Happiness In The Homeland

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The JZA
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Happiness In The Homeland

Post by The JZA » 09 Nov 2024, 06:37

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F1 2024 | Driver Career | Full Season

Weekend Structure
Practice Format: One Session | 45 Mins
Qualifying Format: One Shot
Race Format: Sprint & Feature
Session Length: Long | 50% Of Laps

Rules & Flags
Corner Cutting Stringency: Regular
Parc Fermé Rules: On
Pit Stop Exp: Immersive
Safety Car: Increased
Safety Car Exp: Broadcast
Formation Lap: On
Formation Lap Exp: Immersive
Red Flags: Increased

Simulations
Recovery Mode: None
Surface Type: Realistic
Race Starts: Assisted
Car Damage: Simulation
Car Damage Rate: Simulation
Collisions: On

Assists
Driving Proficiency: Professional
Dynamic Racing Line: Off
DRS Assists: Off
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Topic author
The JZA
Posts: 7979
Joined: 07 Dec 2018, 13:10

Happiness In The Homeland

Post by The JZA » 09 Nov 2024, 06:37

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1
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Topic author
The JZA
Posts: 7979
Joined: 07 Dec 2018, 13:10

Happiness In The Homeland

Post by The JZA » 09 Nov 2024, 06:38

Last edited by The JZA on 14 Nov 2024, 03:11, edited 3 times in total.
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The JZA
Posts: 7979
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Happiness In The Homeland

Post by The JZA » 09 Nov 2024, 06:39

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Chapter I: Big Smoke


I always wanted to open up a monologue saying, "back in the day, I used to run these streets. Didn't nothing move, came in or out unless I gave the word. I had the city in the palm of my hands...", in my most impressionable Ving Rhames voice, but that's another lifetime maybe. Me? I was just your typical kid from the streets of L.A. I was stuck between the glits, the glamour, the police injustice, and Gangland, also known as the Four Pillars of Death...

My story began in Chicago, Illinois, the year 1990. I was the only child to a married couple. My mom, Beverley Jackson, was a receptionist at a big hospital. A spiritual woman that was in tuned with her deep prayers, but never tried to force any religion or spiritual nature onto me. She said it was a pilgrimage to find the calling, not bestow it. My father, Avery Jackson, was mechanic, and his father was a mechanic, and his father too, a mechanic. Clearly I come from a lineage of motor heads, but my father was where the buck stopped. I wasn't much for a gear head, but I fell in love with cars ever the same.

By time I turned four, we moved to Los Angeles, seeking better fortune, so I assumed. What other reason would someone move to L.A.? But I was just a kid, just barely holding my head steady from bobbling in 1994. Though whatever new life they sought, it came to somewhat pass. Mom got a new job as a teacher at a Pre-K school, Dad, he opened up his own auto shop, becoming his own boss. I guess once motors are in your blood, you bleed oil. On weekends, my Dad would take me to his shop and let me parlay with him and his boys, watching them work on cars, shuffling one after another in and out of the garage while I sat around ogling every vehicle coming in and going out, simply because I was fascinated by them. But what really pulled me all the way in on automobiles, was this one special order my Dad received. It wasn't your typical everyday car you see bustling up and down the street. This one looked very unique to the box and bubble cars as it had thick meaty rubber tyres with an infrastructure of pipes. The cabin it-self was a one-seater with a big block engine behind the driver seat. Now I understood my Dad a talent for fixing the everyday car, but nothing came across my mind for this. Seeing my father talk to people in matching logo shirts, working on the car, finally hearing the roar of it's engine, that was the day I learned about formula one cars.

With such an interest at an early age, my father would take me to my first monster truck, stock car and formula one competition. Each one of them I enjoyed, but there was nothing more alluring like the formula ones. Even when I watched them on TV after finishing my homework, I fantasized and dreamed of driving an F1 car. After a thousand and one questions about them, my Dad finally put me in my first racer. Dad took to me to this place downtown L.A., where they had a whole indoors track for go karts. I've never seen anything so miniature, but the karts resembled the formula one cars nonetheless. I was extremely excited about them. At six years old, and a few practice lessons, I participated in my first kart race and the rest was history.

