other podcasts throughout the year. Subscribe on Apple: apple.co/pushkinSubscribe on Pushkin: pushkin.com/plusSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Pushkin Hey everyone, today's episode is a special one, but at the same time, it does deal with mental illness and children in distressing situations. So, take care when listening. You've reached. Jackie, you read me a message. Do you please, let me a message. Jackie, I haven't heard from you in a while.
Starting point is 00:00:38 I thought maybe the adoration of American Canada isn't enough for you. So I wanted you to hear all the peoples of the world, all over the world, who want to hear your voice again. Here are a few of them, Jackie. Jackie, my name is Yangos. I am from Cyprus, which is mega far away from where you're from. Jackie, Jackie, Jackie. This is Tracy.
Starting point is 00:00:59 recording a voice message from London, England. Hello, Jackie, even here in Little Switzerland, the despair is great. Dear Jackie, this is a son from Istanbul. You are the only person who makes me laugh out loud. You should definitely come back. You are the highlight of the show. It means nothing without you.
Starting point is 00:01:17 Come back. Without idea, make it just a car sin. Love from Altaireo in New Zealand, Kinich Charlton, you have a lovely wrist of your day now. And this is Jonathan from England. England, wishing you a merry St. Pippins, that... Hello? Oh, I thought you picked up.
Starting point is 00:01:41 From Pushkin Industries, I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and this is heavyweight. Today's episode, Kevin. Right after the break. This is an I-Heart podcast. Welcome to Decoding Women's Health. I'm Dr. Elizabeth Pointer, chair of women's health and gynecology at the Atria Health Institute in New York City. I'll be talking to top researchers and clinicians and bringing vital information about midlife women's health directly to you. A hundred percent of women go through menopause, even if it's national,
Starting point is 00:02:29 why should we suffer through it? Listen to Decoding Women's Health with Dr. Elizabeth Pointer wherever you get your podcasts. Kevin's email doesn't begin with any small talk. No long-time listener, first-time writer, preamble. He gets right into it. My little brother and I grew up destitute, Kevin writes,
Starting point is 00:02:52 in a public housing project in Sacramento. He goes on to say that life back then was only made bearable by the presence of two boys who live next door. And this is why he's writing. Kevin hasn't seen them in over 30 years, but he still hasn't forgotten them. The two boys, his friends, Jason and Gerald. Can you hear me?
Starting point is 00:03:18 Yeah, I can hear you. Can you hear me? Yes, yes, great. The path that led him to Jason and Gerald is long and circuitous. Kevin begins the tale back in the third. grade, sitting in class, reading. I was reading a book on the Gremlins. Faced on the movie. Yeah, the cover was the theatrical poster of the movie.
Starting point is 00:03:39 And I remember it was during that moment that the teacher just said, hey, we got to go to the principal's office. And when you're a kid, that's kind of memorable because I thought initially I was in serious trouble. When Kevin arrived at the principal's office, his mom was there, surrounded by his five siblings. She explained that she was leaving their father and taking them all with her. So my dad has always been a real imposing, frightening figure because he would beat everybody in the family if you didn't really obey his commands. I never thought that he was malicious, but that he beated us because we screwed up somehow one way or another.
Starting point is 00:04:27 So he would whip us with a metal clothes hanger, for example, or he would pinch us. And when he pinched us, it would go through the clothing and would leave like half-dollar-sized walt of blue and purple and greenish colors. One day, a neighbor, alarmed by a loud argument between Kevin's parents, phone the police, and Kevin's father was arrested. He spent several days in jail, and when he returned home, he seemed different. We didn't have the word mentally ill back then, but we just talked amongst ourselves that he became crazy. And by crazy, I mean, like really crazy, whatever he endured in jail must have been so traumatic for my dad. And he invented a word at the time that everything was dirty. The dirty fixation began as soon as the same.
Starting point is 00:05:20 father arrived back home from jail. The first thing he did upon his return was to ask for a box. He threw every article of clothing he was wearing inside. Then, standing naked before the family, he instructed his eldest son to throw the clothes away. And he goes up, he takes a shower, and when he comes back down, he sees that my older bro brought back the box. He was telling my bro that why do you bring the box back because the box is dirty but more importantly how did you toss out the dirty clothes and my bro said he just grabbed it from the box and tossed it out basically indicating to my dad that my bro touched the clothing himself and my dad just went berserk and he just he just beat my bro on the spot right there but that was
Starting point is 00:06:18 the beginning of this crazy phase where my dad just completely lost it. His dad's new obsession only increased the tension between Kevin's parents. And every time they had arguments, we have no clue what they were talking about because they spoke in Vietnamese. And although that was my first native language, there was a time where my dad thought that we weren't learning English well enough. He forbade the usage of Vietnamese in the house. Then again, if he heard anybody utter a single word of Vietnamese, he would beat us. And so we dropped that quickly. But one of these arguments precipitated with my dad grabbing a cleaver,
Starting point is 00:07:06 and he throws it across the room, and no one in particular, but it lodged itself into the wall. It wasn't long after that that Kevin, his mom, and his siblings, found themselves standing in the principal's office. We went from the principal's office straight to what I now know is a woman's shelter. Do you remember that first night that you spent there? Oh, yeah, it was great. It just felt exciting.
