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Ironing Money -  Dennis Scott Farmer

Ironing Money (eBook)

A Journey of Faith, Family and Freedom from Addiction
eBook Download: EPUB
2023 | 1. Auflage
172 Seiten
Bookbaby (Verlag)
979-8-3509-1233-3 (ISBN)
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'Ironing Money' tells the story of Dennis Scott Farmer, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Legacy Village - one of the country's only privately ran Veterans recovery centers. Dennis was born to young parents in a rural part of California's Central Valley. His tumultuous upbringing would lead to a pattern of bad behaviors - not the criminal kind that land you in jail, but the mental, emotional, and physical kind that leads to addiction and death. After years of struggle with alcohol, Dennis would find himself in a cycle of addiction treatment and relapse. Multiple failures and many returns to the bottle should have killed him - and it almost did. A walk to buy booze and a small church on the corner were the beginning of his redemption. You never know what twists and turns life may have in store for you, but Dennis found that the adventure of sobriety could be as unpredictable and chaotic as his addiction. Only, in sobriety, the risk and rewards of life were far more positive. Life can change in a moment, and a single moment can change your life.
"e;Ironing Money"e; tells the story of Dennis Scott Farmer, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Legacy Village - one of the country's only privately ran Veterans recovery centers. Dennis was born to young parents in a rural part of California's Central Valley. His tumultuous upbringing would lead to a pattern of bad behaviors - not the criminal kind that land you in jail, but the mental, emotional, and physical kind that leads to addiction and death. Lying, deception and all-out debauchery were on the menu as Dennis entered adulthood - not that he had any idea what being an adult meant, let alone a productive one. He was moving on a whim, changing jobs without thinking, and had a total lack of commitment. Those were the characteristics he excelled at. All the while, the trusted friend of alcohol was there every step of the way. It would turn from a love affair to an obsession, and from an obsession to self-destruction. After years of struggle with alcohol, Dennis would find himself in a cycle of addiction treatment and relapse. Multiple failures and many returns to the bottle should have killed him - and it almost did. At just 135 pounds, there was little physically left. Even less of his mental or emotional being remained. A walk to buy booze and a small church on the corner would be the small spark that reminded him there was more to life than this. There weren't great flashes of lightning, and he didn't hear the voice of God, but he did remember his humanity just long enough to think hope may not be dead despite the fact he almost was. You never know what twists and turns life may have in store for you, but Dennis found out that the adventure of sobriety could be as unpredictable and chaotic as his addiction. Only, in sobriety, the risk and rewards of life were far more positive. Life can change in a moment, and a single moment can change your life.

CHAPTER ONE

The Music of the Spheres

Bottles of Diet Coke lined up like soldiers on top of the fridge. Highball glasses perched in the cabinet, clean and ready. There was plenty of ice in the freezer, too, but no Bacardi. Erica and I finished the last drop of liquor the night before and now swore no more. We had both quit our jobs by this point, considering ourselves on a sabbatical from life, agreeing we just needed some time to decompress, get our heads clear, design the life of our dreams, then we’d get back into the rat race, somehow. That’s what we told ourselves anyway.

Through the window, I could see where my stepdaughters would ordinarily have waited for the school bus by the roadside in the bright Los Angeles sunshine. I could hear the neighbors’ pots and pans rattling as they prepared breakfast. Breakfast—the kind you actually eat—was a distant memory for Erica and me, but all that was going to change. I washed dishes, dried them, and put them away meticulously, perfectly, as I dreamed of the new life we were going to lead starting now. I could hear my in-law family fighting with one another already, in the apartment we now shared with some of them, but I wasn’t bothered. Erica and I were getting our lives together despite the fact that we had put ourselves right back into the chaotic lion’s den of this Mentone Avenue apartment building.

Normally, the phone would have rung about this time in the morning when the deadbeat father of my wife’s youngest daughter Alyssa would call to yell at Erica about “his” daughter. Or he’d drive over and yell through the window or bang on the door at midnight, but he’d gained custody of Alyssa by this point, so at least the bastard had no reason to call us. He’d gotten what he thought he wanted. Plus, no one really knew we were back in Los Angeles. The father of Leila, my older stepdaughter, had taken her away by this point, too, so Erica and I were alone, now, except that we were sharing an apartment with her aunt, uncle, and grandmother.

Taking a woman’s child away is a cold thing to do, and Erica was devastated, like she didn’t know which end was up, like she’d lost a limb and didn’t know how to do basic life functions. If I had any positive role as her husband, I needed to help her get those kids back. Everyone knows courts don’t like taking kids away from moms, so all we had to do was get clean, get sober, be the parents those girls deserved, and I knew we’d get them back. We had to. It’d been eternity since I’d seen my wife smile, and that makes a man feel low, indeed.

Erica emptied an ashtray into the garbage. I scrubbed the steel sink until it gleamed. She tried to arrange things neatly in the cramped bedroom that was the only space we could call our own. I opened a kitchen cabinet and realized we didn’t have any food but breakfast cereal, so I lined up the boxes perfectly, as if catawampus cereal boxes were the real cause of all our problems.

