I was almost a school shooter.
In 1996, Denver, Colorado,
I was a student in North High.
In a moment of pain and anger,
I almost committed a terrible atrocity.
Growing up I'd learned early on
there was a strange comfort
and calmness in darkness.
I was always the new kid.
My family was violent and aggressive,
drug-addicted parents.
We were moving from place to place,
went to 30 or 40 different schools,
always seemed to be going
to a new school every other week.
You woke up at 4 o'clock
in the morning by cops,
to run across the country to end up
at a school for a couple of weeks
and then have to do it all again
a couple of days later.
I was the perpetual new kid, and since I
also had such an unstable household,
I wasn't helped by the fact that I smelled
really bad because I never had a shower,
or didn't really have any clean clothes.
All my clothes were dirty and torn.
I had a weight problem. I was smart.
I liked comic books at a time
when kids didn't really like people
who liked comic books that much.
So every time I went to a new school
I was in a new set of bullies.
They'd walk up to me and shoot me
with a harpoon, like I was a whale,
or dump food on my head
because they said I was too fat.
But the bullying wasn't just at school.
It happened at home a lot too.
I was told that I was worthless
by just about everybody in my life.
When you're told you worthless enough
you will believe it,
then you're going to do everything
to make everybody else agree with it too.
I wrapped that darkness around me
like a blanket, used it as a shield.
It kept the few who agreed with me close,
but it kept everybody else away.
I always had heard in life
that there was good and bad people.
I must be one of the bad people.
So I guess I'd have to just do
what I was supposed to do.
So I got really aggressive.
At 12 or 13-years-old
I got really into heavy metal music,
and I was the mosh pit
when I went to concerts.
The abuse just never seemed to stop.
I got into cutting around 14 or 15
because I figured that there was all this
extreme emotion going on in my life
I had absolutely no control over.
I had to find some way
to find control over something
so I took to cutting myself.
I still have the scars to this day.
At 15, 16 years old, I ended up homeless.
My parents had kicked me out
because I didn't want to deal
with their drunken fighting,
so I was living on the streets.
I thought I had pushed
all my other friends away,
shoved them all away
by lying to them or stealing from them,
doing everything that my family
taught me how to react,
which was the completely
wrong way how to react.
But I had no idea.
I was just doing what I was taught.
Finally, at 16 years old, I'm sitting
in my best friend's shed,
who I thought I'd already pushed away too
by stealing from him and lying to him.
Lying in this shed
with the roof wide open,
with rain pouring down on me
into a grungy chair
that was covered in cobwebs and dirt
which hadn't been touched in months.
And I'm sitting there with my arm
covered in blood,
knowing that if I didn't do something
I was going to kill myself soon.
So, I did the only thing
I could think of to do:
I grabbed a phonebook,
and I called social services.
So I went to social services.
Sadly, they didn't just bring me in there,
they also took my mom in there too,
who happened to be one of the largest
sources of my pain growing up.
Since she had spent her life
running from place to place
and dealing with social workers
and police officers,
she knew exactly what to say
to get them to believe
that I was making it all up,
it was just an act,
I was just doing it for attention.
Then they send me home with her.
And as they sent me home with her,
she turned to me and she said:
"Next time, you should do a better job
and I'll buy you the razor blades."
My heart just got ripped out
of me at that point.
The darkness I'd been staring at
for so long, I ran headlong into it.
I had nothing left to live for.
I literally had nothing to lose.
And when you have nothing to lose
you can do anything,
and that is a terrifying thought.
I had decided that my act
of doing something
was I was going to express
my extreme anger and rage
by getting a gun.
I was going to attack either my school
or a mall food court.
It really didn't matter which one.
It wasn't about the people,
it was about the largest amount of damage
in the shortest amount of time
with the least amount of security.
Both those places were the right targets.
So I wish I had a better story
about actually getting a gun,
but that was actually
brother-business-like.
There were gangbanger kids
near my school back in the mid '90s
when gangs were still a major problem
in North Denver schools.
This kid had seen me, he knew my family
and he'd sold drugs to them before.
He knew that I wasn't really in school,
I was just always at school.
He knew I wasn't a narc
or anything like that,
but didn't know anything but a first name.
It didn't take more than that.
I knew they had access to guns,
they talked about it all the time.
I said: "Hey, can you get me a gun?"
"Sure, get me an ounce."
"All right, give me three days."
That was it.
I was waiting to get myself a gun
so I could kill a lot of people.
But thankfully
I wasn't alone in that darkness.
That best friend who had saved me
when I was sleeping in the shed,
he saw this place that I was in.
Even though I had stolen
from him and lied to him
and taken his belongings
and ruined it all,
he didn't care, he still brought me in
and showed me acts of kindness.
Just simple acts.
It wasn't the kind of overbearing
kindness where they say:
"Is there anything I can do for you?
I can I do something to make you better?
How can I help you?"
It was just sitting down next to me.
"Hey, would you like a meal?
Let's watch a movie."
Treat it like it was a Tuesday.
Treat me like I was a person.
When someone treats you like a person
when you don't even feel like a human,
it'll change your entire world,
and it did to me.
He stopped me with his acts of kindness
from committing that atrocity that day.
If you see someone who's in that spot
that needs that love, give it to them.
Love the ones you feel
deserve it the least
because they need it the most.
It'll help you just as much
as it helps them.
We're in a really dangerous spot now
with this trend of arming the teachers,
looking out for the kids who might
be a threat in schools,
and maybe turning them in to the FBI.
What's that going to do to a kid who's
in the position I was 25 years ago?
Who's alone, and depressed, and abused,
and is just sitting there hurting,
and someone thinks that they're a threat?
He gets turned in to the FBI,
and one month of pain
turns into a lifetime of legal trouble
because one person thought
he was going to be a problem.
Instead of looking at that kid
like he's a threat,
look at him like he might be a friend,
like you might be able
to bring him into the fold.
Show him that it's just a Tuesday.
Show him that he is worth it.
Show him that he can exist in this pain
even though it's intense,
that at the end of it, there is a light
at the end of the tunnel.
I found my light.
Now I'm a happy family man.
I am a father of four.
My wife and my daughter
in the audience today.
(Applause)
And even bigger than that,
the friend who saved my life,
he's in the audience today too.
Because friendship
doesn't ever really die.
(Applause)
We have to give love to the people
who we think deserve the least.
Thank you.
(Applause)