Two Spirits

Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken. —-Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde was a witty man who used sarcasm to entertain. He was quite popular at the end of the nineteenth century until he was accused of having a homosexual relationship with the son of a wealthy and powerful man. He went to trial claiming that his alleged affair did not happen and he therefore attempted to sue his accuser for libel. Sadly his efforts backfired and he ended up being found guilty for gross indecency. He was sentenced to prison where he languished in a state of depression for the two years of his sentence. His reputation was ruined by the incident and he became an impoverished refugee in Paris. 

Of course in that era homosexuality was criminal and those who were gay or lesbian either attempted to deny their feelings or lived secretive lives in which the prospect of being caught was a dangerous reality. There is an irony that his most famous quote about being oneself was mostly impossible for him due to the dangerous nature of being gay. His somber end was often the fate of both men and women who had feelings and desires for same sex relationships. It would be another century before  homosexuality began to to be more accepted by society. Nonetheless there are still those who are unwilling to embrace gay and lesbian citizens as the good and normal people that they are.  

I grew up only hearing about homosexual people when I was teenager. Back in the late nineteen sixties the names for such people were grotesque and insulting. I assumed that I had never encountered anyone of that persuasion and had no idea what someone with those tendencies might be like. 

I remember my husband telling me when I was in my thirties in the late nineteen eighties that everyone knew someone who was homosexual and that there was nothing strange about them. I still was not certain that I had ever encountered such souls who were only beginning to publically embrace the title of being gay. 

Of course i was wrong. As society seemingly became more open friends, co-workers and even family members began to “come out.” It was a liberating time for them and a learning time for me. I realized that some of the finest people I have ever known were either gay or lesbian. Somehow it just seemed so natural to be able to openly support them as the wonderful people that I knew they were. 

I attended their weddings when society agreed to make their unions legal. Some of the most emotional moments I have ever experienced came from hearing their stories of being shunned or living in the shadows. As they became more and more open I began to wonder why they had ever been viewed as indecent people. I saw them as being kind, generous and incredibly understanding. I was happy that they were finally able to be themselves. 

The battles that gay and lesbians fought to find acceptance have been difficult. They were often spurned, becoming victims of violence. We have all heard the brutal stories of gay men and women being beaten and sometimes even murdered when they were never hurting anyone. History tells us of individuals who were castrated, imprisoned, spurned from society. it has been good to know that in recent times gay men can become governors and hold powerful positions in the arts, commerce and education. The shackles of secrecy have mostly been thrown aside but what seemed to me like a total reversal of the kind of ignorance that ruined the life of Oscar Wilde was not as universally celebrated as I had believed. There were still groups who found gays and lesbians to be unacceptable and of late they are threatening to restrict the freedoms of the gay and lesbian community once again. 

Even more troubling is the seemingly unmitigated hatefulness being aimed at the transsexual population. This group is so small that few people have ever encountered a trans person. They literally represent under one percent of the population and generally cause no trouble for others, but nonetheless have become the political pincushions of MAGAs. Just existing makes their lives difficult in some circles. There are groups that make no effort to understand them or to accept them even though there is strong evidence that their physical characteristics are out of sync with their brains because of hormonal events in utero or medically verifiable differences in their DNA. Instead of attempting to understand them, there are political efforts to deny the reality of their very existence. The kind of anger and hatred being hurled at them leaves them vulnerable and likely to endure hate and violence and poverty as they become outcasts in society.  

It is well known that people from the LGBTQ community have been around since the beginning of time and in all cultures and nationalities. In fact some Native American tribes have always viewed members of the LGBTQ community as being spiritually blessed. They honor such people for their uniqueness. So too did the ancient Greeks and other societies. Historically they have only been viewed as indecent or dangerous by hyper religious groups with strict rules of sexuality. 

