Floyd Griffin:
I grew up in Milledgeville and graduated high school from J. F. Boddie High
School. The school was segregated at the time (1962). I did the
necessary reading and writing for my school work and I read the
Reader’s Digest, but when I was growing up, we didn’t have an
extensive library at school. I certainly never dreamed that I would
write my autobiography.
Books-And-Authors.net: You begin LEGACY TO LEGEND WINNERS MAKE
IT HAPPEN talking about your father - Briefly discuss and tell us
about him.
Floyd Griffin:
When I was growing up, Dad had a grocery store business and a wood
delivery route. He was an entrepreneur during a time when it was a
very rare thing for a black man. All of us were expected to work
with him in whatever business he was in and there was a time for
work and a time for play. Dad was a strict disciplinarian, but he
was also a man of great integrity. He always did what he said he
was going to do and he helped others as much as he could. His
example demonstrated to me that I could do and be anything that I
could conceive of.
Books-And-Authors.net: Who was Sammy Younge?
Floyd Griffin:
Sammy Younge will
always be remembered as the first black student protester to die in
this country, during the time when the civil rights movement was
just heating up. He was gunned down by a white racist for using the
whites-only restroom as a gas station. But Sammy was so much more
than that. He was a mechanical and industrial arts major at
Tuskegee University and he was so fair-skinned that he could pass
for white. He would often go to Montgomery and rub elbows with
unassuming well-to-do whites who thought he was white. That’s just
how he was – he flaunted the rules and always wanted to know why
things were the way they were. He wouldn’t, couldn’t settle for
being second class to anyone.
Books-And-Authors.net: In
LEGACY TO LEGEND WINNERS MAKE IT HAPPEN you write, "I am worried
that the black community has become too comfortable." Explain.
Floyd Griffin:
My concerns are with that we have gotten too comfortable with a high
class of living. Most of our neighbors have decent jobs, drive nice
cars and live in two-story homes. And many of us will do anything
to achieve that lifestyle – shoplifting, selling drugs, and
murdering people. Forgotten is all the work our forefathers put in
during the Movement and the notion of helping each other come up.
We have gotten too comfortable with being a have, rather than a
have-not. That often happens a generation or two after the great
movers and shakers who change our world for the better.
Books-And-Authors.net: You
have accomplished a lot - Vietnam Veteran, Army Colonel, Football
coach, Educator, State Senator and Mayor -- Is there anything you
have not accomplished that you would like to accomplish?
Floyd Griffin:
I’ve done just about everything that I wanted to do; I want to relax
now. I’m not looking for
anything in particular to
do; I just want to be an elderly statesman. I’m certainly not
interested in running for office again. I’m enjoying spending time
with my wife and family and supporting my home community of
Milledgeville.
Books-And-Authors.net: In LEGACY TO LEGEND WINNERS MAKE IT HAPPEN -
There are some very special photos of you with President Obama and
his wife Michelle - Tell us about meeting the President.
Floyd Griffin:
I met President Obama in
February of 2008 when he was running for the presidency, shortly
before he spoke at Harvest Cathedral Church in Macon, Georgia. He
and I talked about the experience of my being the first black
elected in a majority white senatorial district and the first black
mayor of a predominately white southern city. He could relate to my
experiences with this.
Books-And-Authors.net: Your model for success is "Winners make
it happen." Explain.
Floyd Griffin:
I think that anyone who
strives to be success in life must
have a winning attitude.
Believing in oneself gives
an individual the drive to
go out and make things happen. It’s a continuous process – a daily
thing. If you want to win, you have to make it happen. There’s a
difference between a dreamer and a doer.
Books-And-Authors.net: You speak regularly to students, what do you
tell them that will help them achieve their dreams and desires?
Floyd Griffin:
When I speak, I talk about my life story. It’s a testimony – the
struggles, the challenges, setting my goals; and
then the preparation (an education). Getting along with others is
also important; it’s difficult to move forward if you’re always
experiencing conflict with those around you. I teach that a
person’s attitude must be
positive; every winner I’ve ever met had a positive attitude.
Books-And-Authors.net: What do you hope to achieve with LEGACY
TO LEGEND WINNERS MAKE IT HAPPEN?
Floyd Griffin:
Of course, I would like
to sell the book and I
would especially like to
get it into the hands
of as many young African American men as
possible. This book is a
road map to success, written by
someone who grew up in the Deep South amid segregation, went to
college and had a successful career, not to mention a fabulous
marriage and two successful sons.
Books-And-Authors.net: What was the last book you read?
Floyd Griffin:
The last book I read was Success
Runs in our Race by
George C. Fraser. It’s about how blacks, all the way from slavery
to the present, have risen above the
struggles and ups and downs and become
successful. The book also discusses the
benefits of networking
and how we should mentor our young
people.
Books-And-Authors.net: What's next?
Floyd Griffin:
Rest and relaxation; waiting for the Lord to give me direction for
what He would like me to do next.
Books-And-Authors.net: Do you have any hobbies? What are they?
How do they enhance your writing?
Floyd Griffin:
I’ve never had time for hobbies, but when I do have free time,
I like to watch sports,
especially football. I really enjoy traveling with high school and
college football teams to
support them; that’s how I unwind and get away. I enjoy basketball
too. I don’t know that my method of relaxing enhanced my writing; I
simply wanted to offer inspiration and good, common sense advice to
any young black, man or woman, who has a dream, but might not
believe that the dream can become a reality.