Saturday, December 28, 2013

Up Up and Away

Children growing up and out is the oldest story in the world.
So why does it catch me off guard?
What would you rather do: Send your 10-year-old daughter alone on an airplane to JFK International Airport in Queens, New York? Or send your 17-year-old daughter alone in a car to another state in the winter?
Yesterday, when my daughter drove herself 200 miles it was the first day sunshine broke through the wintery sky in weeks, so it seemed anyway. When you drive in the winter, you want the weather to be either obviously good or obviously bad so you can make travel decisions with certainty. It’s the in-between kind of weather that gets you, when you don’t realize how bad road conditions really are until you are miles down the interstate driving into the whiteout hoping your tires are actually gripping the slickety surface, too late to turn around, or no way to turn around. It’s the in-between kind of weather, when the midwestern machismo raises its head with accusations of weakness for those who change their plans for the weather.
Those are the days when I truly miss living on the East Coast, where they shut things down at one inch of snow, sometimes even with just simple rain. It was a cold, harsh reality when we moved back to Minnesota and I got in trouble for canceling on a meeting because I needed to drive 100 miles in 50 degrees below zero temperatures, counting the wind-chill. (Though my East Coast CEO supported my decision.)
Yesterday the sky was perfectly blue and sunny, so there was no question that the travel conditions would be good for my daughter. She’s an excellent driver and had saved up her money to visit friends. I’m so proud and impressed with the way she’s growing into a strong, confident young woman but still, I couldn’t help but to feel a lump in my stomach the entire afternoon. I tracked her on my smart phone GPS and it reminded me of the old days when she slept in a crib with an the electric baby monitor set up in her room, approximately 20 feet away from our kitchen. We’d listen to the receptor and worry about every little baby burp and grunt, wondering if we should intervene, aka interrupt her sleep. In hindsight I’m not sure those baby monitors are a good idea – too much information. But still, I followed the GPS all afternoon, getting frustrated when it didn’t work as fast as I wanted it too, almost falling for the gimmick to purchase the upgraded app.
The lump in my stomach reminded me of the time she was ten years old and got it into her head she wanted to fly alone to New York City for Christmas vacation. Her aunts and uncles would pay for the ticket, meet her at the airport, and treat her like a celebrity, so the decision was pretty much made my nerves notwithstanding. We researched the unaccompanied minor airline procedures (which I think they’ve cut out of the offerings by now) and got her ready to go. I remember at the time one of our mentors was the daughter of my former boss, who had spent a year after high school working in Beirut and then after college went on to live and work in the Gaza strip, the harshest little piece of land in the whole world (not the people, the living conditions, just to be clear). "Don't call her, she'll call you," our mentor advised. "Just let her experience the trip." You get an idea of our influences.
My favorite Christmas vacations are the ones where we are all holed up at home for a week, sleeping in, building ridiculously complicated Lego structures, watching insane amounts of TV. Maybe that style of winter break will come again but not this year. This year, I am working straight through the holidays. I am considering the change that is about to come upon us, that we are already in, that parents are always in starting the first moment children breathe without your help. My children are growing older and their lives are taking on new and interesting shapes, independent of me and Bob. It’s kind of scary, to be honest, but I’m working to move into it instead of against it. These days I don’t assume that my daughter will always be with me, but I’m always amazingly grateful when I ask her to be with me and she says yes.
Soon, when she actually moves to a different state, when she makes her own more complicated travel plans, when she makes her own decisions about choices I can’t imagine, we will need to be more deliberate to be together. She won’t just be driving a few days here, flying a few days there, or sleeping in the other room making sounds through the baby monitor. 
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Thank you for coming over to my blog. Wishing you and yours all the best for 2014.
With love from yours truly,
Natural Born Bleeding Heart

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Christmas Past and Present

Ghosts of Christmas Past, Brooklyn, New York, circa 1994
If there’s one thing that stands out in this picture it’s the French braid, and the fact that I used to wear my hair that way to my midtown Manhattan office. I realize it was lower Midtown, not Park Avenue but Park Avenue South, but still -- a French braid!
Maybe that’s why the people in Brooklyn called me farm girl even though I had never lived on a farm (though I wished I had, still do). It didn’t take me long to realize that New Yorkers glob everyone east of the Hudson River (basically the border between New York City and New Jersey) into one group. I don’t diss on New Yorkers, because I love them, married into a whole family system of them, just as I don’t diss on Midwesterners, because I am one and I “get” them/us. This post isn't about disrespecting anyone.
But it is about stereotypes, which became evident in our gift giving this year. Who are we? You can tell who we are by what we got for Christmas:
Bob: donuts, cookies, mixed nuts, candy bars
Aidan: a variety of Axe products, skateboard stuff
Amanda: cash, check, gift card, and another check
Me: faux fur gloves with touch screen receptacles (part of my Audrey Hepburn collection), wine and coffee products (though I'm trying to cut down on both, with mixed success)
There’s our current family in a nutshell. We’re pretty simple. Just happy to have a family.
The picture above is circa 1995, when Santa would come to Trinity Lutheran Church in Sunset Park Brooklyn to give toys to all the boys and girls (I think that’s what he was doing, anyway, if I remember right.) BTW, all those boys and girls are now teachers, doctors, designers, social workers, entrepreneurs, comedians, and have grown into adults that make any former youth worker's heart sing. I myself am portrayed in my most recognized state of being, even now, having just returned home from work, thus the hair band and matching pantyhose. For record, these days all my hair bands are black and I tend to opt for pants.
This is what the Christmas present looks like,
and it doesn't even come close to capturing the
magnificence of the music, the lights, the people,
the children, the stars, the story.
St. John's Lutheran Church,
Des Moines, Iowa.
To me that picture is totally dorky and I’d like to put it away, as I tend to not be in relationship with the past, but my 17-year-old Amanda likes it and wanted me to keep it. Speaking of that girl, I don’t know what I would do without her. She has basically turned into the Santa of the house in recent years. This year, even with her own hard earned money. She’s the one who keeps the gift giving alive, even as I am pretty ambivalent about it. In an all time low display of Christmas spirit, as she was wrapping her gifts to others, I wrote out a couple of checks, one to her (my gift giving style, of late) and asked her to wrap them and put them under the tree. She said it was exactly what she wanted.
My 14-year-old son, however, brought a white elephant gift to the youth group last week that was wrapped with a pile of our family junk mail (his idea of a joke) that included my recruitment letter from the Association for the Advancement of Retired People (AARP). So now all the kids at church know my advancing age and they all thought it was quite funny. And I thought I was tricking them all into believing I am forever 49-something. I am certainly not tricking myself. AARP seems pretty intent on signing me up and it doesn't seem like a bad idea.
Soon, in celebration of being home together, my very favorite activity, we will be playing our VHS tape of “The Sound of Music” starring Julie Andrews and eating a mega-sized bag of pizza roles. The theory is that some of us will like the movie, others the food. It’s not easy finding a movie that we can all dig with our four personalities, but if you include an appetizer bribery it usually works. For me, I can’t get enough of this togetherness, and more and more, it’s a rare occurrence.
Tomorrow its back to the office for me. For some reason, even when I’m the only one who must get up and out, when others in the household have time off it still feels like a holiday. My colleagues have been great about making the office feel like togetherness, even in the midst of writing four massive applications to fund domestic violence services, etc. (Last night, Christmas Eve, a 34-year-old woman was shot and killed in her home in Des Moines, the 13th homicide of the year in Des Moines, at an address where police had been dispatched five times previously for domestic disputes. There was no information if children witnessed it, but they often do. I don't see how assault, battery, and predatory gun violence can be called a "dispute" but that's just me, hung up on words.)
But if there’s one thing I can assure you about my work day tomorrow it is this: I will not be wearing a French braid. (These days I go for the French clasp. Easier.) But I remain an excellent French braid stylist, so let me know if you'd like one or two in your hair.  