I am hoping that my LGBQT friends and relatives will not be harmed or ostracized. I’d like to believe that we have moved past such judgmental behavior. Surely we can now see that they are more like us that they are different. They are good people who deserve to live in peace and harmony. I don’t want them to be hurt anymore. Surely we have moved past the ignorance that breeds fear of gender diversity. I for one have learned that those with unique sexuality are some the best people that I have ever known.    

The Upside Down World

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It is spring time and my yard is bursting with life. The birds flock to the feeders that hang from a tree. They entertain me with their frolicking. My roses are budding and my amaryllis bulbs are showing off with blooms of red, white and pink. The hibiscus flowers smile as though they understand how much joy they bring me. My backyard is a refuge that fools me into believing that this is just another blossoming of a season in the long history of my life. Somehow I momentarily forget what is really happening and the worries that haunt me both day and night. 

I spend a great deal of time retreating to the quiet beauty of my little Shangri-La. It is a way of maintaining a semblance  of sanity in the world that seems to have gone mad. There are times when I feel that there really is a rabbit hole that leads to Alice’s Wonderland. I think that I have fallen through and now I must find a way to escape from the mania, chaos and confusion of what feels like a bad dream. 

I have never been a fan of Alice and her adventures. Her world was too upside-down for me. It was populated with characters that I did not like. While I understood it as satire, I never felt comfortable taking my imagination to a place that was so contrary to the personality that defines me. Somehow I found the cast of selfish creatures a bit too bizarre and mismatched with my own quiet and more logical demeanor. The population of fools and dictators annoyed me. 

Finding myself feeling as though I am now living in that upside down world is a source of great anxiety. I literally want to escape immediately but each new day tells me that I will have to learn to cope until our “mad king” who is ensconced in the White House one day goes away. My challenge is to survive and hopefully to find the kindred spirits who will help me to secure a better and more moral future than what we are all experiencing in this moment. 

The truth is that I understood the evil fomenting in our country. I was very aware of the lies and deceit being used to fool so many good people into believing that a seventy eight year old man spouting nonsense and vitriol was a savior. It frustrated me that I was unable to convince so many people that I love and admire that they were being fooled by a con artist. I hoped that cooler heads would prevail but I suppose that a master salesman understands how to sell lies to gain profit and power. 

I wonder how it is possible that we are allowing one man to take two hundred forty nine years of progress toward a more perfect democracy apart in a matter of days and weeks. I cannot understand the silence and even the cheerful support of so many. I wonder what has happened to our morals and our courage. Why are we playing along in a game that we know is absurd? How can any of us possibly believe that the man pushing all of the buttons and destroying our shining city on the hill is anything other than a spoiled fiendish snake oil salesmen. 

I have been told by good people that he was sent by God to protect us. I believe in God but I think that we have the free will to make choices and in this case far too many were fooled into believing that our president actually prays and considers the morality of his decisions. How could a man so vile be an agent of God? The hypocrisy of his beliefs and statements reveal the lie that he wants to protect anyone but himself. 

So I try to warn as many people as possible that we are going to have to work together to secure our nation for our children and grandchildren. I will protest again just as I did during the Civil Rights movement of the sixties. I will continue to write my blogs. I will wake up each morning hoping to see more signs that the foulness of the changes we have endured will end. I will pray for signs of life in our freedoms and in our bravery. I will hope that a movement as beautiful as my backyard will burst forth to save our nation and the world. 

I long to find my way out of the underworld that has become my country. I know there is a way out but it will mean reaching the common sense of more people than the choir that now follows me. I suppose that we will all suffer until we find our way out of Trump’s wonderland of freaks and monsters. 

Until then I will go the the sanctuary of nature in my backyard to keep my sanity and boost my resolve. We have a difficult road ahead but our cause is beautiful.  

We Don’t Need A Son Of A Bitch For Success

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“Let’s face it!” he said. “No matter whether it’s at work or in government we always do better if our leader is a mean son of a bitch who gets the job done without worrying about peoples feelings.” 

