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Goodbye to Luis Villalobos, Our Organizations’ Mentor!

Luis Villalobos receiving the Hans Severiens Award

Luis Villalobos receiving the Hans Severiens Award

Luis Villalobos was a great mentor to me, the 12 Angels and lots of other people! He was a pioneer in angel investing, an advocate for entrepreneurs and an architect of organizations. Here is my story about Luis Villalobos…

In 2004, I was in a long term drug and alcohol treatment program. At 42 it was difficult to imagine starting my professional career over. The last 3 years of drug abuse had destroyed my professional reputation. My financial life was chaotic. My personal life was a mess. I had a young 2 and a half year old daughter and a wife who was a well respected professional in the drug and alcohol treatment industry.

For the last 20 years, I was in technology. I was an entrepreneur having founded 3 tech companies. At 42, I was wondering while laying in my twin bed at the drug treatment center, what do can I do? Am I too old or too poor to start another company? Should I get a job in technology? Should I get a get well job at Starbucks and focus on meetings and my recovery?

Career decisions are daunting while living in converted retirement home with 150 other unemployed addicts. Being around so many unemployed people robs one of hope. What can I put on my resume, I have been serving meals to 150 addicts at lunch time for the last 6 months?  I guess they would call that job a resume killer!

Somewhere along my path in treatment, I took the Myers Briggs personality assessment which helps identify temperament and aids in career decisions. My results, ENTP, the classic personality type of the entrepreneur. I was fascinated by the Myers Briggs and its accurate appraisal of my temperament.

In early recovery from drug addiction a person is on an emotional roller coaster of fear, hope, despair and purpose. I was searching for my calling, what can I do? Who am I, I am a recovering heroin addict and an entrepreneur. Those two activities have dominated my life. Where can I find meaning in my career, do I want to go back into technology?

It hit me one day, maybe entrepreneurship can help people with addictions. Maybe I can take my passion for entrepreneurship and apply it to helping people with addictive disorders. I was aware of social entrepreneurs who apply their entrepreneurial talents to social problems. I thought I am going to do that!

The next question is how? I started to brainstorm:

1. Creating businesses in treatment centers. Is anyone doing that? What are the benefits of having a business inside a treatment center?

a. You can generate money to help the treatment center pay for the services they provide.

b. You can provide job experience and funds to the residents in the treatment center.

c. You can make the transition out of the treatment easier and reduce the chances of relapse.

2. Successful entrepreneurs Create jobs and opportunities.

a. Entrepreneurs in recovery are more likely to provide opportunities to other addicts, because they understand what it is like to be an addict in early recovery.

b. Entrepreneurs can create personal income when traditional employment may be unavailable.

I can go on and on with all the benefits entrepreneurship can have to the recovery process but I need to get back to my personal tribute to Luis Villalobos…

So after my little entrepreneurial brainstorm I thought of the 12 Angels, an angel investment group that would stimulate entrepreneurship in the recovery community. I then went on line and found the Angel Capital Association and signed up as one of their groups. They had a program where new angel groups were assigned a mentor, enter Luis Villalobos.

I had a meeting with Luis Villalobos a graduate of MIT and Harvard Business School. He was the founder of the Tech Coast Angels, the largest angel group in the nation. I couldn’t believe it! Here I was a guy living in drug rehab, who thought of a crazy idea to start an investment group that provided funds to recovering drug addicts. Now I was going to meet one of the most influential angel investors in the country, I couldn’t believe it!

My meeting with Luis Villalobos was more than I could have ever dreamed. Luis immediately saw the value in the 12 Angels, the powerful opportunity to use angel investing to help one of the largest economic issues facing our country; addiction costs the US over $340 Billion dollars per year!

Within one meeting, Luis architected the 12 Angels organization. He gave me a blueprint from which I have been trying to follow for the last 5 years. And he gave me more. He attended our organizations first presentation and mentored me to create the legal structure for the group. He helped me understand how to be an investor and a group organizer.

How do we put the 12 Angels into practice? We needed to find an investment. Luis and I discussed starting a high end drug and alcohol treatment center and over the next year Wonderland Treatment Center was born. Luis suggested I utilize the local business schools for support. I then pitched UCLA’s Anderson School of Management for assistance and we created a business plan for career mentorship using Facebook technology. Luis was a guide, an advisor, a cheerleader and a visionary.