This is just a quick post to check in and wish you and yours a wonderful holiday, whatever you celebrate, however long or short you have to do what you love the most. 
With love from yours truly,
Natural Born Bleeding Heart

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Margaret, Queen of Healing



Margaret with her royal aura dares you
not to pity her, nor her slums, 
nor her continent.
Here's a link to related post
and awesome photo.
I was saddened to hear about the train crash in Nairobi's Kibera slum and found it ironic that I heard this news report as I concluded my early morning writing session that had taken me to another Nairobi slum, Kangemi. I'm kind of a believer in signs, so I took this coincidence as a signal to post about the lovely and incredible Kenyan, The Rev. Margaret Obaga, one who will be well recognized by seminary friends. Below is a short excerpt from a chapter I'm working on about how Margaret helped us deal with the awful retching that afflicted Bob when his liver failed. There was a horrible physicality to Bob's illness, that was beautifully met by one who survived her own horrific physical procedure, inflicted upon her at the age of 12. 
An excerpt:
“Get me a brown paper bag,” she said to me in her quiet yet forceful voice. Margaret stood about five feet tall, but when she talked, people listened. Even my kids listened. Her angelic baby face belied her power, which was firm like hard earned wisdom. While I was deferential to authority, Margaret commanded it. I got her a brown paper bag.
Margaret was from Nairobi, Kenya but during Bob’s illness, she and her family lived down the hall. “If I were home, I would put dirt on the bottom but we’ll just use flour. Get me some flour.” I retrieved a half-used bag of flour from the kitchen cupboard.
“Dust the flour on the bottom of the bag,” she instructed me, as if she knew exactly what to do in times of coughing, retching, and vomiting. While I had to play mind games with myself to separate the ugly illness from the human being, Margaret seemed perfectly at ease in the presence of affliction. If she was revolted by Bob’s skeletal appearance and egg-yolk eyes, she didn’t let on. Instead, she leaned close into Bob and held the bag for him as he twisted his tonsils to gag up bile, and more bile, and more.
When I first noticed Margaret on campus the previous year, I’d been in awe because I recognized her from the headshot that went with an article she’d published in TheLutheran magazine on the topic of banning female genital mutilation, based on her own true story (September 2005, You need a paid subscription to access full article. Get it!). I considered this writing courageous but even though we had turned into sister friends, I had not mentioned I read her article. Her writing seemed too private. It was before I considered myself a writer but I still had the sense that writers didn’t always wish to discuss their published work.
The piece was entitled, “It is not for someone to take this away” which was printed with quotes around it, her exact wording as if she was talking out loud. I can hear her voice. Her writing is chilling yet direct, describing the ritual she had participated in when she was 12 years old: “The next day you go to the river and dive in, for the cold has a numbing effect. Then you face the knife. In my day it was the same knife for all of us. You aren’t allowed to cry. When they cut your clitoris off, there’s singing.” She goes on to write that a her younger sister refused to be circumcised a few years later, that her mother had come to learn it was wrong, that her daughter is not circumcised, and that “Today women in Kenya are rising up against female circumcision and calling it FGM (female genital mutilation) because it mutilates the system God gave us to enjoy.”
I wonder if her wisdom and power comes from that experience. At 12 years old she obediently complied with tradition. A few years later, she started asking questions. Today she is an activist.
I also did not confess to Margaret that I searched her name on the internet and learned that she had organized street girls in Nairobi’s immense slums for health and education. Long before I met Margaret I’d learned how vulnerable girls were in Nairobi’s slums, because the study tour itineraries I planned in my day job included meetings with Kenyan human service groups. I had once visited Kangemi, just one of the city’s six sprawling slums with a population of 100,000 people or so, circa 2000. I had met teenagers who were orphaned by HIV/AIDS, or their parents were drug addicts, or prostitutes, or for whatever reason, they were alone. I remember marveling at how well pressed their clothes were, right there in the heart of the slum. They had all wanted my email address.
While other people may have seen Margaret as just another student, I saw her as special, even one with extraordinary abilities. A prophetess. A healer. I had an idea of the immensity of her accomplishments, even though her home church and possibly even the immediate community around us, did not. While Margaret had earned her Masters of Divinity degree, her denomination in Kenya would not ordain her because she was a woman.

