Author Archives: Be Kinder Than Necessary

SEVEN YEARS AGO

Seven years ago today I buried my youngest child. He was 22 and would never live to see 23. At the cemetery, I stood at the foot of his casket while Deacon Steve performed the burial rite. I held the rose I would place on top of the casket when I said my final goodbye to his body. I think it unnerved the deacon, my standing there, not taking a seat under the tent meant for mourners. I don’t know that to be true. All I knew was that I had to stand with him, until the end.

It’s unnatural, burying one’s child. He’s frozen in time, forever 22. This year he would turn 30. What would he be doing now? Would he still be in his room, upstairs, creating computer programs/games? Apps? Beats? Those delightful cartoons? Would he be on his own? Perhaps with a family? Might I have more grandchildren to cherish? Would his jet-black hair be tinged with grey? Would he be clean-shaven or have a mustache and/or beard?

I sit in his room now, most nights, to watch TV. Last night, after watching a film on Netflix, I turned on my back and put my legs up the wall. I don’t remember now what triggered it, but I bawled my eyes out. It hits me like that now and again. Seven years ago yesterday, we held his wake. People poured through and I embraced each and cried in their arms, except for one. I still can’t believe she had the nerve to show up, but that’s a story for another time. It has nothing to do with Joseph. Maybe there were others I didn’t fall into, but she’s the one I remember most clearly. Anger replaced grief, momentarily. Even my therapist showed up and one of the members of my psychodrama group. Honestly, I have no idea who all came, or who didn’t. I have a copy of the sign-in book somewhere…but some of the pages are missing.

To all who showed, to all who sent flowers or food or cards, or thought of us at that time, great love and gratitude. If I didn’t send you a thank you, please forgive me. I tried, but I couldn’t get through them all.

“WILD AND JOYFUL TIME”

 (A writing prompt at “Get Unstuck” –  Project Write Now

with gratitude to Gay Edelman)

  • Floating
  • in
  • the
  • ocean

  • Sun
  • shining
  • brightly
  • on
  • my
  • face
  • Weightless
  • Content
  • In
  • the
  • hands
  • of
  • God
  • Sun
  • sparkling
  • on
  • the
  • water
  • And
  • I know
  • suddenly
  • How
  • impressionists
  • view
  • the
  • world
  • Not
  • one
  • great
  • whole
  • But
  • in
  • pieces
  • put
  • together
  • Completely
  • at ease
  • am
  • I
  • Weightless
  • Full
  • of
  • Wonder
  • Suspended
  • in
  • Space
  • and
  • Time
  • Empty
  • of all
  • that
  • usually
  • fills my mind
  • and
  • overflows
  • falling out
  • about me
  • keeping me stuck
  • in my own
  • unfiltered
  • Chaos
  • At peace
  • at last
  • Filled
  • with
  • Awe
  • and
  • Wonder
  • and
  • Gratitude
  • Resting
  • safely
  • In
  • the
  • hands
  • of
  • God
  • No worries
  • No drama
  • Nothing
  • holding
  • me
  • down
  • The ocean
  • the sun
  • and
  • me

HOW MY BROKEN TOILET BECAME A POLITICAL ISSUE or THE RICH GET RICHER

Yesterday a plumber came to my house to fix my broken toilet. It cost me about $135 and a lot of aggravation. It was not the plumber’s fault. He was a very nice young man, who very patiently tried to explain to me why the repair was not covered by my protection plan. Understand that I pay almost as much for protection plans, for my external water and sewer lines and internal plumbing, as I do for my water usage. Sometimes more. Oh, and I donate $1 a month to assist others who might not be able to afford to pay for their water.

Like many, I have been working from home during this COVID-19 crisis. My hours have been reduced and I am not making as much money as I was pre-COVID, so I have to be careful about my spending. My toilet has been “misfiring”, so to speak, for quite some time now. For a while, I would catch it running. The usual handle jiggle would solve the problem. After a while, I noticed not everything was going down. Holding the handle down until it flushed completely seemed to resolve that problem. Then came the day when it would continue running and no jiggle would stop it. So…I turned off the water after flushing. Turned it back on after use. Repeat. Finally, it would run and run but not fill the tank, and thus, not flush the bowl. So…I turned off the water and kept a bucket handy to flush the solids, following the green philosophy of: “If it’s yellow, let it mellow. If it’s brown, flush it down.” Obviously, this was only a temporary fix.