Such was a recent commentary from someone that I know and love, someone that I believe is well meaning but so terribly wrong. Ultimately the true “strong man or strong person” does not have to resort to cruelty, dishonesty, anger or force to achieve greatness. It is more often than not the quietly confident individual guided by moral purpose and love for fellow humans who moves mountains. A “son of a bitch” may get compliance for a time because people fear him or her, but the man whose goals are unselfish and thoughtful will ultimately bring out the best in others.

Scrooge was a “mean son of a bitch” but a lonely and feared man. People avoided him at all cost and only complied with his anger to keep their jobs. He inspired nobody. Only with his transformation after meeting the spirits of the past, present and future did he realize how anger and greed had left him miserable and lonely and empty. 

I often think of a neighbor from my childhood whom I knew as “Mr. Barry.” He was a quiet and reserved man who drove off to work each day in his Buick. He was the president of a bank and he did quite well for himself and his shareholders but he did so with love and kindness. He valued his employees and treated them with respect. He got to know his customers personally, genuinely wanting to help them. His goals were simple. He worked hard and never asked anyone to do anything that he himself would not be willing to do. He saw his job as being helpful and honest with both his employees and his customers. He was a resounding success.

Mr. Barry was also a wonderful father of six children. Even after long days at work he took the time to laugh and play and enjoy each member of his family. Whenever I was at his house visiting with my friend, Lynda, he always made me feel comfortable and welcomed. He was never a stern man but it was also apparent that he wanted his children to develop certain marks of character that would make them good people. He guided them by example.

I remember a time when Mr. Barry took me and Lynda to a prayer service with him. We were both excited that he had thought to invite us and we were determined not to disappoint him with our behavior. Unfortunately the event ended with a litany of the saints in which we were supposed to respond, “Pray for us!” After about five iterations something about the repetition tickled me and Lynda and, try as we may, we were unable to stifle our urge to giggle. The longer the litany went on the more we had to hold our breaths to keep loud chuckles from emerging from our mouths. All the while Mr. Barry remained calm, not even giving us the stink eye for our inappropriate behavior.

On the way home instead of scolding us for our lapse of seriousness he explained the meaning of a litany in a calm voice. He assumed our goodness and instead seemed to think that it was only our ignorance of the situation that had led to our silliness. He did not chide us nor make us feel bad about what we had done. I decided in that moment that Mr. Barry was a truly wise and great man. 

I learned from Mr. Barry on that day. He handled a negative situation in a very positive way. He might have had every right to fuss at us but he chose a more powerful way to help us to become better. I would think of him over and over again as I grew older and was charged with the care and education of my daughter sand my students. From him I knew that much more is accomplished with understanding than with anger. 

After Mr. Barry had died I spoke of him with his daughter, Lynda. I mentioned that evening at the prayer service. She did not remember it but smiled when I gave her the details. I told her that in my mind her father was a saint whose name should come up in one of those litanies. She nodded in agreement and asserted that she and her siblings had all said the same about him. Remarkably the man that I saw as a small child was obviously the same no matter where he was or what the situation might be. He was calm and loving and guided by his moral values. 

We are living in a time when quiet souls like Mr. Barry might be thought to be unfit for leadership. Nobody would note that Mr. Barry was a hero in the Navy during World War II or that he competently fulfilled his duties as a bank president for decades. They would not seem to realize his tremendous gift for inspiring people to be their best, but I saw it and often stop to reconsider how to get things done by remembering this incredible man. He was proof for me that we don’t need “a son of a bitch” for success.

It’s Me God

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Of late there has been a great deal of discussion about religion and what it’s relationship with politics and schools should be. it’s a sticky subject because of it’s very personal nature. Each of us embraces an association with religion based on a multitude of factors that have affected how we choose to believe. 

