Search This Blog

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

5/27/2026

 Wednesday, May 27, 2026

2012 A NATO airstrike in Afghanistan killed a family of eight, including six childr

2025   The National Assembly of Vietnam begins deliberations on a government proposal to end the death penalty for some offences, including drug trafficking and some national security crimes, replacing them with life in prison without parole. 

In bed at 9:15, awake around 3:30, up at 3:55; 0410 133/77/57 65 204.8; 57/69/54, mostly sunny day ahead, BEACH HAZARD WARNING, high waves 3 to 6 feet high, dangerous currents.  

Morning meds at 8:45 a.m.,  and half-dose of Bisoprolol at 4:35 a.m.

I woke up this morning reliving my conversation with Nurse Lisa yesterday afternoon, thinking of another in-patient hospital stay, even if only an overnight, of Zeke Emanuel and of Jack Levine.

During my pre-BP flat-footed rest, I started the chapter titled "The Leech" in The Scarlet Letter, wondering why Hawthorne characterized Roget Chillingworth, the 'wronged husband,' the 'cuckhold', the way he did, and wondering too why he treated Hester Prynne's sin as harshly as he did.  Chillingworth is the monster of the story, physically and morally deformed, seemingly having only one purpose in life, that of outing the identify of Hester's lover and the father of Pearl, and of subjecting him to a punishment similar to Hester's.  I'm wondering why Hawthorne creates the little love-child Pearl the way he does, as the literal embodiment of Hester's sin, physically beautiful, but wilful, with none of the self-discipine, or I suppose I should say, social discipline of the Puritan children in the town, and dressed in flamboyant clothing sewn by his disgraced mother, again separating her from the blacks and grays worn by the other children.  I'm wondering too how Hawthorne views Hester's disastrous sin, how he views her relationship with Reverend Dimmesdale, how he thinks of sexual relations between men and women generally.  Was sex to him something dirty or something sacred?  Were Hester and Dimmesdale just irresponsible, irrreligious pleasure pursuers when they created Pearl, or did they share a much. more meaningful relationship?  

The story is set in 17th century Massachusetts, in a Puritan community, but it reminds me of 20th century Ireland, and even of 1940s and 1950s Chicago's Catholic communities and their sexual mores.  It reminds me of the notorious mothers and babies home in Ireland.  From Wikipedia:

Mother and Baby Homes were founded in Ireland in the 1920s, to house unmarried mothers and their children, so excluding them from the rest of society. At least 12 homes were run by Roman Catholic nuns, three of which incorporated Magdalene Laundries, which operated as workhouses, forcing the women in them to do exhausting and unpaid work. The mothers and their small children are now known to have been physically and mentally abused by the nuns.

Deaths and misconduct in homes in the Republic of Ireland

The Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes and certain related matters was established in 2015 by the Irish government to investigate deaths and misconduct from the 1920s to the end of the 1980s in mother and baby homes in the Republic of Ireland. The homes were mostly run by nuns. During this period, 57,000 babies were born to girls and women who resided within the 18 institutions investigated. The mortality rate for the babies born—15 per cent—was never raised as a cause for concern by the government or the Catholic Church. In particular, 973 children died at the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home (in Tuam, County Galway), according to the commission. It reported that a number of the children had been discovered inside an old sewage tank. Only 50 records of burials at Tuam are extant. The Irish government formally apologised in January 2021.  

