Getting Stoned and Liberated

It is easy for me to see how the real history of the true Jesus has been altered, for I have seen with my very eyes how my family history has been altered – by outsiders wrote books and screenplays!

Judy Lynch claims Rosemary only had a high school education. Rosemary went to Ventura City College and UCLA before she joined the Waves. Scoring the second highest aptitude score in Naval Wave history, she was sent to Seattle to work in the code room in order to spy on the Russians. My mother told her children who were caught up in the Cold War America never trusted the Soviet Union.

When we moved to Los Angeles, Rosemary got a job translating French electronic terms into English. It took her a month to learn French from a book while sunbathing in our back yard. Rosemary’s brilliance is what terrified her children, especially when she was drunk. Lynch depicts her as a moron, too stupid to realize Christine was a genius, but, saw that I was gifted.

Rosemary was at the vanguard of Woman’s Liberation, as was her mother. This is the untold story of Rosamond.

Above is a letter from her boss who owned a translation company. Rosemary had exquisite handwriting, and collected quotes.

When I was visiting he in her little house in Reseda, I had to go through the one bedroom to get to the bathroom. Rosemary and her husband were in bed smoking pot. Robby is six months younger then me, and a Vietnam Vet – who got spit on! Here it is, the epitone of Liberation, a mother who turned to prostitution to raise four children, and her soldier who went off to fight a futile war.

Jon the Nazarite

In addition to oppressing Christine artistically, Rosemary also dominated Christine with physical violence. Trying to support four children with only a high school education and little help from her alcoholic husband, Rosemary was often enraged. She took this rage out on Christine and Christine’s earliest known works reflect it. In Teenage Drawing II, her subject is reticent and withdrawn.  In Teenage Drawing III, the woman looks shocked and angry.

If Christine’s parents had embraced her talent, there might be existing works from her childhood, but this was not to be. Fearing that Christine would steal her brother’s spotlight as the family artist, Christine’s mother, Rosemary, forbade Christine to draw at home.

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