I cannot imagine where my life would be had Luis told me the 12 Angels was a horrible idea that would never work. I cannot imagine what my relationship with my wife, daughter, friends and family would be had Luis not given me his time and his experience. Luis encouraged me to follow my dreams. Luis believed in angel investing and entrepreneurship. Luis was a mentor to me and many other people and organizations. I am very sad Luis is gone. The world has lost a very important individual. I know Luis’ made over 60 angel investments in businesses but he made his greatest investment in me. Thank you Luis Villalobos, I will never forget you!

FASHION SHOW - MONARCHY with DJ MICHAELIS at Dr. TEAS - West Hollywood, CA - Fundraiser on November 20

On Thursday November 20 at 7:00 PM in the evening, the 12 Angels is hosting a benefit fundraiser. The event will be held at Dr. Tea’s Tea Garden & Herbal Emporium, which is located at 8612 Melrose Avenue, West Hollywood, CA, 90069.  RSVP to phone number (877) 858-1212 extension 1 or rsvp@12angels.org.

The focus of the fundraiser is to support three exciting projects from the 12 Angels: the microfinancing of sober entrepreneurs, the entrepreneurship education class, and the online social networking program.

The night will be a celebration of recovery with complimentary food and drink, including hot and iced teas, frosted teas, healthy sandwiches and salads, and an array of decadent deserts!

We will be having a fashion show by MONARCHY and music and dancing by DJ MICHAELIS…This will be MONARCHY’s only west coast fashion show this season.  DJ MICHAELIS is an internationally recognized DJ with a huge following. We have a silent auction with a number of very special items donated by celebrities in the community…

For individuals who would like something a little more low key, the event will include an exclusive screening of a new independent film about the disease of alcoholism, Lost In Woonsocket. Recently released across the country, the film was created by John Chester, the star of A&E’s cable show Random 1. The filmmakers and the stars will be present to talk about the film and answer questions after the screening.

On the 12 Angels website (www.12angels.org), we have quoted the NIDA’s statistics concerning the economic damage caused by Alcoholism and Addiction every year in the United States. The present figure of $340 billion dollars is twice the damage caused by cancer every year and half the cost of the current one-time economic bailout plan. So how can we help and what can we do?

Since alcoholics and addicts in early recovery often struggle to find work and are not the easiest people to hire or employ considering their checkered backgrounds, how can we aid them in the process of becoming productive members of society? In the 12 Step community, our common mantra is to be self-supporting through our own contributions. However, if a sober worker cannot find employment, how is he or she supposed to be self-supporting?

The central solution of the 12 Angels to this challenge is creating more jobs and opportunities for the newly sober by helping entrepreneurs in long-term recovery start of expand their businesses. In exchange for financial and technical support, we ask the entrepreneurs in long term recovery to hire the newly sober and provide recovery friendly work environments. By fostering awareness on both ends of the spectrum, the advantages to both employer and employee readily become apparent.

As a nonprofit entity, the 12 Angels organization and philosophy is modeled after the Grameen Bank of Muhammad Yunus, which was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006. The Grameen Bank is a microfinance and community development organization in Bangladesh that makes microcredit (or “grammeencredit”) loans to the impoverished without requiring collateral. The word “Grameen” derives from the word “gram” which means “village” or, more precisely, “of the village”. The bank’s philosophy is based on the concept that the poor have skills that are under-utilized and under-valued. We believe the same is true of the recovery community. For more information on the Grameen Bank - please see:

http://www.grameenfoundation.org/nobel_prize/vid_clinton.php

Beyond raising tax-deductible funds for the 12 Angels microfinance program, the benefit will raise money to finance our 12-week intensive entrepreneurship education program. Almost half the struggle of starting a business is connecting the bureaucratic dots successfully. Similar to NFTE and SCORE, the program walks entrepreneurs through the process while trying to match them with mentors and business counselors who provide the necessary experience and expertise.

Finally, the last and perhaps most revolutionary initiative we are looking to support is an online social networking program with software designed to interact with Facebook. Details about this project will be announced on November 13 at the benefit. We hope you will embrace the mission of the 12 Angels and attend this benefit. For more information, please contact David Cantor at david@12angels.org. Since there is limited seating space available, please set up your reservations as soon as possible.