Mostly though, it reminds me of the Irish Catholic, i.e., American Catholic Church's obsession with sins of the flesh.  From my memoir:

 Father Devereaux was a younger middle aged priest who had a friendly manner, too friendly as I reflect on it.  He was the confessor of choice for pubescent boys concerned about going to Hell for eternity because of what was happening with their penises and the impure thoughts that plagued their minds and troubled their souls (because they liked them.)  Father Devereaux would hear your confession about anywhere and anytime by taking you into a corner or a vestibule or some semi-private place, throwing his arm around your shoulder, head or neck like a grappling hook, pulling you tightly into his chest, listening to you acknowledge your impure thoughts and deeds and then shriving you in return for three Our Fathers and three Hail Marys and your resolve not to sin again (fat chance.)  These physically close encounters of a weird kind with Father Devereaux were unhealthy to say the least.  As I look back on confessions with him, I wonder what he was doing with his other hand while holding the penitent fast with the grappling hook.   It’s hard for me not to believe that he was homosexual with a taste for pubescent boys.  He was also though the easiest path to God’s forgiveness of our besetting mortal sins of impurity.  If my suspicions about him are correct, I suspect there were some boys in St. Leo Parish who were victims of his sexual abuse.  Of course, I hope my suspicions are wrong.

The most popular priest was a young fellow named Father Burke.  He was friendly and open without any hint of being manipulative or predatory.  I remember only two things about him.  One, that I liked him.  Two, that he was delegated to come into our 7th and 8th classes before summer vacation to give us the temple-of-the-Holy-Ghost-avoidance-of-occasions-of-sin talks.  In large part because the American Catholic Church was so thoroughly an Irish Catholic entity, the avoidance of ‘the solitary vice,’ of ‘self-abuse,’ of anything having to do with s-e-x was about as important as defeating Godless Communism and keeping the “undesirables” out of our neighborhoods.  Father Burke told us boys (the girls of course were in another classroom waiting to get their temple-of-the-Holy-Ghost-never-BE-an-occasion-of-sin-for-a-boy talk) that staying in a bathtub or shower any longer than was necessary to remove the dirt from our bodies was inviting damnation.  Better a soiled body than a sullied soul.  

Growing up Irish American Catholic in the 1940s and 1950s in Chicago was a schizophrenic experience.  While we received occasional infusions of “God so loved the world . . .” the main teaching of the Church, which is to say the professional God-guys, was fear of eternal damnation.  The Church touted the Little Flower and St. Francis of Assisi preaching to the birds when it needed a little romanticism and sentimentalism, but its regular indoctrination came right from the same Calvinistic hellhole that Jonathan Edwards drew from when he wrote his “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” sermon.  The wrath of God burns against them, their damnation does not slumber, the pit is prepared, the fire is made ready, the furnace is now hot, ready to receive them; the flames do now rage and glow. There was precious little difference between 16th and 17th century Puritan moral theology and the Irish Catholic moral theology of the mid-20th century.  Damn near every sin more grievous than disobeying your mother was a mortal sin and if you died with one mortal sin on your soul, the eternal fires of Hell awaited you.  Do you know how long eternity is, boys and girls?  Imagine holding a lighted match under your finger for one second.  For ten seconds.  For ten minutes!  Ten hours!! TEN THOUSAND MILLION GAZILLION YEARS!!!!!   And that’s not one one trillionth of one one trillionth of ETERNITY!    And, to make growing up more interesting, any boy or girl could get into this kind of trouble as soon as they reach “the age of reason” which the God-guys decided was 7 years old.  This teaching was enough to keep a pubescent boy awake at night praying for no wet dreams, especially before he fell asleep.

At least if one did slip into a sin of the flesh meriting burning in Hell for all eternity, the sin could be forgiven by coming alongside Father Devereaux and being grappled. 

So, even though The Scarlet Letter is set 'in a galaxy far far away,' Puritan Massachusetts hundreds of years ago, it's pretty easy for a Catholic raised in the 1940 and 1950s, before the Second Vatican Council, to relate to what happends in it. 