Starting point is 00:07:35 You wouldn't know anything imposing about the shelter until you leave. That's when you see the high fences with a barbed wire over the top. It looks like a prison. But it was great inside. There was a giant playground or tricycles. There was a walk-in pantry that myself and my brother really loved because you could walk in and did all these snacks and instant noodles. But after a few weeks of feasting on instant noodles,
Starting point is 00:08:00 my mom just suddenly gathers all of us. And she had a paper grocery bag. She just tersely explains to us that two of us, two of the six of us kids will have to return to my dad she can't take care of all of us she cannot keep all of us
Starting point is 00:08:23 and she said she wrote six of our names on pieces of paper and she put all of our names in this paper bag and she's going to draw two names and the two names will be two kids that have to return to my dad and
Starting point is 00:08:43 I just remember my name was the first name to be drawn. And I was just, I was just shocked. I don't know. At the time, I felt, I mean, there were six of us, two names were to be drawn. I just thought that my odds were somewhat reasonable. But looking back at it, I feel like my mom just rigged the whole thing because she couldn't just say outright. I want you, Kevin, and I want your little bro.
Starting point is 00:09:14 to go back to your dad because I feel that the younger ones won't be able to cope well. Your dad's not going to be able to take care of them. She wanted to keep my older bro. He was just the oldest one, a favored one. The plan, as established by the drawing of names
Starting point is 00:09:36 from the paper bag, was that Kevin's oldest brother and the three youngest kids would stay with their mom, while Kevin and his middle brother Tony would go live with their dad. At the moment she drew my name, I lost my mom, my siblings,
Starting point is 00:09:52 and what hurt just as much was losing my older bro. I looked up to him. I would ask him all kinds of questions, everything from life to school, what color you see when you die. And I still remember his answer because he said, you don't see any color when you're dead.
Starting point is 00:10:10 But I asked him, What does that mean? What is the color of no color, that black or that white? He said, no, it's neither, it's no color. To lose him in that one fell swoop when my mom pulled out my name, let alone knowing that you have to go back to your dad who you're super afraid of. When she drew my name, I remember I wasn't the only one who was crying. We all cried. We all cried. Kevin now has three kids of his own, and in raising them,
Starting point is 00:10:52 he thinks back on that moment. Their hamster died. They were crying, and my partner was telling me, oh, they're just kids. They're just kids, and they don't really mean it. But when she said that, I remember I cried around the same age but my name was drawn from a paper bag and that cry was still the deepest cry I ever had in my life so I just remembered, no, I got a tent to my kids I'm going to bury the hamster in the backyard set a proper tombstone and have a good farewell.
Starting point is 00:11:33 I don't think their cries are going to be any lighter than their future cries when they're adults? I don't think so. For the next several years, Kevin had almost no contact with his mom and siblings. He says his mom would sometimes drop off food at his dad's place, but she was never allowed inside. Kevin was eight and Tony was six. On the night they went back to live with their dad
Starting point is 00:12:04 at his apartment in a public housing project, I remember he was drinking. He's always drinking. I mean, I've never seen him drink water in my life. He's always drinking beer and eating peanuts. And that was actually what he was doing when we came back in the middle of the living room floor. Although the living room contained a big fluffy couch and some school desks,
Starting point is 00:12:26 their father wanted Kevin and Tony to join him on a piece of cardboard he laid on the cold linoleum floor. It turned out that since they'd last seen him, Their father's obsession had only intensified. My dad set some rules. He said that don't ever touch these desks or the couch because they're now dirty. I mean, we weren't going to question him.
Starting point is 00:12:49 We didn't want to get beaten. So we ended up doing exactly that. A lot of these areas around the entire apartment just became dirty, untouchable. Over time, a layer of dust, accrued everywhere that we were not allowed to touch or walk through. I got this pen where a little thick pen with a different colored tabs on the top. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:24 Where you're going to change from black to blue, red. Yeah, I remember those. It was a really, it was a prized possession of mines. And I remember my dad, my bro, and I, were on our living room floor again and my bro was holding the pen and he was trying to change one of the colors but it flung out of his hands and twirled around and it eventually settled a few feet away from him in this dirty zone and at that moment that happened as a eight-nine-year-old I just knew that my pen was gone even though it's literally just three feet away from us my bro and I
Starting point is 00:14:04 I looked at each other. We both looked at my dad, and my dad just gave us that kind of solemn shake of his head. Like, I'm sorry, boys, but that's a terrible loss. So you would just see the pen sitting there? Yeah. And then it would be absorbed by the dust. Over time, it would just become covered with dust itself.
Starting point is 00:14:29 Even when their father wasn't home, Tony and Kevin didn't dare step into the dirty zones. I think we were also afraid because if you ventured into one of dirty areas, you would kind of leave, like, literal footprints into that dusty area. It would be pretty obvious. And so I remember one time a policeman entered our home because it was some kind of robbery. And the cop was trying to find this person. And I remember his face the moment he stepped in, like, holy crap. Like, he was asking me, you guys live here?
Starting point is 00:15:04 here, and he was trying to search the house, and I was pleading with them. I was like, please don't go over there, don't open that door. And be the side closet was part of the dirty zone. And I didn't want to get in trouble. And thankfully, I remember the cop just acquiesced. When Kevin speaks of that time in his life, it's as an accumulation of losses. The loss of his brothers and sister, his mom, the loss of all the rules that made reality. reality, which is why he still remembers the one real gain from that time. Friends, those boys, Jason and Gerald. They were a white family living with their single mom.
