Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Glorious!

Last year, at the TCM Classic Film Festival, I missed seeing Gentlemen Prefer Blondes on the big screen. There was a conflict. Angie Dickinson was appearing to discuss Ocean's 11 at a special screening by the pool. It was the first night of the festival! How could I pass on that live and in-person glamor? Still, I wish I'd seen Marilyn in glorious Technicolor. I mean, she's MARILYN.

Has any star ever shined brighter than Marilyn? Has any film icon been open to more interpretation? And this is such a sweet, albeit dated, film. A decent little musical.

I felt so much when I watched it this afternoon. First of all, I was acutely aware of where it falls in Marilyn's film canon. This was one of three major movies Marilyn made in 1953, the year she became a star. She had worked so hard for it and now it was hers. She was 27 and dating Joe DiMaggio. She would probably never be this happy again.

After 9 years, 8 films and two divorces, she would be dead. So when I watch her in this movie, I wish I could freeze her here. Or rewind her life story, letting her make better choices. Giving her a chance. That's the thing about Marilyn: We all want to rescue her.

Jane Russell is better than I remembered. This is important because, watched in 2020, this movie is as much about girl power as it is about sex. For the movie to work as well as it does, we need the two main characters to be in balance. We have to like both of them and believe they like one another. We do. As sublimely silly yet focused as Marilyn is, Jane is down-to-earth yet idealistic. And yes, they love each other as good girlfriends should.

The movie has some nice musical numbers -- "When Love Goes Wrong, Nothing Goes Right," "Isn't Anyone Here for Love?" -- and a true classic in "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend." But today, my favorite moment was when the two little girls from Little Rock reprise their opening number as they walk down the aisle, each to the man of her dreams. And they all lived happily ever after!





Tuesday 4

PETS


1. What is your pet peeve of the month, year, lifetime? Protestors (in other states, thank God!) who put their police and first responders at risk by flouting the corona virus restrictions while claiming "liberty." As wise Americans have been saying since the 1880s, "Your liberty to swing your arm ends where my nose begins." Their neighbors, police and local hospital workers have a right to feel safe, too. 

It's funny, but I think the virus may have taken care of my all-time pet peeve: space hogs. I've always resented the people who buy one seat on the train but take two, leaving others to stand, or the women at the health club who believe their gym bags have a greater right to the locker room bench than my fanny. But currently we aren't crowding onto trains or into the health club.

Boo! Hiss!
2. Do you have a pet? Tell us about your pet. A pet? No, I've got these two fur friends. The upper berth is Reynaldo. Connie contents herself downstairs. These two rescues are good friends, to one another and to me. I am so grateful they are in my life. 





3. What are some pet projects in your life? Lately, I'm fixated on finding the perfect little plastic thing to put over my pop-up drain and catch my hair in the shower. The one I purchased at CVS works best, but it's not tall enough to let the water drain quickly. The gray one from Amazon is the perfect height, but the holes are too big. I ordered one from Walmart.com that stays in place perfectly, but lets too much hair through. Geez! I hope my client gives me a meaty project, and soon! I need work to distract me from playing Goldilocks as I search for the perfect little plastic thing.

OK, but not perfect


4.  Do you feed the birds or other animals in the wild? I don't, but this question still made me smile. This was my late mother's passion. She got such joy out of her yard! Not only the flowers and lawn but the critters who lived out there. She had a bird feeder and loved the squirrel pine cones I'd give her for her birthday every year.*

The house I grew up in was built by my grandparents when my mom was in high school. It was the house she left when she married my dad. Then, about four years later, when I was almost two, my grandparents sold the house to my parents, so she was back. Consequently, my mom felt she had a relationship with generations of birds, squirrels and rabbits. 




*A perennial project of the local Girl Scouts. Handmade from a pine cone, peanut butter, birdseed and string. It supported the girls and made my mom happy. The perfect two-fer!

Monday, April 20, 2020

From the front lines

Today I had a madcap Monday in the spring sun! The mercury topped 60Âș and it felt so good to be out and about. I strapped on my Cubbie blue mask, donned my denim jacket, and headed off to ...

•  Target. Happy to report that this week, they have plenty of toilet paper and paper towels. No, that's not what I went in for, but this crisis has trained me to check that aisle.

There does seem to be a shortage of fresh meat and poultry. Instead of steak or pork chops, I ended up with a bag of frozen breaded chicken strips. That'll do. I had the voice of the Today Show consumer reporter in my head, who said in effect: you may not find your first choice, but you'll find what you need to feed your household.

•  Hamburger and fries. I promised myself, at the beginning of this crisis, that I would do what I can to support my local coffee shop. The owner works hard to run a good business. She sources locally, and takes good care of her staff. So today I picked up my lunch and tipped. This is the fourth time I've been in since last month, and every time I go in I'm greeted by someone else. It makes me feel good to see that she's giving hours to her waiters.


All together now

Gawd, people are dumb. Or maybe they're in love with their imagined victimization. There's a seamy underbelly of conservative bloggers who just whine, and whine, and then whine some more about staying indoors, wearing masks, social distancing and (my favorite) guns and ammunition being considered non-essential.