As part of my campaign to take care of 'little shit' that I've been putting off too long, I deposited the checks from Costco and the state income tax refund at the bank this afternoon, along with stashing the endless supplied of medications, lotions, creams, and ointments I have collected from the VA.  Also refilled my two weekly pill boses, did some laundry, tried to figure out how to access our streaming services on my new TV, sat on the patio for awhile admiring all the extraordinary ordinary beauty around me. . . . . . I stuffed two ancient Apple laptops into a carrying casse to return to the Apple Store for recycling.  That's the easy part.  The hard part will be getting them to the Apple store.  They weigh a ton (for me) so I have to plan on getting to the store early on a weekday morning when I can find a parking space near the store. . . .  I moved my 'death dossier' back out to the dining room table to go through it with Geri and see what else should be obtained and/or included.  We've put it off too long, especially since the last few days I've felt like I've been at aux portes de la mort.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

5/26/2026

 Tuesday, May 26, 2026

1945 US dropped fire bombs on Tokyo

1966 Buddhist setshimself on fire at US consulate in Hué, South Vietnam

2004 NY Times published an admission of journalistic failings, claiming its flawed reporting and lack of skepticism during the buildup to the 2003 Iraq War helped promote the belief that Iraq possessed large stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction

2018 Ireland voted to repeal their 8th amendment to allow legalized abortion, 66.4% vote yes

In bed at 9:05, up at 4:20;  0430 126/68/32 ### 204.3; 61/80/61, cloudy.

Morning meds at 8:20 a.m.,  and half-dose of Bisoprolol at 8 a.m.

Started the day with a CT scan of thoracic and lumbar spine at the VA at 6:45 a.m.  The scan went well, at least in terms of efficiency.  I was in and out of the VA and back in my car by 7.  The bad news is that it's become clear to me that the symptoms of my heart condition(s) have gotten worse, the SOB and exhaustion from even slight exertions.  I came close to having to sit down in a chair in the entryway to the medical center, as I did the day I was admitted to the hospital for 5 days for low BP and heart rate.  At that early hour, I was able to park in the first row of spaces in the handicapped parking area right in front of the hospital.  The walk to the hospital entrance could hardly have been shorter, yet I was wiped out by the time I reached the check-in area, wondering whether I could make it to the elevators without resting first.  Not a good sign.  I had the same kind of experience walking from the general waiting room of the Radiology Clinic to the smaller waiting room outside the CT scan room.  Then a bit of a struggle getting onto  and off of the scanning table.  Not good.  On top of that, my lower back and right flank were (and are) hurting.  Am I becoming a bona fide invalid?  Or should I be using the present perfect tense, "have become," rather that the present imperfect or present continuous?  My recollection is that NP Maggie Angeli said that I was a Stage 2 od CHF when we met on Februray 23rd.  It's 3 months later and I'm clearly in much worse shape now, with 5 days of heart-related hospitalization behind me and the catheter ablation ahead of me.  I am thinking again of Ezekiel Emanuel's article in The Atlantic about "American immortals" and when to let Nature take its course.  Who does one talk to about such things, in addition to one's spouse?  Or is this the sort of thing on which we are, ultimately and inevitably, on our own?

The catheter ablation is 20 days away.  If I am to cancel, I should do it soon, to permit another vet to take my slot.  I asked ChatGPT:  "Describe the typical recovery from a catheter ablation for ventricular tachycardia and what can go wrong. What is a difficult recovery, especially for an 85 year old?"  The response:

A catheter ablation for ventricular tachycardia (VT) is usually considered a major but minimally invasive heart procedure. Recovery varies a great deal depending on:

(1) the person’s age and frailty, (2) underlying heart disease, (3)how weak the heart muscle already is, (4)  whether the VT is “simple” or related to scar tissue from prior heart attacks or cardiomyopathy, (5) and whether complications occur.

For many people, recovery is fairly manageable. For an 85-year-old, however, the recovery can sometimes be significantly harder and slower, even if the procedure itself is technically successful.

Typical recovery

During VT ablation, catheters are threaded through veins or arteries (usually from the groin) into the heart, where abnormal electrical tissue is mapped and cauterized or frozen.

A typical course might look like this:

First 24 hours: (1) Several hours lying flat to prevent bleeding from the groin puncture sites. (2) Continuous heart monitoring.  (3) Fatigue, groin soreness, bruising, and mild chest discomfort are common.  94) Many patients stay overnight; VT ablations often require more monitoring than simpler rhythm procedures.