Statistically around thirty one percent of the world’s population claims to be Christian followed by twenty four percent leaning toward Islam and around fifteen percent naming Hinduism as their religion of choice. That leaves around thirty percent of the world’s people who are either members of many different kinds of religions or among those who are atheists, agnostics or simply not aligned with any particular religious group. The fastest growing religion in the world is Islam which is projected to overtake Christianity by 2035. 

Statistically it would be incredibly difficult to adopt a singular religion to represent the entirety of the United States. Our diversity is such that even among Christians there would be little agreement on which of the many faiths is most akin to what the majority of people believe. Perhaps that is part of the reason that the Founding Fathers rather explicitly demanded freedom of religious choice while also insisting on a wall between church and state. 

Many of the earliest groups that came to what would become the United States were fleeing from state religions and persecution of their unique ways of believing. They balked at the idea that kings were the divinely determined religious heads of certain faiths that they were pushed to follow. They wanted the freedom to pray and believe in their own personal ways and for the most part the rules regarding religion in the United States have consistently protected those freedoms. It is only of late that there are concerted efforts to make our nation Christian. 

I was born and raised as a Catholic. I even went to Catholic schools from grades one through twelve. I had regular religion classes where I learned about the rituals and spiritual beliefs of my church. I have had discussions with Christians of other faiths who literally do not consider me to be a Christian. They label my faith as being different enough from theirs to create a special category for Catholics. Perhaps we Catholics are most like Episcopalian and Lutherans but even within those denominations there are differences that make us only similar but not congruent. 

I suppose that I see the rationale for keeping religion out of schools and government because of the obvious difficulties of honoring and respecting all people. I have little doubt that if we are not careful we will end up with a significant proportion of people feeling isolated and disrespected in the public domain. It is virtually impossible to give adequate air time to all the different faiths and lack of faith without crossing the line of fairness and ruffling feathers. Religion should be based on the choices of families, not political parties. 

The history of the world demonstrates that when we attempt to overlay one religion on an entire population trouble ensues. Trying to balance everyone is also virtually impossible as I learned at an event celebrating religious diversity at Stanford University. What was billed as a nod to all religions required over four hours of demonstrating a small taste of the many possibilities in the world. While it was interesting, it became apparent to me that we should never try to insert religion into the public sphere because there would always be persons or groups feeling left out and maybe even persecuted no matter how hard we tried to please everyone. 

Even references to God were added to our rituals much later than the moment of our founding. Mention of God was not part of the pledge of allegiance until 1954. The phrase “In God we Trust” was first added to paper money in 1957. The United States Constitution does not explicitly mention God and there are valid reasons for that. 

Many of the Founding Fathers worried that religion would corrupt the state and that the state would in turn corrupt religion. In many ways we are witnessing their fears play out as we see political leaders using religion to curry favor with voters. They imply that they were sent by God to save the people and pray while wrapped in the American flag. At the same time preachers are urging their congregations to vote in certain ways. The blurring of the line between church and state is creating dangerous situations in which people’s beliefs are challenged. 

I am a cradle Catholic who still follows my faith. It is my own personal relationship with God and I would be happy to talk about what I believe with anyone who asks. What I would never want to do is force others to agree with me. Even among my siblings I am the only one who still chooses to be a Catholic. One brother is now a Baptist and the other mostly leans toward being agnostic. He has a good relationship with God but he does not believe any man-made institutions have managed to determine how that relationship should be fostered. I respect each of them for coming to conclusions on their own just as I have. 

I worry greatly about making religion an issue in our schools and in our halls of government. One should never bleed into the other. There is absolutely nothing more personal and free than being able to decide how to feel about God. I would never want to take that choice away from anyone. When I pray I want to know that it is just between the Lord and me and how I have chosen to believe.

I Know How To Do Whatever I Must Do

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I have had a remarkably good life but it has also been quietly difficult. I learned a long time ago that life can change in the blink of an eye. The chapters of my story read like a Greek tragedy and yet if I tell the tale in its entirety it sounds as though i have always been the luckiest person in the world. I suppose that my grit has carried me through the ups and downs that seem to be the way things are in most people’s lives. 