I hope that they don't get sick. But if they do, I hope they have the good taste and moral compass to stay home and not tax the health care system.

You're right. They won't. They'll be fucking operatic about their suffering then, too. Only then, they will put first responders and hospital workers at risk.

It doesn't help my mood that these bloggers tend to shoe horn Bible verses into every spleen-venting post. Please, leave my faith out of it! Christ did not teach us to be petulant and selfish. Find another excuse for your reckless and childish behavior.



Sunday, April 19, 2020

Sunday Stealing



1.   Did you become what you wanted to be when you grew up? Are you happy with your choice? When I was really little, I wanted to be a singer. Since I am completely tone deaf, this advertising writer thing was a better fit.

 
2.    Did man really go to the moon or was it a publicity stunt? It was a publicity stunt. The Clintons killed Jeffrey Epstein. The corona virus is a hoax and we should all go to the beach. If you believe otherwise, you're a sheeple.

3.    Given the opportunity to change one major aspect of your life (i.e. career, relationship, family) with no guarantee of the outcome, would you take the chance? Why? Wow. Great question! I'd go back to my mid-20s and get out of a very bad relationship earlier. I could have spared myself a great deal of pain and found myself with a less toxic view of love. Of course, maybe that pain was my destiny, maybe I needed to learn from that relationship, and so another equally rotten but different man would have somehow entered my life.

4.    Does money buy happiness? All money buys is less worry about money.



Hi, Rey!
5.    What is the first thing you do when you wake up in the morning? Say good morning to this little gentleman. As soon as Reynaldo detects movement, he's there to make sure I haven't forgotten him (or his breakfast).   
 
6.    What are we going to do when we run out of room to bury the dead? I didn't realize I was in charge of that.

7.    What is your greatest fear? Why? Is it rational or unreasonable? I'm afraid of dying in a plane crash. It's not the dying part, it's the descent and the screams of my fellow passengers that terrifies me. No, it is not rational.

 
8.    How do you feel about the exploitation of your private data in the digital age? Does it ever cross your mind or are you hyper-aware of the risks? It concerns me, but I don't obsess about it. (I obsess about many other things I cannot control, but not this.)


9.    You can be forgiven one debt. What is it? If you don’t have debt, then how did you do it? It would be nice to be done with the mortgage. 


10.    Hot or cold? What? If it's weather, I prefer cold. If it's tea, I prefer hot.


11.    What is your favorite thing in the world (aside from family, friends, pets)?


 

12.    You have to give up one of your five senses. Which one would you go without? Smell. It's already dulled when I'm fighting allergies, and I get by all right.

 
13.    Do you believe everyone has a doppelgĂ€nger? Nope.

14.    Likewise, does everyone have a soulmate or is it just a matter of proximity and circumstance? I'm a romantic at heart. I want to believe.

15.    Imagine you have a theme song that plays every time you enter a room. What would your song be? If this played, people would expect something light-hearted. I like that.


 

Add Portland to the list!

My favorite Cub has been doing us all proud ... again! In addition to Chicago and Miami, Anthony Rizzo is supporting hospital workers in Portland.

Click here for the story

Liberate? Please!

So now staying in the comfort of our own homes to protect our neighbors and ourselves is too much for some conservatives. (Gee, I thought we liberals were the delicate "snowflakes.") The fact that the President of the United States is stoking this on Twitter would be appalling, if he hadn't so numbed me with his mishandling of this crisis from the get-go.

It would be nice if, instead of pandering to his base, the President spent his time protecting all of us, as he took an oath to do. Mayor Lightfoot speaks for me:

A friend of mine is married to a nurse and they have two preschool-aged daughters. This crisis is very personal to him.  He posted this card on Facebook and I agree. Everyone who shouts, "Liberate my state!" should be proud to print this card and carry it at all time.



Colin Kaepernick endangered no one by taking a knee during the National Anthem to protest unfair policing. Yet he is pilloried by many of the same people who will needlessly put their own local police at risk with crowd control for their protests.

Consistency, thou art a jewel.


Saturday, April 18, 2020

Saturday 9

Saturday 9: I Don't Care (2019)

1) This song begins with Ed Sheeran admitting he's not enjoying the party he's at. What's something you have to do this weekend, but don't want to do? Laundry. I enjoy clean towels and sheets, but I hate doing laundry.

2) Justin Bieber sings about trying to have a conversation at a party. Have you seen any of your social gatherings cancelled because of the Covid-19 pandemic? My classic movie group has morphed a bit. We now watch the films on our own on YouTube and then "meet" on Zoom to discuss. It cheers me up to talk movies with people who share my passion, but I'm eager to watch the films on a big screen again.

3) Both Ed and Justin conclude that this party -- and everything else -- is okay because they're with the ones they love. Who in your life always makes you feel comfortable and content? My oldest friend. I suppose it's no wonder, since we've been BFFs since Kindergarten.

4) Ed and Justin have both appeared on The Simpsons. Are you a Simpsons fan? Nope.

5) Speaking of animation, Ed Sheeran has said that he'd love to do a Disney soundtrack, like Elton John's Lion King. Do you have a favorite Disney movie? She may not be animated, but she is supercalifragilisticexpalidocious! 