 And yet, Margaret with her royal aura dared you not to pity her, nor her slums, nor her continent.
*
Touche'! I feel that last sentence is one of the best I've ever written, if I do say so myself. Thanks much for coming over. Your best thoughts and prayers for the development of rest of this chapter is much appreciated. 
With love from yours truly,
Natural Born Bleeding Heart

Friday, December 20, 2013

Sk8r boy in bell choir

Hello friends, here's an excerpt from a post I was grateful to write for the Living Lutheran:

I also like to watch one particular bell choir member, my son, the 14-year-old skater boy with long curly hair and dude attitude. On a Sunday morning when they ring, as soon as I find my place on a red cushioned pew, usually packed with people, I look up to see him. We make eye contact. He’s always watching to see if I’m watching. We give our secret little wave. I burst with maternal joy, yet resist the urge to record him and the choir of choirs on my iPhone because the experience is too tremendous to capture.

We call him “skater boy” because that’s what he is. This ninth-grade kid could spend hours and hours on downtown streets with his be-hooded, long-haired friends and respective skateboards. They skate in empty parking ramps and in front of the Y that’s soon to be demolished. I’d much rather see him involved in some kind of structured activity like, say, swimming or drama or cross country or band. He’s interested in none of these things, no matter how many times I inquire, no matter what incentives he’s offered.

With thanks to the fabulous people at Living Lutheran, I invite you to read this full post at: http://www.elca.org/en/Living-Lutheran/Blogs/2013/11/131121

Sunday, December 8, 2013

That Monday Feeling

Today after church Bob had two meetings, one with a family planning a baptism and one with a family planning a funeral. I admit that sometimes I envy the way his vocation allows these kinds of intimacies with strangers, joining with people for the most important events of their lives. It seems to keep them bonded forever in some way as in years later identifying each other according to the event, "he baptized our baby" or "I buried their mother."

My biggest decision today is whether to bake biscuits or blog. Our old house is drafty and the fireplace ignition has worn down, so there's not much to keep us warm except layers of sweaters, the electric pad on our bed, and the kitchen candles lit for at least the illusion of warmth. (An old trick from one of my college roommates when we lived in a small tailor house insulated like a tin can on a South Dakota prairie. "There are universities in South Dakota?" I was asked once when I lived in New York City, but that's another story.)

Baking is another way to keep warm. My apron fits over my sweatered layers and I occasionally stick my hands in the oven for a burst of heat. A fresh pot of coffee helps too. Afternoon coffee is my Sunday indulgence, to give you an idea of how easily pleased I am these days. Or maybe I'm difficult to please, depending on how you look at it. Bob would probably say I'm hard to please because I always like the bedroom window open six inches while we sleep, he prefers it open four inches. I slide it to six inches before I slip into the heated bed. He comes in later, shuts it to four inches. I get up in the middle of the night, slide it back to six inches. And so on. Our window dilemma may be one way to understand the bottom side of marriage, or the underside of human relationships in general -- we're much more alike than different yet we dither back and forth about two inches instead of keeping eyes on the prize: fresh air.

Or possibly the window is an indicator of my poverty of spirit -- I'm not thinking about the things of birth and death, I'm trying to warm my house while also feeling the precise amount of frigid air that my lungs and pores crave. I'm thinking about Monday morning and back to work that, I suppose, is also about the big things in life, somewhere down the line. Last week at church my friend Ed and I talked about "that Sunday feeling" of dread about Monday morning. It's the opposite of "that Thursday feeling" of hope for the weekend. Monday morning is icy fingers plucking you from the warmth of imagination and and into the cold of routine. Maybe the trick is to hard wire your brain to link Monday with the things of meaning. It is, of course, but the hard part is to feel it.

For now, I'm focused on baking biscuits, ala my Betty Crocker cookbook. That's it.

Thank you, friends, for coming over to my blog. Stay safe and warm.

