:22:02
They were a second ago.
:22:04
Five, six, five, six.
:22:08
Five, six, seven, and...
:22:12
All my tired students.
:22:14
Look how tired you guys are.
:22:23
Go out first. Out, cross, turn it around.
:22:34
Come on, go!
:22:48
When I see people outside
selling drugs and stuff, I feel bad.
:22:51
Because they missing
such a big part of life, you know.
:22:54
They got the opportunity
to go to college and stuff...
:22:56
and, I mean, some people
don't have the opportunity.
:22:59
They just wasting...
:23:00
But sometimes, it's not all their fault.
:23:03
It's like their parents...
:23:04
- they don't care that much about them.
- They don't take care of them.
:23:07
And since they... Their parents don't take
care of them the way they're supposed to...
:23:11
they think, "I might get into a gang.
They just care for me, you know?
:23:14
"And I'll get some drugs.
And this is the right path," you know.
:23:18
And it's not only their fault.
:23:19
There's some young girls
that they be in the streets...
:23:23
'cause either they don't have a father
or they don't have a mother...
:23:26
and they need both on their side.
:23:27
So, like, if their parents have
some problems, try to keep it together...
:23:31
so your daughter or your son can be good.
:23:35
But if somebody cheats...
:23:37
like my father did, no offense...
:23:39
but, my father cheated on my mom,
like, four years ago.
:23:42
Now I got a step-little-brother, he's four.
:23:45
I'm always telling my mom to leave him.
:23:48
"Mommy," I'm like, "I'm sorry,
but if my father's cheating on you...
:23:52
"You should leave him,
'cause I don't want you to cry...
:23:55
"and stuff just 'cause of him. "
:23:57
Thanks to God, my parents are none of that.