X Latest Writings Red White & Blind Double Happiness Connect with Me Recent Entries Archives
Where realism and idealism meet Tony Brasunas, author of Double Happiness

32 HOURS LEFT! Meet Me in St. Louis, Send Me to New York!

Making the book, going to St. Louis, and closing in on the East Coast: It’s your generosity that is making all of this happen! Thank you!

If you have not yet become a Backer, please consider doing so now! Just 32 hours remain, and I could still add New York to the Double Happy Book Tour. Everything ends tomorrow night at midnight! I would love to share this huge moment with you, to have your support, and to send you a pre-release copy of the book the hot moment it’s published.

      >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << If you have already become a Backer, and are inspired to send me and the ideas of Double Happiness to New York, please consider increasing your pledge! Let me send you another sweet reward…

  • A trade paperback copy of the book
    (ADVENTURER, $30 or more)
  • An invitation to the Book Launch Party & Celebration, which will take place in late September or early October at a gorgeous urban winery in Jack London Square.
    (PATRON SAINT OF HAPPINESS, $50 or more)
  • Your name in the acknowledgements printed in the book.
    (PATRON SAINT OF HAPPINESS, $50 or more)
  • A hard cover copy of the book.
    (GRAND HERO OF THE TAO, $75 or more)
  • A second invitation to the Book Launch Party for your guest
    (SILVER SAGE OF LEARNING, $150 or more)
  • A trip to China!
    (EMPEROR OF EAST & WEST, $5000 or more)
  • And that’s not all….

    >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << From the bottom of my happy heart, thank you! I’m delighted to be making the book I dreamed of making. I wrote Double Happiness to share a difficult and beautiful story in the hope others might find it useful and find remarkable paths to their own happiness. Now I dream of marketing the book and talking to others all over the country. If you’re inspired, I’d love your support in the next 32 hours!

Meet me in St. Louis! New York area Backers have pulled into third place, and the Double Happy Tour looks currently like this:
    9k – San Francisco Bay Area [Happening!]
    10k – St Louis, MO [Happening!]
    11k – New York and Washington DC [Not there yet]
    12k – Los Angeles and Portland, OR [Not there yet]
    13k – Chicago, Atlanta, Boston or ? [Not there yet]

New Reward! To celebrate the launch of the Double Happy Tour and to thank Backers who might be unable to pledge at the Adventurer level, I’ve set up a new Reward: TEACHER ($22 or more). Claim this if you like, by clicking ‘manage my pledge’ and adjusting your chosen reward or pledge.

    >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << With ever unfolding joy and gratitude, Tony

Share:
Be the first to comment >
Posted in Uncategorized
by Tony Brasunas on June 29, 2013

Yes, We Did It!: 3 Days Left, Let’s Do a Book Tour

Yes! I’ve reached the mountaintop, I’ve hit $8888! Yes, we are making Double Happiness! This is your doing, my amazing friends. Thank You!!

It’s almost surreal. I can’t believe we’re here.

Are we done? June 30 is still three days away. After some contemplation, I’ve realized my dream is bigger, and I want to share it with you. The inspiration that called me a decade ago was to tell my story in a way that would be a contribution to the lives of others. Double Happiness is intended to inspire people to have remarkable experiences in their lives. I don’t want Double Happiness, when we publish it, to be the proverbial tree falling in the woods. I want to get out and talk about Double Happiness.

The bigger dream is a Book Tour!

      >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << I've revised slightly the "Stretch Goals" that I outlined when I originally set up the Kickstarter. My new Goal looks like a list of cities. In addition to general publicity and marketing, I want to go to specific cities and do readings and events -- in bookstores for potential readers, and on college campuses for potential teachers and travelers abroad. Which cities will I go to? To make it fun, and so that I can see as many of you as possible, the list will start with the cities with the most Backers. I’ll deliver rewards in person to you whenever possible, and I’ll do several events per city.

What cities are on the list? See the Kickstarter:

      >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << I can't do this without you! We have three days. Can you send me and Double Happiness around the country? Can you bring me to your city? If you haven’t yet, become a Backer, or if you’re able to increase your contribution level and go for a grander reward, please do it!

      >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << Forwarding this email would also be wonderful, as would sharing with any other potential friends of happiness on social media. In deepest gratitude for all you have already done, To double happiness, Tony

Share:
Be the first to comment >
Posted in Uncategorized
by Tony Brasunas on June 27, 2013

8 Days to Reach 8888!

Thank you! I’m not there yet, but I’m three-quarters the way up this mountain. And it is because of you, amazing souls. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

Double Happiness is coming into view. We’re 74% there, and I’m thrilled. But it’s not enough. I have 8 days left to reach the mountaintop, or it’s all for naught. It’s a humbling and crucial time for me.