With love from yours truly,

Natural Born Bleeding Heart


Saturday, November 30, 2013

Josephine's diagnosis


These things came in so handy
when we lived in student
housing at Luther Seminary.
With a coin operated launderette in the
basement, I wished I had my own
washer and dryer. Now that I have
my own washer and dryer, I wish they
were located closer to my bedroom,
proving that whatever you have,
you always want more. How easily I
forget about the days when I had
to load up the laundry into my car
and haul it all to another building
or even a different town. 
Hello lovely readers, since yesterday's post was pretty brutal and since I am still basking in holiday lollygag, I thought I'd post this story about a sweet and tart woman we knew in seminary, Josephine, particularly about how she was the very first person to diagnose Bob's liver failure, one day while we did laundry together. We've lost track of her and her family, but we still send her all our very best over time and distance. The story is a work in progress. Thanks for coming over to my blog. Cheers!  
*
At first, Bob spent a lot of time in bed, as if he had the flu. But he had no flu symptoms, so it was as if he was simply tired, or perhaps depressed. I was one of those people who believed that people could induce depression upon themselves to avoid reality. (I’m not anymore.) Still, I could see no evidence that Bob’s condition was serious unless wanting to sleep all the time was serious, which is how it presented to me at first. The urgent care doctor said he had bronchitis and prescribed antibiotics. The bronchitis wasn’t letting up, so they prescribed more antibiotics. Then they thought he had C. difficile and prescribed steroids.
Bob was an athletic 6’1” man, and not a sickly man. He’d always had a hearty appetite and an active interest in sports. Mostly, I didn’t think about the sleeping as sleeping, I thought about it as avoiding me and the responsibilities of the household, or finding a job that would help support the household. At the time we were living in student housing at Luther Seminary where Bob had graduated with his Master of Divinity degree three months previously. Technically our family was supposed tuo be on our way out of the apartment and off the campus. In fact most of our belongings were packed in boxes for exactly such a move although we had nowhere to go. We were awaiting Bob’s “call,” the process for Lutheran pastors to be matched with a congregation. Another way to see this process is a paying job acquired through a convoluted system of announcements and assignments not unlike the NFL draft process. (Much later, when Bob did receive his call, it actually did somehow transform into a real "call" to me, in a spiritual sense.)
The fact that Bob was not getting a call, or any ideas for a call, or any leads for a call was exploding inside me. My frustration was exasperated by the fact that Bob was in bed sick for over a week, which meant I was doing all the parenting and household tasks myself. I was trying to be a bigger person, but I wasn’t. I was a bitter person. We were on the edge of homelessness, the apartment was in shambles with half-packed boxes, two young children, and no plan. (Amanda was 10 years old and Aidan was seven.) Bob had always been the stalwart housekeeper, washing dishes and mopping floors. He approached housework like he did sports, as a physical outlet; he’d always been pre-disposed to being super on task with daily duties. However, during August of 2006, when he wanted to lay in bed all day and all night, all the duties all fell to me. It sounds trite now as I write about it years later, but I remember our apartment as disheveled as our future together. After Bob graduated in May 2006, things were supposed to come together for our family but instead they were falling apart.  
That also meant the laundry was piling up because Bob was the family launderer. He had a system that I’d learned not to interrupt. Our building had a laundry room in the basement the size of a small commercial launderette. It held a line of coin-fed washers on one side, a line of dryers on the other side, and one sturdy table in the middle, big enough for six people to stand around and fold their washed and dried laundry. At the far end of the room was a broken down TV, dilapidated chairs, and wonky wheeled toys, the looks of a formerly nice space to spend time while waiting for the spin cycles to end. It could be a space for young children cramped in apartments to stretch and play during the long winter months. More and more, it became a space to dry clothes for families who didn’t want to drop quarters into the dryers. Racks were set up and lines were strung for that purpose. I always thought air drying seemed an economical way to manage the laundry, but not Bob. With his rolls of quarters garnered for just this purpose, he used the dryer to its fullest extent, drying everything completely. He didn’t believe in putting up with damp or hard clothing in order to save money. We didn’t have a garage or basement, so it was almost like the laundry room became Bob’s “man cave,” if you will. It was a place for him to escape his studies and do something tactile. He had always felt more comfortable working with his hands instead of sitting at a desk.
Because Bob was usually the one in our family doing the laundry, he was the one who met others in our building who were like-minded about the washing clothes, or at least with the frequency. It was through a quirky laundry room relationship that we were first introduced to the notion, just 10 days into his illness, and after several trips to urgent care, that perhaps there was something wrong with his liver.
Our building housed students and their families from many countries around the world, giving us all occasions to both celebrate and question each other's cultural differences. Oftentimes when Bob returned from the basement laundry room, he would tell me that he bumped into Josephine from Indonesia, who lived on the second floor. Her black shiny straight hair, red lipstick, blue eye shadow, and smooth brown complexion were neatly ordered for every occasion, including washing dirty clothes. She knew the unique personalities of each machine and offered free advice on which ones would waste the most quarters and which ones would get the clothes most clean and most dry. No matter how many times they met in the basement wash room, Josephine was perplexed about my function in the household. “So what does your wife do?” she quizzed him every time.
We all unwittingly violate cross-cultural discretion, mostly without knowing, and one of Josephine’s indiscretions was that she asked a lot of questions, mostly on the topic of domestic roles. I grew up believing that you weren’t supposed to be nosy about other families and the nature of others’ relationships was none of my business. Josephine had no such predisposition. When we planted the community garden in the spring Josephine couldn’t believe that I was turning soil and Bob was not.
“Where is Bob?” she had asked, standing at the edge of my plot, her petite frame perfectly coiffed for manual labor, looking at me with earnest intent waiting for a response.
“He’s washing the dishes,” I said. In fact, he had been at that very moment.
“Bob washes the dishes?” Josephine responded, with the utmost sincerity and curiosity. “And what do you do?”
“I plant the garden.” I had no other way to explain it. We never got the feeling that Josephine was prying into personal matters intentionally. We knew she was simply trying to understand. Oftentimes when Bob returned from the laundry room he had a story about Josephine’s questions and it often made me laugh, not at her, but at her bold curiosity and the way Bob would describe it. I suspected that Josephine adored Bob because he listened to her, returned her questions, and genuinely befriended her. And because she had never met a man before who took laundry so seriously.
One morning about two weeks into Bob’s constant sleeping, kids in school, Bob in bed, I took a break from office work (I worked a nine to five job from home) and made a quick trip to the laundry room with a heaping basket of the kids’ soiled clothing and blankets, still holding out that Bob would improve soon enough to do his own laundry, the way he liked it to be done. I rolled the wheeled basket into the launderette, Josephine was there. Impeccably dressed as always, she folded clothes on the big table.
When Josephine saw me, she instantly knew something was different. She was well aware that Bob did our laundry, not me.
 “Where is Bob?” She cut right to the point. “Did he get a call?”
“He’s not feeling well,” I said.
I wanted to start my three washer loads of stinky clothes and skedaddle. I didn’t want to small talk, which is one of the reasons I had been grateful for Bob’s willingness to do the laundry. He is gifted at chatting with people, anytime, anywhere. I’ve come to learn recently, thanks to my therapist, that I’m extremely left brained, the other side of creative. However, I don’t consider myself as much analytical and logical like left-brainers get credit for, I'm mostly just plain old practical. I look to get things done and check off my list. That morning with Josephine in the launderette, I wanted to get the stuff in the washing machines and get back to my desk. I would not have shared the details of Bob’s physical status, but Josephine was being herself and she asked questions.
“What are his symptoms?” Josephine further inquired.
“He has a bad case of bronchitis,” I said, only because she asked. “He’s sleepy, can’t eat, can’t get out of bed.”
 “It’s the liver,” Josephine said in her sharp, choppy, Indonesian accent. “It will be long time. Six weeks.”
I was astonished by her speedy diagnosis. She was so decided in her analysis that I believed her, yet I didn’t want to believe her because six weeks seemed a lifetime. I was barely surviving ten days of this, added on to three months since Bob’s graduation, and five months since other classmates had received their “calls.” I can’t exactly remember how I responded, but I’m pretty sure I didn’t tell Bob about this meeting with Josephine right away. I didn’t want her to be right, but of course in looking back, she was. Except Bob wouldn’t be sick for six weeks, but six months. At the time I had no idea how petty I was to agonize over ten days. You can do anything in ten days. There’s plenty of people who would say you can do anything in six months. When you’re super practical, like me, stalled time is one of the worst things that can happen, no matter how short.  

