Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Organization, Oh God, Organization!

Organization, Oh God, Organization


Right at the outset, I can tell you that I'm a big fan of organization. I love the feeling of being able to put my fingers on whatever I --or anyone else--wants, be it information, a lost object, or even an ingredient for a recipe. It's my superpower. And, as a mom, a wife, a teacher, a room mother, or just about anything else in my panoply of jobs, it is invaluable.

What they don't tell you when you sign on for this skill is that, instead of getting easier with practice, it gets harder. The volume of information increases exponentially, while memory capacity declines with each passing year. I am, to put it succinctly, losing it, just when I need it most. And when I say "when I need it most", I am speaking of the process of downsizing.

One ought to be able to express these things mathematically: number of years, size of house, number of storage spaces, number of people involved, acquisitiveness factors--all should fit into an equation that will quantify your level of 'stuff' organization with a nice, scientific, reliable number. I regret to say we are operating in the negative values, and have been for some time. The term 'absolute zero' comes to mind, which is about as low as low can go. It is the the point at which the fundamental particles of nature have minimal vibrational motion, retaining only quantum mechanical, zero-point energy-induced particle motion. In other words, everything stops. 

So, poised on the brink of paralysis, I am taking drastic measures. Drawing on my experience of teaching Franklin/Covey's What Matters Most, I have dragged out my planner and made three lists of goals: immediate, short-term, and long-term. "Immediate" is one step better than my weekly shopping list genetically crossed with my daily 'to-do' list. "Short Term" is stuff I need to do this month, like plan for our vacation with the grandkids, switch out winter clothes for summer clothes, take clothes to storage at the dry cleaners, plant stuff in my patio pots.  "Long-Term" is that mountain of tasks on the horizon that gets closer every day: replacing the car, installing a new fence on the patio, buying a new refrigerator in San Diego, getting the fireplace fixed... If you are unfamiliar with Franklin/Covey, you might need to know that their mantra is "Someday is not a day on the calendar." They espouse planning, above all. Putting small steps on your daily calendar that will lead to accomplishment of your goals. There will be lists; there will be check-offs. There will be progress, and that is what matters most.

In reality, to our credit, we've paid a visit to the storage space and hauled out two Subaru-loads of stuff, half of which went to the dump, the other half to a stack of boxes in the basement. We HAVE hit the DMV and acquired our REAL-IDs. We have taken winter clothes to the cleaners for storage. The trick is not to rest on those meager laurels; not to stop the process as soon as the lists are made, which is what I usually do. (I've WRITTEN about it; now, do I really have to DO it?)

Franklin/Covey's 'one step at a time' should take us from this overflowing house of collections (large and small) to a more streamlined life where I will once again know where things are. Marie Kondo will be our patron saint, and joy will be sparking all over the place, as our trash bins and donation buckets overflow, and our closets and bookshelves and dresser drawers empty.

Yeah. Right.

Monday, April 15, 2019

Seventy

Today is my seventieth birthday. I don't think I ever thought about seventy--it always seemed so far away. However, as milestones go, it's fairly significant. JC suggested a party, but I said 'no'. Too much work, too much expense, right when Christmas is gearing up, right when there is so much to do, when no-one has time. I don't often admit this, but he was right and I was oh, so wrong. We did the party--and a lovely one it was.

I don't often think about friends. It is so easy to take them for granted. When JC told me to make a list, I demurred, saying I didn't have many friends anymore, and nothing is worse than a fancy party featuring a small group of acquaintances, desperately making small talk, while glancing surreptitiously at their watches. I made the list, reluctantly. None of them had anything in common, a fact that struck terror in my heart. Did I say nothing was worse than a small group? Think about a LARGE group with nothing to talk about.

But, there was a list, and by the time we added family, and an assortment of people I cared about, we were up to about forty. We put in the reservation, figuring we'd probably get 35 or so. Then we thought of a few more. We were up to 50. Then 52.  The number wavered a bit up and down, but most everyone accepted. How did this happen? Our event planner at the Metropolitan Club even said this doesn't happen. She planned for 50; we ended up with 56. Of which 55 actually showed up.