From there on, I was hooked. Be it in real life, on TV or on a video game, I was hooked on racing. And to make that impression more decisive, My father would make it a bi-weekly thing to race on Sundays after service. While Mom was home cooking up dinner, Dad and I would head to the track and put in a few laps. It was until the summer of '96 where they held a local tournament, and the winner gets a grand prize of $500 and their own personalized go kart. My father knew I had to enter. And I did. Unfortunately, I didn't win the grand prize, coming in third place. But I did gain some attraction with people. Coming from dead last to third place, a bug got into my father's ear about my potential. And while we was there for the enjoyment and community involvement, there was clearly something more in front of us, or him rather.

After four years of local kart racing and taking it seriously, I joined the junior kart racing league by the age of ten. The skills I kept polishing exceeded most people's expectation. A kid my age, driving nearly masterful, I was becoming a protege of the sorts. My name got bigger, started spreading wider, reaching ears that I never thought it would. But I was just a kid, who would take me seriously? Going into the next stage of my life, entering my teen years, my joy for racing transformed into serious competition as my puberty kicked in, as well as acne and testosterone. There was this one girl that I raced, Greta Elaine Cumacho. All my years at tracks, I've never witnessed a girl participate behind the wheel, only as a parent or sibling, or friend, cheering on the guys that where. But Greta, she was different. With her long black hair and profound eyebrows that framed and captivated her face, she driving was just as beautiful as she looked. While she may have been a blessing to my eyes, she was also a brutal lesson to never take your eyes off the prize as I was embarrassed as she overtook and lapped me as my kart starting having mechanical issues. I would learned that my engine was failing and I was too prideful to concede the race, continuing to drive at a slow pace. That race featuring Greta Cumacho, was a day i'll never forget. And neither would she, as I had to endure her taunts after learning she'd become my school mate the following month.

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You were my first love... At the age of 16, my old man gift me with my very first car, a 2004 Subaru Impreza WRX STi, a modded one at that. A 2.0 liter, four-cylinder turbocharged engine, retrofitted with a STI 6-Speed transmission, stripped of excessive weight to improve acceleration, braking and cornering, tricked out with an anti-lag system, racing intercooler, a middle-RPM turbocharger and can bail out to 60 mph in 4.7 seconds. At 16, I didn't know shit about engines, but It was like my old man was reading my mind in what I wanted, just street enough to be legal. An incredible beast of machinery and a beauty to behold. She was my first big smoke, cruising through the streets in that mantis green, just wishing a mother fucker would. At that age, I really thought I was the shit, and I was looking for all sorts of trouble when it came to racing. I was the new kid on the block, and I had something to prove. Little did my father knew...

While my affinity for open wheel cars remained everlasting, the acquisition of my first car laid my interest wayside. Getting my permit and some allowance until I could get a part-time job, me and my baby was nearly inseparable. I was getting popular amongst my peers at school and around the way. The girls started coming my way as my confidence build up was getting to the point where I felt comfortable around the ladies, no more being that overly bashful nerd that had a one track mind. I was finally spreading my wings, for better or for worse. And for worse, it was a day I never imagined that would come. After about six months after I got my car, my mother's health took a turn for the worse. With neither of them having medicare, home remedies were the best solutions for my Mom, until they weren't the best solutions. As tough and stubborn my Mom was to fight her battle with illness, she succumbed to a undiagnosed pancreas cancer. Her death would be the beginning of a fall out between my father and I. While he dove into his work, I dove into the streets, hanging with the wrong crowd. As I said before, I was spreading my wings, for better or for worse...
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djp73
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Happiness In The Homeland

Post by djp73 » 09 Nov 2024, 07:42

Hell yeah! Following! Always wanted to do a racing chise of some sort but never figured out the presentation aspect
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The JZA
Posts: 7979
Joined: 07 Dec 2018, 13:10

Happiness In The Homeland

Post by The JZA » 09 Nov 2024, 08:02

djp73 wrote:
09 Nov 2024, 07:42
Hell yeah! Following! Always wanted to do a racing chise of some sort but never figured out the presentation aspect
djp73, Should definitely do one. Literally spent the last 7 days trying to figure that out, brainstorming & getting screenshots... Still haven't figured out the presentation :drose:
There isn't too many titles that give you what you need in regards of statistics outside of F1 & Nascar though, not sure about Moto GP or Monster Energy Supercross. While our choices are pretty much limited, we gone ride anyway :yep:
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djp73
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Happiness In The Homeland

