Saturday, December 31, 2011

Papers and Stuff

Someplace in my attic....


~My scrapbooks from early childhood...photos of Elvis cut out of magazines..Hershey Bar wrapper from when my girlfriend, Barbara, and I won the spotlight dance at a 6th grade shindig....a lock of my grandmother’s hair at age 64...still light brown...a straw from my hospital stay after having my appendix removed...


~Collectable cards....Davy Crocket cards...Elvis cards....Beatles cards...baseball cards...


~ My bachelor’s and master’s degree diplomas...something you just don’t frame and hang after earning a doctorate...but both full of memories and pride...


~ Letters and greeting cards...birthdays and Christmas....girlfriends....even letters that Barbara and I exchanged after she moved to Maine (from D.C.) during our early

teens....


~I have this quiz from my undergraduate statistics class....we had one every day and on this one, I got a 6....that’s 6 out of 100....oh, I got an A in the class, but from that point on, my friend Randy called me “scholar”...just couldn’t believe it possible to get a 6 out of 100...I’ve wanted to frame it next to my doctoral diploma...it’s up there someplace...


~ My dinosaurs...little hard rubber things...I played with them endlessly...and when I reunited with Barbara several years ago, I gave her a tyrannosaurus...her favorite... that we used to play with together...


~Files and files...client records...tax returns...it’s the law, but I mean really!.....


~Cassette tapes, VHS tapes, video cassette recorder...you get the picture...


~Pool cues and pool balls...had this gorgeous pool table in Massachusetts...just wouldn’t fit in the Maine house...sigh...


~Boxes...hmm, maybe I’ll have to return this appliance some day and I’ll need the original box....can’t be too careful....


~Interesting, er....antique items...bought at auction...love those auctions with the smells of mold, dust, and coffee...”wow...this will be interesting to put...um..I’ll put

it....someplace...”


~ Camping gear...haven’t camped in over 10 years...dogs love camping...it could happen again...right?


~ A state of the art Teac reel-to-reel tape recorder...yep...it would play for hours...but then again, my ipod will play for days...


In my spare bedroom...


~ Photo albums....remember those? Childhood....grad school...old girlfriends....photos

of gorgeous children I knew and loved during my pre-school teacher years...they’re all

in their early 40’s now....oh man...dogs...tons of dog photos...someplace there is a photo my friend Mike and me standing next to jazz clarinetist Pete Fountain...at the

D.C. armory...I’m wearing some stupid plastic lei around my neck...how’d that

happen?


~ A Canon 35 mm SLR...huge, heavy 70-200 zoom lens...it takes film...remember film?


~ Guitars....and cases....each guitar carries more memories than I could possibly

count...or even remember!


~ A painting given to me by an elderly woman I’d worked with years ago...she later

passed away and I worked with her husband through his grief and adjustment...when told about her painting, he said, “well...she rarely gave those away, so if she gave you one, she must have really wanted you to have it.”


And so, I could ramble on about how much these things mean to me...and they do. I could examine my “hoarder” side, but I don’t think I qualify for the television show...it’s all too organized and accumulated over too many years...I could put it on Craig’s List, but who wants my grandmother’s hair?


Instead, I’m mostly wondering about what to do with it all? I have no children...who would keep and treasure my things or simply say, “now what do we do with all this shit?” I could say, “when I’m famous, people will sell these things on ebay.” Ummm...that’s not going to happen either.


And concluding, I think, that it’s time to purge. Time to rid myself of...me. It’s all just stuff now....my stuff, but still just stuff. I can’t take it with me...and wouldn’t want to. Oh, there are my dogs’ ashes and they’re going with me. All in one place. (If you can, find the Twilight Zone episode, “The Hunter”) But everything else has no purpose anymore. What else do you do with things kept for “later” when there might not be a “later”? Huh?


Going once...going twice...going.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Dear Santa....

As you may know, Santa, it has been many years since I've written. In no way should you take this leave of absence as an indication of my lack of belief in you or appreciation for your past generosities. I actually still have a number of the fine gifts you've brought over the years...like my first stuffed animal, Bobo, and my first Martin guitar at 7, when my stubby little fingers were just learning to play. Thank you again.

