Boomer Down: From Fast Lane to Crashed Lane

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Boomer Down: From Fast Lane to Crashed Lane by Steven M. Meltzer, Steven M. Meltzer
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Steven M. Meltzer ISBN: 9781301867097
Publisher: Steven M. Meltzer Publication: June 10, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Steven M. Meltzer
ISBN: 9781301867097
Publisher: Steven M. Meltzer
Publication: June 10, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

The good life didn’t come to a screeching halt.

It came to a grinding, slow-motion, train wreck halt.

Quintessential Boomer Steve Meltzer was living the limo-licious life of a Mad Men-style ad agency Creative Director and Internet guru in Hong Kong. Great money at $250,000/year. Eye-popping, soul-enlightening travel—a regular business-class client circuit, Hong Kong-Bangkok-Tokyo-Beijing-Hong Kong, and far-flung tourism—China, Tibet, India, Cambodia, Indonesia, the Philippines.

It was rosewood- and teak-paneled suites, top-shelf martinis and big-time clients all the way. It was a regular column in Asia’s leading marketing magazine, speaking gigs in Singapore, Taiwan, Manila, New Zealand.

At his peak, he was Vice President, Brand-Building Partner, for marchFIRST (sic) Greater China, a rocket-hot, NASDAQ-dandy Internet professional services firm. His promised fast-lane next move—to London as Creative Director for Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

When the firm’s U.S. network succumbed to self-inflicted hubris wounds, taking the thriving Asia network with it, Meltzer returned, jobless but with irons in the fire, to his D.C. hometown with wife and two kids, healthy savings, jobless but with irons in the fire and the requisite Boomer optimism.

The optimism didn’t pan out.

The fire with the irons in it burned out.

And the money ran out.

Meltzer tells his before, during and after story with wit, candor, brutal honesty and emails documenting his futile efforts to get back on the road, even if only in the slow lane.

He ends up condemning The Way of the Boomer, capitalism and himself in equal measure.

What happens when every family in your posh neighborhood (except yours) is going to ski in the Alps over Christmas, and then going to soak up some Caribbean sun?

See the piece called Nevis Envy.

What happens when a disappointed wife finally has had enough?

Not My Scotch That’s on the Rocks looks into that.

With email-bites, demographic data, essays, press clips, and guts-on-the-table soul searching, Meltzer gives us life in the crashed lane.

Millions of Boomers are having to get used to it.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The good life didn’t come to a screeching halt.

It came to a grinding, slow-motion, train wreck halt.

Quintessential Boomer Steve Meltzer was living the limo-licious life of a Mad Men-style ad agency Creative Director and Internet guru in Hong Kong. Great money at $250,000/year. Eye-popping, soul-enlightening travel—a regular business-class client circuit, Hong Kong-Bangkok-Tokyo-Beijing-Hong Kong, and far-flung tourism—China, Tibet, India, Cambodia, Indonesia, the Philippines.

It was rosewood- and teak-paneled suites, top-shelf martinis and big-time clients all the way. It was a regular column in Asia’s leading marketing magazine, speaking gigs in Singapore, Taiwan, Manila, New Zealand.

At his peak, he was Vice President, Brand-Building Partner, for marchFIRST (sic) Greater China, a rocket-hot, NASDAQ-dandy Internet professional services firm. His promised fast-lane next move—to London as Creative Director for Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

When the firm’s U.S. network succumbed to self-inflicted hubris wounds, taking the thriving Asia network with it, Meltzer returned, jobless but with irons in the fire, to his D.C. hometown with wife and two kids, healthy savings, jobless but with irons in the fire and the requisite Boomer optimism.

The optimism didn’t pan out.

The fire with the irons in it burned out.

And the money ran out.

Meltzer tells his before, during and after story with wit, candor, brutal honesty and emails documenting his futile efforts to get back on the road, even if only in the slow lane.

He ends up condemning The Way of the Boomer, capitalism and himself in equal measure.

What happens when every family in your posh neighborhood (except yours) is going to ski in the Alps over Christmas, and then going to soak up some Caribbean sun?

See the piece called Nevis Envy.

What happens when a disappointed wife finally has had enough?

Not My Scotch That’s on the Rocks looks into that.

With email-bites, demographic data, essays, press clips, and guts-on-the-table soul searching, Meltzer gives us life in the crashed lane.

Millions of Boomers are having to get used to it.

More books from Biography & Memoir

Cover of the book Meanderings by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book Late-Night Talkers: The Playboy Interview by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book When Chalk Is More Valuable Than Gold by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book Poor Your Soul by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book Little Red by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book Cosa farò da grande? by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book The Minds of Billy Milligan by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book Stephen Amell 35 Success Facts - Everything you need to know about Stephen Amell by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book Christina Applegate 190 Success Facts - Everything you need to know about Christina Applegate by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book El Barça, rey de Europa by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book The Tsars by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book My War by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book When I Was a Loser by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book The Silent Witness: Part 3 of 3 by Steven M. Meltzer
Cover of the book 50 More Stories and Songs by Steven M. Meltzer
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy