FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
V.I.P.
By
Lou Lou Taylor
PAGE
TWO:
I
had managed to emerge as a "hitter" (a favorable and endearing
term amongst investment bankers.) Sexy "live" deals were
thrown at my voracious appetite. And, to my fortune, our clients
had headquarters in "happening" cities. While my colleagues
were stuck in the office crunching numbers, I was flying on a private
jet to hot spots like South Beach, Los Angeles, and Mexico City.
Ordering overpriced continental breakfasts from room service and
ravaging the mini bars at five-star hotels became my favorite pastime
on these business trips. Seeing the "closed" deal printed
in the Wall Street Journal was the ultimate grandeur of my
embellished ego.
The
dangerous dichotomy of success elevated me to such an enviable spotlight
amongst my female friends while simultaneously planting an embryo
of self-loathing that slowly simmered into my self-esteem. My pugnacious
spirits, while illuminating respect from my financial mentors, exploded
into a volcano of alienation amongst my family members. Evidently,
my parents would never be able to relate to the demanding lifestyle
of a young rising investment banker. Wall Street was an unforgiving
ally to humanity, a quality that my parents successfully implemented
in their small world of Midwest suburbia. I cholerically disregarded
my parents' reactions to simplistic ignorance and plunged forward
with my self-defined altruistic stoicism.
Within
a short time, the young blooming finance graduate had transformed
to a petulant "big shot" and burned-out young twenty-something
woman. The spotlight on my high-strung behavior illuminated the
queues at nearby department stores and my local grocery stores.
"Did you find everything you were looking for?" the cashier
checker sweetly asked.
"No,
no I didn't, but it's too late now! Look, I'm in a hurry. Yes, just
give me plastic!" as I hastily left the store.
One
would think that my spoiled behavior would alter this woman's sunny
demeanor. But, in fact, the ruder I became, the more genuinely sincere
she became. What was she so happy about? What a boring simplistic
job she has, day in and day out! I could not understand how some
people could live their daily life without any high aspirations.
A cashier at a grocery store would never really make a mark on society.
My tumultuous public persona continually bestowed immediate results
to my materialistic desires, yet all the while I was unmistakably
left with a vacuous longing for something more lucid. Tantamount
to my confusion, my once treasured "la dolce vita" adventurous
weekends in the Hamptons eventually reaped haplessness. Even buying
the latest Jimmy Choo shoes quickly lost its splendor. Maintaining
the polished young female executive that I had strived to be, became
a burdensome chore. Candidly, the mirror revealed aging bags under
my eyes, and my skin looked and felt ten years my senior. Goodbye
Starbucks and Warnaco Stock! The riches that the stock market had
bestowed upon me were now feverishly invested into elite facials
and pampering eye treatments, with the hopes of a high return in
my social life. I knew my rate in return in life would decrease
if my attractiveness began to deplete. It is true that beauty is
fleeting, but it has been statistically proven by many female-driven
magazines that an intelligent and beautiful woman leaps bounds over
the social progress of an unattractive intelligent woman. To my
misfortune, the ramped beauty treatments produced only short-term
results. I began to see that stress was a stronger opponent than
I had anticipated, and it quickly humbled the egotistical image
that I had created. Stress continually weighed me down, until one
day I woke up dejectedly realizing that I had been beaten. My once
steadfast future ambitions slowly transformed into a haze of cloudy
uncertainty. With the end of the financial analyst program looming
towards me, I knew that I had to somehow recapture the young woman
from the Midwest. How I was going to do that still remained unclear
to my perturbed mind.
While
my colleagues found their sanctuary at the local bars in Greenwich
Village, I found myself spending more and more of what little free
time I had at my local gourmet grocery store. After a long hard
day at work, I found it refreshing to peruse the aisles of gourmet
delicacies in this surreal "Pleasantville." Briccani's
Gourmet Grocery Store became my detoxifying oasis from Wall Street's
hanging noose of profanity.
continued...
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