- Playing
- This I Believe - Martha Stark
- From
- This I Believe
HOST: Today, our essay comes from Martha Stark, who grew up in public housing in Brooklyn and is the first African-American woman to serve as Finance Commissioner for New York City. If you were to look at her essay on paper, you'd see that she references the object of her belief 28 times in her 497 words. Here is Martha Stark with her essay for This I Believe.
ESSAY: I believe in the power of numbers. I don't know when my belief in numbers began. Perhaps when I was a child. My high school dropout, bookkeeper dad came home each week to tell us that he had played the numbers?my neighborhood?s equivalent of lotto but lots more complex.
Dad would convert every thought and dream to a number with help from his trusty dream book. You had a dream about mice? Consult the book. ?That's a 12, 17 or 21. What was the mouse doing?climbing out of a garbage can? Well climbing is a 21, 34, or 42 and garbage is a 17, 39, or 32. So, let?s play 12 and 21 (the reverse of each other), 17 (it appeared twice), and 34, the year your mom was born.?
Perhaps it was my mom's retort to my dad's obsession with playing the numbers that helped me understand the power of numbers. She cited my dad's record: "You have hit the number once in the last 150 weeks. We could have used that money to replace the 15-year-old couch."
Or perhaps it was my mother's focus on our grades. "You got a 97? What?s your strategy for those extra three points?" Maybe it was my dad's legitimate number playing, his love of doing his friends? tax returns to earn a little extra money?a skill he taught his 15-year-old daughter that led to my current job as the New York City Finance Commissioner, AKA the tax collector.
But numbers also scare me. What does it mean that my mom died when she was only 46 and I was only 21? What does it mean that my brilliant doctor brother, who told me he would live forever, followed suit and died at the age of 46 on his 17th wedding anniversary?
Maybe it is just that numbers don?t lie. Management gurus often say you are what you measure, which might explain why I haven?t been on a scale in the last year. Whatever the reason, my belief in numbers grows stronger every day: As I try to improve what we do at the New York City Department of Finance, an agency responsible for collecting more than $18 billion in city revenues; as I try to persuade my 17-year-old niece that she has to go to college. Most people wouldn?t expect her to amount to much?as the child of a single mother?but it helps to show her the numbers. Without a college education, she won?t be able to pay for her manicures, pedicures, makeup consultation and the fancy car she so wants.
As I try to live each day as if it could be my last?I turn 46 on June 30?I know numbers will guide me through the future. Numbers may scare me, but they also tell me it?s likely I?ll make it well past 46, and keep serving my beloved hometown. Knowing that, I?m going to keep believing in numbers.
Also in the This I Believe series
This I Believe - Amy Tan
(04:17)
From: This I Believe
Acclaimed writer Amy Tan believes in ghosts and the messages of joy, love and peace they bring her.
This I Believe - Luis Urrea
(03:57)
From: This I Believe
Luis Urrea believes he is a better writer and better person when he’s open to the world around him.
This I Believe - Eve Birch
(03:47)
From: This I Believe
Tired of chasing personal prosperity, Eve Birch now believes in an American dream of shared success.
This I Believe - Muhammad Ali
(02:54)
From: This I Believe
To be the “Greatest of All Time,” boxing legend Muhammad Ali says you have to believe in yourself.
This I Believe - Matt Harding
(02:47)
From: This I Believe
By dancing around the world, Internet video star Matt Harding believes he’s helping to unite people.
This I Believe - Van Jones
(04:05)
From: This I Believe
Environmental activist and White House advisor Van Jones believes in making his late father proud.
This I Believe - Macklin Levine
(02:35)
From: This I Believe
She's only 12, but Macklin Levine is already old enough to appreciate—and believe in—The Beatles.
This I Believe - Jennifer Thompson-Cannino and Ronald Cotton
(03:37)
From: This I Believe
Jennifer Thompson-Cannino and Ronald Cotton believe in forgiveness, but from different perspectives.
This I Believe - Russel Honoré
(04:03)
From: This I Believe
Retired Army Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré believes hard work can build character and promote freedom.
This I Believe - Sheri White
(03:12)
From: This I Believe
Even though we tend to focus on our differences, Sheri White believes there is much that unites us.
Piece Description
HOST: Today, our essay comes from Martha Stark, who grew up in public housing in Brooklyn and is the first African-American woman to serve as Finance Commissioner for New York City. If you were to look at her essay on paper, you'd see that she references the object of her belief 28 times in her 497 words. Here is Martha Stark with her essay for This I Believe. ESSAY: I believe in the power of numbers. I don't know when my belief in numbers began. Perhaps when I was a child. My high school dropout, bookkeeper dad came home each week to tell us that he had played the numbers?my neighborhood?s equivalent of lotto but lots more complex. Dad would convert every thought and dream to a number with help from his trusty dream book. You had a dream about mice? Consult the book. ?That's a 12, 17 or 21. What was the mouse doing?climbing out of a garbage can? Well climbing is a 21, 34, or 42 and garbage is a 17, 39, or 32. So, let?s play 12 and 21 (the reverse of each other), 17 (it appeared twice), and 34, the year your mom was born.? Perhaps it was my mom's retort to my dad's obsession with playing the numbers that helped me understand the power of numbers. She cited my dad's record: "You have hit the number once in the last 150 weeks. We could have used that money to replace the 15-year-old couch." Or perhaps it was my mother's focus on our grades. "You got a 97? What?s your strategy for those extra three points?" Maybe it was my dad's legitimate number playing, his love of doing his friends? tax returns to earn a little extra money?a skill he taught his 15-year-old daughter that led to my current job as the New York City Finance Commissioner, AKA the tax collector. But numbers also scare me. What does it mean that my mom died when she was only 46 and I was only 21? What does it mean that my brilliant doctor brother, who told me he would live forever, followed suit and died at the age of 46 on his 17th wedding anniversary? Maybe it is just that numbers don?t lie. Management gurus often say you are what you measure, which might explain why I haven?t been on a scale in the last year. Whatever the reason, my belief in numbers grows stronger every day: As I try to improve what we do at the New York City Department of Finance, an agency responsible for collecting more than $18 billion in city revenues; as I try to persuade my 17-year-old niece that she has to go to college. Most people wouldn?t expect her to amount to much?as the child of a single mother?but it helps to show her the numbers. Without a college education, she won?t be able to pay for her manicures, pedicures, makeup consultation and the fancy car she so wants. As I try to live each day as if it could be my last?I turn 46 on June 30?I know numbers will guide me through the future. Numbers may scare me, but they also tell me it?s likely I?ll make it well past 46, and keep serving my beloved hometown. Knowing that, I?m going to keep believing in numbers.




