Where It All Began 🌍
Hi, I’m Kevin Jeunang Metamo.
I’m the CEO and Founder of VQ, which stands for Vinyl Quantum. Before I tell you how my dream came to life, let me take you back to where it all began.
I was born on July 17, 1992, in Douala, Cameroon, the youngest child of Josephine Kenfack Jeunang and Maurice Jeunang. I grew up in a big house in the city, surrounded by family members who were all at least five years older than me. Education and family were everything to my parents. They worked hard, built businesses, and ensured they cared for not just us but also our extended family.
My parents weren’t born rich, but our roots trace back to the western region of Cameroon, a place defined by mountainous landscapes, including the Bamboutos Mountains ⛰️. Known for its rich agriculture—coffee, cocoa, and tea- our tribe has a legacy of resilience and hard work. Looking back, I’m grateful to be from Dschang because growing up in our culture taught me the values of perseverance, faith, family heritage, and determination—qualities that would shape the rest of my life.
A Creative Mind in a Unique World 🎨
From an early age, I was always creative. My dad and I would spend hours reading cartoon magazines 📖, and I learned to cook at a young age with my mother 🍲. I also loved drawing, often creating action scenes inspired by Dragon Ball and other cartoons I watched on Manga TV.
But in my neighborhood, I stood out—literally. My hazel eyes 👀 made me different. Some kids even called me an albino when we competed in soccer ⚽, which used to bother me. But no matter what, my sister and brother always had my back when it mattered (even though we fought like all siblings do, lol).
As time passed, things changed. My cousins, brothers, sisters, aunts, and uncles started moving overseas or to other cities for better education and opportunities.
Life kept moving forward. I kept growing
A Leap of Faith – The Journey to the U.S. ✈️
Finally, my time had come. It was time to leave—to chase something more significant.
The United States 🇺🇸 promised education, opportunity, and a fresh start. But beyond that, I was also escaping my country's social deterioration—running toward a future that, at the time, I couldn’t fully understand.
Yet, deep down, God knew. 🙏 My 3-year-old self knew. It wasn’t until 2023 that I finally realized why.
A New Beginning in America
I arrived in the United States on July 4, 2006, in a new world, a new beginning. I had no immediate family here, no relatives bound by blood.
But family isn’t always just about blood.
One of my mother’s best friends, Auntie Georgette, made sure I had a safe place to stay. She had a large, welcoming family in the U.S., and thanks to her, I never felt completely alone. I moved from house to house, adjusting, learning, and finding my place—until I met Auntie Ferdinande, my second mother.
So yes, Front Royal, Virginia, became home for most of my teenage years. I lived with Ferdy, her husband Bendiong, and Destin. She also had a daughter, but she was older and was studying at VCU, the same university I would later attend.
During high school, I threw myself into sports, playing varsity football from junior to senior year under Coach Tony Talent and competing in Track & Field under Coach Chris (if I remember correctly).
Even here, I stood out. My French accent caught attention—the ladies loved it, and the guys? Well, let’s say some had their eyes on me, but most were cool.
I could go on, but let’s speed things up.
The Reality Check – College & Hard Work 🎓
I graduated high school, and man, I felt free.
You know that feeling you see in movies—when teenagers throw their caps in the air, ready to take on the world?
Yeah, that was me.
I thought life was about to be easy.
But that was a lie, lol.
I moved to Alexandria, Virginia, where I lived with Jacques Dassie. We were both grinding—working and going to school simultaneously. I attended NVCC in Annandale while working at KFC, just a few minutes from my apartment.
Three years later, I earned my associate degree in engineering and moved to Richmond to study Mechanical Engineering with a minor in Applied Mathematics.
And that’s when the real fun began.
I found myself at Castleblack—not the one from Game of Thrones, but something just as legendary.
The land of my people, my brothers, my friends from all over the world.
There’s so much I could say about those years, but some things, you just can’t put into words, lol.
The Breaking Point – When Everything Collapsed ⚡
By November 2015, I was grinding hard because 2016 was supposed to be my graduation year.
I was juggling 30-hour workweeks, 18 credits, a beautiful girlfriend, and, of course, partying all the time. 🍾
Life was moving fast, and I was handling it all—until my body gave out.
One night, my health collapsed. My brothers at Castleblack called an ambulance 🚑, and I was rushed to the hospital.
When the nurse checked my vitals, my blood pressure was over 210—dangerously high.
They hospitalized me for further tests but let me go the following day. I should have felt relieved, but something was off.
A Battle for My Life 💔
It was exam season, and I needed to study.
But every time I tried to focus, panic attacks hit me—one after another.
My mind was racing, my body wasn’t cooperating, and I knew something was seriously wrong.
I went back to the hospital. More tests.
Blood pressure? Still high.
This time, they ran an MRI, and that’s when they found it—my heart was enlarged.
I was diagnosed with asymmetric hypertrophy.
I forced myself to take some exams, but I couldn’t finish. I had no choice but to leave.
I returned to Front Royal, where I was received with open arms. But I still had no idea what was happening to me.
Auntie Ferdy took me to Warren County Hospital, where they confirmed that my blood pressure was still dangerously high. They prescribed more medication, but that wasn’t the real problem. My mind was racing at a thousand miles per hour.
At night, I would run from my bed to sleep with my adopted parents because I couldn’t calm myself down. They knew something was seriously wrong.
That’s when they made the call—my mother and sister Aurelie flew in, one after the other, from Cameroon and France. It was time for them to take care of me. I wasn’t okay.
Hopeless & Support
felt hopeless. I hadn’t slept for weeks and had lost nearly 15 pounds.
Through it all, my amazing sister stood by me. She never showed a single sign of negativity, never made me feel like a burden. She was solid—both as my sister and as an emergency doctor. She did everything she could to take care of me before my mother even arrived in the States.
Still searching for answers, my mother and I went to a psychiatric hospital in Northern Virginia, desperate for help.
That’s when we met the craziest psychiatrist I’ve ever seen. She looked unstable herself, and after barely evaluating me, she diagnosed me with schizophrenia.
Hahaha. My mother took one look at me and said, “Kevin, let’s go.” I remembered my mother's look like it was yesterday hahaha.
She and Auntie Ferdy had already talked. They knew something wasn’t right.
So, we went back to Warren County Hospital. This time, they prescribed me Xanax. I took one, and I felt a little better the next day.
But something inside me said, “Don’t retake it.”
That night, I prayed.
“God, if it’s my time, let me go.”
But the following day, my mother encouraged me to push myself. She told me to run.
So, I did.
And little by little, I started getting better. The panic attacks lessened, and I kept pushing myself forward.
I returned to school in Spring 2016, but at my own pace—taking just five credits at a time. I also continued checkups at Bon Secours for my heart condition.
Eventually, the only medication I needed was for high blood pressure. I also started seeing a psychologist at VCU for about a year, and thanks to her, I helped me healed.