Category Archives: Editorial

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The Brigade

Halfway through college we gals found an Irish pub downtown. We got to sing and have a pint but there was always a line for the ladies’ room.

I asked that they give free beer and charge $10 for the restroom but that didn’t go over so started my brigade system. We took over the mens’ room as well and the two first in line guarded the door. We still had a line and men went to the front of it but with 200 people in a pub and two onesie restrooms we did what we had to do.

Let’s hope they re-arranged their restroom system and their music is alive. That’s where I learned about “the man who never returned” on the MTA.

Let’s hope it’s at least as popular as Dee’s Kitty Wake-Up List. That’s what I invented for the spay/neuter feral cat clinic for our volunteer “breathers” to use to show which cats came successfully out of anaesthesia then just took a nap from those who were still “under” or dead. None died in Recovery on my six-year watch.

And now I’ve birthed a crosswalk where no motorist will ever stop. I do think of inventive things and follow through on them, some to great success. Just say, “keep up the good work, Dee.” Aw, shucks. Dee

Little Things Mean a Lot

I’ve done a lot of research and if my husband and I ever settle down I want a knot garden of herbs right outside my kitchen, surrounded by an errant country garden that includes a teak bench on a cobblestone round that has a small Italian water feature on the wall. Under shade trees, of course, for reading and writing and entertaining guests.

As I age, I know I’m in it for comfort, not speed. I may have arthritis and wear camo crocs and you may be fast in high heels but my brain will get me to the destination faster. Thank you, Al Gore, for the internet, te hee.

I keep designing my dream home and it gets smaller and smaller (2/2.5 with 2-car garage) with a guest house studio, 600 s.f. Of course the main house would have a patio with supreme grill, cabinets, burners, refrigerator et al. I don’t know where in the country so certain weather factors would come into play. A roof over a stone terrace with said outdoor kitchen would be great with seating, propane heaters and no shoveling.

Yes, we like the Rockies. Log cabin, perhaps. Lake or mountains, preferably a view of both. Ocean, of course, but only north of San Fran.

I know my kitchen, at least what I need but don’t have the configuration down. Clean, open space and get this, a galley kitchen. These Texas monstrosities drive me nuts, but these huge ones are just for show. They go out or order in, and don’t walk ten feet from oven to refrigerator to sink and really cook.

Oh, I’d have Uncle B craft us a state-of-the-art smoker so that we could have people over for brisket, ribs and chicken. All with a slice of Wonder bread and cheddar. On butcher paper. Or I’d cook up some of Lady Bird Johnson’s Perdenales chili, my way. ‘Tis Texas so there ain’t no beans in that dang chili.

Seeing as I’m going to spend $2 to win a super lotto prize and build the home of my dreams, the little things matter. I know I need an enclosed “butler’s pantry” to keep food away from the dog. Large, cool (granite or other cool surfaces) counters and glass-enclosed upper cupboards for glassware and plates, lower cupboards for pots and pans and bakeware.

There is an elevator ready to be installed. All is to be ready to be made ADA accessible, including supports behind bathroom walls for handrails and doorways are wheelchair-friendly as is the entrance to the home.

Most everything is on the first floor and if needed, the office can be moved upstairs so it is on one level as the office could become a bedroom with en suite bath and a closet. Laundry is important. I need to think about that because I’d normally place it in a large master closet but don’t want the noise. Nor do I want it in the basement. If on the 1st floor a handy chute is needed.

Yes, I could drive an architect and feng shui artist nuts but we’ll need both of them to make dreams come true. Just thinking of the little things. Still working on it as I’m stuck on a desert design I’ve thought of for decades. Think Alamo. Dee

Transformation

When I was seven years old, I wore lace ankle socks and patent leather Mary Jane shoes, and dresses. When I was eight I was barefoot in shorts and a tee shirt climbing a rope down a 150′ cliff and dealing with snakes and mice and boy neighbors.

