Tuesday, August 3, 2021

The Frozen Yogurt Incident

I took Agape and Talia to Froyo Life, a frozen yogurt store and our weekly hang out joint after dance class. We stood in line and I guided them as they picked out a mix of strawberry and vanilla bases topped with rainbow sprinkle, mochi and gummy bears. 

I did notice a lady in her 80s observing as we made our way to the cashier. I didn't make much of it at first.

When we stood at the cashier to pay, the lady stood next to us at the 2nd cashier. I paid cash for our share and overheard that her total came out to $3.06 which was almost exactly the change returned to me.



I usually don't do this, but for reasons beyond my understanding, I was compelled to lean over, hand the money to the cashier and said "Please allow me. I have the exact change, it would be my pleasure to cover this for you." The lady looked at me and as she thanked me, I took her hand and looked at her for a moment. I wanted to say "It's the least I could do" as if I had known her forever, but I contended with "of course! Have a good one!"



The girls and I found a table inside and settled down and as they each began to dig into their frozen yogurt masterpieces, the lady approaches us. "I wanted to share something with you," she said. "As you were standing in line, I was observing you and I could tell what a sweet dad you are. And I remembered my own father and how he used to hold me when I was a little girl and how I would place my head on his shoulder and rest it there and how protected I felt," she continued as her words plunged into my heart and soul. 

I could tell that she missed her father greatly and perhaps it was the spirit of her daddy that had come over me to buy his little daughter some frozen yogurt.

Love has no bounds and if we share a genuine act of love with someone else, we may be the bridge that connects them to that a place where they once were. Where they once belonged. I know in my heart that my simple gesture gave that lady whose name I may never know life. And by giving another life, I experienced a spark that gave me life.

"Thank you so much for sharing that with me. God bless you!" I told her as she smiled and walked away. "God bless you too," she said.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

The first time I saw my baby!

 
There I was, on November 8th, 2014, in hospital scrubs, sitting in the hallway, waiting for the nurse to call me into the delivery room to sit besides my wife and welcome our first baby. We had decided to call her Agapé which means "God's unconditional love." I had heard so many fathers speak of the first time they were in the delivery room. Some cried and their wife had to comfort them. Some felt sick while others fainted. But mostly, new dads talked about how they experienced love at first sight! They fell in love with their newborn child as soon they laid eyes on them. A feeling of "fatherhood" washed over them, like a software update with a new set of apps like maturity, reliability, fatherly love and a sense of protectiveness.

As you can imagine, I was excited and a bit nervous about getting my own software update. How would I react when that little person appeared in my life. How would I react when I would hold her for the first time? Would I cry, faint, puke? Or would I experience that immediate and out of this world love that I had heard about? A new person was going to come into our lives and I was prepared for whatever emotion came my way. I was going to embrace this moment and try to remember the laughter, the cries, all those messy feelings. 

I prayed. Finished. Then the nurse called me in. She lead me into the delivery room where Arsine was laying down on an operating table with a large curtain separating us from the doctors. I sat next to her and caressed her face, telling her everything would be alright. Although she was under anesthesia, I could tell she was extremely uncomfortable. Later, she would describe the strange feeling of being drugged up but still being awake and feeling someone cutting her open and all of her organs behind taken out of her. Finally, a pressure, hands, and the weight of the baby being lifted out of her.  

Everything was in slow motion and in extreme closeup. Arsine squeezed her eyes shut pressing out teardrops that streamed down her cheeks. She was relieved. I was relieved. She then let out a cry through her clenched jaw and the sound of a newborn crying pierced through the world.

This was it. She was here. This was the moment I had been waiting for. A nurse gestured toward me, "Come on dad." I stood up and walked around the curtain to see another nurse holding our baby. Crying, frail, surprisingly hairy. "Well, ok then" I thought. The doctor and nurses exclaimed "Beautiful baby, congratulations!" I automatically thanked them.

I stepped closer. I searched deep for what I was feeling. Was I about to faint, puke, cry? None of the above. In fact, I felt nothing at all. No surprise, no love washing over me, nothing at all. The moment seemed very run of the mill.  

The nurse then called me to cut Agape's umbilical chord, "would you like to do the honors?" "Sure," I responded. A part of me wished they had done it themselves, not because I was disgusted, but I thought they would do a better job. At the moment, I did feel something. It was either a sense of surprise that the umbilical chord would be so thick and resilient or resignation that they would hand me dull scissors at such a special moment. 

"Would you like to hold her, dad?" They asked with big smiles, gleaning my face for excitement and joy. They placed Agape in my arms and besides my amazement at the mechanics of new life entering the world, I didn't feel any fatherly software updates.