Post by djp73 » 09 Nov 2024, 09:04

just seems like the race result posts would get boring, story will help for sure
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Captain Canada
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Joined: 01 Dec 2018, 00:15

Happiness In The Homeland

Post by Captain Canada » 09 Nov 2024, 10:24

Always like a unique chise. I'm following
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Topic author
The JZA
Posts: 7979
Joined: 07 Dec 2018, 13:10

Happiness In The Homeland

Post by The JZA » 10 Nov 2024, 21:12

djp73 wrote:
09 Nov 2024, 09:04
just seems like the race result posts would get boring, story will help for sure
djp73, That's where I'm pretty much at with it. I've never done a race chise before, so reading some on OS got me sprucing my ideas up differently. So I'm laying some ground work, but it's going to be a slow burner for a few chapters.
Captain Canada wrote:
09 Nov 2024, 10:24
Always like a unique chise. I'm following
Captain Canada, Preciate to have you fam! We ride soon
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The JZA
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Happiness In The Homeland

Post by The JZA » 10 Nov 2024, 21:15

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Chapter II: Rolling Thunder


Since my mother's passing, my relationship with my Dad had drifted somewhat. We didn't hang out as much as we used to. He'd come home, check up on me, sometimes I do the same for him, maybe some small talk about work and school, but the joy between us seem to have strained it-self. With Mom gone, our home felt hallow. These walls were quiet. The scent of succulent meals, soft music in the background, or just hearing her laughter while on the phone, all of that were just memories to us, painful memories. No matter how much at peace she made before she left, we was just never ready... Nevertheless, my Dad would still be a father to me, a good one when he can, but I wasn't much of a good son. Always running around in the streets, barely coming home unless I needed a change of clothes, staying at friend's house, couch-hopping, doing things i had no business doing. I always needed an escape, and with the way things were, I wasn't trying to fix my problems, just kept creating them.

One thing that hasn't changed was my love for racing. After I upgraded my permit to license, I was on the prowl for my first race. From some chatter around the way, heard there was some boys in East L.A. trying to stunt on the tarmac and make noise. Of course I got grilled for showing up, but not as much as they grilled me for my car. There had to be about at least 50-75 people at the car meet, mostly guys, but there were definitely some hot women about trying to have a good time with their dudes or looking for a good time with the shortest and tightest skirt they can keep their asses from falling out of. I didn't have much to offer to the scenery as I was just as green as my ride, but with $300 to my name, I put my last cent on the line for a 3/4 quarter drag sprint. As laughable as my entry was, one guy stepped up as a charity, as he put it. His name was Trey, the streets called him, "Trill". Trill sported a Buick Grand National with a V6. And while the crowd was on his side, I had the confidence in myself to win. While he touted power, I touted my acceleration, besting him in a two of three heat runs. Trill wasn't pleased about coughing up the pot, even going as far as to try to intimidate me, but I stood my ground and earned $600 and a bit of respect. It wasn't long until I found myself with a few more wins under my belt, and the streets were learning my name. A kid who only had $300 to his name, flipped it for nearly $20,000 in a matter of weeks. While some were giving me my respect, not all were too keen on paying up, trying to flip a sore loss into a violent situation. One vato, Chino, was not to be messed with, being a part of MS-13. Be it win or lose, Chino was expected to walk away with the purse, but my pride wasn't having that. I won my race fair and square and to try to put some tension at ease of cheating, I offered a tour of my engine to prove there was no tricks under my sleeve, just all skills. And just when I learned that wasn't enough convincing, that's when my bacon was saved from the frying pan...

"Ha-haaa! That's my dawg right there! Getting duckets in a bucket! Fam, what I told you about revealing all your secrets under the hood?"

"Huh? You talking to me?"

"Am I talking to you, boy you got some nerves to act like you don't know me, CJ!"

"How do you know-"

"Come on, walk with me, talk with me. Aye, Chino, lay off of him man, he's new around here, he definitely don't know who you are so allow me put him on game, if you will."

"Yeah, you do that, ese..."