What happened? We moved to the country, five miles outside of our tiny village. I went from prim and proper in a dress and Mary Janes to learning, at age eight, to run a seated Toro lawn mower with two gears for hours because my Dad wanted the change, but he also wanted a huge lawn. Never mind that 80% of the lawn was weeds.

Prissy girl or tomboy? I err to the latter but today have everything done for my husband’s return from a business trip: laundry; dishes; dog; clean house so I’m writing for a bit before I figure out what to make for dinner.

My mother never liked my choices. Oh, she finally approved of my husband, just never of me and she’ll be gone 5 years next month. I dream about her all the time.

Mom didn’t like that I was smart and a feminist and wrote laws that affected 35 million people on civil and human rights, including bias against actual or perceived sexual orientation. That part was OK. I’m straight but human rights and privacy and now public safety are my linchpins.

She didn’t want me to go to work with my Dad, which I did anyway. Years later I eloped because I didn’t want her to suffer being in a small room with my father and his girlfriend.

We’ve moved all over the place so I can’t keep a career and retired. Now I call myself, as I did to work for Sundance a couple of years ago, a Feminist Homemaker. That’s why Sundance called me. Perhaps Mom would be proud of me now.

I’m wearing comfortable athletic pants and a pink tee shirt, and pink fluffy socks. Shoes, no. Not in the house. I don’t have any ropes to climb, snakes being put down the back of my shirt, ghost softball games, skinnydipping with my sister, or crayfish but I do have one thing.

It’s a picture by the former editor of the local paper of my favorite creek. I framed it beautifully and placed it at the end of the hall for maximum impact. It reminds me of where I grew up and how I’ve changed and like the balance of justice it sways a few degrees. I’ve challenged those degrees and have gone off balance with work and social issues from time to time.

Like spending six years working to get a park where I could legally let my dog chase a ball. She died and I regret spending every night at community meetings while volunteering as VP to raise funds for parks and wreck when I could have spent it with her and not for her.

A friend once gave me a dog angel ornament that is on my desk and looks like the dog I had for ten years and have lost for twelve, that has wings and a halo. Also a framed photo of me at age one in a pink snowsuit hanging onto an evergreen tree. Isn’t that prophetic. The other is my first cat, Nathan, Gift from God, on his bed. He died 13 years ago.

The final transformation is death and while we never want to think about it, I need to get the paperwork in order. A living will, will allow my husband not to make a decision to let me go in certain circumstances and know that I made it for him. I don’t plan to die for another 40 years at least but if I do, I’m building a case for him to re-marry. He doesn’t buy it, just because he drove up in a Honda it looked like a white horse to me.

I framed this work of the creek I grew up on because I love the woman who took the photo 31 years ago and I’ve always known my ashes should be along this creek that took me from prissy girl to adventurer. Admiring that side I had at age eight and knowing I landed in a great place in the middle, marrying a genius and having a wonderful partnership, makes life worthwhile.

Steak on the grill, rosti potatoes, and the salad just needs to be tossed. Welcome home, dear. Cheers! Dee

School

Two people I know have kids going to school this week, one to kindergarten, another to college. All I know is that tears will be involved before and after, hopefully not during the first separation.

I can’t imagine what my parents felt as I, their eldest, went off to school. I felt dread every year and for weeks had nightmares about things like showing up naked for school. In reality, the worst part is that the teachers inevitably butchered my name, first and last, and shy me had to correct them from the back of the room. I also had to pretend to be “average” so I wouldn’t get beaten up on the bus.

These children have so much to live for, and look forward to an education, career, marriage, family, and grandchildren. I always want to help kids along the way, but one must always be on the lookout for those who hurt them as well. Whether it’s bullying or psychological abuse by a parent or other, it’s something that needs to be dealt with.

On a cold winter day two boys stole my hat, threw it around the bus then tore it in half. I was crying when I got to school and a teacher saw me and took me to the principal’s office where I hesitated but finally identified the boys, knowing life would never be the same again as they’d beat me.

It was never the same because I had 12 neighbors, cousins all from the dairy next door, who let the bad guys know never to touch me again (the principal sent a letter home which they tore up and they didn’t have a phone). School is a testing ground, a way to learn both subject matter and social skills.