Before I give you a list of what Rusty, Nora, and I would like this year, I want to offer a brief, general request. I guess it might be considered a suggestion even. I was just thinking that, instead of loading down your sled with big ticket items like televisions, computers, or blow-up Justin Bieber dolls, you might have a more lasting impact on families and children if you could bring a few million jobs and a government that actually works. The one we have needs a change of batteries fairly often and even the new ones don't seem to help. And, while you're here, could you load up Jerry Sandusky and his sick brethren, take them back to the North Pole, and leave them out where they can freeze their pathetic weanies off or get eaten by polar bears.

For Rusty:

~ Night vision goggles. I tell him that squirrels go to bed at sundown. But he's not convinced. I guess he's thinking we can't be too safe....that longer nights just give them more time to plan! He has smallish ears, so take that into consideration for sizing.

~ You know those really long fingernails like the Wolverine has? Well, he'd like a pair...so it might be easier to dig his lairs underneath trees and bushes...as well as for burying his rawhide bones, only to eventually dig them up when they're nice and soft and covered with dirt.

~ Don't ask me why, but for some reason he wants a Rocky and Bullwinkle t-shirt. Oh yeah...and a Cubs hat.

~ He was watching Martha Stewart one day and thinks it could be fun to have one of those large pastry squirter things...like for filling cannoli or stuffed shells. I think it's for his empty marrow bones. Where we'll get the lard fillings, I have no idea.

~ Finally, he'd like a new pair of footie pajamas...his nails have worn through his Marmaduke pair.

For Nora:

~ I know it could be expensive, but she would like dental implants. Poor girl has lost most of her teeth due to distemper and she would like to again enjoy those harder treats as well as look nice for her boyfriend, Mr. Jones. I tell her she is beautiful as she is, but she's a bit self-conscious about her teeth.

~ She wants an Easy-Bake Oven....thinks it could be a blast to make her own cookies.

~ An in-ground pool....but only about 3 inches deep. She loves getting silly in puddles and is afraid of the plastic Spongebob pool I got her. No diving board is necessary.

~ Tennis balls...can't have enough tennis balls.

~ Anything that squeaks...

For me:

~ Sox in the World Series and the Patriots in the Super Bowl.

~ One of those memory erasers from Men in Black so I can go on television, wave the thing at everyone and make them forget the Kardashians, Bieber, Lohan, and all the other talentless celebrities that clutter our lives.

~ A turnover on The View....keep Whoopi, can the rest. Add Meredith Vieira an Rachel Maddow ...you can choose the last one from Uma Thurmen, Cherlize Theron, or Ashley Judd.

~ A really good night's sleep.

~ New jobs...out of the public spotlight...for Al Roker, Jay Leno, Rachel Ray...oh hell...the list is just way too long.

~ A best selling book so I can give up this other career...no offense to my clients, but I'm spent.

That's about it. I have many things. I am blessed with perfect, adorable dogs...and a few wonderful friends. I really only want lasting health and good fortune for them and for myself. I'm thinking, while these gifts could be asking a lot, they might take the weight off of your sled...and off of me...at least for a while.

Thank you, Santa
Rick

p.s....I was Richard for a long time so I hope you'll remember me.



Saturday, December 3, 2011

Walter

Let me tell you about Walter...I was thinking about him today while out walking my dogs...

At least we'll call him Walter.

Walter came to me as a client some years ago. He was a corporate big shot...I mean, the kind that rides helicopters to meetings and has that growly, marine lieutenant-type laugh that scares people. He was definitely not the type of guy who would ever have considered therapy except that his wife had left him...somewhat suddenly, although he quickly suspected the church choir director was involved. He changed churches.

Over time, I had sessions with Walter and his grown kids, from whom he'd been estranged, ending in tearful resolutions and new connections. Walter learned to cry. We had a very cool, honest relationship. He was a hunter and I would often encourage him to shoot animals with a camera, not a rifle. We'd laugh...knowing he wouldn't change that little flaw. Okay, big flaw.