 
6) Justin Bieber is fluent in French, and Ed says he knows enough to get by. Say something to us in French. Sont les mots qui vont tres bien ensemble. (Everything in my life somehow goes back to the Lads from Liverpool.)

7) Justin can solve a Rubik's Cube in less than two minutes. Are you good at puzzles? Nope.

8) In 2019, the year this song was popular, 20 new governors took office. Tell us something about the governor of your state (or commonwealth)? Last year, I cast my vote for JB Pritzker without much enthusiasm, but he's turned out to be a wonderful surprise. He really fights for us here in IL. JB addresses us every day and speaks seriously and plainly. He's informing us, not "selling" us or campaigning for re-election. I genuinely appreciate him now.

9) Random question: Did you more recently give a compliment, or receive one? I gave one. I let my oldest friend know how her easy laughter lifted my spirits.

The week in captivity

I've been moody this week. It started with the Easter-that-wasn't. I attended church online, made myself a special meal, and enjoyed a nice chat with my friend Henry, but it was a weird holiday because of the corona virus. Then there was work -- first my boss retired, then we had layoffs. There's been some drama on the condo board that I don't feel like recounting just now.

I didn't tackle any of the projects I intended to. I barely read 10 pages of the two books I've started. I did binge through The Morning Show on my free week of Apple TV. While I enjoyed it, I don't know that finishing it counts as an accomplishment.

I'm fixated on weird shit. I picked up carryout from Boston Market, but on the way home I threw my Coke away. The guy at the counter wasn't wearing gloves when he gave me the lid. Was that wise or paranoid? Then there's the new cover for my bathtub drain. I want a nice little vented plastic thing to catch the hair, but I can't find one that fits over my pop-up drain. The one from CVS is too small. The one from Amazon is tall enough, but the holes are too big. I have high hopes for the as-yet untried one that arrived from Walmart.com. I have become the Goldilocks of vented plastic things!

So to cheer myself up, I'm going to recount the nice moments:

•  Martin's birthday.
My friend Kathleen hosted a Zoom party for her husband. I joined at about 6:30, and by that time he'd been drinking since noon. I don't blame him. He turned 60 during a pandemic, and was celebrating this big birthday without his mom, his older brother and one of his sisters-in-law -- all of whom died in the last two years.

Anyway, he was drunk and funny and hyper-emotional. At one point, he got up and walked out of frame. He came back waving an old photo. It was me, holding his daughter. The day, decades ago, when Kathleen went into labor, Martin was downtown without a car. So I went to the hospital with her and held her hand as she checked in. I stayed through her first stages of labor until Martin arrived. I picked up their older child from preschool and took care of him until Martin could come home and tell him about his baby sister.

By sharing that photo with everyone at this Zoom party, Martin was saying, in his sloppy and slightly impaired way, that I was part of their family. It was charming and sweet and meant a lot to me.


•  Three hours! My oldest friend and I broke our previous record for blabbing on the phone. We were watching the Magnum PI reruns on the Hallmark Channel together, just like we used to watch it together on Thursday nights back in the day. How we laughed! I felt positively healed when I hung up.

•  "I love you, Gal." Henry's husband, Reg, is coming to a heart-breaking conclusion: Henry is no longer getting better. His condition has deteriorated since I saw him at Christmastime. I wrote Reg a long email, explaining to him that I think Henry needs around-the-clock care. Maybe not forever, but right now. I wanted Reg to know how I felt, and that I support any decisions he makes in this regard. Reg wrote back that he loves me. His response was important to me, since I was afraid perhaps I'd overstepped.

Truer words were never sung:


Friday, April 17, 2020

Jake is amphoteric

I don't know anything about science, but I know the the word "amphoteric." Back in the glory days of Big Hair, I worked for a hair care company. Perms are generally formulated with either an acid or alkaline base. Acid perms make loose curls and waves and are better for color-treated hair. Alkaline perms create tight curls and are recommended for thick or coarse hair. We created a buzz with an "amphoteric" perm, which could function as either an acid or alkaline and create loose curls on thick hair or tight curls on dyed hair.

I also know a little about COE and conventional trucks. I've written about a wide variety of topics over my looooong advertising career. But I'll save my knowledge of big rigs for another time.

Back to hair chemistry. Sort of. Whenever I deal with someone who changes quickly, adapting immediately to changes in the environment, I think, "Ah! He's amphoteric!"


Jake is amphoteric. He's the marketing director on my team. For years, he was the loyal lieutenant of Mr. Senior Vice President Ben. He was Ben's confidante, cheerleader and henchman. Yet when Ben ignominiously departed and was replaced by Meghan, he became totally Team Meghan. Ben who? It was chilling to witness.

So I was impressed -- okay, perhaps "weirded out" is more accurate -- when Jake called my cell for the first time ever in our professional relationship. He referred to my boss' retirement and Thursday's layoffs, and he wanted me "to feel supported." When I didn't pick up (I didn't recognize the number), he followed up with an email. I promptly thanked him for reaching out.

Calling me was a nice thing to do, and Jake is not nice. Clearly I must matter, or Jake wouldn't have bothered.