So, where does that leave me? Grateful. There, amidst a crowd of friends (none of whom had any difficulty conversing) I realized the most important fact of my life: it is friends and family who make you who you are. Every person in that room--and many who were too far away, or were unable to travel, or had to work--the list goes on...was important. I think of all the people who have touched my life and am amazed at how many there are, at how many people have made me who I am by caring and supporting and keeping me going through thick and thin.

Which makes my birthday an occasion for gratitude. Not for the inevitable aging process; I am not offering up prayers of gratitude for arthritis and memory loss and general decrepitude. Instead, I am grateful for the laughter and the tears and the support and the unwavering loyalty through the years, for the people who listened, and the people who talked to me, and all those events that made it all worthwhile. It has been--as a friend of mine once said--a good run. Even if I'm not running anymore, I can always enjoy a good walk.

Thursday, December 6, 2018

Overload 3 and 4

Overload-3

I do not doubt there are some   
who deserve to be thrown to the wolves. 
I do not doubt there are some 
completely out of touch, 
scandalously overpaid 
in salary, and respect,
who masquerade as representatives.    
I do not doubt that many are 
cowed by the bully-in-chief,  
concerned about their futures,    
refusing to do the right thing because 
it would imperil the life they’ve chosen. 
Cowards all.
Let us choose this time
the truth-tellers, the courageous, the dedicated, 
the servants of our nation, rather than 
the profiteers.


Overload-4

The United States is not the country 
of “one nation, indivisible, 
with liberty and justice for all.” 
That place does not exist. 
It probably never did. 
That was the goal. 
That was the promise. 
That was our job: 
to build that country.   
That pledge gives no timeline,  
nor does it define a straight line 
from the Constitutional Convention 
to where we stand today. 
We have been led astray.
We have lost that focus. 
We have forgotten 
that we move together 
or not at all. 

Monday, November 5, 2018

My Vote



I will vote today:
for intelligence, not fear;
for understanding, not anger;
for reason, not rhetoric.

I will vote today
for history and its lessons,
for thoughtful assemblies,
not inflammatory mobs.

I vote for peace and justice,
not guns and violence,
for safety for my children and their children,
and for others who come here seeking that.

I vote for forgiveness and kindness, 
not punishment and rejection,
for caring over cash,
for prayer over profit.

I do not listen for the loudest voice,
or the most abhorrent accusations.
I vote for what’s good about my country,
though it may still be flawed.

I vote for the dreams there, 
for all that still could be, 
for the builders, not the breakers,
for the ones who still believe.  

Sunday, November 4, 2018

Overload-2


Educated. A citizen. I read. I vote.
These advantages should insure
a more-or-less sane existence.
No.
Advantages are buffeted into liabilities
by the prevailing winds of two years’ insanity.
The elected con man
owes his position to
anger and fear, to the disadvantaged,
who bit the hands that fed them,
who embraced the slick sales pitch,
who sold their livelihoods
for a sack of worthless promises.
Jack-and-the-beanstalk all over again.
Who knows what angry giant they've
awakened?

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Overload 1

Overload

Too much, too many
things to process,   
to adequately pursue.   
Shootings and killings,
Political wrestling,
domestic and global.   
Elections and 
over the top ads.  
Troops at the border 
with razor-wire and guns,
throngs of desperate people 
with nowhere else to turn. 
Republicans turn on each other 
(is that, perhaps, good?) and 
Democrats are asking ‘one last time’ 
for money—every day. 
Sexual harassments are 
a commonplace, and 
college football is the new football 
to toss around in conversation:
a good metaphor for a world   
obsessed with offense and defense. 
Offense is winning. 

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Seeing and Hearings

I don't know about anyone else, but I am disturbed. I suspect that is the state most people are in this month. I deliberately avoided watching THE HEARINGS because I suspected I would be even more upset, angered, frustrated, divided, unhinged than I already was. I was right, as I found out when I started reading accounts of what went on.

I like to think that I am a logical thinker. As such, I looked at Kavanaugh and his record and thought he might be the best we could do, given that we knew we'd be saddled with a conservative justice, no matter what. Then, Dr. Ford entered the arena, and threw a gigantic monkey wrench into the machinery.

