Farstorm321
This is not a redemption story.
It's a record.
My Life is a stark, unpolished memoir told in short, cutting chapters that move from the West Side of Chicago to military bases, hospital corridors, libraries at midnight, and boardrooms where silence carries more weight than applause. Farmer writes the way memory actually works-fragmented, sensory, unforgiving-tracking a life shaped by poverty, violence, loyalty, discipline, faith, and relentless self-education.
The book follows a boy raised fast, a soldier tested early, a man broken and rebuilt more than once. It documents brushes with authority, betrayal and brotherhood, marriage and loss, survival and reinvention. Along the way, it traces the quiet accumulation of knowledge-reading, writing, calculating-as a form of resistance and preparation.
At its core, My Life is about momentum. About refusing to arrive empty-handed. About turning scars into infrastructure and belief into work. It is a chronicle of becoming, written by someone who understands that the story isn't finished when the money shows up-it's finished when the work does.
This book is for readers who value honesty over polish, discipline over pity, and truth told without apology.