"El Diablo" says he used to be one of the "deadliest drug dealers on the streets"[1] of Los Angeles.
But today, he's known as "Pops" and works at Union Rescue Mission[2] (URM), a nonprofit that provides homeless people with hot meals and a chance to turn their lives around.
Pops went to the Mission two years ago, hoping to end his 50-year-long heroin addiction[3] . And now, after getting clean and reuniting with the family he abandoned 30 years ago, the 68-year-old is sharing the lessons he's learned in the powerful HooplaHa video above:[4]
1. It's never too late to make a change.
"I was watching a Christian program, sitting there dealing drugs.. and all of a sudden -- it wasn't like a voice booming at me -- but something was just like 'You need to get in,'" Pops says. "The only thing I thought about was the fact that I needed to clean my act up and get in because I'm about to die. I came into the Mission, and I sat there and kicked morphine, heroin, and alcohol."
2. Forgiveness is possible.
"I was speechless for a moment," Pop says about reuniting with his children. "I said 'I'm sorry, man, I'm really sorry.' [My son] said, 'No, that was yesterday. This is today.'"
3. Life is about the people you share it with.
"Now that I've got my family, how can I lose, man?" Pops says. "I've got life now. I've got life -- and more abundantly. I'm just full of it."
Also on HuffPost:
References
- ^ "deadliest drug dealers on the streets" (urm.org)
- ^ Union Rescue Mission (urm.org)
- ^ 50-year-long heroin addiction (urm.org)
- ^ in the powerful HooplaHa video above: (www.youtube.com)
- ^ HooplaHa (hooplaha.com)
- ^ Send us a tip (www.huffingtonpost.com)
- ^ Send us a photo or video (www.huffingtonpost.com)
- ^ Suggest a correction (www.huffingtonpost.com)
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