Not long ago, sometime during the winter, I had discovered a leak in the waste line from my washing machine. This discovery came while I was in my crawl space replacing smoke and carbon monoxide detectors after a visit from police and fire fighters when one of my CO detectors’ alarm went off at 2am. False alarm by the way. Batteries were corroded onto the circuit board.

So, I called a plumber, the company with which I have my heating system protection plan, and had it repaired to the tune of over $350. AFTER which I remembered having the water protection plans. I had been paying for them for so long without incident that I forgot I had them.

When I called New Jersey American Water Company, I was referred to American Water Resources to file a claim. The helpful attendant explained to me that I might not get anything back, but if I did, it would take some time. I was, therefore, happily surprised when I received notification that they would reimburse me for $150 of the expense. After all, I did not follow procedure and call them to initiate the repair.

So…this time I remembered I had a plan and followed procedure. I describe the problem, in detail, to the claims attendant. I am told that I have to pay a $50 service charge and she can collect that. I am annoyed, but I figure okay, it’s a copay, deductible, whatever. I ask if it can be charged to my water bill. No. I ask if she can take a credit card. No. She then tells me it will be collected by the contractor. I am a little confused but okay. I am told I will receive a call from the plumbing company shortly.

Four hours later, I have not heard anything, so I call back. I get a different attendant. I am told the plumber reports calling and leaving a message for the homeowner. Nope. So, we determine that the attendant I spoke with earlier gave them the wrong number. This is corrected. Not too terribly long later, I hear from the plumber. Someone is on the way. A nice young man shows up. We both wear our masks. He goes up and looks at the toilet, comes back down, and tells me the problem is the flap in the tank. That, he says, is not covered by my plan. I am annoyed. He kindly offers to tell me what part to buy so I can fix it myself. This option had occurred to me. I figured it was probably a simple procedure. I could have pulled out my Reader’s Digest home repair manual, or asked the Google, but I had an INDOOR PLUMBING PROTECTION PLAN!!!!

So, now I not only have to pay the $50, but it is going to cost me 70 some dollars plus tax for the repair. I am pissed and begin to rant. I realize it is not his fault, and I tell him this, but I was specific about the problem when I called in my claim. He, very patiently, explains how it could have been misconstrued as being a clog, which would have been covered. I am not buying it. I call the claims number back and get yet another attendant. I explain the situation. she insists that, yes, I have to pay the $50 whether or not I decide to go ahead with the repair, in addition to the cost of the repair, should I decide to go ahead with it. In fact, she says, the plumber should have collected the $50 service charge before he even looked at the toilet.

Now, the way I see it, I am paying a $50 referral fee. Had the attendant told me it was not a covered service, I would have been annoyed, but I would then have had the option of repairing it myself or calling the plumber I used before, without paying a $50 service fee! At this point, I just want the damn toilet fixed. I tell the attendant that I want to cancel the inside protection plan. She cannot help me with this. I have to speak with customer service. While I am on hold waiting to be transferred to customer service, I pay the $50, and sign an agreement for the repair. I speak to the customer service representative and cancel the service plan, which I am told will be effective today but may take two billings cycles before they stop charging me. The plumber fixes the toilet. I pay for the repair, and he is gone before I am off the phone.

I tell the customer service rep that I would like to be credited for the $50 charge because, as I see it, I explained very clearly what the problem was and the claims attendant should have told me that it was not covered. Unfortunately, she tells me, customer service cannot help me with that, and she must transfer me back to claims. She asks if there is anything else she can help me with; and, I tell her my remaining issues are political in nature. I complain that this is a case of the haves getting and the have-nots paying. She kindly humors me.  Why is water, I ask her, which is a basic human need and right traded as a commodity? While I am waiting to be transferred back to claims, I am disconnected.

I call the claims number back and get another very nice attendant who tells me she believes I will be able to get my $50 back but “it’s a process”. I ask if I will get an email; and, she assures me I will hear directly via telephone. No call yet.

I call the company with which I have my heating system protection plan and ask the operator if they offer a home plumbing protection plan. I am told they do not. I tell her the water company has some racket going. They, the water company, also offer electrical protection service. Water and electricity?