If you haven’t already, watch the video. It’s short and sweet, and it’s at the top of this page:

      >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << In other news, this very Monday, June 24th, is my birthday! All I want for my special day is to summit this peak of four 8's! We're about $2250 away. Here's a little birthday math:

  • If 10 of you pledge $225, we’re done, Happy Birthday, we’re making Double Happiness.
  • If 25 of you pledge $88, we’re done, Happy Birthday, we’re making Double Happiness.
  • If 75 of you pledge $30, we’re done, Happy Birthday, we’re making Double Happiness.

Let’s make this! Check out the video, and if you feel inspired, become a Backer:

      >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << As a special additional birthday teaser, I've uploaded a reading I did last week at Sungevity:       >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << Note: If I don’t get to $8888 by June 30, none of the contributions matter and Double Happiness gets $0. I do need your help to get to $8888 as soon as possible. Thank you!

If you are planning on Backing Double Happiness, please do so today. I would love your support now. If we can get to $8888 in the next day or two, I’ll have a week to aim for stretch goals, the first of which is 10K and enables me to treat you Backers to a wonderful Launch Party & Celebration at a winery!

If you’re already a Backer, my Double Gratitude to you. Now please forward this email to your friends, send an email of your own, or post this to Facebook or your favorite website! Yes, yes, yes! You are amazing.

With joy in the unfolding,
Tony

Share:
Be the first to comment >
Posted in Uncategorized
by Tony Brasunas on June 22, 2013

18 Days: The Countdown is on for Double Happiness!

Wow!! We’re almost halfway to China! Thank you so much for reading, supporting, and backing Double Happiness! I’m grateful and inspired. We are making a beautiful book together, one that you will soon have in your hands. Thank you!

We still need to dig deeper to get there. We’re at 41%, not quite halfway, which of course isn’t all the way. So if you’re able to, I need your help to create this book. Please jump in right now, become a Backer, choose your favorite reward, and create Double Happiness with me:

      >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << If you're not sure what I'm asking, or what this is all about, watch the fun video:       >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << I'd love your support today so that I know how close - or how far - we really are from the goal. A pledge of any amount helps, even one dollar! This is how it works, if you don't know:

If your pledges total $8888 or more by June 30, the funds are released, I publish Double Happiness into a beautiful volume, and we share it with the world.

If I don’t get all the way to $8888 by June 30, I get nothing, zip, zilch, nada, no matter how much anyone pledges, and it’s back to the drawing board with Double Happiness.

I want to ensure that the first scenario happens. So jump in, help me publish Double Happiness and share this story of teaching, travel, and transformation with the world. My hope all along, from the very first time I put pen to paper with Double Happiness, has been that this story can inspire both those who can leave everything behind and seek their fortune in a faraway land, and those who for whatever reason cannot but are able to access the story through reading.

Help me share this story:

www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart

Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

Towards Double Happiness,
Tony

ps: If you’re already a Backer, Thank You! Now forward this e-mail to friends who might be interested in books, teaching abroad, adventure travel, China, or coming of age in a foreign land. Thank you, you’re amazing!

Share:
Be the first to comment >
Posted in Uncategorized
by Tony Brasunas on June 12, 2013

It’s launched! Kickstarter is here.

It is with humility and deep gratitude that I arrive at this moment. The top of the mountain that I have been climbing for years is just ahead; the peak is in view. I need you to help me reach it.

I’m thrilled to announce that the Kickstarter for my book, Double Happiness, just went live.

If you know what that means, without further ado, here it is:

      >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << If you're still reading this and don't know what Kickstarter is, read on. Kickstarter is a website that allows people all over the world to contribute financially to creative projects in order to help make them happen. The range of projects funded through Kickstarter is incredibly vast, from unusual metal spice racks to major motion pictures. If you contribute to Double Happiness, you’ll get some great rewards, you’ll take part in publishing a book, and you’ll make me and other potential readers of the book very grateful.

There are two important rules. Read these twice:

1. I have until June 30, four weeks, to reach the goal, $8888.

2. If we don’t get to $8888 by June 30, I get nothing!

Yes, that’s right. I need to get to $8888, my stated goal, during this month of June. If we do get to $8888, the dream of Double Happiness will become a reality. You’ll take part in creating a wonderful book and share a transformative story with the world and with posterity.

It’s going to be an exciting 28 days!

Much more information is on the Kickstarter page. So please visit the page, read it, pick your favorite reward, and contribute early! And please share the page with your friends via facebook, twitter, email, and good old fashioned human conversation.

THANK YOU!

I can summit this peak with your help. Join me in the journey and we’ll get there!

Here’s the page:

          >> www.DoubleHappy.be/kickstart << All my blessings and gratitude to you.

Share:
Be the first to comment >
Posted in Uncategorized
by Tony Brasunas on June 3, 2013

Manuscript Excerpt: The Prologue

PROLOGUE

 

“Do you want to tickle the dragon?” 

My father was calling up to me. I was curled near the ceiling in a carpeted cubby he had built as a loft space. Lying on my belly like a snake, I sorted golden rivets into piles: long, yellow brass ones; shorter, reddish copper ones; dull, gray steel ones. It was fun and important work, but I could never resist tickling the dragon.

