A written history of Bobby Jameson and his search through the past. Working my way back through the jungle of drug addiction and booze. My family life as a kid was the breeding ground for addicts. No self worth, no help, and one chance to get out alive. Music was the horse I rode out on...and the music business was the horse I rode into hell. Pronounced dead twice from drug over doses, I lived to tell how the pursuit of fame is as deadly as any narcotic I have ever used.
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
(part 76) NANCY HARWOOD
This is Nancy Harwood. She was a Playboy Centerfold in 1968, and my favorite of all the women I lived with. Note that I said: "lived with." I met her at Howard Gilliam's house in 1968, where I was living. She was beautiful, arrogant, and pushy, and I asked her to leave almost immediately. She refused. I asked her again and she said, "No!" I told her to get out, and again and she said, "No!"
She was used to getting her own way, and this became a test of wills, which she was determined to win. I stood up and walked over to where she was seated and said, "Goddamn it, get the fuck out of my house." "I don't want to," she said half smiling. I reached down and grabbed a handful of her hair and lifted her out of the chair.
She was like a cat being grabbed by the back of the neck. I drug her across the floor to the front door, opened it, and pulled her out onto the front porch and let her go, then turned and walked back inside slamming the door. In about 45 minutes the doorbell rang and I walked over and opened it, thinking it might be the police.
As I opened the door I saw Nancy standing there looking kind of sheepish and a lot less aggressive. She said, "I'm sorry I was so rude. Can I come back in?" I let her in and she didn't leave my side for the next year and a half. That's the way things happened in my life.
Nancy had been the girlfriend of Johnny Echols, from the band Love. I never knew how she ended up at Howard's house that day, but I never forgot it, and I'll never forget her. If there was ever a woman that I actually loved, it was her. She was a special creature, and I mean that in the very best of ways.
Nancy and I loved hard and fought hard, but no matter what happened she would not leave me. She was loyal to the bone where I was concerned, but I can not speak for Johnny Echol's experience with her, and assume it was his loss. Everywhere I went, people would stare at Nancy, then look at me, and wonder how I did it.
I used to get a kick out of watching guys try to get her attention and get her to leave me. It happened all the time and went on for as long as we were together. I got into a lot of fights because of it, but in a strange kind of a way I liked it, it meant I had something everybody else wanted and couldn't have.
Demo from 1967-68 period.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Women are jealous creatures. Nice lady!!! Hot. Humor, drama, the works. Too bad we are mortal and suffer ailment. I really hope you get better. A person told me that 'each woman was a lesson'. Does that make sense?
ReplyDeletemixter,
ReplyDeleteThat's been true for me.
"nancy and I loved hard and fought hard but no matter what she would not leave me, she was loyal to the bone with me." you state that no matter what she would not leave you but it ended after only 1 1/2 years, what happened?
ReplyDeleteShe sounds like a good person to have had by your side.
ReplyDeleteAh, Mixter, the correct form of the sentence would be "SOME women are jealous creatures, as are SOME men." Being a woman who has never had any experience *being* a "jealous" creature, I have, however, had a lot of experience being *around* many jealous types.There's pretty heavy mix, in both of the sexes.
V
anonymous, I will get to that in the story, if I can ever get myself going again.
ReplyDeleteI knew Nancy during the innocent days (1963 - 1965). What a challenge and facination rolled into one. I ran into her later at my class reunion (1986). If only I wasn't married.....RT
ReplyDelete