Homily on Happiness by Token
Here is the preview of Fr. Rossiâs homily on Happiness by Token:
Hopkins Mass Homily
 âHappinessâ
byÂ
Token
 âShow me where Happiness isâ
 The first time Ben Goldberg rapped in public he was 13 years old.Â
 It was July 1, 2012, and Goldberg was part of a swarm of 30 or so kids who intercepted Hopsin, a Los Angeles-based rapper who had just finished performing at a local club.Â
 While Hopsin signed autographs, Goldberg stepped forward.
 âYo, Iâm going to rap for you,â Goldberg told him.
__________
 This wasnât a premeditated decision.Â
 He didnât weigh the consequences of embarrassing himself in front of someone he idolized, not to mention a crowd of his peers.Â
 But Goldberg, who had already given himself the stage name Token, was confident.Â
 It was as if he had spent the last three years building to this â countless hours in his room, pen to pad, constructing intricate rhyme patterns.Â
 Hopsin was known for the complexity of his rap âflowâ.Â
 Goldberg thought heâd have to appreciate his style.Â
__________
 âYou chumps know it is dumb. Hoping / this young Token / for fun wonât split you, cut open / I come roaming / with a lyrical gun loaded. . . . â
 The crowd fell silent, Hopsin included.Â
 It felt, Goldberg would later say, as if he were onstage.
 When Goldberg was done, Hopsin offered affirmation and advice.Â
âI see what youâre doing, and itâs sick,â he told him.Â
 âYou have the techniques, but sometimes take it slower and kind of steez it out a little bit â and have some fun with it.â
__________
 It wasnât as if Goldberg had any doubt about his path before that point, but he recalls this moment as galvanizing.Â
 âThat night was the night of my life for years,â says Goldberg, now 19.Â
 But thereâs been competition for that title lately â much of it in the past 2 years.
 In October 2015, Goldbergâs entry to a rap video contest went viral, ultimately tallying more than 2.5 million views on YouTube.Â
 In April 2016, he had another viral hit: a six-minute-long performance on the influential Sway in the Morning hip-hop show on Sirius XM that was so powerful it moved a co-host to tears.Â
 Then in September of last year, he released a mixtape, âEraser Shavings,â which reached number 3 on the iTunes hip-hop charts and made it into the top 40 overall.Â
 His work caught the attention of Mark Wahlberg, who helped him land a guest spot on a November episode of the âWahlburgersâ reality show and a role as a college kid in the movie Patriots Day, released last December.
__________
 Goldberg also had the opportunity to tour for the first time in 2016, doing several solo dates in France and Switzerland â two places where one of his viral hits got heavy play.Â
 Then, he played more than 20 dates in the U.S.Â
 This time, he was an opening act. The headliner: Hopsin.
 âHe doesnât remember that night,â Goldberg says, laughing. âI reminded him many times.â
__________
 From an early age, hip-hop was a therapeutic for Goldberg.Â
 Even as a first-grader, he was getting suspended from school for yelling at his teachers and fighting.Â
 âHe had this explosive anger,â says his mother, Leslie.Â
 At home, heâd have an episode â screaming, throwing things â and then retreat, horrified about what heâd done.Â
âHe would go into his room,â she says, âand you could just see in his face that he was crestfallen.Â
 Heâd ask, âWhatâs wrong with me?â â
__________
 Goldberg went from therapist to therapist and was eventually diagnosed with depression and anxiety.Â
 He was also slow to read, and doctors identified a language disability.Â
 And, yet, as he continued to work on his word skills and composition, writing became an outlet.Â
 âWhen he started writing, you could see he used it that way,â says his sister, Madeline, who is five years older.Â
 âHeâd blow up, try to say something, and if he didnât have the right words, he would go to his room and write.â
__________
 It worked.Â
 âI donât think I realized, holding this pad, this is the answer â this is the reason why I donât feel bad anymore.Â
 But subconsciously, I knew it, and thatâs why I kept going back to it,â he says.Â
 âHonestly, at some points, it feels like itâs all I have to get this negative energy off of me.â
__________
 Soon, Goldbergâs diary-like writing turned into poems, and the poems turned into raps.Â
 He started recording himself when he was 10 years old, using GarageBand and rhyming over beats playing from the computerâs speakers.Â
 They were self-therapy sessions set to music.Â
 âI was basically hiding them from everybody, because they were for me,â he says.Â
 But one day, a friend found them on his computer and pushed him to create a YouTube channel and upload them.Â
 After some protest, Goldberg relented, releasing his first song â him rapping over the beat for Lil Wayneâs âDrop the Worldâ featuring Eminem.Â
 His MC moniker at the time was his initials, BDG (Benjamin David Goldberg).Â
__________
 âWhen I got my first positive comment on YouTube, I was like âThis is what I need to do for the rest of my life.ââÂ
 âThe fact that somebody could like something that I love to do so much, itâs likeÂ
âThatâs it â thatâs what Iâm going to do. Thereâs no question.ââ
__________
 And thatâs where his song âHappinessâ comes in.
 Itâs the first track released from his first major project âEraser Shavings.âÂ
 It was released on the 23rd of September 2016.
__________
 âHappinessâ is an emotional Hip Hop track that is sure to pull on the heart strings.Â
 Before the release of this track, Token took to social media.
 There, he said,â This video I got is next level, manâŠ.
 âIâm showing you guys a part of me that I never put out there before.â
__________
 This song presents some insights into Tokenâs life at home and his familyâs history with depression.Â
 Itâs about two teenagers.
 A boy who has no friends and seems to have nothing going for him
 Ironically, itâs also about a girl, approximately the same age, who appears to be perfect in everyoneâs eyes, but, in fact, is in the same state as the boy.
 Through their stories, Token airs his feeling towards mental illness and the affects it has on him, his family and other people.Â
 It asks the big question, âWhat is happiness?âÂ
__________
Goldberg says in the song,
 Sometimes I just am feeling down
Sometimes I just feel no one will ever understand
Sometimes I wanna cry
Sometimes I want to crush my family's so-called medication look in their eyes
And tell them they don't need it as long we just have each other
But then sometimes I watch them suffer
I just wonder where happiness is.
 But, I think he answers this question by the way heâs been living and working.
 Whatâs he been doing?
 Heâs been reflecting on his life, finding out what his talents and abilities are, and then disciplining himself to develop those talents further.
__________
 We as Christians can add one more element to that equation: God.
 We can ask God to help us think about and consider who we are, who he has made us to be, and then pray that He will help us acquire the disciple needed to expand those talents.
__________
 Token says, âHappiness ISNâT as easy as "happy life = happy personâ and âsad life = sad person.âÂ
 âThereâs a lot that doesnât meet the eyeâŠ"
 He certainly is correct there.
 It takes hard work and patience.
 And it takes help from outside ourselves.
 The psalmist is right on the mark this week:
 You are my God whom I seek.â











