Saturday, April 20, 2013

A Strong People

Notes of Concern…
                               …Jackson Blair


A STRONG PEOPLE



By the time this column is published many Americans will be over their original shock at the bombing of the Boston Marathon. They will be back at work following their regular routine. And they will have tucked away the sadness in their heart to be recalled from time to time but not to capture the good minutes and the good days that are what we call “normal.”

It is not that we Americans are insensitive but rather that those roots established so long ago, funnily enough right here in New England, somehow get passed down through our genetic structure and family heritage. I am speaking here of a sort of American stoicism.

We are a tough people.

It was as true after Pearl Harbor and the Sandy Hook school tragedies as it was after the horrific 911 attacks and more recently the event in Boston.

We instinctively know how to deal with sadness.

We instinctively manage to control our anger until we can make reasoned decisions, based in fact and well thought through.

Our flags go to half-staff.

Our President reassures us.

All the people trained as first responders do what it is that they do so well. We are well prepared to react quickly and this saves many lives.

And we know that behind the scenes, quietly and effectively, the folks who spend their lives learning how to ferret out the most evil among us are already working around the clock to ensure not only that the perpetrator(s) does not elude justice and that we learn from yet another tragedy better ways to provide protection and security in the future.

Life in America is back to normal. That is healthy.

We are a people who stop to help.

We are a people who stop to grieve.

And we are a people who can hold tight the sad memories while getting back to the business of living.

God Blesssed America.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE


Notes of Concern…
                               …Jackson Blair


DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE



I am writing this column as a substitute for mayhem, divorce or spousal revenge.

Two Christmases ago, about 15 months ago, most of our children and grandchildren came to visit. It was a very big gathering. Two days before Christmas the water purifier stopped working.

No big deal.

One day before Christmas a shelf in the refrigerator fell down and refused to be corrected so a lot of shelf space was lost.

No big deal.

Christmas Eve the disposal broke.

No big deal but as you can see a pattern was developing.

Christmas day, the dishwasher broke.

Big Deal!

I began on Christmas Day what would drag out to be 15 months of washing dishes.

My wife, a frugal lass, announced after the kids had departed that two people living alone didn’t really need all those devices and she had no intention of getting any of them repaired.

So Christmas 2011 marked the start of catty-wampus (you have to be a certain age to know what this means…but think of a bald guy wearing his toupee a little off center) shelving in the fridge, all disposal friendly products now taken to the garbage can daily, drinking water out of the tap, and regular washing, by hand, of all dishes.

It was a lot like Outward Bound in our kitchen.

Every family should have a little chance to “rough it” from time to time in our appliance filled society…or so I tried to convince myself.

Magically, sometime in late January the disposal just started to work again. That is when my wife felt safe in telling me that our daughter had put something in the disposal on Christmas that had rendered it unusable. Fortunately for our daughter, she lives in England, which is a pretty big and safe distance across the “pond.”

Sometime around February I brought up the subject of repairs.

I wasn’t brave enough to bring it up again for another six months.

So this Christmas we still were working in a dysfunctional kitchen.

In March 2013 we had a dinner party for ten. As I was toiling away over the sink, with a gazillion dirty dishes, I made my mind up. I am the alpha male in this marriage. I need to “man up” and take a stand.

Truthfully, I had a new weapon. My wife had decided to do some remodeling in a number of the rooms of the house and I was tripping over electricians, painters, dry -wallers, etc. Thousands of dollars in support of renovation but not a dime for good water, clean dishes, or to straighten refrigerator shelves.

Revolution was brewing.

So feeling a little like Colonel Custer at The Little Big Horn, I made my stand. I admit I was afraid the result of my stand might be similar to the result of his little encounter with Sitting Bull.

Darling, I said, you do not have to get the dishwasher repaired but this dish washer is on strike as of tonight. My hands will not spend one more day in dirty dishwater. You want to live like you were born in a covered wagon crossing the plains, that is fine.

But you wash the dishes.

Next day, voila, the local repair people were contacted and scheduled.

Who knew you could get service on three items in 24 hours. And to think…it had taken me 15 months to win the day.

On service day the fine fellow pulls up and asks me what led to the problems. Right then I knew I was in trouble. I am dealing with a serviceman about problems in my wife’s kitchen. I, by choice and family tradition, have never been an authority on anything in the kitchen.