Josephine’s two little daughters were not twins but they were named liked twins, Jeffy and Jesse. They looked alike and often dressed as princesses with fluffy blue and pink crinoline miniature gowns shipped from extended family in their home country. Wearing thick eye-glasses that seemed to produce nasally voices, the girls also asked me a lot of questions whenever I saw them in the hallway. They were so cute and, like their mother, so sincere, I tried to slow down in my sensible daily routine to consider their questions: Why are you wearing your pajamas in the daytime? Who does the dishes? When will Bob get better? ~

Friday, November 29, 2013

A movie review, of sorts

Hello Friends, a little time off, a family-movie night gone 
wrong, and we've got ourselves a blog post. 
Alternate title: when teenagers, parents, 
and sex enter the family room.
After a glorious Thanksgiving day of cooking and home time, we cozied up with family movie-night, a rare opportunity together for Bob and me and our two teenagers. My favorite bonding posture is on the sofa, with my daughter to the right, my son to the left. (Bob, whose doppleganger is Ed O'Neill, in his recliner is a given.) Blankets, footstools, cats, and kiddos settled into a cozy family room of holiday togetherness, we turn on the movie – “We’re the Millers” with Jennifer Aniston and Jason Sudeikis. It didn’t take long for the boredom to set in as evidenced by me turning on my Kindle, my 17-year-old daughter opening up her laptop, and Bob, who was already cranky from a spider-induced infection, to voice his annoyance about the script. The only one who wasn't completely bored was likely our 14-year-old son, but my guess is he split his time between wanting to laugh hysterically and blush profusely. The mixture of responses (boredom, annoyance, blushing, and laughing) was magnified during the scene when the movie dialogue went something like this:
“You suck his dick.”
“No, you suck his dick.”
“I’m not sucking his dick, you suck his dick.”
You get the idea. (So sorry to include this raunchy movie clip on this post, but it helps make my point.) Where do I begin? As parents, we haven’t been much into censoring our kids’ films and books. In fact my daughter had already seen this movie and thought it would make for a fun family togetherness. She meant well, but I think she decided that watching the “dick” scene with her parents wasn't so funny after all. (I’ve done that plenty of times – remembered a movie as innocent fun but then realized when watching it with mixed company that maybe not.) Still, I don’t think banning movies is the answer. (I watched “Due Date” with my son twice. We both liked it a lot.)
My problem isn’t so much about the vulgarity, although there is that. My problem is more about the lack of creativity. The poorly written screenplay. The jokes that relied so heavily on crude sexual references, that they were not funny. If I’m going to give two hours of my precious free time, I want to experience innovation and, if possible, even artfulness. Not trying to be a snob, but I’m desperate for cleverness and beauty as one who has so little leisure time and so much routine. I crave inventiveness.
Besides the unoriginal plot and horrible writing, the other thing that bothers me more and more, in the 51 years of my life and counting, is the objectified position of women whether it be in movies, on TV, in the workplace, or in the world. After “We’re the Millers” was over I asked my kids why Jennifer Aniston (and/or her body double, if she had one) had to remove her clothing when Jason Sudeikis did not? And all the questions about the Hollywood treatment of women vs. men. “You don’t see Tom Hanks stripping,” I said. “You don’t see movie posters zooming in on penises.” My kids were pretty horrified, at that point of our family movie night.
And then there’s the racism (in this case, specifically how Mexicans are portrayed as illegals hiding underneath RVs to cross the border or as corrupt officials who can be bribed through, say, oral sex, aka the aforementioned dialogue). And to top it all off, the movie utilizes an exaggerated Minnesota accent to convey stupidity and ignorance. (You betcha, I’m from Minnesota, one of the most progressive states in the U.S.A.) And the formulated characters, the requisite reoccurring supporting-role-family-in-RV-with-extreme-Minnesota-speak who act as extreme foils for the bad-ass main characters, lobbing like softballs the lines and situations for gratuitous laughs that don’t at all move the story forward. (Minnesota-accent mother feeling Jennifer Aniston’s breasts in the camping tent and then so excited, as if she’s won the hotdish bake-off in her church basement, that she’ll never wash her hands again – give me a break.)  As my Minnesota mother would say, “Uffda.” As I would say, I have known so many church-basement-sounding ladies who have rocked so many complicated global solutions. Supposing that women who sound like "Minnesota church ladies" are unworldly, is unfair and untrue. I hate that stereotype.
But it’s not just his movie. I have nothing against this film per say. My problem is with so many attitudes and so many ways that women are degraded, immigrants are humiliated, and images of sex fall far short of anything close to intimacy. The thing is, I can let all these things go and take a stronger stand in our next family movie selection. But what I really want to do is to arrange for my kids to un-see this movie, and to un-hear all the influences that come their way that tell them that women are dirty, that Mexicans are drug dealers, that sex is grubby.
There’s a snarky side of me that seeks to dig up the actual movie script of “We’re the Millers.” To print out three copies and sit with my two teenagers around the dining room table. There would be pizza rolls and soda pop. We would take turns reading the script aloud, line by line. Besides being awfully embarrassed, my kids would be subject to hearing me rip to shreds the quality of the writing, in the off chance they didn’t see it for themselves. I’d have them rewrite the lines, rewrite the movie, rewrite every scene in their lives when they hear something demeaning or hateful.
However, I’m a believer in parenting through positive experiences and reading that script line by line would be torture for all of us.
I’d like to let it go. I’d prefer to enjoy my glorious days of holiday break before moving on to our normal lives of crazy busy, as we will come Monday. But the mother inside of me can’t. Not sure what I’ll do, but it will probably involve some sort of comfort food and discussion that my kids will dread. It may turn into a one-way conversation, a lecture delivered by me, about respecting women, loving our neighbor, seeking authentic human relationships. My influence is so small, but I have to try, gosh darn.
Thanks much for coming over to my blog. I wish you all a lovely and sane Thanksgiving weekend. 
With love from yours truly,
Natural Born Bleeding Heart