Walter was retired...forced to retire due to a major heart attack. He had a pacemaker...and, from across my coffee table, across the room, I could hear that thing ticking like a cheap watch. It was mildly eerie. He looked healthy and was fairly active. But there was that tick...tick...

At one point, Walter was looking for office space in Boston for a charitable organization he worked with. Well, I had a friend in Boston real estate and connected the two. My friend did manage to find him the perfect space he needed and all were happy. The reason I'm telling you about this was...this. This same friend and I once drove up to Maine to an auction for a lake front cottage. And there...at the auction...and staying at HIS cottage next door...was Walter. And don't you know, Walter said to my friend and me, "let's go have a beer!" And, before I could answer, my friend said, "Sure!" And so, we went to this little country store/bar/video rental type place you find in the Maine woods and sat there on stools...laughing, talking, and, yes, we had those beers. The only rub is that therapists don't customarily have beers with clients. So, as we talked...laughed...I had a sort-of-good time as I sat there uncomfortable with this inadvertent ethics violation!

Therapy continued however. At great urging, I got Walter to attend a divorce support group I'd often given lectures to. (That's poor grammar, but you can handle it...you know who you are) He became a regular at the group and met a fine, kind, lovely woman to boot! Walter was in love.

Some weeks later....that day...he came into my office...smiling. It was late in our conversation that he said, "You know? I am feeling at peace for the first time in a long time...maybe in my life." It was her...his new love, his resolved family relations, his cottage...he was happy.

Prior to our next biweekly appointment, I learned that Walter had died. Heart attack. Gone before he hit the floor, they said. You would not believe the long line outside the funeral home. So many friends from so many circles. A respected, loved man. And there, in the receiving line, was not his ex wife, but his kids standing with his new love. I hugged her and whispered, "Walter really loved you." When I finally reached him lying there in his handsome well-cut suit, in his handsome casket, I leaned towards him and said, "Damn it, Walter! You let it beat you!" It's the way he talked. It's the way we talked.

So, what's the point of all this...this story. On short notice, I can think of two things.

First of all...to hell with all that therapist/client boundary stuff. Oh, I'm not going to sleep with clients or play golf with any. I CAN say that, when I heard that Walter....my client of several years...had died, I was very happy I'd had that beer. Yep. Sometimes, in our work, we meet and, yes...even LIKE people. I always liked Walter...hunting and all.

The other point is just this folks....TICK TICK TICK! Don't wait! My God...Walter found his peace and then died. I'm so thankful I helped him get to that point. So was he. Wouldn't it have been great if he'd lived longer? Or his peace had come sooner? But it didn't.

So...here comes the corny part. Go. Love. Give. Take. Now. Tick, Tick, Tick. One never knows....



Thursday, November 24, 2011

Thanksgiving Yin Yang

Years ago, I wrote a little piece for a local newspaper on the holiday blues. This also became the requested topic of numerous lectures to community groups, many of which were offering support for those suffering the grief over a lost loved one or the emotional shrapnel left after divorce. The gist of my message was that, as we age, the holidays become bittersweet...opportunities for joy and reverence, tempered and tainted by the inevitable changes life usually brings. I urged these men and women to approach the holidays in this very spirit...to cherish memories rather than avoid the pain of loss, while embracing the true meanings underlying our otherwise overly commercialized holidays.

And so, now...this Thanksgiving, I am reflecting on how these sentiments parallel how I...we...approach our daily existence. I wish others...and they wish me...a "happy" Thanksgiving.
"Have a merry Christmas." Well, you know what? I'm not happy today. I'm okay, but I wouldn't say I'm happy. But here's the thing....that's okay! In fact, I don't really want to be happy today.
It's okay if you wish this for me...I know your sentiments to be genuine beneath the obligatory cliche. But I have spent my life learning to see life in a more realistic, satisfying "yin yang" kind of way. Is it possible to feel thankful...and still whine? I like to think so....