Starting point is 00:15:47 Jason was witty and funny. Gerald was kind of goofy-looking, but lovable. Gerald was Tony's age. Jason was Kevin's. They had video games and a mom who was nice to them. Every morning we will wake up, we go outside, just yell out. Jason, Gerald, what are you up to? And he would come back out, groggy-eyed, wiping their eyes.
Starting point is 00:16:09 We was just hanging out all the time. In a life that was filled with significant, often traumatic events, the time Kevin and his brother spent with Jason and Gerald was notable for just how unnotable it was. It was simple and fun. It was time spent just being a kid, building secret passageways out of cardboard boxes, racing bugs through obstacle courses
Starting point is 00:16:34 and climbing the highway retention wall to watch cars speed by. They swam at the public pool. They played with firecrackers blowing up snapple bottles in the park. Then there were the comics Kevin made. It might have been a smorgasbord of different characters I drew at the time,
Starting point is 00:16:53 like one of the teenage mutant ninja turtles or Batman or Bart and Garfield, or all four of them in the same comic who knew. they offered me a quarter for every comic book I drew and gave it to them so I did that and I used to quarters to buy myself candy hanging out with them was always a blast
Starting point is 00:17:12 for 12 hours a day did you ever have friends like that before no no and it helped it helped soften my bro a nice polite situation living with our dad that we could hang out with Jason Gerald Jason and Gerald were the only people with a window onto Kevin and Tony's lives.
Starting point is 00:17:35 Quite literally, their apartment window looked directly in on Kevin and Tony's window. And I remember one time my bro and I would take a bath and we didn't have towels and we were shivering and we ran back to our bedroom. And we were trying to put on our clothing, but it's really hard to put on clothing when your body's wet. And the next day, Jason and Gerald would come up to us and say, hey, why were you and Tony dancing on your bed? naked. Why didn't you guys have towels? I don't know. We just didn't have towels. You know, we didn't have a lot of things at kids. We didn't have a refrigerator. That's the wild one. That's hard to imagine. But the refrigerator would part of the dirty zone. And the refrigerator worked? I think it was plugged in. Yeah, we just couldn't use it. And so whenever we purchased food,
Starting point is 00:18:21 we would have to consume it within that day, including a gallon of milk. My dad believed in giving us milk and I remember my dad thought he had a genius idea he didn't want to waste any of the milk so he told me and my bro just jogging place outside so that we would want to drink more milk and that didn't bode very well
Starting point is 00:18:46 and we ended up vomiting all the milk out there I imagine if Gerald and Jason had been watching from their window they'd have seen their little friends looking like they were in some milk-sponsored version of boot camp But no matter what unbelievable things they saw, and no matter what unbelievable things Kevin told them,
Starting point is 00:19:04 about off-limit refrigerators or pens or couches, they didn't belittle him, didn't tease him, they accepted him. They never doubted me when I told them these things. I did wholeheartedly believe it. At a time when Kevin and his brothers felt so doubtful of their own reality, so isolated, Jason and Gerald were not only allies, but a check on their sanity. They were always there until the day they weren't.
Starting point is 00:19:36 Tony and I would go home one day, and they were gone. They were just completely gone. Their home was cleared out. Kevin's father said that Jason and Gerald's mom had died. And so, that very same afternoon, the boy's grandparents came and took Jason and Gerald away to live with them. Our friendship just suddenly got severed. There was no farewell or anything like that.
Starting point is 00:20:04 We just went from hanging out all the time being best buddies to one day just not even seeing them. People had left Kevin's life before, but Gerald and Jason didn't leave. They vanished. And when someone vanished in the early 1990s, They vanished. No cell phones, no emails. But the boys were always with him. Like in college, when Kevin's father died, his thoughts turned back to Jason and Gerald, how they must have felt losing their
Starting point is 00:20:38 mom. Kevin's an adult now with a family and a career in biotech. Yet any time he's introduced to a Jason or a Gerald, his mind always leaps back to his Jason, his Gerald. So now, 30 years later, Kevin wants to find them, the two boys who are the only witnesses to the hardest part of his and his brother Tony's life. I've always wondered about them and where are you up to you. Are they all right? How are they doing, first and foremost? Did they get over that kind of grief and loss? Because I can't even imagine losing your soul parent at that age. Because they always referred to themselves as white trash.
Starting point is 00:21:23 They called themselves that. They did, yeah. Always in a joking way. But every time I read about, like, for example, the opioid epidemic where a lot of rural whites were hammered, sometimes I wonder, are Jason and Gerald okay? Do you ever wonder if they think about you as well, if they think about you and your brother? I do wonder about that. Yeah, I do wonder about that, but all of that is secondary. If they're doing all right, I think that'll warm up my heart pretty well. If they're not doing
Starting point is 00:22:08 all right, I want to see if I can help them out. And at the minimum, maybe just say hi. I just never forgotten about them. And if they've forgotten about, Myself or Tony, you know, that's fine. That's fine. I'd just be just as happy to find out that they're doing all right. I would normal friends would probably want, right? The problem is, they were always just Jason and Gerald from across the way. Kevin doesn't know their last name.