P.S. If you saw this movie and you liked it, feel free to dispute me. I’m not posting this to judge you or anyone. I’m posting this to consider my parental choices.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Is that the sun or is it your smile?

In honor of my dentist's birthday, I'm posting a blog post I wrote last year (October 3, 2012), about my trip to the chair.
True confession, I plagiarized that blog post title. I totally stole it from my dentist, who happens to be a writer. Yes, you read that right, my oral health practitioner is a writer. My tooth doctor blogs. My cavity healer tells stories.

"I didn't know you had a dentist," you might be saying.

Valid point. Before noon today, I didn't. So you can imagine how relieved I was when Dr. Snavely told me that his office is not a judgemental one. He assured me of unconditional acceptance after I told him it's been a while since I'd last been to the dentist. (Six or 15 years, however you want to count it.) It was a relief to know that I wouldn't be reprimanded for my sinful oral health behavior. Seriously.

And then Dr. Snavely invited me to wear dark sunglasses. That's the part I liked the most. Those shades protected my eyes from the florescent lights while looking straight up to the ceiling during the exam. But they also protected my dignity in light of such pathetic preventative dental history. I could write a whole meditation on my personal dental life story, but we'll save that for later. (Or you could chat with my mom). The dark glasses kind of covered it all up, at least metaphorically. Or at least they helped me relax.

It has been six years (or 15 however you count it) since I'd last seen a dentist before today, and dang, things have changed. Not only was Dr. Snavely kind, gentle, and non judgemental -- he was all high tech. He has this camera on the end of a stick that shows images on a computer screen right in front of you. So as he describes the condition of each tooth and surrounding maladies, you can see it live on the screen. It is an information geek's dental daydream: to observe the inside of your mouth in live time with dynamic commentary by a trained expert who can explain the status of your inner mouth in terms you can understand.

You're right, I don't have a dentist. I have a decay whisperer.

Which brings me back to the issue of plagiarism. You see, Dr. Snavely not only practises dentistry, he also writes about it. Like all writers, he seeks to understand it, to explore it, to share it. Today I ran across a piece whereby he mentions a couple teeth whitening methods in a post called, "Is that the sun or is it your smile?" (Title, here.) How could I not steal that blog post title? How could you not want a dentist who would write that? Plus, I seriously didn't know that teeth whitening was available to regular folk like me but now that I am dental empowered, I'm thinking about it. I'd like to have sparkly white teeth.

All this to say, if you're in Greater Des Moines and looking for a dentist. I have a recommendation. Check it out: http://www.snavelyfamilydentistry.com/2011/05/is-that-the-sun-or-is-it-your-smile/

Thanks for coming over to the Charmer Blog.

Cheers, T

Thursday, September 12, 2013

School Office Conundrum

She's a senior in high school now, but here she is in fifth grade,
otherwise known as her duck tape stage,
when she hand crafted purses, wallets, skirts, and other items
from sturdy, sticky strips.
My daughter is now a senior at Roosevelt High School in Des Moines. Here's a post from a year ago, when she started her junior year. I feel the awe of parenting.


One of her toddler dresses was the color of watermelon. Green and pink with white zig zag piping and black dots like seeds. It had a matching hat. I miss those cute little girl smock dresses my daughter used to wear. We pass through a department store children's section and I still long to buy another one today. She was cute then.

But you know what? She is fun now. As it turns out, the teen years offer as much innocence and inadvertent humor as the pre-school years when my girl would wonder about things such as, "Why are we going the right way?"

These days the funny material comes from her newest thing: working the principal's office during first hour in school. Answering the phones. Helping the secretaries. Filing paperwork. Coordinating students. Typical office stuff. My interest is surely self serving because I've done so much office work in the past 20 years or so. But still, she cracks me up with reports like:

"Mom, they gossip a lot in that office."

and

"Mom, people call crazy mad about the bus company and I have nothing to do with the bus company."

and

"Mom, we had to pass out student ID's this week and it was a madhouse."

and

"Mom, it took me a while to figure out how to transfer calls and I think I hung up on some people."

Sounds pretty normal to me. I have mixed feelings about her office work. On one hand I'm glad she can get the experience. On another, I hope she gets a dose of it then runs as fast as possible in the other direction. I'm reminded why I rarely answer my own phone anymore. My tenure of office work plum burned me out of answering phones, never knowing what the caller was going to say, always knowing that I had to figure out on the spot a way to answer even if there wasn't really an answer. You spin a response on the spot. Receptionist linguistic Olympics. I think I've really made it because I don't have to answer the phone in my current job. For my daughter it goes something like this.

Her: "Roosevelt High School, student speaking, how may I help you?"

Caller: "The bus is late! I want to talk to the principal!"

Her: "The principal is on another line with the bus company."

Caller: "The X@#!% bus is late, I want to talk to the principal now!"

Her: "The principal is on another line resolving the issue with the bus company right now. Can I put you into her voice mail?"

Caller: "The X@#!% bus is late, put me on with the principal!!!"

Her: "But if I put you through, the principal will have to discontinue her conversation with the bus company and thus, not resolve the issue, which is probably the very same issue you are calling about." (OK, she didn't really say that but just thought that response out loud to me.)