It's like being alone. As I've grown older and, particularly, since I've been divorced, I have learned to value my aloneness...to need it, enjoy it, protect it. But, then again, I get lonely sometimes. Sometimes often, sometimes not so often. I speak to my dogs (they speak to me) and I have lengthy conversations with my clients. Otherwise, I am alone in this world. But what has been so very helpful for me, is that I've learned to handle this situation with "creative indifference." I feel lonely...take a step back...and take in all that I have and have had. I feel sad due to the passing of time and the major losses I have endured, but feel so fortunate to have lived life with so many choices, opportunities, and loved ones. Today I am actually choosing to be alone...a decision made with foresight and much consideration. Do I feel lonely? Sure. Am I okay? Absolutely.

This is because, this year, I am aware that one friend is battling cancer...and my good friend Wendy just lost her son. Others...friends and clients...face the challenges of children with major illness, financial hardships, or major depression. I'm going to still whine, if that's okay with you, about my stuff...a few health concerns, too much work...not enough work...or even loneliness. Meanwhile, I know how lucky I am...believe me. This man has it good...he wishes he had more sometimes, but he has it good. It's all a matter of honest, reasonable understanding of living. I sometimes say that, the good thing about dogs is that they're always there...and the bad thing about dogs is that they're always there. They always need something, right? But, in truth, I ALWAYS need them!

So, don't have a happy Thanksgiving. How about, "have a pretty good thanksgiving...one that puts your good fortunes in the context of what you and others don't have, but feeling pretty darn good about it anyway." Okay...so this is a little longer and won't fit on your average greeting card (remember those?). But it works for me. Alone...lonely...and okay. Now I have to go walk my dogs...again...oh my...in the fresh Maine air...in my good health...and come home alone...oh my....to food...PIE...homemade ice cream...and settle into my warm home and think about my friends...those who hurt and those who are happy. Love y'all!





Monday, July 25, 2011

Another Side to Grief


In the autumn of 1967, my life was entering a most unwelcome yet necessary period of transition. Much due to my own laziness and immaturity, I had managed to earn an academic dismissal from the University of Maryland where my girlfriend and buddies would remain to finish their degrees. Overweight and underachieving, I began my scholastic rehabilitation at a small, anonymous community college. The campus was new and clean, small enough to fit into the confines of the Maryland Terrapins’ spacious football stadium. The buildings were constructed with bricks and pillars in an apparent attempt to make us second-tier students feel that we were attending a real college. Why, there was even a “quad” where the hippies and Viet Nam veterans would eat lunch together, occasionally joining in tense but peaceful political confrontations. No one knew me and I knew no one. And yet, this anonymity would be my friend. The institution and its unassuming students would embrace my mediocrity. I was safe here.


Soon my changes began. I lost weight and gained facial hair. I actually read my text books and passed exams. I discovered I could write and even think. I began to have priorities, to care about the world, other people and my own life. Gradually and unconsciously, my identity was emerging from the primordial swamp like the first creature to walk on land. The dramatic events of the late sixties brought us together with an intensity none of us fully understood at the time. In fact, it was my new group of friends who changed my name, from Richard to Rick. Goodbye mom and dad and the freshly ironed collegiate look of my College Park friends. Hello Woodstock generation.


I met Jean that fall at an extracurricular activity dubbed the “folk music workshop.” Once a week, a large group of young, tie-died men with long hair and young, braless women with even longer hair would gather to strum heavily on guitars and scream familiar tunes. It was not pretty. Talent was not important, only the memorization of chords and lyrics and a certain sixties, anti-war passion for singing loudly.


From amidst this paradoxically raucous group of peaceniks, I noticed her and she noticed me. We could both sing in tune. She knew Mary Travers’ parts and I knew Peter Yarrow’s. She knew Sylvia‘s, I knew Ian‘s. We soon yielded to our musical destiny and became Rick and Jean, stars of the small time.


