donnaplease wrote:let's not treat him like he's little orphan Annie, plucked out of a tragedy to instant stardom. He was a relatively successful performer in his home country and in HongKong and he has a family that he is supposedly very happy with. I don't think this is the rags to riches story that some are trying to make it out to be
I don't think it's about that, as if winning some lottery.
Thinking so, would miss the message in Arnel's story.He persevered, in a very dangerous slog through life, little by little making his life better, to get to this.
No magic shortcuts.
We're shown where Arnel came from, just so we see how far he had to go without giving up.
I've only been to Tatalon a couple of times, though it's not THAT far from where I live.
Not all of it is as impoverished as some make it out to be, but parts of it are quite depressed, and dangerous.
Life is too cheaply taken in those parts, and "crushing poverty" doesn't even begin to describe
what the residents face, let alone those wandering, with neither shelter nor food.
RocknRoll wrote:Well, Arnel has certainly has me hooked. The guy can flat out sing and then to come across so humble and real,
I think he will be a keeper with the band. I just hope he doesn't get acclimated with the music biz and develop the "dreaded LSD"
LSD = lead singer disease, I'm guessing?
I'm rather hoping that it is the rest of Journey who'll get infected with Arnel's humility.
Maybe Neal, Jon, ...yes, even Steve, can realize just how good they've had it, and how petty
their grievances are, in comparison to what much of the world's population tries to endure.
For many of those suffering, some music to listen to is a tiny measure of solace
against day after day of despair.
Never too late to seek forgiveness, nor to forgive.
wech