Anyone who has followed my blogs knows the challenges I have faced as well as the wondrous happiness that I have experienced. Until I was eight years old life seemed perfect to me. I lived in a kind of wonderland of middle class abundance. I rode around in a new fancy car. My beautiful home was filled with fine furniture, books, music, artwork. My parents were brilliant and well educated. I attended private school and had many friends that I still count among the special people in my life. I suspect that I might have been the envy of people who saw the seeming perfection of how I lived.

My roller coaster ride began from the moment my father announced that we were leaving our model life behind and striking out for adventure in California. I eight years old and never really adjusted to saying adieu to everyone and everything that had seemed to define who I was. Somehow I was not inclined to be as daring as my father. He had constantly moved from one place to another with his family when he was a boy. He liked the idea of exploring and trying new things. He had a kind of wanderlust baked into his personality. I would have preferred staying with what I knew.

After my father’s announcement that we were heading to California we seemed to hook up with a whirlwind from October to the following May. Ours was an unsettling journey from one place to another as my father struggled to find something that I never quite understood. After living in San Jose and Los Angeles California and then Corpus Christi, Texas, I felt like the kid who comes and goes to different schools never having the time to make friends or understand the expectations of how to behave in a new environment. I was an unhappy vagabond until we finally landed back in Houston, Texas at the tail end of the school year. I set aside the loneliness and confusion that I had been feeling and looked forward to a new beginning in the city where everything and everyone that I loved seemed to be.

Of course I had not counted on losing my father in a car accident. I had never heard of anyone whose parent died at the age of thirty three. The trauma that I felt would alter me and stay with me for years before I felt that I was in control of my life. I went inside myself and learned to celebrate small moments while not counting on anything to last forever. 

My new outlook on life made me cynical but it also kept me optimistic as strange as that may sound. I learned not to be surprised when terrible things happened. In fact I expected such things to take place. But I also knew that if I took a deep breath and kept pushing forward even the worst times would ultimately go away providing me with respite from my sorrows. 

Thus has been my life. I have had long stretches of good fortune almost always followed by painful challenges. Because of my background I have navigated through life with a sense of wariness but also the knowledge that I have the ability to weather any storm. So when my mother was diagnosed with mental illness that would last for the remainder of her life when I was only twenty I grieved for a time and then set to work facing the reality of the situation. There would be beautiful ups and tragic downs in my relationship with her but I chose to concentrate on the times when she was well and happy and inspiring. 

I somehow found the perfect husband to accompany me through both the good and bad times. He has always been supportive in the situations that threatened to break me. When he contracted a fungal disease that is sometimes deadly and spent many months in the hospital being treated with chemotherapy I prepared myself for both the best and worst possible outcomes. I shed my tears and focused on my two little girls and kept the faith that his doctors would know what to do to restore his health. 

Surprisingly after all of these tragedies had affected me and the people I loved until my late twenties there came a decades long period of relative calm that allowed me to enjoy my family and my friends with only minor annoyances. While I still had to watch over my mother who would have many recurrences of her worst symptoms I mostly felt a sense of balance and stability in my daily routines, I enjoyed my family, my work, my neighbors, my friends, my trips. My children grew up, went to college and left home to begin their own lives. There was a tranquility in my world that was healing. 

Now that I am older it seems that the challenges are arising with great frequency once again. None of the elders who supported me for all of my life are still alive. With each passing year more and more of the friends who were so important to me have also died. I have grandchildren now and many of my friends are young enough to be my children. The changes keep coming more and more rapidly and sometimes I do become afraid. Then I tell myself that I know the drill. I have suffered many times and each time the sun has risen once again and I ventured forward in happiness. I don’t worry as much as I once did because now I am certain that I know how to do whatever I must do.