The coffee house circuit was ours. Friends would follow and support us as we all knocked around the church basements of D.C. The smells of guitar case lining, burnt Maxwell House and flowery incense drew us like the release of a new Dylan album. What a rush it was to have the passion of our words and harmonies met with the energy and enthusiasm arising from candle-lit tables around us. After many of our performances, we and our entourage would often wander down Connecticut Avenue to top off our coffee with cigarettes and imported Loenbrau at the Old Stein. Other nights, we might all gather at someone’s apartment for wine coolers and a hash pipe. When the hour became late and friends became high, these parties could evolve into spontaneous, miniature sing-alongs. Confidence comes from knowing your fans and sharing in a collective inebriation. Or, we might just find our own corner and be with each other. In these dreamy, blurry-eyed states of consciousness, we would sit, face to face, absorbed in the blending of our voices and the touching of our bare feet. It was magic.


Despite the unique intimacy we often shared, Jean and I never really dated. We never had sex. Instead, we would talk, sing, argue and even walk holding hands. Every once in a while, during brief, coincidental lapses in our separate romantic lives, and after several beers and sweaty dancing to Steppenwolf, we might end up on an apartment balcony or a friend’s second-hand sofa, smooching our brains out. Our physical intimacies would always end there, however, and we would tease each other or simply laugh about what might have happened. No, I was always with this or that girlfriend, she was always with this or that guy….usually Glenn. He was awful to her but she remained loyal to him. Damn it.


After completing community college, I went off to finish my degree in Richmond, Virginia and Jean left to live with her sister in Phoenix. She never returned. It wasn’t that her decision was easy or that my frequent late night, long-distance pleading didn’t sway her. On more than one occasion, I nearly had her convinced. She had simply moved on, no doubt finding peace through a geographical distance from her destructive father and ugly reminders of her painful childhood. Over the many years since that fall of 1969, we remained dear friends. Jean flew east to be in my first wedding, I visited her home in Arizona, she once came to experience New England and see our beautiful autumn foliage and, after her first stroke, I would send her money for extras, even cigarettes. After her second stroke, she asked me to be her power of attorney. Her speech had become garbled and hard to understand, hard to hear. About a year later...another autumn, as the colors had mostly fallen to the cold earth and the first flurries blew harmlessly by, Jean suddenly died. Her brother identified himself on a voicemail, asking me to call. Just hearing his name and the tone of his voice, I knew. Although Jean’s car had hit a tree, they believed she was gone before impact. Another stroke. Her third stroke.


I have a cassette tape of a concert we gave on the campus of our former community college. It was the night of the Vietnam demonstration in Washington. You can hear the sound of guitars being strum too hard. You hear the audience at a fever pitch. You can hear the tears in Jean’s voice as she tearfully sang “Leaving on a Jet Plane,” knowing she would be returning to Arizona that next day. It took me several years to listen to that tape....or even play my Peter Paul and Mary cd‘s. I sometimes stare at my old Martin D-18, which I had named after her, and remember all the places that it had traveled with us. I did frame an old photo of the two of us for my wall. But it’s still feels all too new.


I’ve lost both parents and I am estranged from the rest of my family. I learned that Mike, my best high school friend, died much the same way Jean did. He and I had lost touch during my late 60‘s evolution, but I know now that he was a major influence in my life and beloved friend for many years. If I had known that then, I would have worked harder to stay connected, to bridge the gap between pressed khakis and bell-bottomed pants. I lost Annette, my close friend and cohort at Salem Hospital and frequent movie buddy, to cancer...her second bout with cancer. I’ve lost numerous dogs who brought me so much joy and kept me sane. But I don’t think any loss has hit me quite the same way that losing Jean has.


I somehow knew Jean would not live to old age. There had been something sad about her all along. The childhood abuse by her father, her failed marriages, her smoking and, finally, the cruelty inflicted by her imperfect brain cast a dark shadow over her otherwise bright spirit and playful sense of humor. But never did I ever consider that I would not see her again. Never. There was that promised reunion in Phoenix just as soon as a convenient opportunity to travel arose. There was her wish to revisit the splendor of fall foliage denied her by the relentless sameness of the southwest climate. I would talk, she would try to talk. We had always planned to see each other again.