In our society, the road of transformation from addicts and alcoholics to productive members of society must be paved with more than good intentions. The 12 Angels want you to help us pave this road through a carefully managed process of investment, education, networking and advisement. With your help, the goal of one hand helping another can become a reality. Together, we can make recovery happen.

WORLD PREMIERE “BOYHOOD SHADOWS”

Boyhood Shadows - World Premiere - Sept. 22nd

Boyhood Shadows - World Premiere - Sept. 22nd

As the focal point of our community, a goal of the 12 Angels is to support creative projects that raise awareness of the issues we face and encounter. A major project screening later this month in Monterey is the documentary, BOYHOOD SHADOWS. Focusing on male sexual abuse, this powerful film stars one of our own board members Glenn K. Sexual abuse often leads directly to problems with addiction as a way to escape the harshness of memory and reality.  Since “One in six boys is sexually molested before the age of 18”, the problem needs to be addressed. Support of this film by our community is an important first step. Personally, I experienced sexual abuse as a kid, and I know how it fueled my use of drugs and alcohol. During the making of the film, I had the opportunity to meet with the inspiring filmmakers, and it is an honor to support their work. The media is a powerful tool of social entrepreneurship.  We encourage our community to let us know of other media projects targeting addiction.  Below is the official press release of the film….

“The silence is broken.
On September 22, the groundbreaking documentary, BOYHOOD SHADOWS, “I Swore I’d Never Tell” holds its world premiere at the Steinbeck Forum in Monterey. This unprecedented film explores the emotional carnage of childhood sexual abuse - yet also shines light on the strength of the human spirit. It is a stunning, worthwhile expose of this monstrous secret.  It is true. Childhood sexual abuse happens. We as a society don’t want to talk about it. Yet, it is on the front page of our newspapers…. the accusation of David Stamm… the conviction of Charles Lamb. These are Monterey county cases. But it is a national story, a national epidemic. One in six boys is sexually molested by the age of 16. The Monterey County Rape Crisis Center presents a fundraiser premiere of BOYHOOD SHADOWS, a film by award-winning filmmakers, Terri DeBono and Steve Rosen of Mac and Ava Motion Pictures (Beyond Barbed Wire). Past and present elements are woven into the plot of this gripping documentary revealing Glenn’s story that began as a young boy under the power of a sexual predator.

Filmed in California, New York and New Jersey, the narrative chronicles Glenn’s struggle as he tries to make sense of his life, telling no one. Numbing his pain as a teen with alcohol and drugs, he held the secret and the shame. His brothers and sister, his mother and father – who recognized something was wrong with this once-golden-boy were at a loss to understand the cause of his devastation.  After suffering for decades addicted to alcohol and drugs, Glenn finally found the help he needed at a special Men’s Group led by therapist, Stephen Braveman, at Monterey County Rape Crisis Center.  In the film he describes his past…funny, poignant and sad. Glenn’s story is interspersed with other boys-turned-men.”

Along with nationally known experts in the field, several Monterey County and central California men are featured in the film, as well as Monterey therapist Stephen Braveman, Fred Jealous, Clare Mounteer, Executive Director for MCRCC and Ann Hill, Deputy District Attorney.  Laura Dare, Monterey composer and singer, will perform scores from the film at the premiere.

The film’s genesis began at the Monterey County Rape Crisis Center’s Men’s Group which created a 30 second PSA. Stephen Braveman, LMFT, facilitates this group. It is one of only an estimated 40 groups in the country. The premiere begins at 7:00 p.m. in the Steinbeck Forum and is followed by a dessert reception with the filmmakers and cast. The proceeds will benefit the Monterey County Rape Crisis Center’s Child Abuse Prevention Education Program which reaches over 5,000 public school children each year. Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Call the Rape Crisis Center at 373-3955. Reserve your seats now.

*View the film’s trailer or get more information: http://www.boyhoodshadows.org/

WHERE: Steinbeck Forum in the Monterey Conference Center
WHEN: Monday, September 22
TIME: 7:00 – 9:00 pm
DESSERT RECEPTION: follows with filmmakers and cast
TICKETS: Call 831-373-395

$20 in advance, $25 at the door
Proceeds benefit MCRCC’s Child Abuse Prevention Program