Photo credit: photostock at freedigitalphotos.net.


Wednesday, April 15, 2020

It took four months

Last December, I wrote a post suggesting that it was time for my boss to retire. Yesterday, he did.

It was a plot twist I didn't see coming.

We aren't at work. I didn't know you could quit a job remotely. (You can.)

He started at the agency even before I did in 2004. This means he's entitled to 16 weeks+ severance (not to mention unemployment)  if let go. He and I talked about this a couple months ago. He said that, even though he wasn't enjoying the job/the commute/the industry anymore, it's too much money to walk away from and so he was going to hang on.

Some things changed his mind.

•  Last week ended with an email from the chairman of the multinational corporation our agency is part of. He told us that the pandemic has had a negative impact on our clients' businesses, and therefore on ours, and that layoffs could be expected. He started this week by reiterating that, but that the organization was working to see if they could cushion the blow with extended medical coverage.

My boss will qualify for Medicare in October. Extended medical doesn't mean as much to him as it does to other people. His salary (I'm guess it's $150,000) would be a relief to get "off the books." It might save other people's jobs. Like, maybe, mine.

•  This month of being home and away from the office has re-emphasized how little he misses work.

When he called me yesterday to share the news, I asked him what changed his mind about walking away from the compensation. He said that he and agency's management team "worked something out."

This news has upset me. I really don't know why. My boss and I have clashed often over the years, so I honestly don't think I'll miss him, though I was used to him. Maybe it's that I don't like change. Or perhaps it's what he told me on yesterday's call -- that he thinks my job is safe through the end of the year. I admit that I had made my peace with never returning to the office again, either. But I need the money. (Oh, yes, I do!)

Or maybe it's that he knowingly took the bullet for me.

This time of virus has been so surreal for so many reasons. I guess this is just another.



Monday, April 13, 2020

Have we gone soft?

"Government overlording" ... "mainstream (or "lamestream") media hysteria" ... "socialism" ... The blogosphere is full of right wing paranoia. Of course, it's their right to share their opinions on their own blogs, just as it's their right to dismiss me as a "libtard."* They can work themselves into a lather about this all they want -- as long as they stay home.

Cool poster from WWII

But I wonder how these rabid right wingers would have behaved during WWII. Would they have been this unpatriotic then? Today these people foam at the mouth about their personal freedoms being restricted. Can you imagine how they would have similarly bitched and moaned about:

•  Being asked to grow their own vegetables in Victory Gardens?
•  Using ration stamps for household staples?
•  Sticking to a national speed limit of 35 mph to preserve tires and gas?

We have it so much easier than our grandparents did. We are asked to sit on our sofas and watch cable, livestream movies, read books, and pick up carryout as we wait for our government stimulus checks. (Which will be direct deposited -- most of us don't even have to fill out a form or go to the bank!)

The United States is now #1 in corona virus deaths. Now is the time for all of us to serve our country as best we can. Perhaps, instead of fixating on one's inability to buy ammo (!), we should channel our inner grandmas. They didn't complain about shortages and restrictions, they proudly collected bacon dripping and made eggless cakes. I imagine that they would be very ashamed of their soft and selfish grandsons/daughters, who moan so mightily at making far fewer sacrifices for the greater good of their nation.

Or, to borrow from that WWII Navy hero who became president, maybe it would be nice if instead of complaining, we ask what we can do for our country.



*Of course, the suffix "tard" is hurtful. Not to me, but to those with learning disabilities. But then, these tend to be the same people who heedlessly call the COVID-19 "the China virus." This willfully insensitive and cruel language makes me so happy to be on this side of the political divide.

24 good minutes

Yesterday, we had our own small Easter miracle. I called Henry, and we managed to get through the entire call without mention of furlough vs. medical leave, or his rage about his hospitalization over New Year's.

I told him I saw him on the Facebook feed from his church. He wore his Sunday best pink shirt and did a reading in Spanish. We laughed when he asked me how he did.

"Honey, I don't speak Spanish."

"Yes! I forget!" He told me he read the Bible verse where Mary Magdalene encounters Christ outside the tomb, and he calls her by her name. It was very important to him to participate in the Sunday service. There were only three of them in church yesterday: the pastor, Henry and his friend Phyllis, who also did a reading and was his wheels to and from.

I worshiped with Henry at that church on Christmas, and there was no Spanish read. I didn't notice any accented English from the parishioners before or after the service. But Henry's condition has deteriorated since Christmas -- I don't know why, but it clearly has -- and I suspect this was a kindness on the part of the pastor. With no job to go to, to help define him, Henry has become less moored to reality. Being assigned this reading on such an important Sunday meant a great deal to my friend. (So good on you, Pastor!)

We compared our Easter menus. Patrick was making a feast for the household -- baked ham, spaghetti squash and a dessert made using a can of pears from the cupboard. I grilled myself a steak and had sides I picked up Boston Market (mashed potatoes and creamed spinach).

