Meet Spencer
Spencer C. Demetros was born in 1962, and raised in Trumbull, Connecticut, a typical American suburb that was bursting at the seams during the post-World-War-II baby boom era. But the real story of Spencer, the author, begins in the fall of 1985, when he was a graduate student at the University of Michigan. Here, his life was at a crossroads.
It was a moment when he was telling one of his outrageous stories from his youth to a packed dining hall at the student co-op in which he lived. These performances occurred every Saturday morning during brunch at the urging of several of Spencer’s fellow residents who felt that his stories had to be shared with the world. As the room erupted in laughter, Spencer was overcome with an intoxicating combination of incredible joy and heart-pounding energy, like nothing he had ever experienced.
That was the moment when Spencer’s love for storytelling and making people laugh emerged from within and stared him right in the face. This was the crossroads: he could continue on the safe and conventional career track he was on, or he could careen off that road, onto the uncertain but exhilarating and possibly spectacular path of creativity and artistic expression.
But Spencer did not take the road less traveled. Maybe he just didn’t have the courage. Or perhaps God had a different plan for his life, at least for the several decades that followed. So Spencer tucked his creative aspirations into a drawer, like an unsent letter in an unrequited love affair, not knowing whether he could ever bring himself to take it out and share his true love of storytelling with the world.
Spencer’s decision to stay the conventional course should have come as no surprise to anyone. His parents, Christie and Barbara Demetros, were second-generation Greek-Americans of modest means who were raised during the Great Depression. They understandably impressed upon their children the value of a good education and steady work in a reliable profession. Spencer dutifully complied, eventually becoming a business attorney. At the age of 41, he married the love of his life, Catherine, and together they are raising their beautiful twins, Coco and Christopher.
It was when the twins entered their preteen years that Spencer’s creative spark reignited. During the family’s nightly devotional time, Coco and Christopher resisted reading the Holy Bible, complaining they were bored and couldn’t see the Bible’s relevance to their daily lives. As a true believer, Spencer was enormously concerned. So he summoned his long-buried passion for story-telling, and began writing stories from the Bible in a way that was clear, entertaining, and relatable to young people. That labor of love ultimately became his first literary project, The Bible: Enter Here.
And Spencer hasn’t stopped since. After reengaging the creative passion that had been tucked away for so long, he has been writing prolifically, and hopes to release his second book soon. The lesson to be learned? All good things happen on God’s time.
Meet Spencer
Spencer C. Demetros was born in 1962, and raised in Trumbull, Connecticut, a typical American suburb that was bursting at the seams during the post-World-War-II baby boom era. But the real story of Spencer, the author, begins in the fall of 1985, when he was a graduate student at the University of Michigan. Here, his life was at a crossroads.
It was a moment when he was telling one of his outrageous stories from his youth to a packed dining hall at the student co-op in which he lived. These performances occurred every Saturday morning during brunch at the urging of several of Spencer’s fellow residents who felt that his stories had to be shared with the world. As the room erupted in laughter, Spencer was overcome with an intoxicating combination of incredible joy and heart-pounding energy, like nothing he had ever experienced.
That was the moment when Spencer’s love for storytelling and making people laugh emerged from within and stared him right in the face. This was the crossroads: he could continue on the safe and conventional career track he was on, or he could careen off that road, onto the uncertain but exhilarating and possibly spectacular path of creativity and artistic expression.
But Spencer did not take the road less traveled. Maybe he just didn’t have the courage. Or perhaps God had a different plan for his life, at least for the several decades that followed. So Spencer tucked his creative aspirations into a drawer, like an unsent letter in an unrequited love affair, not knowing whether he could ever bring himself to take it out and share his true love of storytelling with the world.
Spencer’s decision to stay the conventional course should have come as no surprise to anyone. His parents, Christie and Barbara Demetros, were second-generation Greek-Americans of modest means who were raised during the Great Depression. They understandably impressed upon their children the value of a good education and steady work in a reliable profession. Spencer dutifully complied, eventually becoming a business attorney. At the age of 41, he married the love of his life, Catherine, and together they are raising their beautiful twins, Coco and Christopher.
It was when the twins entered their preteen years that Spencer’s creative spark reignited. During the family’s nightly devotional time, Coco and Christopher resisted reading the Holy Bible, complaining they were bored and couldn’t see the Bible’s relevance to their daily lives. As a true believer, Spencer was enormously concerned. So he summoned his long-buried passion for story-telling, and began writing stories from the Bible in a way that was clear, entertaining, and relatable to young people. That labor of love ultimately became his first literary project, The Bible: Enter Here.
And Spencer hasn’t stopped since. After reengaging the creative passion that had been tucked away for so long, he has been writing prolifically, and hopes to release his second book soon. The lesson to be learned? All good things happen on God’s time.