So I mention the dishwasher just won’t work. I was afraid to tell him we had not run it for 15 months for fear he would wonder what kind of nuts wait this long to get help. Anyway, he opens the door and takes a look. Then he bends down and removes a square of dishwasher soap that had lodged under the little piece that rises and lowers to drain and then fill the dishwasher.

He turns her on.

She works.

I am mortified.

I quickly lead him to the refrigerator with a shelf that resembles the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Everything on that shelf is perpetually sliding right to left and piling up on one side.

He reminds me I need to take all that detritus out of the fridge before he can really repair it.

I comply.

He reaches in and pulls the shelf out.

He then puts the shelf back in and makes certain to listen for a little locking sound evidently one is supposed to know about.

Who knew?

Voila!  Shelf is fixed.

By now my repairman is looking at me like I belong in the institution featured in the movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.

I am beyond humiliated.

On to the water filter.

My repairman tells me they do not repair these things. You are just supposed to get a new one. I breathe a sigh of relief.

But then he reaches for the under counter doors, opens them, shines a little flashlight back into the darkness, reaches in and with one turn of his hand he rights one of the two filters. It had been miss-set 15 months ago.

Voila. Pure water.

He cured 15 months of agony in less than 15 minutes.

He departed with a check in his hand, one that I was happy to write and relieved to sign, as well as with a story he will be telling back at the shop, to other customers, and in every bar he frequents for years.

I just hope he doesn’t remember my name.

As for my wife, she just shrugged her shoulders when I told her.

Some days I think permission to berate one’s spouse should have been one of those Commandments Moses brought down from the mountain.

But since he didn’t have water purifiers, dishwashers or a refrigerator it just probably didn’t occur to him.













Friday, April 5, 2013

ANOTHER FORM OF BULLYING



A woman of the 1960’s fell in love.

Nothing unusual there.

She went to Canada to marry her female lover. They were together for 44 years until one passed away.  

Now there is something different.

A federal estate tax bill was received by the surviving spouse for $363,000. If this woman had chosen a man to marry the tax bill would have been zero.

It is this brave American woman of the 1960’s who brought a suit that has reached the Supreme Court of the United States. In her eighties now, she was right out in front of the court edifice, on the steps, asking to be protected from discrimination in the tax codes.

For 44 years she lived quietly, happy and content. It does not appear that she marched, protested or demanded acceptance for her lifestyle, the choice she made so long ago. She did not become an “in your face” person until her government told her she was different from other citizens.

No reasonable person can believe that this is equal treatment under the law.

No reasonable person could believe this wrong should not be righted.

This has nothing to do with religious beliefs. This has to do with federal laws being applied unfairly. Our country is better than this.

I hope my readers will not get caught up in all the sturm und drang on the issue of gay marriage. What is today before our Supreme Court in no way seeks to interfere with the religious beliefs of any people. It seeks to interfere with the outrageous application of laws in a manner meant to create second-class citizens.

Americans of all beliefs and practices need to accept that no one requires us to celebrate what we tolerate. What we as a nation tolerate needs to be equality under the law. We can be, and are, individual and unique. We need to learn to accept that individuality and uniqueness and the right of each of us to pursue happiness.

It is not necessary for me to want to practice in my life what you practice in yours. It is not required that I affirm what you choose to do. It is important, however, that I recognize your right to make those choices.

What happened to this couple, and presumably to many other couples, is appalling and should not be countenanced by any enlightened people.

This woman spent 44 years with her partner.

I have spent 44 years with my wife. If I am sick no one questions her right to make medical decisions on my behalf. If I die no one questions her right to make funeral plans, to inherit, to continue to soldier on in our home without me.

The woman at the center of this case before the Supremes seems no to have the same rights. The question before the Supremes will be loaded with legalese. The question before American citizens is simple:

WHY?

The very people most upset about same sex marriage are those that also think church and state should be separate.

The state exists to protect the people and to ensure equal treatment of all.

The church exists to encourage moral behavior and religious belief.

There is no reason these entities cannot be compatible.

There is no winning argument that one should “trump” the other.

Everyone is free to believe whatever he or she chooses and to practice whatever religion they find meaningful, or to practice none at all.

Human beings should be permitted under the law to enjoy the companionship of anyone they choose and not to have that choice judged by the government.

It would be good to see Christian charity applied to this recent “dust up” and to see the good men and women of this nation demonstrate the kind of common sense that our Founding Fathers wrote so eloquently about in framing our Constitution.

What I see in the treatment of this woman and others like her is just another form of something we cannot tolerate:

Bullying.