He got weepy when he talked about our mothers. Henry recalled that my mother loved decorating her house for Easter -- they met only once, but I swear he remembers everything she said. He still insists the first book he ever read was a gift from his mother -- Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl. When he was in pre-school. I don't see how that is remotely possible, and if it was, I think it shows dubious parenting on the part of his mother. But whatever. Yesterday Henry was sad because that copy, the one Mother presumably placed in his 4-year-old hands, was damaged by mold and mildew.

I knew we were headed to Crazy Town. Tears never precede anything good with my friend. So I told him to preserve the book by wrapping it Saran Wrap* and said I had to go: Jesus Christ, Superstar was about to start on NBC.

I told him to tell Patrick and Reg "hi." I reminded him to eat, eat, eat! We said we loved each other.

I hung up happy. I must remember the lessons of Sunday's call -- keep it short and have an agenda before I dial (or, as if more often the case, pick up) so I can pivot back to it.



*Is that true? I don't know. I just wanted to divert him.


Sunday, April 12, 2020

"Grief into gladness"

This morning I attended my first -- and, hopefully, only -- Zoom Easter service. We sang "Morning Is Broken," just like we do every year. Just this year, we were accompanied only by a single guitarist playing alone in her apartment somewhere across town. We each sang remotely, but we sang! Sometimes traditions are balm for the soul.

The sermon was about turning grief into gladness. Our rev admitted that these are unusual times, but reminded us that they won't last forever. Personally, I have moments of anger: I'm in isolation, in the midst of a pandemic that the White House ignored for too long. But here in Illinois, our governor and local leaders have really stepped up, filled that void and worked to protect us. We are blessed.

That's just it! I must remember how blessed I am: Comfortable in my home, healthy, with a paycheck coming on next week.

I am loved. By the people I love, and by Christ.

Right now I'm watching Jesus Christ Superstar.

It's still Easter. It's a miracle, really. It's funny, but I don't really remember details about last Easter. But you can bet I'll remember this one!




Sunday Stealing


 
1 – What is something you are doing due to the pandemic that you normally don’t do? After the pandemic will you continue to so this? I discovered a channel called Hallmark Movies & Mysteries that shows a Magnum PI binge every weekday. If I'm not tuned into a teleconference, I put it on. I find I remember more of the plots than I thought it would, but that doesn't reduce my enjoyment. However, when real life begins again, I'm afraid I'll have to wave aloha to Thomas and the red Ferrari.



2 - What made you happy, sad, or frustrated today? List, all big and/or small, as there may be some of one or all of these feelings! I haven't attended church yet this morning, but I'm sure that will make me happy. Especially if the livestream goes off without a hitch! It also makes me happy that I don't have to go out today at all, and that my cat Connie is such an affectionate little purr box. (She's on my lap as I answer these questions.)

3- What is one of the first things you will do when the pandemic is over? Eat out! I really miss tucking myself into a booth with a book and enjoying a meal someone else cooked (and will clean up after).

4 – Are you an essential employee or do you know someone who is? Is this affecting you in some way? I'm by no means essential! In fact, this pandemic has helped emphasize how non-essential I am! My niece is an essential. She works for a string of appliance stores and these days she finds herself scheduling service calls. After all, washers, dryers, refrigerators and ovens go on the fritz, even during pandemics, and people need them more than ever when they can't go out. I don't worry about her, though. She's part of a skeleton crew in a massive office building, so it's easy for her to social distance.

5 – What are you doing to de-stress during this stressful time? I find talking to my friends helps a lot.

6 – Have you tried any new recipes during this time? Please share your recipe if you want to. No new recipes for me. No old ones, either. For example, my special solo Easter feast will be the filet I splurged on. I'll toss it onto my handy George Foreman grill. The sides will be courtesy of Boston Market.

7 – Have you always lived where you do now? If not, how did you wind up in the place you currently live? I have lived in this community my entire adult life. I love how diverse and inclusive it is.

8- Where is the last place you visited on-line? Facebook

9- What is the nicest thing anyone has ever said to you? "You are an exquisite friend." I try.

10 – Tell me about the last photo on your camera (phone or real camera or both!) It was of Easter baskets. A local organization hosts resale events to benefit local charities. Their doors are shuttered, and will remain so for weeks to come. Instead of packing up the Easter decorations they'd hoped to sell, they put them out on the lawn. There were baskets of plastic eggs and a sign that said, "Help Yourself!"  I thought it was so charming. 

Here's hoping your Easter is groovy and outtasight. 



"I hear you!"

Reynaldo helping me with work
On my way out to the dumpsters, garbage bag in hand, I ran into my neighbor from across the hall. He's a very nice man. It was good to talk to him (and touch elbows instead of hug).

But we were distracted by the yowling coming through my closed/locked front door. Reynaldo wanted me back inside ... pronto!

It's taken me awhile to get into the rhythm of self-isolation. But Reynaldo adapted to it instantly. He loves having me home.

I worry about what happens when I have to go back to the office. He'll probably go back to his destructive ways. I mean, he misses me and gets rambunctious when I take the garbage out!




Saturday, April 11, 2020

A lot of hurt inside these walls

This is not Henry and Reg's home. But theirs is so similar, I bet it was built by the same contractor. Ground level is the garage and the laundry room. Take the stairs up to the front door and enter a nice, big kitchen. Pass the 1/2 bath to the living room and a little patio, perfect for a table and four chairs. In better days, we had Christmas dinner back there. Upstairs are the master bedroom, a guest room and a full bath.