If I ever go back to school it will be on my terms and I’ll have the best teachers for the subject matter I desire to learn. I’ve done it once, cooking school in Tuscany, a birthday present and one student and I still keep in touch.

Thanks to my precious teachers and professors with whom I’m still in touch, and to my neighbors and protectors during my school years and beyond. Dee

p.s. It won’t be Trump University!

Happy

No, she’s not sick or anything but Zoe, our dog nearing age ten, is the happiest animal I’ve ever met. I’ve worked with thousands of dogs and cats over 20 years and even though we had to take her hips out as a pup she grew her own and just is happy, sleepy, hungry or needy every day.

I can’t think of what to do without her or in her final days. Years ago before we married my husband said let’s have babies. I said OK but first we have to get a dog to find out how bad you are. He’s horrible. He is the “fun guy” dad who lets her off leash and tosses the ball and lets her eat icky stuff off the road or in the bushes that she tosses on the bed and I’ve five loads of laundry to do.

Disciplinarian and food wench am I.  Guess who she waits at the door for when I’m out shopping for groceries on the weekend? Me. She loves him. She really likes and tolerates me. My husband would disagree as he believes I’m her sun and moon as he is mine.

We’re on our own this evening and she stays right by me and barks at any noise. She takes good care of me. And it’s nice to have someone to talk to, even though she doesn’t really talk back. She probably has beaten a monkey with word knowledge, however. Even if we spell something out, she knows what it is. Ball is now “spherical device.”

I always adopted the unadoptable animals. My first was abused by a law enforcement officer so was afraid of men, children and men in uniform. I cured her of that and she was the sweetest dog, beloved by all the kids in our park. They all gave the park a tree in her memory.

For once, I wanted a pup who could be normal. Of course she wasn’t because she had the worst hips her vet had ever seen. But she got over it, and a couple of days later was happy as can be. I bought an E-Collar (in “Up” they call it the Cone of Shame) and it is still taped to the back of a picture, unused.

Yes, I let her get up on the bed and she’s remained there ever since. She’ll go with either who will lift her up and sit for a while sleeping or watching tv. Why? Because even though the hip surgeries hurt and I was worried she’d get at her stitches, she had razor burn and that was her primary concern.

I left her at the grocery store the other day, tied her to the bicycle rack and was in the store for just a few moments. I walked home and thought I forgot something. Oh, no! I ran full-out until I got to the street she was on, about three minutes, then took deep breaths and walked slowly and calmly to get her.

Yesterday there were three men and I walked Zoe on a 6′ leash held between my fingers at 2′ and one man recoiled in horror at the sight of a dog but she was several feet away from him. His friend said “He’s afraid of dogs.” I said I was sorry to hear that.” Friend “He’s a human being.” Me at my mailbox with short-leash dog 20 feet away “So am I, in case you haven’t noticed.” Then he told me my dog wasn’t human and I said she never got anywhere near him and was under my control at every moment.

Zoe knows who likes her and who doesn’t.  People in the neighborhood know her name, not always mine. I can tell you that if you want to meet a perfect “starter dog” pick Zoe. A two-year old could take food out of her bowl and she’d just look up at me and question, will I get more? Here’s to happy dogs, from a secret cat lover too, Dee

Will They Stop?

Ah, that is the question. Yesterday city workers graded the gravel and today they poured the concrete. My husband isn’t here with his iPhone 6:30 a.m. alarm and my four-legged alarm, even leaving the shades up so the sun would stream in about 5:00 didn’t work. I think I need a trade-in that won’t let me sleep until 8:11 in the morning.

So, we went out for a walk immediately and ran into the city workers making “my” crosswalk. Someone came around the blind corner fast yet stopped for us. I thanked the workers and said I’d been trying to get this for months. Even with the construction tape around it I figured that between the yellow signs was the safest place to cross to get home from our walk.

