Alvin Lynell Bess
The objective narrative of an undaunted black male and deliberate blue-collar Scholar: Strolling Slowly Circumspectly Amongst Chameleon Scarecrows and Outwitting the Pitfalls, Insecurities and Stigmas of Standardized American Selective Retardation: an Unr
The objective narrative of an undaunted black male and deliberate blue-collar Scholar: Strolling Slowly Circumspectly Amongst Chameleon Scarecrows and Outwitting the Pitfalls, Insecurities and Stigmas of Standardized American Selective Retardation: an Unr
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The author knows what happened in his life. The reader knows what happened in his or her life. It is your decision to accept it and then deal with it before it consumes and defines you. It cannot be hidden by money, status, rank, employment, sex and toys. It is there always; it cannot be washed away. Believing it does not matter is the shame.
This book is honest. This book spares no one. In order for it to be effective, and help someone else heal, it has to meet a deep and aggravating pain.
This book is written by someone who developed a love for words. His love is so intense that he is unafraid to play with constructions or guidelines to produce his own instrumental arrangements. He is respectful of ceremony and acknowledges the general comfort received by standardization: blue notes often bend the mind-and perspective.
A thorough and honest account of my life, and of my retarders and how I succeeded despite them, this book is designed to serve as a guidebook or a handbook for individuals, young and old, male or female, Black, White, Hispanic, Indian, Asian, or Native American, during their undaunted and necessary travel through the underbrush of firm selective retarders and chameleon scarecrows. It is not too late to start or resume your journey. It is not too distant to behold what you believe you have the aptitude to do. If you fail-so what! Live!