I took Agape and sat close to my wife who was so tired. I placed Agape next to her and she cried.
"I love you so much, little girl! Welcome to our family! I love you!" She said. Good for her! I was married to a human who could feel actual emotions, not like myself.

As the nurse moved us to our room, I surveyed myself to see if my feelings would shift, change, appear. I found myself experiencing that excitement through the reactions of my family members until that night, when I experienced something very unique and yes life changing.

Arsine had finally been able to fall asleep when the baby starting crying. Did this mean I would have to hold her? The thought did cross my mind to call a nurse to help but the response time had lagged and I didn't want to risk Arsine waking up again so I bit the bullet and picked up Agape.

I held her in my arms and started singing to her:

This is the day,
This is the day that the Lord has made,
We will rejoice,
we will rejoice and be glad in it.
And be glad in it.

She slowly calmed down and began to stare at me. It's the way that she looked at me in that moment that I will never forget. It's as if time stopped and she said to me "I have come into this world on your account. I don't know anyone. And I have nothing to my name. I have come to this world on your account."

I felt this overwhelming sense of responsibility to be a good host for her life. To never take for granted the role I have been given by God to be a good host for her in this life. To shower her with kisses and hugs and make sure she always feels loved. Loved completely and unconditionally, just like her name, at all times and circumstances.   To guide her and protect her and allow her to experience life just as it is, challenging, surprising, difficult, fun and always extraordinary.

Friday, January 17, 2014

Evaluna Montaner - Si Existe (English Translation)









Evaluna Montaner - Si Existe (English Translation)

If there is wind 

If there is a world 
If I exist, then you exist 

If there are seas 
And loves 
With the greatest depths

If I fall, help me up
If I'm tangled, untie me 
If I am badly hurt 
Cure me with your love

With your fingers open the night 
Stars of the skies and of the seas
I have so much to give
In your hands I will fly 

If I fall, help me up
If I'm tangled, untie me 
If I am badly hurt 
Cure me with your love

If there exists love
If there exists my voice
If there exists the salt of the oceans

If there is father
If there is mother
If peace always prevails 

If my hands have the power to create
If calm appears after grief

If I fall, help me up
If I'm tangled, untie me 
If I am badly hurt 
Cure me with your love

If I fall, help me up
If I'm tangled, untie me 
If I am badly hurt 

Cure me with your love

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

David Ring: A Real Miracle Story

I've been reading a book on the life of David Ring, the man who, at infancy, was announced dead and remained so for 18 minutes. As he miraculously resurfaced to life, the lack of oxygen to his brain would develop a condition called Cerebral Palsy which he would have to struggle with for the rest of his life.

Cerebral palsy (CP) can be defined as a central motor dysfunction affecting muscle tone, posture and movement resulting from permanent, non progressive defect or lesion of the immature brain.
David's father passed away when he was only 11. His mother died when he was 14. David became a recluse and forsake the word of God and refused to connect with people around him.


It wasn't until he gave his life to Christ, and felt the creator's absolute acceptance of him, that David's life made a a complete 180. Within 2 weeks of being bullied by his fellow students, he was voted vice-president of the senior body, Mr. School Spirit. He also became the manager of the football, basketball and track teams.

He has since gone on to marry a wonderful woman, have children and become an internationally
renowned Pastor speaking to thousands upon thousands.

In his book, he says:

"You might walk OK. You might talk OK. But down deep in your heart you are saying, "I'm in pain."
We all hurt today, folks, but we are asking the wrong questions. We are asking, "Why, why, why?" Don't ask why, ask what! "What can I become because of the situation? How can I glorify God?"

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

A Story of Salvation

Last week, a young man by the name of Emil Haroutunian approached me and asked if I could help make a video that might possibly change his life. With that kind of approach, he certainly had my attention. Over a brief meeting at Coffee Bean, he explained his dreams of going to a Theology school that would help him develop a nice balance between knowledge and practicality.

He then shared with me about an opportunity that he had just learned about. Eternity Bible College was holding a contest where they asked participants to create a 4-minute video talking about who they were before Christ, how He changed their life, and why they want to attend the school.

The Youtube Video with the most "LIKES" would win an entire year of tuition absolutely FREE.

The launch date was a week earlier and the deadline was fast approaching, so we had no time to waste.

DAY 1 - We drove to Santa Monica and filmed some B-roll on the pier, then on the beach and even captured some candid moments in the Farmer's Market crowd.