So, just for the hell of it, I look up the price of a flap for a toilet. It costs about $7. American Water Resources is trading on the NYSE for $124 a share. Yep, what is that old adage? The rich get richer and the poor have babies? Time to buy a lottery ticket.

My Dear Jesus

IMG_20191116_095747911

Good morning.

I don’t know what I believe about you any more.

I try to remember the tears that filled my eyes in Bethlehem, the most overwhelming part of my trip to Israel and Palestine. I touched the star that represents where you lay in the manger and I felt such gratitude for your having come into the world, bringing light and love. Yes, where Love was born!

The other night at my grief group, two women jumped on a man’s questions about whether or not his deceased loved one is in heaven. It hurt my heart and I could feel myself becoming angry and shutting down. All I said was…”this creates so much division in Christianity”.

So…I’ve improved! I didn’t just vomit out my anger or tell them they got it all wrong. I just agreed and reinforced with him that the important thing is the relationship.

Help me to be more loving.

In Your Holy Name, Jesus,

Amen

The Sound of Children Playing: a writing prompt at Project Write Now, Red Bank, NJ

At the beach. I close my eyes. Face to the sun. I hear the waves crashing. Seagulls calling.

I note the sound of children playing. “Daddy, help me build a castle.” No response. I open my eyes. A little one, in solar protective swimwear, holds her pail in front of her. Sad face. Daddy sits in his beach chair, ear buds in, looking at his not-so-smart phone. My heart breaks for her.

I want, oh-so-much, to join her…to scoop her up, run down to the water and fill that pail. Pick up some shells and stones along the way. Come back and build a sloppy-but-magnificent castle in the sand.

I yearn to yank those god-awful earbuds from her ignorant father’s ears, take his phone and throw it into the sea.

Jesus, man! Don’t you see the magic in front of you?! This blessed child will be little for only so long! A blink of the eye! LOOK at her! Really SEE her! LISTEN to her! Hear the little voice that will all-too-soon be silenced in our so-called “halls of learning”. Teach her just how magical, how precious she is! Let her know: “Yes, Baby, I see you! I hear you! You matter to me, more than all the distractions of the world.”

Put away that little black box. Better yet, throw it into the sea. “Today I set before you Life and Death. Choose LIFE!”

For God’s sake, man, see the magnificence of the sun, sand and sea before you! Teach her about what REALLY matters!

Look at the sand! Do you see how tiny it is…one little grain of said? And all of these little tiny grains of sand make a BIG, BIG beach!

Fill that pail with water. Show her a drop. All those little tiny drops make a BIG, BIG ocean!

Look at the sky! What colors do you see? Are there clouds? Are there birds? Do you see that sparrow over there? What is a land bird doing on the beach? Crazy, right?

Oh, Baby…If I wouldn’t scare the hell out of you, I would hold you in my arms and tell you how wonderful you are. But I know it wouldn’t matter coming from me.

Wake up, man!

So, I close my eyes again, and I pray a little prayer…and I hope his battery dies.

The Cleansing of Ten Lepers

The Cleansing of Ten Lepers, Luke 17:11-19, New American Bible:

11As he continued his journey to Jerusalem, he traveled through Samaria and Galilee. 12As he was entering a village, ten lepers met (him). They stood at a distance from him 13and raised their voice, saying, “Jesus, Master! Have pity on us!” 14And when he saw them, he said, “Go show yourselves to the priests.” As they were going they were cleansed. 15And one of them, realizing he had been healed, returned, glorifying God in a loud voice; 16and he fell at the feet of Jesus and thanked him. He was a Samaritan. 17Jesus said in reply, “Ten were cleansed, were they not? Where are the other nine?” 18Has none but this foreigner returned to give thanks to God?” 19Then he said to him, “Stand up and go; your faith has saved you.”

Warning: If irreverence offends you, stop here.

In my journey with Jesus, he has taken on more human form. I look at this passage in a contemplative manner, from where I am now. I find myself noticing nuances.