The idea of dispassionate government and judicial procedure is a long way from the circus environment engendered by the injection of emotion into the world of politics. Trump has somehow let loose the floodgates on emotion. His is a government where emotion trumps (sorry) facts and theories. You can give a toddler all sorts of warnings and explanations of consequences, but he's going to proceed on emotion, no matter what. So does Trump. And electing him gave everyone the permission to be guided by emotion as well. If you are racist, if you are a white supremacist, if you (irrationally) hate any ethnic group, if you dislike your neighbor...go ahead. Call them names, shout them down, threaten them, lie about them. If the president can do it, it must be okay.

Into this maelstrom of anger and hate and lies and persecution complexes, comes the appointment of a Supreme Court justice. And not just any Supreme Court justice. Here is a guy who'll be there for life, who will change the balance of the court, who will be handing down judgments that will affect all of us for years to come. There is a lot on the line.

The atmosphere is fraught to begin with. The Republicans have sat on judicial appointments--including a Supreme Court vacancy--preventing Democratic appointments. Now, as they try to push through a confirmation that will solidify their dominance on the court, Democrats are reacting with a (not unexpected) "Not so fast..." and are dragging their heels. Enter Dr. Ford.

No matter whom you believe, this has slowed down the process. And it's hard to know whom to believe. I think both believe what they are saying. I find Dr. Ford more believable in her account. Kavanaugh is too defensive, too angry, too emotional, too irrational at times, for me to look at him and say he should sit on the highest court in the country.

But, this confirmation hearing is not going to hang on who did what 30 years ago. When reality sets in, nobody really knows, or can prove what went on. Times were different, 'normal' behavior was different. Things that happened might have been horrible; girls were subjected to all sorts of horrendous behavior, and boys got away with it. It was wrong. But going back and judging past behavior by today's standards is ...well, wrong as well. Nothing makes frat-boy behavior acceptable, but ..more understandable, at least. And you have to allow for growing up. I wouldn't want to be judged today on my behavior when I was in high school, college, or grad school. There was a lot I didn't know, then, and I have changed. So have Dr. Ford and Brett Kavanaugh, I am sure.

BUT...and this is a huge "but": the performance we saw in the hearings is happening today. We're not looking at a frightened 15-year-old girl, anymore, but a poised and thoughtful woman who, despite her pain, has come to understand what happened to her.  We are not seeing a teenage Kavanaugh today when we see him losing his temper, threatening those who oppose him, ignoring questions, or turning them back on his questioners. (or maybe we ARE.) What we are seeing is Kavanaugh under duress, and that ...is not an encouraging spectacle. I can understand a certain degree of anger and indignation--particularly if  innocent (which is debatable, still.) However, he demonstrated no grace under pressure, no judicial calm, no damping down of emotion. His was a Trumpian performance, and I would never want to seat a mercurial, adversarial, rude, entitled, self-aggrandizing person as a judge at any level, much less the Supreme Court. In the words of a number of commentators, this was a job interview, and he blew it. Teenage foibles can be understood, and perhaps even forgiven, but carrying that defensive attitude into adulthood just doesn't work.

We have been emotionally hijacked in this proceeding. No matter how hard we try to be fair and open to all information we receive, we all have an emotional response--to Dr. Ford's wrenching testimony, to Judge Kavanaugh's heated denials, to the accounts we see and hear and read in magazines, on TV, and in the newspapers--even on Saturday Night Live. Heart and head are under assault. Deciding which to listen to is no easy task. Perhaps we should just set this aside and start anew.

But that is no longer an option. Kavanagh has been confirmed and we will just have to live with that fact. I disagree with that confirmation. I care, deeply, about what I think was a colossal mistake, but have no authority in the matter except for the most indirect influence: my ability to vote for or against those who made this decision.  I intend to exercise that right, and I pray daily for a return to normalcy, a return to balance--and the continued good health of Ruth Bader Ginsberg and her liberal colleagues on the court. We cannot survive another Trump justice.