Power of Mentoring: Carl D. West on Mentorship, Community, and Guiding the Next Generation
Carl West, a publisher, editor, CEO, father, and mentor. His story shows what’s possible when a young person has guidance, accountability, and a community that refuses to give up. His experiences are central to his book, The Power of Mentoring, and drive his ongoing efforts to help the next generation avoid the challenges he once faced. Carl West shares a personal reflection on coming of age in the Southside Growing up on the Southside of Chicago and graduating from CVS High School, West saw early on how a young life could take very different paths. Like many teens in underserved areas, he faced both opportunity and danger. As a student-athlete with potential, he was also surrounded by peers attracted to the streets, where fast money and a false sense of belonging tempted many. “I was living in two worlds,” West shared. “I was an athlete, so I moved freely in my neighborhood. On the same court, we all played together, football, basketball, and baseball. But when the games ended, everyone split into two groups: the ‘good kids’ went home, and the ‘bad kids’ stayed out. I walked on both sides. We all did the same things, chased girls, got high, drank, but the bad kids took it one step further once the streetlights came on. I joined them sometimes, not a lot, but enough. Older men in the neighborhood would pull me aside and say, ‘Carl, that’s not who you are.’ Eventually, they told those guys to leave me alone, and I was pushed away from that side. Years later, in my early twenties, it hit me hard that every one of the five guys I used to run with on that side was dead.” Older men in the community, coaches, neighbors, mentors, and friends who lived the hood lifestyle recognized something in him and made it their responsibility to step in. They challenged his choices, kept him accountable, and reminded him of what he could become. Those early experiences left a lasting impact. As West built a successful career, he always remembered those who supported him when he needed it most. Eventually, mentoring became not just something he received, but something he felt he had to give back. The Power of Mentoring: Transforming lives through guidance, wisdom, and example That sense of responsibility led to The Power of Mentoring, a book West says draws on over 30 years of observation, reflection, and hands-on work. Published by Chicago’s Third World Press Foundation, the book is both personal and practical, giving readers a clear look at how mentorship works and why it matters now. In his book, West describes what he calls the three pillars of effective mentoring. The first pillar is the young person. West believes young people need to find people they respect and look for guidance from those who are genuine and available. “Everyone may not be able to reach a celebrity or public figure,” he explains, “but there are mentors right in your community if you’re paying attention.” The second pillar is parents or guardians. West says parents are a child’s first mentors, even if they don’t realize it. The voices, actions, and values in the home shape how children see themselves and the world. Even when parents try their best, West points out, they can’t do it alone. The third pillar is the village. West sees this as the point at which mentoring becomes everyone’s job. He believes communities are already mentoring children every day, whether they mean to or not. The problem, he says, is that negative influences often reach kids before positive ones. “There are people recruiting our kids into harmful lifestyles the same way we should be recruiting them into success,” West has said. “If we don’t step in early, someone else will.” Over the years, he has seen how quickly young people can get caught up in violence, incarceration, and missed chances. He believes mentorship should start early, before life-changing decisions are made. What’s coming up next for Mr. West
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