What did they say? THEY almost got killed this morning! Two big trucks and a cement mixer and THEY were in danger. Tonight I checked on the setting concrete (visually) and at least 30 cars sped by us in the crosswalk without a thought of our safety or their jail time if they ran us over. Perhaps we should have a pedestrian protest and hold up signs like “Run over me! Go to Jail” while we cross at legal intersections.

Six months has gone into making us safer. I’ve gotten three stop signs, a “carriage crossing” whatever that means and soon to be a real crosswalk. They’re doing others in our neighborhood since recent deaths have occurred from speeding drivers.

Less than 1% compliance with state law is a travesty, of a mockery of a sham, so said Woody Allen back in the day. Even though this city supposedly has zero tolerance for jaywalkers, I’d jaywalk in a minute if I found a safe place on a street to do so, without curves that make it impossible to see oncoming traffic without venturing out into the street at a legal location.

“Dear Driver: I know you’re in a hurry to get somewhere. I have things to do as well, like walk my old dog. She’s fast but doesn’t understand the concept of traffic and just thinks she’s happy and safe all the time. She is and I’m glad of it so take our lives in my hands several times a day to take her for a walk.

You speed on our streets and deny pedestrians the right, written in State law, to cross at designated crosswalks because you want to get somewhere a minute or two faster. Please consider that these are your neighbors you are mowing down and killing just to get to where you want to go a few minutes sooner than if you obeyed the law.”

Thank you, Dee

ps No, they’ll never stop, not until we have the National Guard at every killing crosswalk for a few months. I’ve several other ideas but will leave it at that. Got one, leave earlier and you won’t have the need to speed, Top Gun-inspired.

Travels and Travails for Zoe

Dear Reader,

I am Zoe, a herding dog, breed unknown but probably between Aussie and Border Collie. My folks got out a suitcase last night and finished packing it before I was done with my beauty sleep this morning and it was like planning for the invasion of Normandy.

Mom told Dad he had to pack his own bag with help so he could hang up his belongings and bring them all home. She says Dad hasn’t packed a suitcase in 12 years. I’ve only been around for nine so no judgment there.

He stole my pillow I’ve had for five years to use on the plane and in the hotel. I’ve been looking for him all day, not just for the pillow. Mom is calm and into our routine. I have been badgered by a man whose friend says he is afraid of dogs and I got nowhere near him and he and Mom argued for a few moments. I’m only sorry he’s afraid of us dogs because he’s missing out on a good thing.

Then there were fireworks. I’m not really scared of them but they are loud and bother my ears. I was still looking for Dad to come home even though Mom is taking good care of me. She did eat the rest of my meat loaf for dinner, though. In order to make her feel guilty for me missing a pack member I did jump on the sofa three times tonight, and that’s not allowed. She did not make me jump down.

Then there have already been two late night Coast Guard exercises with helicopters and now she’s gone to her desk to write this and I had to come see her. Now when she goes back to bed she’ll have to lift me up again. I have no hips and am getting old.

I look forward to our pack being together again tomorrow as right now I think Mom has to go to sleep and I’ll protect her. Canine friends, keep rescuing Timmy from the well. I’m learning the Lassie salute. Zoe

Daring Foods

My sister and I had a game as kids when one went out of the kitchen and the other made the most disgusting mess of food that the other had to try. It was usually overly salty or sugary and may even have coffee grounds in it.

Ick.I went easy on my sister. She played hard ball. That game did not last very long. She liked to let me win at board games, but was a wizard with family politics.

One rule in cooking school is that you had to try everything, unless you were a practicing Jew which prevented contact with pork or shellfish. I never killed a lobster. We did four and the guys in our class of eight relished the thought of placing a 12″ chef knife between their eyes and cutting them in half. I ate them, just didn’t kill them. Yes, I know.

If I was lost in the woods I’d eat crickets but I don’t have to do so and really don’t want to eat one preserved in chocolate. Perhaps I should take a trip that encourages me to do things on my own. No, I’m too old for that. Plus I’d need more survival techniques to survive an endeavor that would make me… survive.