First week: (1)Tiredness is very common. (2) Some irregular heartbeats may still occur while the heart heals. (3) Walking is encouraged, but no lifting or strenuous activity. (4) Many people can resume light activities in a few days to a week.

First 1–3 months: (1)The heart tissue continues healing. (2) The arrhythmia may improve gradually rather than immediately. (3) Medications may still be needed. (4) Follow-up visits and ICD checks (if the person has a defibrillator) are common.

What can go wrong:  Most procedures are completed without major complications, but VT ablation is more complex than many other ablations because the patients often already have significant heart disease.

Potential complications include: (1) bleeding in the groin or internally, (2) blood vessel injury, (3) infection, (4) stroke or blood clots, (5) perforation of the heart causing bleeding around the heart (cardiac tamponade), (6) worsening arrhythmias, (7) heart block requiring a pacemaker, (8) anesthesia complications, (9) worsening heart failure, (10) kidney injury from contrast dye, and  (11) rarely, death.

One feared complication is cardiac tamponade — accidental perforation causing blood to collect around the heart. It can require emergency drainage or surgery.

What makes recovery especially difficult at age 85:  Age alone does not automatically make VT ablation inappropriate. Some studies show carefully selected elderly patients can do reasonably well.  But in practice, an 85-year-old is more vulnerable to difficult recovery because reserve capacity is lower.

A difficult recovery might include:  (1) Profound fatigue and weakness.  (2) Older adults may take weeks rather than days to regain strength. Even anesthesia and a long procedure can cause marked exhaustion. (3) Delirium or confusion  (4) Hospitalization, anesthesia, sleep disruption, and illness can trigger temporary or prolonged confusion in older patients.  (5) Loss of mobility.  Even a few days in bed can lead to major decline:, trouble walking, falls, need for rehab, loss of independence,  (6) Heart failure worsening. If the heart is already weak, the procedure stress can temporarily worsen shortness of breath, fluid retention, or low blood pressure.  (7) Kidney problems. Contrast dye and blood pressure fluctuations can injure kidneys, especially in older adults with preexisting kidney disease.  (8) Bleeding complications. Older blood vessels are more fragile, and many VT patients are on blood thinners.  (9) Longer hospitalization.  Instead of going home the next day, some elderly patients require: several hospital days, ICU care, rehabilitation facility placement, temporary oxygen,  or home assistance afterward.  (10) Persistent arrhythmias. Sometimes the VT is reduced but not eliminated, or another procedure is needed.

The larger question doctors usually consider at age 85 -Electrophysiologists generally weigh: (1) how dangerous the VT is, (2) how often ICD shocks are occurring, (3) quality of life, (4) overall frailty, (5) other illnesses, (6) cognitive status, and (6) what the patient values most.

For some 85-year-olds, ablation dramatically improves life by stopping repeated ICD shocks and hospitalizations.

For others — especially those with advanced heart failure, frailty, dementia, severe lung disease, or multiple illnesses — recovery can be very hard and may not restore previous function.

A key distinction is often:

a robust 85-year-old who is active and independent,

versus

a frail 85-year-old already struggling physically.

Those are very different risk categories even at the same age.

I sent this journal entry to NP Maggie Angeli as the concluding part of this message:

Please direct to NP Maggie Angeli. Thank you.  I have an appointment with you on Thursday and don't know whether this message will get to your before then, or whether you will have the time to read it, but it seems to be worth trying.  I am scheduled for a caatheter ablation by Dr. Singh on June 15th.  I am considering whether I ought to cancel the procedure.  I realize that the responsible thing is to cancel enough in advance of the scheduled date to permit another patient to be scheduled in my stead.    I am copying herewith my personal journal entry from this mornning that describes the thought process I am going through and some pertinent information I gathered from the AI source, ChatGPT.   I hope to be able to discuss this matter with you on Thursday.  Thank you. 