Starting point is 00:22:45 And their mother's name has also been lost to time. And although he does know the brothers went to live with their grandparents, I don't even know where the grandparents reside except for one comment that Jason made a long time ago where he said that whenever he visits his grandparents, they would burn pine cones to keep warm. And that's why Kevin has come to me, with just the names Jason and Gerald, hoping I can help. Because I thought that your superpower investigative sleuthing abilities are going to be able to track him down again. After the break, my superpower investigative sleuthing abilities are put to the test.
Starting point is 00:23:45 Welcome to Decoding Women's Health. I'm Dr. Elizabeth Pointer, Chair of Women's Health, chair of women's health and gynecology at the atria health institute in new york city i'll be talking to top researchers and clinicians and bringing vital information about midlife women's health directly to you a hundred percent of women go through menopause even if it's natural why should we suffer through it listen to decoding women's health with dr elizabeth pointer wherever you get your podcasts Kevin remembers his own address from back then and clicking around on Google Maps, he's able to determine which house was Jason and Gerald's. But when my producer Kalila and I start digging, the only records we find are topsy-turvy,
Starting point is 00:24:30 dozens of people listed under the same address, the timelines overlapping and confusing ways. So without much else to go on, Kalila skims the records, searching for any single women who lived at Jason and Gerald's apartment number in the early 90s. Then, using the surname she finds, She starts dialing. Hello. Hi, is this Jason? Hello? Is this Jason?
Starting point is 00:24:58 Oh, snap. You got the voicemail. You know what to do. Later. Wow, I really fell for that voicemail. Hi. My name is Kalila Holt. I'm looking for a Jason who has a brother named to Gerald.
Starting point is 00:25:12 Kalila phones dozens and dozens of numbers, leaving messages for Jason's and Geralds across the nation. Many of the numbers she tries are disconnected entirely. We're sorry. You have reached a number that has... We're sorry. We're sorry. We're sorry.
Starting point is 00:25:27 We're sorry. We're sorry. And while some Geraldson's do answer the phone. No, I had a dad need to do. No, ma'am, I'm born to raise in Texas. They're never the ones we're looking for. Unless you're giving away millions of dollars and then I can make it be. No, ma'am, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:25:43 Wish I could help you. When Jason does helpfully tell you, that there's another guy with the same name a few towns over. I've spent a night in jail for a warrant in his name, he writes. Too bad your podcast isn't about that. I figure the local elementary school might have Jason and Gerald's last name on file, so I give them a call and am put on hold. It might give me a chance to do a little bit of freestyle and
Starting point is 00:26:18 while I'm waiting Jason he's got a brother Gerald Thankfully I'm interrupted by the receptionist She sends me to the district office Visit our website
Starting point is 00:26:32 At H-T-T-P-S colon forward slash And all the district office has to offer Is a web address Straight out of the mid-90s Enrollment center
Starting point is 00:26:49 hyphen TK hyphen We search obituaries thinking we might find one for Jason and Gerald's mom we post in neighborhood Facebook groups
Starting point is 00:27:00 we try phoning neighbors messaging old classmates submitting a research request at the public library nothing comes of any of it after two months of dead ends Kevin returns to the housing project to look for new leads. One of the last times he went back was to show his wife and three kids where he grew up,
Starting point is 00:27:25 but the kids were too scared of the neighborhood to get out of the car. This time he goes alone, and it's while walking by his old building that Kevin has a realization. For Jason and Gerald to have seen him and Tony through the window getting dressed without towels that day, their address would have to have been, not the one he'd originally told me, but actually one apartment over. And that new fact makes all the difference. Amazingly, we've been able to triangulate who these guys are, who Jason and Gerald.
Starting point is 00:27:57 Really? Yeah. No way. Yes. Wow. But just when you whack a mole one problem in this life, a new problem rears its ugly mole head. Even though we found Jason and Gerald,
Starting point is 00:28:11 we're not hearing back from Jason and Gerald. After sending both brothers' letters, Gerald bounces back, and Jason's goes unanswered. I try Jason on LinkedIn, but still, nothing. Maybe the name Kevin no longer means anything to them. Maybe they forgot the friendship altogether. I can't find a phone number for Gerald or Jason, but I do find one for Jason's wife. And so I leave her a voicemail. When I get no response, I try texting.
Starting point is 00:28:44 Still no response. So I call again, and this time, the phone doesn't even ring. Fearing my number has been blocked, I asked Kevin to phone, but when he tries to leave a message... My name's Kevin. I've been childhood friends with Jason and his brother. Oh, I couldn't even leave a voicemail. It's no longer feeling like Jason is simply forgotten. It feels like he emphatically doesn't want to talk. Although Jason's a no-go, I still have one more shot at reaching the younger brother, Gerald.
Starting point is 00:29:22 He has a Facebook, so this is where I'm thinking, like, maybe the most direct way to do it would be for you to reach out? Yeah, I don't mind. It's just that I don't even have a Facebook account, but I can definitely make an account, I suppose. When we check back in the next day, Kevin tells me that he made a profile and added one single friend, Gerald. And I just sent him a message. Are you to Gerald with the brother Jason? This is Kevin with the little bro Tony. We used to live right across each other, and we were really good friends.