I have tried liver, kidneys, sweetbreads and other delicacies. They’re difficult to find so I do not cook them. No prairie oysters, sorry. I tried octopus in Greece and it was a textural thing. It tasted great but was chewy, same with squid, calamari which must be cooked quickly or stewed for a long time to be edible.

Ideas about this post name abound but I’ve none to know why I chose it. Just tired and have to go to sleep. Favorite foods next? I’d love to stop talking about crosswalks. Dee

Brava Kristin Chenoweth

As you’re from OK I bought my husband a more country CD of yours (he’s from TX five miles south of the Red River) and never saw it again. That he means he loves your beautiful voice as well but I never got to hear it.

I just watched you on Leno, with your variation on Wicked’s “Popular” featuring Anthony Wiener. Amazing, and humorous for everyone beside the fourth most popular mayoral candidate. I notice that Spitzer got points for being Client 13 and actually following through and not just sending photos. Oh, Mayor Bob Filner of San Diego is resigning for groping staff. Unfortunately there are other songs out there ripe for the picking.

Since your stint on the West Wing I’ve been a fan and would love to see you on stage sometime. You are a force to be reckoned with on Broadway, in Hollywood, anywhere, and have the brains and guts to do anything. Godspeed, girl, and don’t touch any fish Jay gives you next if it’s worse than sea urchin. Dee

Home Care or Daycare

I’ve been involved in a debate today on this. I’m not a mother. I have one husband and one old dog. Zoe, you know her already.

One person blogged that he/she is too introverted to take care of her child so is taking him/her to daycare. I argued… first let’s call her “she” because she appears to be a mother, and flip a coin and call the kid “he” just because it’s easier.

She’s a scientist and refuses to learn to teach her child how to emotionally deal with future beatings and disrespect he will endure in grade school because the kid is smart.

I got A’s. I never studied. I just did it. But I’m a girl so I never told anyone my grades. I probably got a few B’s just to fit in.

Due to my background I do believe that the first five years are essential in development of character that will determine a child’s life. I also believe that a child’s parents should model behavior, like not talking on the cell phone while driving, and cooking healthy meals.

I would love to be a mother, and know my husband would be a great dad but we have not been blessed and that’s the way it goes. We’ve raised a dog for nearly ten years so I must tell you this.

As a volunteer for animals for over 20 years I asked potential adopters if they had time to potty train, obedience train and spend time and effort with a good diet and exercise. Some said, it’s just a dog. I said “no.” Crating 12 hours a day with no dog walker, no. And as Dr. Dog says, a backyard dog is a dog without a home.

I think it’s about time to re-evaluate the workplace of conservatives who want to make money and breed more conservatives. If you have a child you’re out of the running for partnership, probably even if you take the prescribed six weeks maternity leave. As a husband, don’t even think of taking paternity leave unless you want no job when you return.

Our species depends upon reproduction so why is the workplace so horrified of it? Our nation’s laws and interpretation of these laws are so convoluted and inane that they can’t decide what to do with mothers, illegal immigrants or people who make minimum wage and can’t get by.

If I had a child and we had enough money, I would stay home with that child for five years and send him to kindergarten and work part-time, then first grade and work full-time with a nanny. Most parents don’t get to do that and this fight about parents vs. daycare is just not right.

My husband, a genius, was never broken, given many opportunities to succeed by my dearest in-laws and grandparents. Being with me has grown him intellectually in artistic and culinary matters and expanded his societal strengths. OK, he now asks me what kind of cheese is on his grilled cheese sandwich and is that a four- or five-year cheddar? His parents don’t regret the change because he’s happy and I cook with his mom for several days every Thanksgiving to feed 60!

People need to make their own decisions, but not trying to get an introvert out of his shell may induce him to only live on individually-wrapped string cheese leaving wrappers from the frig to the computer. Yes, that’s when I met my future husband in his man cave. There was also a 72 oz. Dr. Pepper in the frig and one lasagne his mom left him in the freezer. Now he says I make up a new recipe and by the third time it’s great, as long as it doesn’t have eggplant in it. Cook! Dee