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The Second Step, a Step Down: The Isometrics of Welfare and Power of Losing
Unavailable
The Second Step, a Step Down: The Isometrics of Welfare and Power of Losing
Unavailable
The Second Step, a Step Down: The Isometrics of Welfare and Power of Losing
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The Second Step, a Step Down: The Isometrics of Welfare and Power of Losing

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"This is not a step study book" Was Paul a bigot? Or had his shortsightedness caught him with his pants down? From a freeloader to an office holder to a prison cell, we find ourselves incarcerated by Paul’s misfortune. He really can’t do much behind bars. As author of twelve step spoofs, he sputters about lack of publicity. He just can’t get around like he use to. The author finds himself adequately recovered from his first book, The First Step, and now is in contention with total relaxation, an art form, while his favorite protagonist, Paul Undres, cavorts merrily down the decadent path. Mr. Lucas is happy Paul has found a home and wishes him well. Mr. Lucas avows someday to be rid of Paul, but for now, he can rest easy. He suggests you do the same and read about the vagaries of Paul Undres, the eccentric alcoholic.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 23, 2018
ISBN9781483492674
Unavailable
The Second Step, a Step Down: The Isometrics of Welfare and Power of Losing
Author

Al Lucas

This is the original 1st person version called High Steppin' off da Crack, first submitted as a 3rd person account under the name of simply Hi' Steppin' years ago. This 1st person version is more in keeping with an autobiographical style while still using fictional names as characters and was created before the 3rd person version, but lost, only to be found later after the 3rd person publication. It opens with an emaciated man standing on the day of 9/11 in the VA lobby, awaiting hospitalization for crack usage. One bizarre incident after another occurs leaving his sanity no longer in question. Being a Vietnam-era vet, he is screened and then followed up by two psychiatrists of Oriental persuasion who treat him rather realistically, to his chagrin. He is discharged with a nursing plan to attend Avon Park, a renowned dual diagnosis center in Sebring, FL, but first must go to SafePlace, a transitional housing facility in Tampa to protect him from the dealers while he awaits an opening in Avon. First, however, Paul decides to go home and have one more bout with crack, to get the high he never had, using his car as leverage. It doesn't work out so well. He thus attends SafePlace without a car. It should be noted, he has read to one of the psychiatrists his ongoing novel and continues to read or have read to any and all its contents. One person, a roommate, at SafePlace is so moved, he blows his brains out. At Avon, he is assigned a class coordinator, Manfred Mundane, an ex-military pilot, who is unsympathetic about Paul's writing skills. Getting kicked out for bumming cigarettes, Paul comes home with new verve. He will in fact attend AA and does. He fights his way out of bankruptcy and foreclosure blindly with no help from family or friends and miraculously incurs twelve years of clean time. The book ends with a surprise, reserved for the reader. It should also be noted, the narrative weaves between Paul's acid days in Morocco and his current plight. His journal is in the past tense; the book's outcome, in the present with both coming to an end in Paul's bedroom where reality merges in a sexual farce.

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