In the first verse (11), Jesus is travelling through Samaria and Galilea. As he enters a village he is met by ten lepers. Is he really met by them? They stand at a distance…why? Because they are lepers! They are diseased, considered unclean. But, they have hope; and, despite being marginalized, outcast from their communities, they dare to call out to Jesus. They call him by name, “Jesus!” They defer to him, calling him, “Master!” They ask for pity. Jesus SEES them. Jesus HEARS them. He does not ignore them, treat them as though they are invisible, worthless. No! He tells them, “Go show yourselves to the priests.” And off they go. He gave them a direct order and they followed it.

I’m no Scripture scholar but I believe that when someone, a Jew, received a healing at that time, they were required to go show themselves to the priest, and, perhaps offer a sacrifice of some sort in thanksgiving. In any case, these guys did as they were told. However, a Samaritan among them, noticing he’s been cleansed, goes back to thank Jesus.

This is where I begin to get irritated. This man is grateful to Jesus. He returns to thank him personally because he is aware from where his healing came. I recall that Samaritans were looked down upon by “the Jews”. (Remember the woman at the well?) They don’t go to the temple to pray. They realize they can pray on the mountain.

So! The Samaritan, a foreigner, who by the way may be in his own land as Jesus is travelling through Samaria, goes back to Jesus as God’s representative, God’s human form, on earth! He has no obligation to go to the temple! But, Jesus asks, “Where are the other nine?” They’re on their way to the temple where you told them to go! They are being obedient!

I get it! It’s all about the personal relationship, but let’s cut the other nine a break. They may have been institutionalized by their religion. It may take them a little longer to get the personal relationship…or they may never get it. Does that mean they won’t enter the Kingdom? I don’t think so. They may just not be called to deeper healing, deeper relationship.

Two Years Gone

Two years ago today I buried my youngest child.

On July 5, 2014, at about 11:20pm, after getting off my shift as a residential counselor at a psychiatric children’s home for adolescent girls, I had difficulty opening my front door. The key and the door knob turned, but something was blocking my entry. I pushed against it, imagining the doormat had somehow turned up. It wasn’t the doormat. Someone had moved my ottoman in front of the door.

I don’t remember if the light was on or if I turned it on. I think I must have turned it on because there would have been no one home. To my horror, I found the cold, stiff, dead body of my son hanging from a beam in my living room.

I SCREAMED and SCREAMED. I muttered, “Oh God, Oh God, Oh God”, “No, no no”. And screamed. No one heard me. No one came. I’d dropped whatever I was carrying, looked at him, felt his body. I ran around in circles trying to find the house phone. It didn’t occur to me that I had a cell phone with me when I came in. 

I finally found the phone and dialed 911. It rang and rang. I tried again. Again it rang and rang. It was like one of those dreams when you’re calling for help and the call just won’t go through. Third time I finally got an operator. “911, where’s your emergency.” I answered her questions. Then she directed me to cut him down and start CPR. I knew he was gone. This was no longer my son. This was just the shell of who my son used to be.

Obediently, I found a pair of scissors. I held his body with one arm and cut the rope with the other. I lowered him to the floor and cut the noose from his neck. There was a deep, red groove. I tilted his head and began compressions. His mouth wouldn’t open. His jaw was clamped shut, no space between his teeth. I had the operator on speaker by now and asked if I could breathe through his nose. She said ok. I tried. I continued compressions until the police arrived, the whole time just hearing air escape as I pressed down. 

I was aware that he did not look distressed. There was no sign of struggle.

When the police arrived, an officer took me into the kitchen and directed me to sit down. I rocked and rocked and hyperventilated. He told me to “calm down”. I looked at him and heard what he said. I tried. In my head I said, “You’ve got to be fucking kidding me!” He was young.

Another officer took me upstairs. I tried to get into my bedroom, but I’d locked the door after hiding my son’s antidepressant in my nightstand to prevent him from taking another overdose. He had made three suicide attempts two years before. I couldn’t find the “key” to get in. I don’t think I ever found it.

And so I sat in his bedroom, on his bed. Still rocking. By myself. While police were downstairs. A detective came up to speak with me. He asked if he could call anyone. Did I want him to notify anyone? Did I want my cell phone to call anyone? I answered no to all. I finally found something…a screw driver, a paper clip…I don’t remember…and got my bedroom open. I grabbed my rosary, pulled out my meditation cushion and sat, praying the Chaplet of Divine Mercy. The detective popped his head in to ask me something. I responded.