I was pulled aside by the unknown loud mouth who prevented a situation that was about to get ugly, "Look who it is, the man I been looking for."

"Who are you? How you know me?"

"They call me, "Robbing Hood""

"Robin?", CJ reiterated.

"Nah fool, Robbing, like New Jack, or you trying to find out the hard way?"

"Nah man, I think I got the gist of it."

"Yeah, anyway, I heard of you by way of my little cousin you go to school with, don't ask no names. Talking 'bout this kid in a go-kart racer jacket, who's a go-kart racer, winning shit. Also mentioned how you be pulling up to school in a green Subaru. Apparently, you look the part with your little racer jacket on right now, and seeing there's a green Subaru right behind us, it just had to be you, pulling up to the lion's den."

"Didn't think I was big enough in L.A. to be followed."

"Don't get big headed kid, but you definitely got a rep. Did a little homework on you, your accolades legitimizes you. What you doing rolling up into the lion's den like this? This ain't a smart idea."

"Man, I just wanted to race. Just having fun."

"Homie, you're definitely green around these parts. You want to have fun, you take your ass to fun land or something, these ain't the type of people you want to have fun with. These are serious people. Serious about their cars and their bread. More importantly, they're serious about their street cred, and they prioritize that above everything else I mentioned."

"Alright, so let me just get my car and I'll bounce out of here. Won't see me again if it's that serious."

"I think that's the best idea for you, but hold up, you gonna have to make a sacrifice to satisfy los loco over there."

"What you mean?" I asked.

"Well, whatever pot that was on the line, that's his now."

"What!? Nah man, that was $40,000 on the line! I can't let that slide man!"

"Yeah? Tell me what's it gonna be? You slide that fourty-bands over to him, or they slide your ass into a hearse, if you're lucky they leave you in one piece. That's MS-13 fool, not to be fucked with."

I took a deep sigh, taking in all that I was hearing from someone I didn't know from a hole in a wall, but yet, things were looking hairy.

"Come on, I know you really not contemplating over a easy choice..."

"Alright, alright. Fine, give him the fucking money, bro... Fuck..."

"Aye, money makes the world go around. What leaves you, will come back, believe that."

Robbing Hood and I walked back over to my car, where Chino chose to reside his carcass on the side of my car, pretty much giving me no escape route. But I wouldn't have taken the chance to find out if they were packing heat or not anyway.

"Chinoooo! My dawg! Listen, I talked to the boy and knocked some sense into him. Just lay off my man here and let him slide. In return, my boy CJ is going to make a handsome contribution of $40,000 to the, "Chino National Relief Services" as gratuity to experiencing and participating in the lion's den."

Robbing Hood grabbed the winning purse from the MC and handed it to Chino, letting him verify and satisfy the count. But all I could think about is $40,000 down the drain, bamboozled out of more accurately. Just a few weeks ago, I only started out with $300 to my name, now, nothing. I guess in this lesson here, pushing your luck will only go so far.

"Fourty thousand... Gone... Just like that..." I mumbled under low enough as I walked back over to the driver side of my car.

"Yeah, but you live to see all that gone and take your linky ass home and see another day."

"Dude is just a fucking sore loser, man. Simple as that."

"I know, trust, I agree. But that's the hood for you, some games you got to play by their rules until you can play by your own. You ain't from around here, aren't you?"

"From Chicago, but I've been here in L.A. pretty much since I was little."

"Aw shit, your mud ain't no shittier from ours. Yo, give the big homie a ride one time. I wanna see how this girl move!"

From there, Robbing Hood and I took our leave from the lion's den with haste. I couldn't get away from there fast enough. Flat broke and a deflated spirit, embracing death would have probably been better than tucking tail and running. But fuck it, life's learning lesson.

"CJ, listen. I know that shit burn, giving up that kind of money, especially for a kid like you. But you got your whole life ahead of you. Fuck that bread."

"So what? You're supposed to be my knight in shining armor?"

"Hell nah, just happened to be at the right place at the right time. I was getting a lick of my own. But Chino back there, that low-skully wearing mother fucker isn't all that smart. Cars isn't Chino's science, he just likes to race. Money is his thing. But I just put a tracker on his right hand's car. I'm about to boost that mother fucker and resell it back to him for a finder's fee. So in essence, that money you loss is money I'll gain."