There are differences, though. Henry and Reg's house is beige with brown shutters and a white front door. Theirs has (non-functioning) central air and a little Arctic Air personal cooler next to each bed. And lots of pain. Their home is 880 sq. ft. of hurt.

Quarantined there right now are Henry, Reg and Reg's dear old friend Patrick. It is not going well. Henry has gone off the rails. The disruption caused by the pandemic, plus his traumatic brain injury,* have made him exceptionally difficult. While the rest of the library staff was furloughed, Henry was put on medical leave. This gives him more time off with pay because it excuses him from returning to work remotely, as the other employees will be expected to do. Working from home requires Henry to use a computer program that leaves him frustrated and angry, so placing him on medical leave was a nice, kind thing for his boss to do.

Henry is furious. He insists he's been "diminished" and "singled out" by medical leave. It is all he thinks about. Reg has explained all the reasons why this is a good thing. So has Patrick. I know his friend, Violet has tried, too. But he refuses to (or can't) accept this. Reg found that Henry has unwisely emailed the human resources department to complain about this.

When Henry called me Thursday to complain, I tried to change the subject. I told him how our community ice rink -- where children take skating lessons in the winter -- has been converted to a morgue to prepare for the bodies that will need to be preserved until funerals can be held. I was sure this would shock him, as it did me, or at least give him pause.

"That is too bad, but what I want to know is, will my pay be different from everyone else's? I asked my boss but he deflected me ..."

I told him that I found this conversation difficult because, as much as I want to help him with the situation, I simply can't. I'm in another state, I work in another industry, so I have no advice or suggestions. He said he understood, but continued to talk about his boss. "Miguel is messing with the wrong queen," he began. "I have information on him. I have seen him commit infractions ..."

I was tempted to reiterate that his boss has done him a favor in this situation, but I didn't bother. Instead I put my phone on speaker and let him go on and on about how awful this is, how unfair this is, while I literally changed a light bulb.

When I was done, I waited for him to catch his breath and then brought up Easter. Hallelujah! For a moment I got him to think about something else!

"Yes, tomorrow is Good Friday," he acknowledged, and then talked about this weekend's church services, before returning to, "What I want to know is, will my pay be different from everyone else's? I asked Miguel but he would not answer me."

Reg and Patrick have been living with this. 24/7, as Henry seldom sleeps. He has exhausted them.

To Reg, Henry says, "You are my husband. You are supposed to care about me! You should call Miguel and defend me." Reg responds by explaining (again and again) that medical leave is really beneficial, and so he will not lift a finger to have it changed. Henry accuses Reg of being lazy and simply not caring

Reg tries to explain that everyone they know is suffering through this pandemic. That local government has more to concern itself with right now than how Henry's layoff is classified. "You do not care that I have been singled out and diminished!"

Then there is yelling. Reg tells Henry to shut up. Henry responds by saying his blood pressure is "sky high" and he wants to go to the doctor. Reg says the doctor won't see Henry because of the pandemic. Henry begins to cry. They get in the car and make their way through the busy grocery store to the blood pressure machine. Henry's blood pressure is normal. They make their way back through the crowd and go home. 

Patrick tries to distract Henry. It doesn't go well. Patrick is into fitness, and every day asks Henry to join him for walks. After all, in Key West it's sunny and 80Âș+. Why not take advantage of the great weather and empty streets? Henry refuses. He is too achy and tired from worry about his work situation. Patrick makes small bowls of food for Henry -- cereal, soup, a green salad -- and insists he eat at least some of it. They fight, but Henry has lost 40 lbs. in the last year and a half. Patrick is concerned about his health ... and his drinking. No exercise, little food but plenty of booze are not the recipe for good health. Yet Henry slips out at night to purchase wine. Patrick tells him that liquor interferes with his medication. Henry responds that he must drink because he is so upset about "diminished" and "singled out" by medical leave.

"Why is this happening to me? Why will no one stick up for me?"

Patrick explains that no one can afford to deal with this right now, that the county and state are dealing with massive health and financial issues. They argue. Henry doesn't cry with Patrick, he gets mean.

"I have degrees," he slurs. "I speak three languages. You are just a waiter! You are not smart enough to understand my life!"

Patrick and Reg go to sleep. Henry phones friends. The next day, it all begins again.

I must stress this: Henry was not always like this. He used to be indefatigably kind and curious about the world around him. His accident robbed him of all that, and left him like an angry toddler.

I have spoken to Patrick regularly during this crisis. About him, about me, and naturally about Reg and Henry. "This isn't sustainable," he says. I agree. Patrick worries that Reg will leave Henry, and that Henry can't survive on his own. I worry, too, but not about that. What happens in June, when hurricane season starts? If a storm heads for Key West, Henry and Reg will be locked inside again, without the option of rushing to Publix and the blood pressure monitor. Or what if the county decides enough is enough and lets Henry go? Can he function without the stability the job gives him, and the all-important health insurance he needs?

