The next generation needs you By Bill Buley The Garden Island | Thursday, May 16, 2019, 12:05 a.m.
Bill Buley / The Garden Island Comedian Zavier Cummings speaks at the Kauai Resilience Project meeting Tuesday at the Kauai Memorial Convention Hall in Lihue. At right is Nannie Ann Apalla.
LIHUE — It wasn’t that long ago that Zavier Cummings was a custodian. Fine work, he said, and he did it for two and a half years, but it was not what he wanted to do for the rest of his life. “I did not see a way out of that career path,” he said Tuesday. He got into what he called “a weird place mentally,” and reached a point where he didn’t see much of a reason to live. “If we’re being honest, if we’re being real, right now, everyone here is going through something or has gone through something,” Cummings said to about 150 people, many youth, at Kauai War Memorial Convention Hall. “You guys may have faced the point in life where you might not have felt too many reasons to live.” But there is a way through it. “I just want you guys to know you guys are loved, you guys are important, and you guys deserve to feel that way,” said Cummings, who today describes himself as a comedian, part-time weather