…and the underbelly of the beast
Another tale excerpted from “Hot Pants,
Motorcycles and K Street”
“Why the extremes Anastasia?” you might be
asking, if
you read my last blog.
“Why so attentive to tragedies and catastrophes?”
Having “lived” the extremes (past tense that is) with decades since, pledged to my emotional and
psychological health and serenity, I’ve learned a few things I want to pass on,
to the youngins, particularly.
That’s why!
I want to share with you how it was that I got from there to
here to have, an almost wonderful, though far from easy life. I want you to draw
inspiration, strength and wisdom from my experiences. And, heed, if you are inclined,
the lessons from what I am selectively revealing. This -- for the sake of my
healing, wholeness and liberation. The latter in line with my intention that “Anastasia
The Storyteller,” the blog site and the radio
show, could be, a venue for me to, at last, remove those 1000 masks I wear;
all of them -- me.
How very fitting to take another serious stab at this unmasking,
just in time for Halloween.
If I have nothing more to offer, I, at least, have my
authenticity and from this I leave you my stories; stories, of course, being some
of the richest treasures of a life.
For my well-researched, well-documented solutions
to the problems addressed in this article, find out more in Exploring
Your Dark Side: The Adventure of A
Lifetime and at the New Horizons Small “Zones of Peace”
Project.
Now about those extremes, which are a significant part of the
underbelly of the beast of success, ala Anthony Weiner.
If my meaning is not immediately clear, in time it will be
so. Patience will be your virtue here. But don’t hesitate to ask for the more
you would like.
(You can contact me, directly, at: zonesofpeacenh@aol.com.)
In the meantime, walk your way through my stories on “We came
for Camelot,” “Hot
Pants, Motorcycles and K Street” and beyond in other stories, fraught with
clues that meander here and there on this blog site. (Also check out “The
Man Who Believed In Evil.”)
Allow me to, now, discuss my book-in-progress project and
its related intent of getting out from under whatever masks I still wear.
The cost, is, was and always had been, at the expense of – “whatever?”
So, herewith, I advance the story of my book-writing
adventure, revealing a few notes on beginning
the next, immediate leg of research a month ago.
The commencement, officially, was launched by my attending several
meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous in Washington, D.C. How about that!
No, I am not a “real deal” alcoholic. However, suffice it to
say that it was, here, in our nation’s capital that I learned the art of “work
hard, party hard” as the choicest path to success in the American dream package.
Thus, these particular meetings, held in the very heart of the beast, the
central business, power- laden home to the offices of untold lobbyists etc., K
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., are smack in the midst of what became for me, the
fire pit of my adult awakening.
Oh, I would have been a great candidate for AA back then;
disease or not.
My tales, readily, emerge from there -- “work hard, party
hard.” The underbelly, also, including the repulsion I felt, being relentlessly
stalked by a Senator, endeavoring to set me up as his mistress, no doubt, to be
funded by his congressional pay.
Scarey. What does an innocent, twenty something do up
against this kind of power and prestige?
Dummie me, I was too naïve to understand the episode until
decades later. But I sure was intimidated and scared.
(If
you care to do the research, now in the archives at the Smithsonian, “Hot
Pants, Motorcycles and K Street” most directly ties to “Burgeoning Business Brims
Over: Twenty-seven year old starts runaway personal shopping service” –
Washington Sunday Star newspaper, September 24, 1967. Check it out. That, of
course, be me and the basis for “Hot Pants, Motorcycles and K Street.” However,
we will hold off on that celebrity entrepreneur part for a bit. So please bear
with me. You will not be disappointed, I assure you.)
Question: How do women
of today, eager to break the glass ceiling world, dominated by the male power
sector, bypass these temptations and dangers?
Answer 1: Emily Yoffe addresses the “work
hard, party hard” aspect of the topic eloquently in College
Women: Stop Getting Drunk, underscoring the main reason I chose to visit AA
meetings as my first research step for “Hot Pants, Motorcycles and K Street.”
Answer 2: PG –
Parental guidance, also, suggested.
The real deal for me is that I could never be bought! I hope you cannot either.
So I offer my stories that you and your’s will be just a
little bit stronger and wiser than some of our sisters
who did not make out as well.
Or, who might still be inclined to think and re-think the
price they are willing to pay to break through that glass ceiling.
I’m so glad instinct protected me from the underbelly of the
beast where parents did/could not.
Now, how about asking me, how I, now, see transforming
the Dark Side of society and politics.
You can begin by exploring all kinds of dark side
transforming strategies on the New
Horizons Small “Zones of Peace” Project blog site.
More to come.