She tied up a garbage bag. I took it out to our building’s dumpster. She mopped the floor. I made the bed. All the while, I couldn’t help but be happy because someone nearby was playing my favorite music. I sang along with Mick Jagger …

Please allow me to introduce myself

I’m a man of wealth and taste

I’ve been around for a long, long year

Stole many a man’s soul and faith

I was ‘round when Jesus Christ

Had his moment of doubt and pain

Made damn sure that Pilate

Washed his hands and sealed his fate

The bit about Jesus and Pilate meant nothing to me then, but the classic song reminded me of younger days and freedom and innocence. It made me smile, and I couldn’t believe it when the next song the neighbors played was George Strait! Boy those neighbors had incredibly good taste ranging from classic rock to country. It was like they could see into my soul or something. I made a note to go and make friends with them, soon. After all, we were about to become a new couple, an outgoing couple who made friends and were upstanding pillars of the community.

I gathered clothes in the bedroom while Erica scrubbed down the bathroom sink. I noticed none of the pants I picked up off the floor fit me anymore. In fact, I had actually punched new holes in my belt just to keep up my trousers. It was a shame, but I folded them neatly anyway and set them into a drawer, where they would sit and wait for me to put twenty pounds back on. Gathering my shirts into a pile, I wondered how long it had been since I’d actually washed these. No matter. With my newly clear head, I was going to do laundry every day, now! I shoved the shirts into a hamper as I bopped along to Carrying Your Love with Me. Then, I couldn’t believe what came on, next.

In sleep he sang to me, in dreams he came.

That voice which calls to me...and speaks my name...

Phantom of the Opera? Did these neighbors have a direct line into my brain, or what? It was amazing! I knew all the words and sang them opera-style as I cleaned.

Erica called me a nut. I asked how in the world she could resist singing along, too! She asked, “Sing along to what?”

I assumed she was kidding. The answer was obvious. The neighbors were absolutely blaring the music. My wife and her goofy sense of humor. I just sang louder, and she rolled her eyes. I reminded her this was the first day of the rest of our lives. She told me to stop quoting bumper stickers and pick up the toilet brush. I told her everything was going to change as of today, toilet included. She laughed and agreed. I sang along with Phantom, serenading her, but she didn’t seem to appreciate it.

“You’re so out of tune, I can’t even tell what song you’re singing!” she complained. But how could she not know? The music was coming right through the walls.

We took a break from housecleaning, and she said she was “thirsty.” I knew what that meant, but I suggested we drink some water instead of the usual. That sounded like what healthy people would do, so we tried it. She gagged. I puked up some green bile. We weren’t ready for water, not by the glassful, anyway. My wife was a good sport, though, and suggested it wouldn’t be wrong to have Diet Coke without the rum. I agreed to try, but it tasted horrible. I mean, the fact that I could taste it was a problem, in itself.

Water, I had heard, was a medical necessity, even though Erica and I had somehow survived without it for years, except as a mixer. But now, I resolved I would not only drink water—straight, no chaser!—but eat salad, too. What’s more, I swore to introduce bread, tomatoes, hamburgers, casseroles, spaghetti, and green beans into our diet … I tried to tempt Erica with these ideas, but just uttering the words actually made both of us ill. We resolved that simply saying the names of foods was enough to start with. If we could do that without dry heaving, it seemed like a start.

Oh yeah, I was going to be a new man. All I needed, I felt, was a good day like today to affirm my resolve not to drink and just fix me. I could fix myself, after all. I didn’t need rehab. I’d been to enough rehabs that I felt by now I could do it on my own with the sheer force of my own willpower. Meanwhile, I heard arguing coming from down the hall. Erica’s family members were having a go at one another, chattering and fighting as usual, but it didn’t get me down!

I reassured Erica this was going to be great. We were going to be better than ever before, in no time! All we needed was dedication! And great music! Luckily, we didn’t even need a stereo because our neighbors had the most incredible taste in music, and they played the exact right songs in the perfect order. I felt like I was living inside a karaoke machine! I wondered aloud why I had never before noticed what great taste in music the neighbors had. Or perhaps they had just moved in? Erica looked at me funny.

“What are you talking about?” she asked. “What neighbors?”

“I don’t know if they’re on the right or left of us, but they have great taste!” I announced. “Maybe they’re in the building next door?” I said and looked out the window as if I might suddenly find an Eagles album cover painted there.

She gave me a half smile and said, “Okay. Whatever.”

I realized we hadn’t ever really talked about music before. Imagine not knowing your own wife’s taste in music! I had been so remiss in getting to know her, but things were going to be different, now. I pictured us setting up Spotify playlists together or buying CDs or whatever people do. I actually hadn’t kept track of how music worked these days. I’d had my liquid distraction for the past decade or so, but the first thing I was going to do in my sobriety was get caught up on the latest audio technology, I decided. I told her, “From here on out, our lives are going to be filled with music!”

She looked at me like I’d lost my mind, but I was just happy, for once. I wanted her to be happy, too. Sure, we had some problems to solve, but we could do it, together. She smiled in a tired way and said yeah, we’d do it together. She seemed to need some convincing. We went on like this, all day long— cleaning the house, listening to the neighbors’ music, resolving to change our lives. We both had the dry heaves a couple of times, but we were undaunted. Getting sober was just a matter of will power, and we were going to do it...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 12.7.2023
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Psychologie Sucht / Drogen
ISBN-13 979-8-3509-1233-3 / 9798350912333
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