"How the hell does that even work? You've done this before?"

"Yup, even the car he raced you with, finder's fee too."

"How does he not suspect you? You keep rolling to him in cars he lose."

"It's one of my things, man. My hustle is cars, I get whatever you think you need, as long as the bread is right!"

"Yeah, well, it's easy to say all that when it's not your money you're throwing away"

"Fool, ain't no money anybody's money. Money is just like a female, it's only your turn when you got it!"

I really had nothing to say to that rebuttal as I kept driving and listening to his bullshit. He was right though, $40,000 was a lot of money for someone like me, and I was tight that I never had a second to enjoy it in my hands.

"Like I told you, what goes around, comes back around. The lion's den ain't the circuit in California. From 2-bit gangsters to the rich teenage snobs who never seen a day of work in their entire lives be out here. You find all walks of life in the dark."

"I guess man."

"Yeah, I hear you down in the dumps, so I got a proposition for you, peep game. I know these cats in Sacramento, some real ballers, claim they the kings of the strips. But they ain't nothing but some dirty busters that be running against lames daily stock cars. And the way you're pushing ol' girl here, you're a different breed."

"Alright, so what? We go down to Sacramento and run some laps?"

"That's the idea, but the money different there, they don't run for cash, it's pink slips only."

"Pink slips? You mean titles!?"

"Correctomundo, El Capitan."

"Nah man, I'm not feeling that at all. Yo, this is all I got, this is my first car, my old man got me this for my birthday."

"And it won't be your only or your last car either. I'm telling you, there's some serious money to be made here."

"How? You just said they play for slips."

"Right. And that's where you and your expertise behind the wheel comes in. You line up with these goofies, blow them out, we take the slips."

"That don't sound like money is being made", I sternly responded.

"Just listen, dawg, I'm getting to it. We take these fool's cars and flip them, and if we can't flip them, it's to the chop shop they go, there's always someone looking for scraps. At the end of the day, it's a no-money investment, but high risk, high reward... You can easily make bank and triple your loss of $40,000. There's always a sucker out here trying to step up and be the new, "King of the Hill". So the surplus is always there. Most of these cars get imported and exported for exchange, and by exchange, I mean that oh mighty dollar. You want to race, all you have to do is race. You just need to race like your life depend on it. I'll handle the rest from there, and we bank. I got a whole team put together at a shop, we just been waiting on a driver like you."

"Like me?"

"I didn't stutter. Exactly like you. Come fuck with me, I'ma blow you up, get your name all over the streets, all the big rollers gonna come out of pocket and invest. And the best part in it for you is that your hands stay clean, cause all you did was drive, providing you never get caught by one-time."

"Man... I really don't know about this."

"Think about it homeboy, you can make some serious paper, set your family up, better yet, get them the hell out of this sink whole. You think I live out here where I do my dirty work? Shiiiiit, I know better. Too many snakes in these tall grasses."

"You're really serious about this?"

"Dead serious, CJ. I'm telling you, my operation runs flawless. Our spot ain't never been blown up or too hot, except for our last driver."

"What happened to the last driver?", I asked with concern.

"Ain't nothing. Fool just didn't know how to keep his mouth shut and his wallet fat. We didn't do nothing to him, but the streets did. That was on him. Let's just say, it was a case of divine intervention for you and deja vu for me tonight. Aye, pull up over here, this me..."

I pulled over somewhere on Obama Boulevard in Crenshaw to let Robbing Hood depart, just before he let me peel off, he leaned through the window, handing me his contact card.

"You should really think about my offer. It's money to be made."

"I'll think on it. Give me a few days and I'll back to you."

"Chea', you do that homie. Thanks for the ride, here's a little something for you."

Robbing Hood reached out his back pocket a wad of cash, peeling a few fresh hundreds off top and handed it to me. With a close mouth, I accepted it. Ironically, it was $300. This had to be a joke of my life somehow.

"I'll be seeing you CJ..."

With that, I ended my night on the streets of L.A. and took my ass home. After how tonight went and how it could've ended up, there was no place I rather be than home with Dad...
Last edited by The JZA on 13 Nov 2024, 23:52, edited 1 time in total.
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