I wish I had added that it's not clear to me whether there is a relationship between the CHF and the arrythmia that would be addressed by the catheter ablation,   What effect, if any, would a successful catheter ablation of the arrythmia have on the CHF" 

Geri read the journal entry also this morning and we had another serious discussion about the "big issue."

Dr. Cheng called with the result of this morning's CT scans.  It turns out that as expected I do have significant deterioration of my mid-spine and arthritis in two places, T4-T5 and T9 (if I'm remembering accurately.). There is a narrowing of the foramen in T9 that would account for the recurring pain between the bottom of my rib cage and top of my pelvis on the right side.  What can be done about it?  Basically, nothing.  Learn to live with the pain.  I took two 650 mg. Tylenol 8 Hour tablets this morning  and they're not helping at all with what I'll problebly now call my T9 pain in my right flank.

Nurse Lisa from the Cardiology Clinic called me around 4 this afternoon, wanting to talk about my secure message to NP Maggie.  We spoke for about 30 or so about my various concerns, which I felt better about after our discussion.  She said she has been in the Cardiology Clinic at Zablocki for 12 or 13 years and seemed to be very knowledgeable about Dr. Singh and about catheter ablations, the kinds of patients on whom it is generally performed, and the risks (mainly bleeding from the thigh).  After speaking with her, I felt more inclined to go ahead with the surgery and told her that, in any event, I would let them know within the next few days.  My arrythmia, PVC or premature ventricular contraction, is pretty substantial, at 30%, based on more than 3 days of wearing a Holter monitor. 

I had to laugh at one point in our conversation, when Nurse Lisa mentioned that in her years in the Cardiology Clinic, no one had died from a catheter ablation.  I apologized and explained that, at my age, I'm never afraid of dying under full anesthesia in an OR, realizing that there are SO MANY ways dying that are much more challenging.  What I fear, rather, is surviving a surgery but coming out WORSE than I was before the surgery, e.g., from the effects of a stroke, etc.

On the other hand, I've been thinking much of the day about that sacred cow, or should I say, that meaningless cliché, "informed consent."  According to Wikipedia, 

Informed consent is an applied ethics principle that a person must have sufficient information and understanding before making decisions about accepting risk. Pertinent information may include risks and benefits of treatments, alternative treatments, the patient's role in treatment, and their right to refuse treatment. In most systems, healthcare providers have a legal and ethical responsibility to ensure that a patient's consent is informed. 

Has there ever been a time when I truly gave my informed consent to any medical procedure or to taking any number of medications that have been prescribed by a physician?  I don't think so.  That word "informed" imposes a duty on the docs to make reasonably sure that their patien reasonably understands what he or she is 'consenting' to, including especially the risks, the 'downsides,' the potential costs if the statistically unlikely happens.  Do they routinely ignore this supposed duty?  I think so.  Informed consent comes up only when the unlikely actually occurs, and a legal claim is made.   Too bad, but in the real world of medical practice, it's not surprising and indeed undeerstandable. although I think for something as significant as any kind of invasive heart surgery, even so-called 'minimallly invasive' catheter ablation, a lot more 'splaining' should be done.

Weird weather.  We had the wettest April in recorded history here in SE Wisconsin.  Now we are in line for the driest May.

Monday, May 25, 2026

5/25/2026

 Monday, May 25, 2026. Memorial Day

1787 Constitutional Convention opened at Philadelphia, with George Washington presiding

1961 JFK announced US goal of putting a man on the Moon before the end of the decade

2020 George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer

2025 Russian forces launched their largest air attack on Ukraine, including the capital city Kyiv, since the start of the war, killing at least 14 people and wounding dozens more. At least 298 Iranian Shahed drones and 69 missiles were launched at Ukrainian cities during the overnight attack

In bed by 9, up at 5:45; 0555 133/66/32 ### 205.0;57/77/52, mostly sunny.

Morning meds at 8:40 a.m., half-dose of Bisoprolol at 7 a.m.