At several points, the detective asked me if there was someone he could call to take me out of the house. I said no. I wasn’t leaving the house while my son’s cold, dead body was still there.

At some point I started making calls. I don’t remember in what order. I called his father ‘s cell phone, no answer. I left a message requesting a call back. I called his house phone, no answer. I left the same message. 

I called my oldest daughter and told her her brother was dead. She asked how he did it. I told her. She hung up on me.

I called my other son. He was horrified and continued to call me back throughout the night to check on me.

I called my other daughter. No answer. I don’t remember if I left a message. She recalls seeing the number in the morning as a missed call and thinking her brother had reached out to her and she missed him. So, maybe I didn’t leave a message. 

I called my neighbors, hoping to spend the night with them after everything was settled. No answer. I don’t think I left them a message.

I called my church and spoke with a priest who told me not to worry, that the funeral home would contact them and everything would be taken care of. He’d pray. I thought about asking him to let the deacons know but couldn’t put the words together.  

Finally, I called my ex-boyfriend, at work, an hour away. He said he’d come.

I hadn’t wanted to call him. He’d relapsed on alcohol earlier in the week. I’d been away on a (almost) cross-country trip. I called him the night before I was flying home and realized he’d been drinking. He picked me up the next day. I’d decided I didn’t want him completely out of my life. He went and got a script for Antabuse. That was June 30.

On July 4, I knocked on my son’s bedroom door. He wasn’t home but had left his air conditioner on. I went into the room to turn it off and opened a drawer looking for a shower curtain I’d put there while he was living elsewhere. I found drug store bags and empty cold medication packages. His drug of choice was DXM, dextromethorphan. He had relapsed as well. The receipt was dated the same day as the drunken call with my ex.

I went to work that night intending to discuss it with him when I got home. The discussion didn’t happen that night. He was either asleep or pretending to be.

Next morning, or maybe early afternoon, I knocked on his door, told him what I’d found – though I hadn’t been looking for anything. I asked him for his key. I told him he couldn’t be in the house when I wasn’t home…and I was leaving for work in a little bit. I told him, “My heart is broken”. I told him he had to be out of the house by Monday. This was Saturday.

When I was leaving for work, he walked out with me and sat at the table on the deck with his phone, which was not active for calling, but he was able to use the wireless internet connection from the house. I asked him if I could give him a ride anywhere. He said, “I have nowhere to go.” Those are the last words I heard from him.

I texted both of my daughters and his father letting them know what was going on. My daughters both responded that I was over-reacting. No response from his father. None of us had any sense of his being in trouble that day. And we have pretty good sixth sense.
I don’t know for sure how he got into the house. A couple of windows were unlocked, but the screens were in place. Some days later I found my garage was unlocked. I think I must have left it unlocked the last time I’d been in there. 

I was sure that I killed him. Although, intellectually, I know that’s not true, I still feel responsible from time to time. 

This year the anniversary seems even harder than last. Perhaps I was still in shock then. My then ex is back in my life. We’re living together now. He showed up that night. I cut him off for a while after the funeral, but we’re trying to make it work. He’s the only one, besides me and the police, who saw my son’s body that night. He’s sober.

Eulogy for My Son

I awoke from a nap one day when I was pregnant with my fourth child, and said to his father, “How about ‘Joseph Francis’?” True story. That’s how he got his name. Joseph for the dreamer of the Old Testament and, of course, the foster father of Jesus, and Francis for the Knight of Assisi. He was baptized at Mass – on the very altar from which his Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated – on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord, as a demonstration for his brother Eric’s 4th grade religious education class.

I used to say that Joseph wore his nerves on the outside of his body. As a young child, his feelings were often apparent and intense…when he was joyful, he would flap his arms and jump up and down. When he was upset, he fell to
pieces.

Even from a young age, logical explanations were comforting to him. In elementary school he was concerned that he might be kidnapped. While other children may have needed only to hear that it wouldn’t happen, Joseph needed a reason why. I told him the family wasn’t rich enough for anyone to bother. Oddly enough, this alleviated his fears.

Joseph was brilliant. When he was about 2 years old, maybe 3, he went for a walk with his Grandma Martha – my paternal grandmother – and, after a brief period, said to her, “Perhaps we should go home now.”