DAY 2 - The following day, I filmed Emil playing in the worship band before teaching a short lesson to the Jr High Kids and High school students. Now, all that was missing was his testimonial. Luckily, with Armen's help, we accessed the church library and used it as a symbolic setting to talk about visions of academia.


DAY 3 - Back to work, I edited an hour's worth of footage and condensed it into 4 minutes.

The video was completed and uploaded at 6PM today and it already has 140 LIKES, just 4 1/2 hours later. By Wednesday, it will have accumulated 1264 views and 268 LIKES.

I pray that Emil has a blessed journey and that he gets all the likes needed to get into Eternity Bible School.

If you haven't viewed the video, please click on the LINK to be redirected to YOUTUBE and click LIKE to be a part of this success story.






Saturday, July 27, 2013

Using a Chevy Camaro as a Dolly

When I was 17 years old, I couldn't afford a doorway dolly or any other dollies for that matter. The poor man's tracking system generally consists of placing the camera on an office chair and pushing it on a smooth surface. I did things differently.

I asked my friend Marcel to drive my 1988 Chevy Camaro, while I laid down on the hood
to get a smooth tracking shot of poles in the parking lot. After filming for 10 minutes,
Marcel stopped the car.

Without breaking focus or lifting my eye from the viewfinder, I made quick circles with my
index for him to resume.

"Come on, let's move!"

I felt the transmission change gears to PARK.

Finally, I raised my head to see what was wrong when I realized there was a tall police officer
standing next to the car and staring me down with a very serious look.



"Hello Officer."

"Do you know why I stopped you?" He asked.

"Hmm... I'm... not sure." I said trying to gather my thoughts. I could have thought of a lot of reasons. Trespassing. Filming without permit...

"You're not wearing your seat-belt," he said.

A cop with a sense of humor!

I let out a relieved chuckle but I knew I was still not out of the wood. I explained to him with quite a lot of enthusiasm what an incredible shot I had in mind.

"Officer! Imagine this... the camera past past the parking meters in the deserted lot.
That would be so amazing and visually... so... POETIC! Don't you think?"

Gulp*

He looked at me with his lips forming a subtle smile. My passionate plea must have worked
because he let us off the hook without a ticket.

"I don't want you to do this again. Next time, I'm giving you and your driver a ticket."

"Yes Officer. Thank you. Thank you very much."

Before leaving, he even suggested some very creative ways to build a wooden shelf on the passenger side window to elevate the camera and keep it steady and create a great dolly shot.

Whether he was a cinephile or a weekend filmmaker, I'll never know. But one thing's for sure,
he was a good guy with a good sense of humor.

Friday, July 19, 2013

Anti-Bullying PSA starring Joey King directed by Shervin Youssefian

I've worked on a ton of commercials with my producing partner Danny Simonzad, but we had never done a PSA. As I was doing research for a feature film that I'm writing about high school kids finding new ways of combating bullies, I picked up a book called "Dear Bully." It was a collection of short stories written by well-known authors and the one that jumped at me was a story called "The Eulogy of Ivy O'Conner" by New York Times best selling author Sophie Jordan.

It wasn't so much the story that grabbed me, but the ferociously and fearless style in which it was told. I had never seen such an innovative way to write. So I thought... What if we found a way to show this visually while keeping faithful to Sophie Jordan's work? Was it possible?

The best ideas are simple and undeniable. With that vision in mind, we set off to find the right person to play the role of Ivy, a secluded teen girl who finds it hard to deal with her bullies. Working with talented casting director Sarah-May Levy, we convinced Joey King to be a part of this anti-bullying PSA. Joey had just come off of some mega budget productions such as Oz the Great and Powerful, White House Down and Dark Knight Rises, but the issue was close to her heart, so she accepted.

Spot On Media also got support from www.StompOutBullying.org a national Anti-Bullying organization that helps increase awareness and equips teens and parents to fight off bullying.

Shervin Youssefian and Geoff Reisner

We would have to shoot Joey on green screen and recreate the environment completely with CGI. This meant having to build a Green Screen Treadmill.

Spot On Media is now in the post-production phase and I'm hoping to see the final version in only a couple of weeks. In the meantime, here is an exclusive still from "The Eulogy of Ivy O'Conner."

PHASE 1 OF ANIMATION


PHASE 2 OF ANIMATION


PHASE 3 OF ANIMATION
"The Eulogy of Ivy O'Conner" starring Joey King. Written by Sophie Jordan, Directed by Shervin Youssefian
"The Eulogy of Ivy O'Conner" Starring Joey King, Directed by Shervin Yousefian