In the thirty three years after Jean moved to Arizona, I think we actually saw each other a total of maybe seven or eight times. We exchanged phone calls maybe twice a year. We always ended with “I love you,” because we did. Over three decades, I have had several best friends, two wives and countless casual and professional relationships of note. I’ve lost touch with many of these people while a few have survived the rough terrain left by life’s changes. Still, with only these few exceptions, they are all living. They’re all out there. Should I wish to, I could call any one of them and say, “Do you remember when…..?”


But with Jean, all that is gone. All those memories. All those conversations. All the back-stage butterflies and rousing applause. All the excitement of just getting it right. I remember one night when admiring fans urged us onto a coffee house stage where we played for two hours in exchange for a few slices of pizza. I remember standing before two thousand people at a Richmond concert and nearly overcome with fear were it not for Jean standing next to me. I remember Jean, upon my telling her that I had located an even older, childhood friend, struggling to enunciate, “I’ve been usurped!”


What is undeniably and excruciatingly true, now, is that I am alone with these memories. I can tell you about these times and you might even find my stories amusing. Jean and I could remind each other of our times together and we could see, hear and even taste the same experience. At the end of the film, “A Mighty Wind,” Mitch and Mickey stand on stage once again. Their sound and presentation coming as naturally to them as a finely tuned dance team. The emotion is in their faces as they seem to avoid eye contact, probably afraid that their feelings will interrupt this perfect moment. I always had that feeling with Jean, even when we just talked, even when I just thought about her.


Shared memories, the magic of any meaningful relationship. The stuff that binds families as they individuate and grow apart. The invisible fabric of the safety net held by people who protect what they have together. When one lets go, that net falls and much of the safety is gone. The memories fall to the ground, never quite the same. This is a side to grief that I had not considered. I was not prepared. We all experience the stages of grief: denial, anger, blah, blah. And at that elusive point where we have come to terms with loss and supposedly found some resolution, there are still proverbial holes left in our proverbial lives. We have said goodbye to the loved ones, but how do we say goodbye to memories?


We don’t. We treasure them. We learn from them. We find greater value in making new memories as they unfold into new safety nets. We hold tight to our own ends, creating a taut but comfortable surface on which each other’s sorrows might land. And magically, until one end might fall, we might use that net as a broad, swaying hammock as we lie there separately, but knowing that we stare at the same clouds as they move gracefully by.



Saturday, July 23, 2011

Random Thoughts...

As we sweat through the hottest temperatures for Maine in many years, I am reminded of life in D.C. and Northern Virginia....where heat and humidity were constant and made worse by pollution and smog...to the point where one struggled to breathe....yes, we might reach 90 again today but...the sky is a beautiful blue with white puffy clouds and cool, dry air arrives tomorrow after only two days of discomfort....I'll take the blizzards with Maine summers like this...

Can't believe I spent much of my life not knowing about pesto....or avocados for that matter...my mom was a great cook...home cooked meals every freakin' day, bless her heart...but just the meat and potatoes variety. Makin' up for lost time now...

I've never been a television snob, you know? But man...has TV ever been this bad? There are a few excellent shows (The Closer, The Good Wife, Men Of A Certain Age, House) but do I really want to see David Hasselhoff and someone with the same name switch lives? Do I care about "real bitches of any county?" Do I care if really obese people get thinner and become celebrites on the Today Show? Thank God for baseball...that's all I can say...

And movies....all comic books....all CGI....all mediocre actors (are you listening, Jennifer Aniston?) in the same, hackneyed schmaltz....

At my office the other day, a mother was tickling her seven year-old into hysterics...Rusty jumped out of his nap, approached the mother and barked at her...protecting the kid! I'm almost sure he had children in his first home as he's always fascinated with babies crying, strollers, carriers, etc. Gotta love that boy...

If I drank all the Smirnoff raspberry coolers and Mike's Hard Limeade I wanted, I'd be headed to rehab...

Are Lester Holt and Brian Williams not just the best? Had Katie C. on a long leash for years...she's a UVA Alum ya know...but the evening news?