One day when I picked Joseph up from a summer computer camp, the instructor told me that he’d been teaching the kids how to program a musical scale when he heard “Ode to Joy” coming from one of the computers – guess whose.

Joseph was a thinker, an over-thinker, and a “make-you-think”-er. He had a way of asking questions that not only would make you curious as well, but would make you wonder why you never wondered why before. His sister, Jessica, said that while Joseph was living with her, she couldn’t help but turn to Google every five minutes to research things that came up in conversation.

He loved to draw. As a child, Joseph was inspired by the “Captain Underpants” illustrated series and began drawing his own comics. As he got older, his artwork gained influence from video games, graphic novels, and anime. The comics he
drew featured original – and usually fantastically absurd – characters and plot lines.

Family and friends could always count on him for silly, sweet, unique gifts for birthdays and holidays…and sometimes for no reason at all. Joseph was caring, sensitive, and kind. The time and thought he put into preparing those gifts were characteristic of Joseph’s love for his family and friends. He enjoyed creating presents, but not as much as he enjoyed seeing how happy they made everyone.

Joseph loved to experiment. Once he and his sister Christine stole Comet from above the kitchen sink and bleached the grass in the front yard. I was furious, but they thought it was hilarious. Suffice it to say that I found a safer hiding spot for the Comet after that.

He once kept a caterpillar in a bug box hoping to see it turn into a butterfly. It had made a cocoon, but the box was invaded by ants. They chewed a hole in the cocoon and ate the caterpillar. When Joseph went outside to find that his beloved test subject was gone, he swore vendetta against ants. He took his revenge by holding a magnifying glass over them in the sun with one fist raised high in the air.

Joseph believed that his father was the most successful person he knew. It amazed Joseph how much knowledge Frank has, particularly because Frank is self-taught. Joseph was impressed by his father’s business knowledge and admired Frank’s building and gardening skills. He respected his dad’s dedication to supporting his blended family of eight children and grew to love his second mother, Karen, who treated him as her own son.

George Carlin once said, “Here’s a bumper sticker I’d like to see: ‘We are the proud parents of a child who has resisted his teachers’ attempts to break his spirit and bend him to the will of his corporate masters.’” Joseph’s free spirit and strong will contributed to difficulties getting through school, but his parents – and even the teachers he frustrated – loved Joseph for his creativity and passion.

Anyone who ever met Joseph loved him from the get go. His gentle, loving spirit will live on in the hearts and minds of all who knew him.

Memory and Human Rights

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The photo above is of the plaque outside the Museo de la Memoria y Los Derechos Humanos, the Museum of Memory and Human Rights, in Santiago, Chile.  It is the only photograph I took, but what I saw and felt that day will remain forever vivid in my memory.

The museum chronicles the holocaust of Chile during the Pinochet dictatorship, 1973 to 1990.  Our guide spoke only Spanish; our professor would translate as needed.  Since most of our group understood Spanish, there was little translation done.  My Spanish is not so good; and, in a situation that evokes strong emotion, I hear very little, even in my native tongue.  As we entered the Museum, I already had an overpowering feeling of dread about what we were about to witness.  The Pinochet era was filled with human rights abuses and many were tortured, killed and/or disappeared during his reign.

I tried to pay attention as we moved through the building, but one of the first exhibits we saw was a metal-framed bed with a large battery and electrical cables attached that was used as an implement of torture.  I heard very little after that.  We moved from exhibit to exhibit, from floor to floor.  My breathing became more and more labored until, finally, I was close to hyperventilating and tears poured from my eyes.  I dropped out of the tour and found a glassed-in area in which to sit with my feelings.  As I gazed through the glass, on the wall across the way I saw an array of photographs, hundreds of people who had been disappeared never to be heard from again.  And that was only a small percentage of them.

The awareness of unmitigated evil was all around me.  I breathed in the bad and breathed out the good – a yogic exercise I had heard of before but never understood until that moment.  Evil exists in this world.  The German Holocaust was not an isolated blip in the history of the world.  It continues.  We must keep our hearts and minds open to seeing it where it is and confronting it.

In the United States it is more clandestine and insidious.  It exists when corporations are considered people, children are allowed to go hungry and without healthcare, and millions populate prisons having passed through the cradle to prison pipeline.  I will keep my eyes open and speak the truth.

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