Starting point is 00:29:58 And he just replied immediately. Welcome to Decoding Women's Health. I'm Dr. Elizabeth Pointer, chair of Women's Health and Gynecology at the Atria Health Institute in New York City. I'll be talking to top researchers and clinicians and bringing vital information about midlife women's health directly to you. A hundred percent of women go through menopause. Even if it's natural, why should we suffer through it? Listen to Decoding Women's Health with Dr. Elizabeth Pointer wherever you get your podcasts. It's been an eventful 24 hours.
Starting point is 00:30:50 For the first time in over 30 years, Kevin and his friend Gerald are back in touch. The two have been exchanging messages at a rapid pace since last night. I'm still digesting all of this real time. Apparently, Gerald is in the East Coast right now. He's been homeless for three years. but he said that he's got no problems been staying out of trouble he only smokes cigarettes and sparingly drinks
Starting point is 00:31:22 he stayed away from the hard drugs oh and I wanted to talk to him over the phone because I'm just not a big fan of texting but he said that he doesn't have a cell phone he lost it while traveling through Maryland and he only has access to Facebook Messenger brought her internet while at the library. So, yeah, it's just quite a bit to digest it when he mentioned Jason. One of the first things Gerald did after hearing from Kevin was to message Jason.
Starting point is 00:31:56 Gerald shared the message he sent his brother. I can just read it out. He said, how are you, brother? You won't believe this. Remember Tony and Kevin when we were living with mom in Sacramento as kids? They are reaching out to us to get to know us again and connect. We are catching up. It makes me so happy to talk to Kevin.
Starting point is 00:32:16 It's crazy. Jason responded to his brother's message, saying he remembered Kevin and Tony fondly. It turns out he was well aware Kevin had been looking for him. He'd gotten all those messages left for his wife, but he didn't want to revisit that time. In the months to come, Kevin keeps the messenger app on his phone, so he and his one Facebook friend can send long messages back and forth. And eventually, five months later... Hey, Gerald.
Starting point is 00:32:50 Hey, Kevin. How you did? Gerald gets a new phone, and a conversation is arranged. The last time we've ever heard each other, we were just kids. I was it over 34 years ago. I remember exactly how you look. When you were a kid, you were slightly tolerated. to me with black hair. You had a freckle. I think you had a freckle under your left eye.
Starting point is 00:33:13 Yeah, I do. I'm actually looking at you right now through my mind's eye. Remember when we hung out at your place? Oh my gosh, yeah. All we do is play video games. I remember you and Tony were so good at playing video games. Oh, I would watch you guys for hours one time. We had this game Rigar. Oh, I remember Ryegard. That's right. Yeah. And for like four or five hours you played it and you ended up beating it and my jaw was just lord you know why though we didn't have anything else to do me and tony no literally we were just in that place in the at home and we didn't have anything oh we knew that too i remember you guys came over once right Yeah, yeah. It's crazy because I actually still remember the inside of your house.
Starting point is 00:34:12 You remember? Didn't it look crazy? It looked like, it looked like a haunted house or something. Yes, a haunted house because I remember it was dusty, like not necessarily not necessarily unclean is not to work, but it was like nobody lived there. You remember the backyard that we hung out? It had the clothes lines. Yeah, we swing on them. Yeah, they're gone now. guess every unit has a dryer now. Wow.
Starting point is 00:34:40 And everything seemed a whole lot smaller. He just surprised me. I just thought everything was way bigger, but I think we were just so small. You know, growing up with you, I always thought that you would become like a comic book artist, like a professional one. I mean, I would pay you a quarter. a piece for them because I like them so much. Remember how you would always bug me about, oh, what's the next issue coming out? Once the next issue coming out?
Starting point is 00:35:14 Yes, yes. Oh, my gosh. You have no idea. They were so good. They were so, so, so good. All these decades later, Gerald still remembers the specific Bart Simpson plot lines. There was an electrical monster that Bartman would bite. You'd make them, oh, I just unlocked an old memory that I hadn't thought about.
Starting point is 00:35:35 you would use your old tests and papers from school and you'd pull them in a way where the back side would be the comic book and I could unfold them and I'd see your work for school. I didn't even realize that, yeah, but that wouldn't make sense because I wouldn't have assets of paper anyways. I held on those for like 15 years. It turns out, Gerald was out there looking back, just as much as Kevin was.
Starting point is 00:36:05 I always thought of you, too. Making friends with you guys was just a big breath of fresh air. I mean, at school, I was never able to make real friends. A lot of the kids were actually really mean. I got beat up a lot. But I had Kevin and Tony right across from me. I mean, those were my friends. Those were the only two friends I actually had growing up.
Starting point is 00:36:30 I really, really never made that kind of connection again. how are you doing man oh i'm okay i'm okay i'm happy in life life isn't really what i thought it'd be what it turned out to be but it turned out okay and i am myself and i'm happy it's not like i'm living a life where i wake up and go to work and realize i'm unhappy but just do the same thing every other day. I'm kind of just free and by myself now. You seem to be doing pretty resiliently. That's the word resilient, really.