That was her first day answering the phones, also her first day of 11th grade.

The only problem is she answers phones during first period, which is the same period that I usually call the school to say that my kid will be late (most always because of me being late in getting her there). Do you see my conundrum? My kid is now the one answering the phone line you call when your kid is going to be late. And the reason your kid is late is because you had to pour another cup of coffee, feed the cats, change your shirt, sleep five more minutes, check Facebook, or whatever valid reason.

The other day my daughter told me that one of her classes was discussion non-verbal communication and political speeches. The teacher showed convention speeches of Paul Ryan and Bill Clinton. They observed the uses of hand gestures and eye contact. "Those guys like to point," she said. But towards the end she was loosing interest in the long speeches, she said.. She was falling asleep in class and apparently wasn't too impressed by Clinton's spellbinding command of relevant factoids. I admit to unabashedly watching every minute of the Democratic National Convention I could, like an idealistic big-eyed puppy who cuddles up close to the we're-all-in-this-together mentality.

Since my daughter and I were on the topic of convention speeches I mentioned that Iowan Zack Walls would be speaking. "He's the one who testified at the Iowa legislature about having two mom's," I said to my speech-analyzing daughter. "Remember, it went viral on You Tube."

She said Paul Ryan was charismatic and could really hold a crowd. "Paul Ryan talked about marriage a lot," she said.

And then it was a slow motion moment. You know, when you see something click. When the air shifts and the person you're with stops and thinks "wait a minute" in a cartoon bubble above her head.

"Wait a minute," she said, "What do they say about marriage?"

As in who can and who can't, who's legitimate and who's not, who's in and who's out. As in, she got to that glorious place beyond the non-verbal communication and wanted to explore the real communication. What are they all really saying? She knows and loves gay cheerleaders, got a good dose of anti gay bullying talk at the ELCA Youth Gathering, plus we watch Glee and have friends at church in committed relationships. So civil equality genuinely holds her interest.

I think in that moment, she realized that a single word can mean two things, depending on who says it and what their record is. Details matter. Marriage on prime time this week was way different than marriage on prime time last week. And I didn't even get a chance to chat with her how different again marriage is in the Bible. (Put it this way: definitely not one man, one woman.)

My lunch break was going long and I had to rush back to my office. I would've loved to continue the conversation because for that moment, she was into the discovery.

I remember another adorable toddler dress. It was light blue denim and had layers of ruffles. Like a denim wedding cake she wore with sneakers. The dress was play-in-the-dirt sturdy so she could rough around while still looking cute. She always was that blend of girly and its anti. A be-ribboned cheerleader who slobs around on weekends. She used to painstakingly dress up her Barbies and then methodically rip off their heads. Presently, we have a box full of decapitated dolls in the garage. We have a house full of dilapidated hair paraphernalia tucked in corners and drawers.

Who knows what children think or how they'll turn out? I have a lot of hopes, but really I have no idea. For now I'm simply enjoying the ride, grateful for every moment. These days when I need a little laugh all I have to ask is this: "So how was the office today?" I might get a some gossip, the transcript of a nutty phone conversation, or I might hear something like this:

"Mom, I like office work but I don't think I'll sign up next semester. I'm taking a class instead."

Huh? It took me decades to get to that place.

Thanks for coming over to my blog.

With love from yours truly,

Natural Born Bleeding Heart


Cheers, T

Friday, September 6, 2013

My War Shelf

This week for fun I reorganized my books and realized we have a war section in the living room. Since we are already talking about the next tax-paid conflict, I thought I'd pass along this excellent reading selection, straight from our living war shelf.

Here goes, from left to right on this picture:

The Bottom Billion, by Paul Collier (This book is not explicitly about war, but rather about the reasons why a billion people on this planet remain in desperate poverty, mostly due to reasons around war. The author is an Oxford Economist, so you could say this is almost like an international socio-economics textbook).

The Forever War, by Dexter Filkins (This New Yorker writer has much experience in Afghanistan and Iraq. He writes like a reporter, not so creative, but super wonky if you're into analysis. Plus, have you ever thought how a team of soldiers defecates while doing house to house searches? He describes it in detail, and it ain't pretty.)

Memories in Mosaic, edited by Maria Lopez Vigil (Letters and stories leading up to the assassination of Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero, smack dab in the middle of presiding over communion, aka, body and blood of Jesus Christ, paid for my the tax dollars of yours truly.)

Jarhead by Anthony Swofford (U.S. Marine writes about his tour in Iraq. He's such a good writer that he went on to Iowa Writer's Workshop after he returned. You probably already know that the Iowa Writers Workshop is the premier writing program in the world. Yes, the world. Anyway, I really liked this book, probably because I love the literary memoir style so much. He's written a couple more books, which are on my list.)

The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien (Critically acclaimed memoir about Vietnam. The book is a collection of stand alone essays that work together to tell a greater story. It's exquisite. You must read this book.)

War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, by Chris Hedges (If you can only read one book on this list, I'd say read this one. Author talks about his addiction to war, why we love war, and how he got out of the business of war. Since he's a classics scholar, he weaves in a lot of Roman and Greek mythology into his writing.)

Romero, a VHS-tape of my hero, Archbishop Oscar Romero, starring the late, great Raul Julia. (See earlier reference, Memories in Mosaic.)

All I Could Be, My Story as Woman Warrior in Iraq, by Miyoko Hijiki (Someone, send this book to Reese Witherspoon for her next movie project. Thank goodness there's at least one book written by a woman who served in combat, and combat she did, and writer she is. It was such an honor to meet this Des Moines-based author. Since I have her book on my e-reading gadget, she was prepared with this nice postcard of her cover art, the opposite side includes a personal inscription. I'm so honored. This book is so important and I hope you read it.)

Also, because I link propaganda to war:

A Handmaiden's Tale by Margaret Atwood
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (which I admit, I need to read)
Animal Farm by George Orwell

There you have it, my war shelf. I wish these books never existed, never had to be written, never needed to be recommended. But please let me know what you think, if you've read them, or if you have additional recommendations.