Patrick and I agree Reg should see a counselor, to learn caregiver coping techniques to diffuse the situation. Reg is resistant. I don't know why.

Everyone in that house hurts. Everyone is worried and scared. It is a tragedy.




*If you read the section on Behavioral Impairments,  you'll see a portrait of Henry.




Friday, April 10, 2020

Saturday 9

Saturday 9: The Easter Bunny Bop (2015)

1) This song encourages little ones to celebrate Easter by doing a little dance. Do you feel like dancing this morning? I'm trying to get into the spirit of the holiday. Not quite there yet.


2) Everyone in this video is wearing bunny ears. Target, Amazon and other retailers sell bunny ear headbands sized for adults and priced at about $5. Will you be wearing bunny ears, or perhaps a more conventional chapeau, this weekend? Or, because of the corona virus, will your Easter attire be the same as any other day? Jeans and a t-shirt. No reason to dress up. I'll be live streaming our church service.

3) This week's featured artists, The Bounce Patrol Kids, are a children's entertainment juggernaut: CDs, DVDs, downloads, and t-shirts. Additionally, they often update their YouTube channel because they want children the world over to have access to their upbeat, energetic songs for free. Besides the Bounce Patrol, what's the last YouTube video you watched? Randy Rainbow. Loooooove him.




4) According to Forbes magazine, the average American household spends $20.66 on candy each Easter. Will you be consuming candy this weekend? Probably not. I like my sweets, but I tend toward bakery and ice cream.

5) The biggest chocolate Easter egg was made in Italy, measured 34 feet tall and weighed a staggering 15,000 lbs. Do you thinks it's possible to have too much chocolate? Yes. I've had too much chocolate/sugar and felt logy afterward.
 
6) After chocolate, the top-selling Easter candy is Peeps Marshmallow Chicks. They're so popular that, in 2018, they were the subject of a Jeopardy clue. Do you often watch Jeopardy? Nope

7) Jelly beans are also popular this time of year. In a 2019 poll, jelly bean fans responded that Jelly Belly Buttered Popcorn is their favorite flavor. Sam is crazy about cherry. Do you have a favorite? Red licorice.

8) We've been talking a lot about sweets this morning. The only holiday that generates more candy sales is Halloween. When do you eat more candy: Easter or Halloween? Halloween.

9) Easter is considered the season of rebirth. What makes you feel refreshed or rejuvenated? I'm always in a good mood after a shower.

Boys and their toys

Paul's joy at owning and playing this bass is infectious.

Thursday, April 09, 2020

Not my office, but it could be


Look at this picture. Imagine this setting when everyone is at their assigned seat. There can be no "social distancing." Everyone is closer than six feet to the person to their left and right, as well as directly across from them.

For this reason, when we begin returning to work after the pandemic, we are likely to do it by teams. If your client is Global Airlines, you're expected to be at the office on Mondays. The Jiffy Burger team will be there on Tuesdays. The Consolidated Insurance team will be onsite on Wednesdays ... We'll sit as far apart as possible, and wipe down our areas throughout the day.

I read in Business Insider that more than half of us believe that open offices will lead to an increase in coronavirus infections. I'm one of that 52.9%.

Of course, I hated open seating before this. It robs me of my privacy and the quiet time I need to write. It leaves me piteously exposed all day and exhausted at night.

And now it puts me at risk for disease.

Yea.

If it wasn't for the stock market's nose dive, I'd welcome retirement.



"Is Will there?" "Betty, turn on your mic!"

Our classic movie group met last night via Zoom.  It got off to a rocky start, as these meetings always do. But once we all got into it -- both technologically and emotionally -- it was fun.

We each watched the movie on our own. Will chose The Reckless Moment, a 1949 noir* starring Joan Bennett and an impossibly handsome young James Mason. I enjoyed it well enough. It reminded me of Mildred Pierce (bad daughter) with a dash of Hitchcock (lots of MacGuffins†).

I attended the Zoom meet up with one cat or the other on my lap, which was nice. A pair of millennials joined us, and it's always fun to talk classics with a new generation of fans. These two really knew their shit.

We had a newish member, a rather pretentious woman who kept reminding us that she's a playwright. She insisted that the movie reflected the tough times the middle class suffered as it came out of the Depression. Um ... no .... Joan Bennett's character had a beach front home with an adjacent beach house, both a car and a boat, a live-in maid, and a mink which she wore not on special occasions but every time she left the house. Even after this was pointed out to her, the playwright kept reminding us that this movie depicted how hard it was to be a middle class woman in 1949. She knows, she's a playwright, after all. I mention this because I forgot myself and allowed the camera to catch my eye rolls. That was unkind of me. Gotta remember that for our next meeting.

But in all, I had a great time. I think our moderator, Will, enjoyed it, too. I'm especially happy for him. This is the first April in a decade that he won't be at the TCM Classic Film Festival. I hope last night's coming together took some of the sting out of this for him.




*Or was it a melodrama? I find classification conversations tiresome, but I know classic movie aficionados who love them.

†Hitchcock describes a MacGuffin as something that the characters worry about and discuss but, in the final analysis, had nothing to do with the way the plot unfolded. In Psycho, it's the money Marian stole. I love MacGuffins, because I fall for the trick and am distracted by them every time. They're a delicious reminder that I'm not so smart after all.