Starting point is 00:37:13 When you first become homeless, it's scary, you know. But it's kind of an adapt-or-die kind of scenario. And one thing I found out about being homeless is it's a bit easier if you can blend in with other homeless people. If you can find an area that has resources and other homeless people, you're more likely to survive better and not be a target because it's pretty dangerous being homeless. People don't like homeless people. Did you find yourself targeted? Yes, a lot.
Starting point is 00:37:47 I've gotten beat up a few times, but I've also been helped too. I've had a lot of Christians help me, which is something amazing. A lot of people help me on my way. Good people. Gerald had been living beneath an underpass in D.C. for about a year. But a few months ago, he decided to return home to California. I got into a point where I had no contact with my kids, and I missed them, and I just needed to see them. And I knew if I stay gone, if I'm just out there in the world, I'll never have a relationship with my kids if I don't come back now.
Starting point is 00:38:26 I need to see my boys. I need to tell them I love them. And the strange thing is the very day that they initiated the sweeping of the homeless in D.C. was the day I had a bus ticket to come back to California. So I was getting on a bus right when the troops were coming into D.C. like that day. Gerald explains he'd started going to church with another friend who was homeless and that the church helped him scramble together enough money for a ticket back home. to his kids. And I'm grateful that I was able to leave because I don't know what happened to all the homeless people. There were hundreds of homeless people when I was in D.C. all in that area and they were all dealing with the same thing. It was very sad to see. Some were genuinely
Starting point is 00:39:14 crazy. Some were playing the system and others were just emotionally distraught. Something happened in their family, like a kid died and they just couldn't pull themselves out. Can you say like What led you into that situation? Yeah, heartbreak and lack of family. My wife left me about four years ago now. And honestly, it just got to a point where I realized that if I didn't actually go away for a while, that her heart couldn't mend where she couldn't grow and become herself. So I needed to just leave the whole area
Starting point is 00:39:57 And I needed to do something for myself I needed to go see the world I needed to go walk Is that how you you traveled by walking? Mostly yeah From state to state Yeah well I would get rides of course I wouldn't hitchhike I wouldn't put my thumb out
Starting point is 00:40:16 But I would walk and eventually somebody would pull over And ask me if I needed a ride Gerald tells me that after his wife left him, he was living in his truck, but when he decided to leave California, he swapped cars with a friend. I traded him straight up for his jalopy car for my nice Toyota truck. I couldn't find work, I couldn't find a job, I couldn't find money for my gas tank, so I could either leave my truck on the side of the road and have it impounded and lost, or I could give it away somebody I love
Starting point is 00:40:51 and tried to find my way on foot. So I chose to give it to my friend Josh. And I drove his car up through to Sierra Nevada's into Nevada. And then when it ran out of gas, I just started walking. For the next several years, Gerald traveled all over the country. From Nevada, he went to Kansas, then Oregon, Alaska, Tennessee, and eventually Washington, D.C. And now he's back in California, spending most of his time camping. So I'm just sitting up on a mountain right now looking down at a river.
Starting point is 00:41:29 Honestly, even being back here in California, I kind of realize that I may end up staying homeless. I don't have a lot of options. But I realize I'm just happier being halfway out of the system. Or one foot in, one foot out, I guess. I'm more comfortable just being alone in the crowd of people. So, like being up here in the mountains where I'm at right now, it's just wonderful. I mean, there's nobody around. Nobody.
Starting point is 00:41:59 Gerald looks after his kids a few days every week, staying at his ex-wife's house. It's a relief to see them again, his two boys, seven and 13. And they're fine, and they missed me. I would think that they would miss you. I mean, you can't. Yeah. You can't ever replace a parent. something both Kevin and Gerald know all too well
Starting point is 00:42:22 I just remember taking that news that your mom had passed and that you two were just gone and we're coming back and Tony and I we were both and we cried we were hurt broken we lost our two best friends
Starting point is 00:42:44 they didn't even get to say goodbye It was so suddenly. Oh, in one day. Yeah. Yeah. And we were always wondering what happened. To your mom? To you two?
Starting point is 00:42:58 I could tell you the story from the start. As a kid, making sense of what happened, Kevin assumed maybe Jason and Gerald's mom had heart attack. But Gerald says no, that his mom had a heroin addiction. When I was like six, it came across a leather glove with a needle. inside the couch when I pulled up the couch cushion and I brought it to my mom
Starting point is 00:43:23 and I said, Mommy, what's this? And she slapped my hand and took it from me. And she said, never touch that again. Don't dig in there, okay? That's moms. That could poke you and hurt you.
Starting point is 00:43:36 So I knew about it, but I didn't know what it was exactly. And my mom would, she sleep a lot, a lot. Most of the time, she'd just sleep on the couch downstairs. But when she was awake, she was a very good mom. She always cooked for me and Jason, and we always had food.