Speaking of news, it's very hard to watch these days...as our government ruins the country, as child murderers are set free, as celebrity news is considered news at all, as people starve around the world because of corrupt leaders, as the shuttle program ends, as stories about corporate and political greed are followed by those about unemployment and foreclosures...

I would so love to go to my office without socks...hate socks in the summer....and while wearing shorts....but it's just not professional....is it?

How do spiders connect a long thread of web from one bush or tree to another? Doesn't it get tangled along the way? I can't even manipulate plastic wrap without it becoming a ball of transparent frustration...

It's so disappointing when "friends" seem to drop out of sight when you stop doing favors for them, huh?

The show Frazier was just one of the best written, choreographed, and acted comedies of all time...I can watch repeats over and over and still laugh out loud...

Kinda sad to see Borders close....it was unwelcome to our community when it opened, but I was glad it was there....at one point I read that Maine had the most independent book stores per capita...but the really sad part is that book stores will probably all become extinct before long...

There is sometimes a very thin line between loving time to oneself and loneliness...the company of dogs makes the difference....

Now let me get this straight....I might lose my deductions for home mortgage and health care...I might lose my medicare benefits...so that rich assholes and their political body guards can avoid taxes altogether? Hmm...

Let's hear it for the tea party tea bags! They get alllllll this attention for being pretty and radical but they CAN'T WIN!! Cool! Meanwhile, real threats like pretty boy Mitt Romulan are ignored. Way cool!

The really scary part for me it that, right now, I trust no politicians of any party...none. It's all about getting elected and re-elected...which requires money...which requires favors...and guess who has the money?

The real proof that humans are evolving into, as Lewis Black said, "meat with eyes"? The Casey Anthony jury....

If you don't know of Amos Lee, investigate his music....great songs, great voice, great arrangements...just good, quality music. You won't be disappointed....

Time for lunch...


Friday, May 20, 2011

Little Shoes

Without question, the civilized world needs a way to regulate who among us are qualified to do certain things. It's our way of maintaining order you know. We need a license to do that! "I have my license!" One needs a license....to drive a vehicle, to cut hair, to buy beer, to sit in a boat drinking that beer while luring and killing fish, to run a hot dog stand, to operate a forklift, to carry a gun (legally, at least)...hell, even to dress up in cute little cammy outfits and kill animals in the woods (it's a sport!). Even my DOGS have licenses. And hell...after holding a license to practice psychotherapy in Massachusetts for almost 20 years, I had to earn a license to do the same thing in Maine. We can't be too careful. I love sitting in my licensed office, wearing an orange vest, rifle at my side, with my licensed dogs on my sofa (for which I pay excise tax every freakin' year).

And yet...one does not need a license to be a parent. There is no little framed embossed document to earn in order to roll around in a bed or the back seat of a Buick and get knocked up. Bam! We're pregnant. Buy the crib, buy the high chair, buy the diapers and animal crackers...a baby's coming. And so, anyone with a...well, you know what...can then assume the most important job on the face of the planet...raising a child. To be honest? I'd love to see a license necessary to become a parent. Haven't quite figured out the application process, but there would be one. It'll never happen, of course. We can't control who succumbs to impulse, to that extra wine cooler...or the wistful sounds of Johnny Mathis playing on the 8 track (dating myself here, but you get the idea). "You got protection?" "You on the pill?" "Um...no." WTF! "I LOVE you, baby." When I become ruler of the world, there will be a license to become a parent....somehow. I'll even make running over a squirrel a capital offense, but that's another story. And no one....NO ONE...with at least 10 extra pounds will be permitted to wear spandex. The world will be a much better place...I promise. But, in the mean time, we'll see squashed squirrels, over-stretched garments, and that young couple....he with his baseball cap on sideways, boxers showing above his loose, dark denim hanging around his thighs, wife-beater t-shirt barely covering his chains....she with her post-natal muffin top, tousled hair, and "Love Is Good Shit" tattoo...pushing a stroller carrying an ice-cream and booger-faced little chub-monkey that is theirs FOR LIFE! The joyful parents and little Tyler go for a walk. Where is that license...for me to be ruler of the world?