My Life in Pictures
Eight Things Most People Don’t Know About Me
- When I was three, my parents lost me in Grand Central Station in New York. Thankfully, I was holding my favorite stuffed animal, Bunny, who brought me some comfort during the traumatic ordeal. Despite the name, Bunny wasn’t a rabbit but a Teddy Bear and had a music box embedded in his neck that I ripped out just before our trip. A man found me and Bunny, who had a gaping hole in his neck (Bunny, not the man), wandering alone through the crowded terminal. The man brought us to a security officer, who then located my uncharacteristically neglectful parents. I’m still not over it.
————————————- - I love Caesar salad dressing. I’m embarrassed to admit that I sometimes drink it straight from the bottle.
————————————- - I used to own a business called Radiant Corporation that provided workplace safety training to non-English-speaking Hispanic construction workers. I hope to someday revive the company, as it was among the most gratifying and important work I’ve ever done.
———————————— - When I was a kid, I used to lock myself in the bathroom, stand in front of the mirror, and pretend to do TV commercials for products like toothpaste and shampoo. I would repeat the commercials over and over, as it had a calming effect on me—and I have no idea why.
———————————- - Before law school, I was a health and safety inspector for asbestos removal projects in various high-rise office buildings on Wall Street and the surrounding area in lower Manhattan. My job responsibilities included crawling around ceiling girders looking for remaining scraps of asbestos and making sure large crews of construction workers adequately showered before leaving the containment area. I had to take about a dozen showers per day, often in cold water and freezing temperatures because the heating systems were shut off in and around the work areas. I really did not like that job.
———————————- - Whenever I have to ride in a convertible with the top down, I pretend to enjoy it to be polite. But I find nothing pleasurable about it, even on beautiful days. In addition to the physical discomfort of wind pounding on my head, there’s also the anxiety that my poorly anchored possessions will fly out of the car. I have this theory that nobody truly likes riding with the top down—they just pretend to because it looks cool. (But in the interest of full disclosure, I’ve been told that I have a tendency to project.)
———————————– - I have a recipe for the world’s most delicious white chili.
———————————– - For much of our childhood, my sister, Mary Ann, and I plotted to run away to Florida. Why Florida? Because many of the neighborhood kids would take yearly vacations there for Spring break. The only Spring vacation we ever took was this hellacious trip to Washington, DC, when I was in junior high. So, Mary Ann and I had this utopian image of Florida as Heaven on Earth, and we were determined to someday get there. I finally did when I had my own kids and took them to Walt Disney World. Ironically, I wanted to run away back to Connecticut.
Eight Things Most People Don’t Know About Me
- When I was three, my parents lost me in Grand Central Station in New York. Thankfully, I was holding my favorite stuffed animal, Bunny, who brought me some comfort during the traumatic ordeal. Despite the name, Bunny wasn’t a rabbit but a Teddy Bear and had a music box embedded in his neck that I ripped out just before our trip. A man found me and Bunny, who had a gaping hole in his neck (Bunny, not the man), wandering alone through the crowded terminal. The man brought us to a security officer, who then located my uncharacteristically neglectful parents. I’m still not over it.
———————————— - I love Caesar salad dressing. I’m embarrassed to admit that I sometimes drink it straight from the bottle.
———————————— - I used to own a business called Radiant Corporation that provided workplace safety training to non-English-speaking Hispanic construction workers. I hope to someday revive the company, as it was among the most gratifying and important work I’ve ever done.
———————————– - When I was a kid, I used to lock myself in the bathroom, stand in front of the mirror, and pretend to do TV commercials for products like toothpaste and shampoo. I would repeat the commercials over and over, as it had a calming effect on me—and I have no idea why.
———————————— - Before law school, I was a health and safety inspector for asbestos removal projects in various high-rise office buildings on Wall Street and the surrounding area in lower Manhattan. My job responsibilities included crawling around ceiling girders looking for remaining scraps of asbestos and making sure large crews of construction workers adequately showered before leaving the containment area. I had to take about a dozen showers per day, often in cold water and freezing temperatures because the heating systems were shut off in and around the work areas. I really did not like that job.
———————————— - Whenever I have to ride in a convertible with the top down, I pretend to enjoy it to be polite. But I find nothing pleasurable about it, even on beautiful days. In addition to the physical discomfort of wind pounding on my head, there’s also the anxiety that my poorly anchored possessions will fly out of the car. I have this theory that nobody truly likes riding with the top down—they just pretend to because it looks cool. (But in the interest of full disclosure, I’ve been told that I have a tendency to project.)
———————————– - I have a recipe for the world’s most delicious white chili.
———————————— - For much of our childhood, my sister, Mary Ann, and I plotted to run away to Florida. Why Florida? Because many of the neighborhood kids would take yearly vacations there for Spring break. The only Spring vacation we ever took was this hellacious trip to Washington, DC, when I was in junior high. So, Mary Ann and I had this utopian image of Florida as Heaven on Earth, and we were determined to someday get there. I finally did when I had my own kids and took them to Walt Disney World. Ironically, I wanted to run away back to Connecticut.
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