Starting point is 00:43:54 She was always looking for us. If we were out too late, she didn't let nobody mess with us. My mom was a good mom. Yeah, that's what I remember. The night as mom died, Gerald remembers hearing a third. thud upstairs, but he didn't think much of it. He and Jason were busy watching the Simpsons at the time, and not long after that, they went to bed. So I went and crawled into bed, and Jason crawled into his bed, and he went to sleep, and I was lying there, and I'm like,
Starting point is 00:44:34 I'm going to go see if I can go curl up to mom in her bed. So I got up, and I went to my mom's room, and I opened a door, and she was laying face down on the ground, not moving. But I had seen that before, so I didn't think a lot. I didn't know anything was wrong. I was like seven, six, somewhere in there. So I slowly closed the door really slowly because I didn't want to wake her up. And in the morning, me and my brother got ourselves ready for school and we walked to school. And while I was at school at about 1 o'clock in the afternoon, some cops came to my classroom. I thought I was in trouble because I hadn't been doing good in school. I thought I was about my grades, actually. And the cops brought me back to the house. And apparently, my brother
Starting point is 00:45:27 had come home from school early because he was feeling sick. And he found my mom face down on the ground and couldn't wake her up. So he went to a neighbor, Lloyd and Cheryl. They lived up the block. And Lloyd came down and checked her pulse and looked at my brother and said she's dead and uh and i didn't even realize she was dead i didn't know even when the cops brought me into the house and the house is filled with cops and my grandparents are there nobody's told me what's happened so i'm just looking at everybody and I'm wondering where mom is and then a cop comes up to me and says we're going to take you to Burger King and get you something to eat so a cop actually took me and my brother to Burger King in his cop car and bought us lunch and I still didn't know what was going on so I'm
Starting point is 00:46:37 just gabbing to the cop like my very young seven-year-old self just talking, talking, talking, like nothing's wrong. I remember asking the cop, did he ever shoot anybody? He said, yeah, he shoots the bad people when he has to, and he had a shotgun that was mounted close to the dash, and I thought it was so cool, and my brother didn't say a word, and the cop starts crying. And he brought us back, and nobody's talking to me at all.
Starting point is 00:47:09 I'm like an insect on a wall or a fly. I just don't know. Yeah. And so my grandparents tell us, okay, we got to go get inside the car. Grandpa has some things he has to do, so we're going to take you to Ann Elizabeth's house for right now for a few days. So I got happy because I got to see my cousin Brian, who was about my age, and like, I loved him. And when I get there, my cousin Brian, he knows what's going on, what happened. and he looks at me and he says,
Starting point is 00:47:42 Gerald, I want you to sleep in my bed. You take my bed. I'll sleep on the floor. And I said, you don't have to do that. And he said, no, you can just take it, okay? And I could see he was sad. And then I sat down on the bed. And that's when it hit me.
Starting point is 00:48:00 That's when I realized that mom had died. And I started crying and crying. And I cried for hours and hours. And I cried myself to sleep. After all that, my brother ended up becoming really quiet. You never really talked to me very much after that. And, uh, I don't know. It just seems like the world got a lot colder after that.
Starting point is 00:48:48 Jason and Gerald spent the rest of their childhood with their maternal grandparents, living in the mountains. I asked Gerald if they ever had any contact with their dad. No, he died before I was born. Oh, I see. I'm sorry. It's okay. I never knew him, so there's no effect, you know. Yeah. But I do know a story. My dad, right before he died, he asked my grandfather for $500 because he needed to buy a car so that he could go get this job.
Starting point is 00:49:21 And my grandfather didn't believe him, so he said no. And then the next day, apparently a neighbor had come across my father's hanging body from a tree and called my grandfather. and my grandfather cut him down and looked at his body on the ground and said, what a waste. This is the same grandfather who about seven years later would become Gerald's guardian.
Starting point is 00:49:53 Gerald says he could be strict. He had a military attitude and he was really a gruff on me. And Jason? Well, just you? Not Jason so much. Well, Jason was more like my grandfather than I was. Jason went into the military.
Starting point is 00:50:07 He did very good. He was in for about eight years and went to Iraq twice, and he did really well. Wow. Jason now lives in Arizona where he works in security. Kevin's happy to hear that his life seems stable. But Gerald and Jason's relationship never recovered from the death of their mom. In contrast, Kevin and Tony have remained close. That Jason and Gerald haven't is hard for Kevin to hear.
Starting point is 00:50:35 I hope that you can at least maintain a little bit of contact with Jason here and there. Yeah, it's spotty, but it is. It just is what it is. Some people, they, everybody's different. We all have our own special abilities. We all, you know, are good, our own good things. One thing my brother isn't so good at is dealing with the past memory of my mom's death.
Starting point is 00:51:01 He kind of locked it away, I feel. but it's his memories to keep you know and he doesn't want to dig him back up and I think that's the big thing if you ever see him again or communicate with him again can't let him know that yeah I never I never never forgot about you too yeah yeah it's all right you didn't want to talk about it that's fine and I just want to let him know that yeah Tony and I were real real sad
Starting point is 00:51:40 and I never forgot about him I'll tell him I'll tell him Gerald says he was just never like his brother and grandfather me I was the complete opposite I was kind of more like the free bird the hippie I guess
Starting point is 00:52:02 got into skateboarding. I always wanted to start a skateboarding company and design my own decks, do artwork through that. That's actually what I really wanted to do in life. But I kind of put it on a shelf just because of how everything turned out in life. But he says he did gift skateboards to each of his sons.
Starting point is 00:52:22 And now, when his younger son goes out to ride his bike, Gerald will use one of the boards to skate alongside him. honestly i i don't know what it really is to to be a proper dad i never had a dad i had a grandpa who was kind of a dad and i learned some from him but to be a dad is something i got to learn as i go along i guess that's my biggest journey now it's just to stay home stay in my area and watch my kids grow that's what i want to do Do you think you're going to stick around? Yes.