One recent night...or day...in the rural town of South Berwick, Maine...a mother...an unlicensed mother...stopped her car by the side of the road, got out, and dumped her son...her little son...in a ditch next to her car. She had suffocated him somehow. Imagine that. Imagine how she might have chosen...PREMEDITATED...how to do it. Imagine what he was thinking as he struggled and cried. Something had gone wrong somehow. Was he whining? Was he hungry? Was he just too much for mom to handle? Did he spill his milk? Did he want the toy truck so badly he screamed? Whatever it was, it was too much for poor mom. Poor unlicensed mom. What to do, what to do. What could have happened? I'll tell you what happened. A woman...one lost in a fugue of self-pity and helplessness...one lost in a moment of tortured, total narcissism...killed her child. And was that enough? No....she then treated him like a bag of McDonald's trash...like a full Buick ashtray...like an empty beer can...she dumped him out of her car. Refuse. Litter.

One of my colleagues at a hospital in Massachusetts...a quiet, easy-going woman....a talented social worker...returned from having her second child in just a few years. She looked tired, but happy. But what she admitted to us was that, with two small kids...two needy, crying kids, she "understood" child abuse. She would never act on those moments of feeling overwhelmed or jolts of temper, that is for sure. But she understood. It was a moment of honesty typical of her. And, as close as I can, not having had children, I understand. It is...appears to be...the most difficult and, again, important job anyone can take on.

Thank God there are choices. There are government agencies. There are clinics and hospitals. There are psychotherapists and pediatricians. There are crisis hotlines. There are options. And, so, what happens when a woman kills her little child and throws him away like an empty Marlboro wrapper?

Right now, I don't care. I know depression, personally and professionally. I know and treat people with incredibly ugly trauma histories. I've helped mothers with three kids, abusive husbands and menial jobs. These people are among my most admired, considering the pressures they had endured and the strength they mustered and the daunting choices they were forced to make. This woman? The one found at a rest area in her car? The one who took the life of a gorgeous little boy because it was just way too much work? I have no respect for her. No respect, no empathy, no tolerance, and no desire to share the air that my dogs and I breathe with her. Second degree murder my ass. Send in the Navy Seals one more time. She deserves no less and no better. Forehead.

Angry? You bet I am. I am so, so tired of this society's relative tolerance of child abuse and neglect...animal abuse and neglect...passive acceptance of domestic violence which still receives a tsk-tsk and a wink from our law enforcement...I could go on. And this woman...she can burn in hell in the same big hibachi as bin laden and Satan's hamburgers. They're both terrorists and murderers as far as I'm concerned. Why dicker over numbers.

And Camden Hughes? I wish you had been mine. I'd have bought you that toy truck. I'd have wiped up your milk. But that big golden retriever licking your face in heaven? He WAS mine!




Saturday, February 12, 2011

Searchers...

Gut: "Hey...here's one who sounds kinda interesting..."
Head: "Yeah, maybe...but look...she lives far, far away in another land..."
Gut: "Oh but look...she seems playful like me, intelligent, accomplished..."
Head: "But you know what a pain in the ass that distance can be...and if heart gets involved, only bad things can happen..."
Heart: "I can handle it..."
Head: "That's what you said last time!"
Heart: "I know...."
Another, deeper voice: "I think she's kinda sexy"
Gut: "Who said that?"
Head: "Stop it! Both of you! She's probably fat or dumb or something...."
Gut: "You're mean..."
Heart: "I think she sounds romantic...."
Deep voice: "And sexy..."
Head: "Imagine that long, boring drive...it doesn't make sense..."
Gut: "I know...but all this gets really tiring and tedious...I just have a feeling..."
Head: "You and your 'feelings'...."
Heart: "I'm bored..."
Deep voice: "Me too...."
Head: "Just keep looking...lots more kayaks and walks on the beaches to visit..."
Heart: "Okay...sigh...."
Gut: "Sigh...."
Deep voice: "Sigh...."