Tuesday, April 07, 2020

As bad as a drunk driver

There was a Texas woman who insisted that the pandemic is not real, but "media driven, and controlled by the radical people in powerful places." She posted that anyone who didn't agree with her should, "go back to sleep under the rock you crawled out from."

Today she is dead. From the very virus she mocked.

It's sad that she died. She left two young sons.

But this is important: her Facebook post appeared on 3/14 and she died on 4/2. Two weeks. That means she'd already been exposed to Covid-19 when she wrote it.

Every time she left her house armed only with her faith "and, of course guns!" instead of hand sanitizer, she put people at risk. The people in line in front of her at the drug store. The congregants in the pew next to her. The health care workers who fought to save her life. Her sons! In that way, she was just like a drunk driver. Anyone who has been over-served and gets behind the wheel puts not only their own lives at risk, but also everyone they encounter on the road.

I'm glad to be one of the "idiots" this poor woman derided. I'm grateful that I've listened to our elected leaders and taken precautions to save my own life. I appreciate that my Christian faith encourages me to treat others -- and their health -- with respect.

I believe that saying: "Science is an answer to our prayers." I also believe that we're all in this together. And that it's my government's responsibility to do for me what I can't do for myself. I thank God that (so far) I'm healthy, and that I was wise enough to choose to be an "idiot."

Perhaps her sad story will be a wake up call and will save lives.


Monday, April 06, 2020

Tuesday 4

About Work

1. Describe the best job you ever had and why was it good? (If it was awful, tell us about that instead.) I had my best job between 1996 and 2002. It was great because that advertising agency was run by a great man. It was a real privilege to know and work for him. He demanded good work from us and I was inspired to do my best because of his example. He was a man of integrity and compassion who put The Golden Rule into practice. He died almost a year ago, and this is what I wrote when I heard the news.

2.  How did you learn to do your job?
I'm a writer, and words have always come easily to me. But I've also been lucky to have some very good teachers. One boss, Ed, taught me that writers have to be concerned with formats and layouts, too, and work closely with our art directors if we are to get the message across. Another boss, Barb, taught me how to balance art and commerce. I'm not paid to serve my muse; I'm supposed to serve my client.

3. You are now in charge of your town's public relations committee ... Tell us why we need to move to your town.
We work hard making everyone feel included and welcome. The following sign appears all over town (though not all lawns look this good).


4. 
It's lunch time! Build your perfect sandwich for us ... What's in it and on it and what's in our cups? How about ham on wheat? With mayo, lettuce and pickle slices or relish. Potato chips on the side. I'll have ice water or a Coke with my sandwich.


Troubling times in Camelot

Two sad news stories caught my eye this past week.

Maeve McKean and her son, Gideon, were lost in Chesapeake Bay. Maeve was the daughter of Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, the oldest child of Robert and Ethel Kennedy. Gideon was her 8-year-old son. Because of the pandemic, the Kennedys can't mourn together. Because they're Kennedys, they can't mourn privately anyway. Friends and neighbors have hung home made cards on the trees outside the family home, and the Kennedy clan held an online prayer service in memory of mother and son.

Maeve's mother, Kathleen, is a favorite of mine. She was the first grandchild of Joe and Rose Kennedy, yet no one expected her to to go into the family business because, well, she's a girl and girls born in 1951 didn't get to have political careers. Kathleen showed 'em. In 1994, she ran on the ticket with Parris Glendenning and was Lt. Governor of Maryland for 8 years.

Kathleen -- born on the 4th of July -- actually knew her Uncle Jack and father (who lovingly nicknamed her "Clean Kathleen" because she was such a good girl). She was 12 when President Kennedy was assassinated, and just shy of her 17th birthday when she lost her father. She has worked her entire adult life to be a credit to their memories. Today, she's on the faculty of Georgetown University and a member of the Points of Light Foundation (started by President George H. W. Bush). And, because she's a good Kennedy, she's a fundraiser for the Democratic party.

Clean Kathleen has been married more than 45 years to her first and only husband. I hope they are a comfort to one another at this awful time.


Photographer Peter Beard is missing. He loved Kenya and became well respected for his photos of elephants and big cats. In 1969, his work was championed by JBKO, who invited him to Skorpios. He babysat John Jr. and mentored Caroline in photography. He also had an extra-marital affair with her sister, Lee, which reportedly ended badly. But he and Jackie remained friends until her death.

Some of the Jackie O glitter rubbed off. With his good looks and talent, he became a member of the jet set, hanging around with Andy Warhol, Truman Capote and Mick and Bianca. He was married to model Cheryl Tiegs.

He was more than just handsome and glamorous. Karen Blixen and Salvador Dali were as enamored of his work as Jackie had been.

Now 82 and suffering from dementia, he disappeared last Tuesday from his Montauk home. K-9 units and drones have searched for him, but so far, no luck.

I have hopes that this survivor of the wilds of both Africa and Studio 54 is still all right somewhere. After all, Peter Beard was once gored by an elephant and lived to joke about it.