Starting point is 00:53:02 I'm done traveling now. So it feels like it's the end of something or the beginning of something new? When one thing ends, something else begins. Yeah. I'm 41 and just means I have half my life to live still. After my mom died, Nobody in the family would talk about it. It was like my old past life in Sacramento had been erased.
Starting point is 00:53:34 So having connected with Kevin, it's like validation that I did have a life before my mother died. Like, I'm not the only one that remembers my mom. Yeah. Likewise, Gerald means something to me, too, that I wasn't too crazy thinking about my childhood so much. like someone else was thinking about it as well. That actually happened, yeah. Yeah, it actually happened. It's nice to know I'm not invisible.
Starting point is 00:54:18 I'll see you in a bit. We got to cash up. I'll make a visit up there. Yes, you'll have to come up. Yeah, I've never been to that area before. So it'll be a new place. Yeah, it looks like it. You will love it, I promise, Kevin.
Starting point is 00:54:35 I'm sure I will. Okay. All right, bye. All right, by, Gerald. Kevin and I stay on the line to talk about everything Gerald shared. We harken back to what he said about not knowing how to be a dad, and I ask Kevin how he learned to be a dad. and I asked Kevin how he learned to be a dad.
Starting point is 00:55:00 A lot of it, he says, comes from his partner. But also, he tried to define himself in opposition to his own dad. I didn't want to be feared. I wanted my kids to be able to trust me. I wanted to be warm and open to them and good time with them. Yeah, I guess I just wanted to do everything opposite what my own dad did. and I know I didn't walk away unscathed both me and my bro
Starting point is 00:55:33 probably with my entire family I feel like sometimes I sort of like PTSD almost Kevin tells me how when his kids joined Cub Scouts he volunteered to be an assistant scoutmaster he had to go away on this weekend camping trip to be trained when he got back home he pulled into the garage Everything in the house was quiet.
Starting point is 00:55:58 I remember unloading the car and calling for my kids because I thought that it could help me set up the tent in the backyard to let the tent properly dry and all that. But there were no response. Notice that they were in the living room or something like that. Playing board games, it kind of nodded at me. like oh that is home
Starting point is 00:56:27 and I just remember feeling like immensely overwhelmed with sadness I just remember sitting down in another room on the couch
Starting point is 00:56:46 just being super removed and even wondering about why I was feeling that emotion and it took me a little wild the process like why this black cloud was just just hanging around me and I guess
Starting point is 00:57:11 ultimately what was going through my mind was I felt like my family didn't really want me and maybe i was envisioning that that they would miss me and it would greet me and but because they didn't i got that sensation that like i wasn't wanted like i didn't like i wasn't wanted and i didn't know how i was processing it but it reminded me of the time where like how my mom would draw my name from a paper bag she chose me as a first kid that she didn't want
Starting point is 00:58:05 and it had it didn't go and I thought about how coming home to my dad and looking at me like like he wished he had my older bro come home instead of me
Starting point is 00:58:45 and that was a feeling I got when I just got home from that camping trip like nobody wanted me yeah yeah is just a terrible feeling I remember my my partner she came back out and she saw me
Starting point is 00:59:14 and I didn't know how to explain it to her but I just told her I wasn't feeling well and then meet my family in the other room and be normal again and say hey what's that wrong doing what game are you guys playing
Starting point is 00:59:38 and life would just carry on This weekend, Kevin is planning on driving out to the mountains to see Gerald, to go camping and fishing. Gerald says the fish are jumping. It's the beginning of something new. Life carries on. You know, Now that the furniture's returning to its goodwill home
Starting point is 01:00:58 Now that the last month's rent is scheming with the damage deposit Take this moment to decide If we meant it if we tried Or felt around for far too much From things that accidentally touch. This episode of heavyweight was produced by Kalila Holt and me, Jonathan Goldstein, along with Phoebe Flanagan. Our supervising producer is Stevie Lay, editorial guidance from Emily Condon. Special thanks to Chris Neary, Greta Cohn, Jake Harper, Lydia Jean Cott, and Kevin's brother, Tony.
Starting point is 01:01:45 Emma Munger mixed the episode with original music by Christine Fellows, John K. Sampson, and Bob. Lobby Lord. Additional scoring by Blue Dot Sessions and Pottington Bear. Our theme song is by the Weaker Thans, courtesy of Epitaph Records. Follow us on Instagram at Heavyweight podcast or email us at Heavyweight at Pushkin. We're taking a break for American Thanksgiving, but we'll be back in December with two more episodes of heavyweight. Until that time, happy American Twiki Day. A gobble, gobble to you and yours. The sun in an empty road. The sun in an empty road. Michael Lewis here. My best-selling book, The Big Short, tells the story of the build-up and burst of the U.S. housing market back in 2008.
Starting point is 01:02:43 A decade ago, the Big Short was made into an Academy Award-winning movie. Now I'm bringing it to you for the first time as an audiobook narrated by yours truly. The Big Short Story, what it means to bet against the market, and who really pays for an unchecked financial system, is as relevant today as it's ever been. Get the Big Short now at Pushkin.fm.com or wherever audiobooks are sold.
Starting point is 01:03:08 This is an I-Heart podcast.

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