Thanks so much for coming over to my blog.

With love from yours truly,

Natural Born Bleeding Heart

Monday, August 26, 2013

A Woman Warrior Reflects

The lovely and talented Kirsten LaBlanc
was the first of six readers at the inaugural public
reading of my writing club, River City Writers,
held at 4th Street Theater
attached to Java Joes in downtown Des Moines.
Bravo, everyone!
Woo hoo! Last night my writing club, River City Writers, hosted our first reading and it was awesome. I pretty much forgot to take pictures but fortunately, a friend took this one so you get the idea of how cool it was. We were in the 4th Street Theater, attached to Java Joes, a full service coffee shop/wine bar in downtown Des Moines, with two awesome waitri to tend our food and drink orders. (And set up the mic, as my stage hand skills have only just begun.)

This is the first reading I've organize and I hoped for six people. 25 people showed up, including one guy who walked in from the street because he saw something "literary" on the event calendar, he said. He didn't leave early so I took that as a good sign, and I'm sure it wasn't for the free wine. Seriously, I was thrilled with group who showed up; everyone was so casual and mellow, just what I'd hoped for.


I am so proud of all the readers, most who were in my summer writing class "Song of Myself." Happy teacha here. I couldn't believe the stories they wrote and read. We were all spell bound with tales of heartache, love, road trips, shame, fire, a first kiss, and Clark Kent. Bravo, everyone, bravo. And now I feel the force of momentum pushing me to put together the next four-week class for October, "Radio Station KFKD." (An exploration of Anne Lamott's "Bird by Bird." Let me know if you're interested. Watch for more info.)


Our guest reader was truly spectacular. Miyoko Hikiji read from her memoir, "All I Could Be, My Story as a Woman Warrior in Iraq." (With thanks to Kirsten LaBlanc who booked Miyoko.) Presently, I am half way through reading the book myself and it is a page turner. But it's more than a good read -- it's a thoughtful, thorough, interesting, truthful, passionate, painful, chilling, thrilling account of her experience as a soldier, as a female soldier, as an Asian American female soldier. While she's pretty dang tough, her writing style is not just a rockem' sockem' war story (although there is some of that too). Miyoko is deeply reflective and introspective while using plain and simple language the described the military setting which centers her memoir. I think she could eventually sell her book for a movie deal. I don't know much about how Hollywood works, but I think this book would work there. Miyoko effectively utilizes dialogue to tell her story, so much so, that the screenplay could almost write itself. 


I close this post in deep gratitude for everyone who came out last night, for the awesome River City Writers, and for the amazing Miyoko Hikiji, who has a story to tell that is important to all Americans. Check out her video blog below. 


Thanks for coming to my blog. 


With love from yours truly,


Natural Born Bleeding Heart


Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Messy awesome kid

Seems like yesterday, but here we are celebrating the boy's 14th birthday. (I've been trying not to use my kids names in social media, fyi, after realizing how prevalent they are on Google searches, thanks to me, and after they specifically requested that they be removed from google searches, but posting your kid on the internet, like so many other parental actions, cannot be undone.)

I'm posting this picture with permission, and with great nostalgia for my children's childhood. We blinked our eye and now he's a teenager on the verge of high school and a driver's permit.

Just in case this gives the illusion that I've been a vigilant scrap booker ... sadly, no. It's one of a half dozen pages I've created to represent the past 20 years of marriage and motherhood. The will is there, by gosh. Scrapbooks, look out 'cuz here I come.

There's so much I could say about this time and place, summer, 2001, Baltimore, backyard. For now, I'll just say "we made it."

With love from yours truly,

Natural Born Bleeding Heart

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Man Candy: 'til death or DMV do us part

Guest blogger, the right reverend Erik Elkin in front of,
I believe, the original "American Gothic" house, somewhere in Iowa,
a place for which I should know more location details, a place for which
I should have already visited, an artwork for which I can truthfully say
I have seen the original, it was awesome though it gave me the creeps
(looked like incest to me). However this blogpost is hilarious
and I give thanks to the extraordinary  Erik Elkin
for allowing me to post. I hope it makes you laugh.
 

Dear Bleeding Heart readers, as you know, this blog has been sorely at loss of humor for a very long time. I apologize. Thankfully, I'm able to troll Facebook for material and today came upon this gem of a guest post, brought to you by and with permission from, the indomitable storyteller, Erik Elkin. Enjoy!

Peggy (the presumed wife) received critical information today while attempting to get a Minnesota Driver's License. It turns out we're not legally married. The pastor never filed the paperwork. We just went through a rigorous series of background checks under new government lending laws to borrow money to purchase a house. But It took the fine investigative work of the DMV to figure this little nugget of information out.

She's really upset about it, on the verge of tears and the DMV guy says, "Don't worry, you can still take your test." Thank you Jesus for protective glass. As she tells me the story all I can think about is all the times we have been rejected by the DMV for not having the correct forms with us, this one takes the cake.

So, as Peggy is crying, I think to myself, I'm single! Hey, Ladies! In a predictable lapse of judgment at a critical moment I decide to blurt this out loud. You know, to make her feel better. She then reminds me about all the money Margaret and Eric Elkin have borrowed in recent years. Since Margaret Elkin does not exist, Eric Elkin must pay back all this money by himself.  

This gets her on a roll. She gets even more mad when she realizes, because I am male and did not change my name, Eric Elkin will not have to go through this humiliation. Which now all of a sudden has unleashed her feminist inner-tiger, complete with the claws and fangs of death.  It's no longer about me, but men in general. Since men in general are not in the room, I take the heat for all of them. Men get this, men get to do that, yada yada, yada... Peggy decides she needs to start making a stand for herself and declaring her liberation.

So short story long, Peg's got a date tonight a wealthy guy named, "Man Candy." And, I'm looking for a second job to avoid debtors prison. Damn you DMV!