I climbed down the ladder and stepped onto the sooty concrete floor. The smell of coal hung in the air around my father’s brick forge. I grabbed hold of the wooden peg on the giant black wheel and pulled it down. The wheel began to turn. Because I wasn’t tall enough, I let the wheel spin the peg back up, and I caught it again as it came down, pulling again so the wheel began to turn faster. Heat radiated in intensifying waves from the hole in the center of the forge, and embers of hot orange and gold flew from the hole. The dragon was breathing!

“That’s it,” said my father. “Good. He’s awake.” In iron tongs he clutched a long piece of black steel that maybe, finally, he would make into a sword instead of a horseshoe, triangle, or fancy gate.

But I had to watch from above. He sent me back up to the loft, and I let my head hang over the edge so that I could watch as my father held the steel in the dragon’s breath. The fierce heat now exhaled constantly and turned the steel purple, red, orange, and finally a bright golden white. The flames held my gaze. Is there really a dragon down there, under the concrete floor? I wondered. Does it actually eat the coal we give it every morning?

He pinched the white-hot steel with the tongs, set it on the anvil, and with a heavy iron hammer, he struck the glowing metal, once, twice, three times, and sparks flew: Long, hairy fragments of orange shot everywhere in an inverted waterfall of light.

 

This was the end of the 1970s, on a commune in West Virginia. Twelve years earlier, before becoming a blacksmith, my father had been one of the first long-haired hippies at MIT in Boston. He swore he would never wear a tie, and he leapt into the civil rights and peace movements that were sweeping through the country like wildfire.

Soon he changed course and elected a more personal path to fixing the world. With the woman who would become my mother, he traveled to England and lived for a year in a spiritual community west of Oxford. They learned meditation techniques from the community’s leader, John G. Bennett, a wise and well-traveled man. Bennett determined that the time had come to start a community in the United States, and an estate called Claymont, in West Virginia, with four hundred acres of hilly forests and fertile farmland, was chosen for the purpose. At Claymont, my father turned an old concrete storehouse into a forge while my mother worked in the bookstore and the vegetable gardens. I helped in the forge and attended the three-room school, studying math, French, and art in the mornings alongside the two dozen other children; in the afternoons, our teachers would take us into the loam-smelling woods or down to the gurgling waters of the fish farm.

After a mere nine years, the commune faltered, rudderless. Bennett’s unexpected death had robbed the experiment of its visionary, and efforts to replace his leadership had largely proven fruitless. My parents had ushered my sister and brother into the world, and they consulted an astrologer for a new path. “Telecommunications” was divined in my father’s future, and he concocted a short resume, tied a tie to his neck, and landed a phone company job in a nearby town.

I went a different way, breaking with my strange hippie parents and attending a faraway college, exploring a freshness I found in political and cultural conservatism. But the dragon-breath that I fanned as a young boy I had also lit deep inside me, and an interest in travel, a love of languages, and a curiosity about China that my father, through his secondary role as the school’s occasional geography teacher, smoldered in me – and these coals did not die. Math, computer science, and, finally, Chinese drew and held my attention. After my college graduation, I left the United States for the first time. I flew alone to the other side of the planet, and at twenty-two arrived in China with but a few bags and a handful of wild expectations.

The year was 1997, just before international travel became dominated by the omniscience of smart phones, ATMs, and email – before Google, Twitter, Facebook, Wikipedia, and the technologies that would replace them, before the ubiquity of blogs on every imaginable subject. In China, it was an exhilarating and confusing time. The nation’s political isolation was thawing rapidly but unevenly: Many towns and regions were open, but others remained verboten to foreigners, and the motives of Americans in particular were suspect. The excitement was palpable: Hong Kong was reverting to Chinese rule after 157 years of British colonialism, the economy was heating up like a blacksmith’s forge, a building boom featuring modern glass and steel was transforming cities small and large, and formidable international honor from things like the Olympics had become more than a gleam in the eye of well-placed officials. It was before 9-11, before the “War on Terror,” before American invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan; in many ways it was a simpler time for Americans to travel. In every other respect it was just like today.

 

The steel glowed in the flames as if coated with honey-hued neon. My father pulled it out and flipped it over on the anvil.

High-pitched notes rang off the walls as his hammer pounded, metal-on-metal. Sparks leapt through the air, danced across the floor, vanished. Slowly the steel cooled under the transformative blows.

Could it be? I watched the steel flatten, lengthen, darken.

He dipped the steel into a barrel of water beside the anvil, sending clouds of steam hissing into the air. He motioned that I could climb down.

“Are you making a sword?” I asked.

“What else are you going to be carrying – if you find a dragon that isn’t friendly?”

I stepped towards the blade.

“Let it cool,” he said, a hand on my shoulder. “It will be yours soon.”

Share:
Be the first to comment >
Posted in Uncategorized
by Tony Brasunas on May 30, 2013