Yesterday was the unveiling of Tom's gravestone, almost 3 and 1/2 years after his death.  Micaela said it was hard, "so hard" and "surprisingly hard."  To some extent, I suppose she is referring to getting the whole family together, especially with Jack "shut down," but mostly she's surely talking about reliving the terrible experience of Tom's sudden and stunning death in the waters off St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands, all that she and Saul went through, in the water, and on the boat, and getting him to the hospital, then the struggle of getting his body back to Wisconsin for the funeral and burial.  He died on January 18, 2023 and the funeral couldn't be held until the 26th, 8 long days afterward.  I'm reliving some of those long days myself this morning, recalling the gatherings on Wood Place with the family and closest friends and Rabbi David Cohen, my anguish (too strong a word?) and sleepless nights over how to eulogize Tom properly and meaningfully  before Micaela, his children Jessie, Ben, Saul, Jake, and his sisters Judy and Mary.  I felt unworthy of the honor and unequal to the responsibility and struggled with it for the week.  By the time of the funeral, I must have looked pretty weak and tired because the cantor helped me with my cane up to and away from the bimah from where I could see the entire gathered congregation, with so many friends, many of whom I had met through Tom's catalysing of new friendships.   

How many times have I thought of Tom and of our friendship since that day?  More than 1,000 days have passed and I'm sure I've thought of him more than 1,000 times, the very many experiences shared, the durability of the friendship despite its sometimes fragility, our strengths and our weaknesses, our imperfections, my own imperfections.  It's been my friendship with Tom, more than any other friendship, that has led to reflect in my old age on the complicated, imperfect nature of friendships between complicated, imperfect adults. Judith Viorst wrote her very interesting book about relationships, Necessary Losses, in 1986.  The title of her chapter about friendships is telling: "Convenience Friends and Historical Friends and Crossroads and Cross-Generational Friends and Friends Who Come When You Call at Two in the Morning."  Friendships comes in many forms.  Viorst quotes and rebuffs the great Roman orator and essayist Cicero's essay "On Friendship":

"How can life be worth living . . . which lacks that repose which is to be found in the mutual good will of a friend?" But he then goes on to impose upon friendship a burden no friendship could possibly sustain by defining it as a relationship between two "stainless" characters having "a complete accord on all subjects human and divine . . . There must be complete harmony" proclaims the stringent Cicero, "of interests, purpose and aims, without exception."

[But, rejoins Viorst] Two people, two adults, will never match each other perfectly.  Even the best of friends are friends in spots.

And so it was with Tom and me.  So it was with David Branch and me, with Ara Cherchian and me, with Ed Felsenthal and me, even with my sister Kitty and me.  

We are all complicated and imperfect and so are our friendships.  That acknowledged, I still say thank God (in a manner of speaking) for good friends.   Today I'm thinking of Tom and Micaela and their complicated friendships over almost an adult lifetime, and I'm thankful for them, for Ed Felsenthal, and for Tom Devitt, Bill Hendricks, and Jerry Nugent, for Ara Cherchian, and Vicki Conti, and David Branch, for Bob Hillary and Andy Furlong, for John Kroll and Ron Kendall, for Larry Stack, Jack O'Keefe, and Johnny Flynn, for Cathy Semrau and Ralphie Bradshaw, for Wally Halperin and Mr. and Mrs. Kelly, for Ann and Carl Semrau, for Frank Peterson and our downstairs neighbors in Doylestown, for Matthew Gottschalk and Troy Major, for Gerri Sheets-Howard, for Pat Hetrick and Tom Olson, Bob Boden and Ray Aiken, and  . . . and . . . 

Facebook posting today:

Charles D. Clausen shared a memory.

Alas, the tree is now gone, hewn a few years ago by the cemetery officials because of age or perhaps disease.  In this respect also, it reminded me of the folks buried at Wood and of the folks I bump into at the nearby VA medical center, all vulnerable to age and disease.  I miss the tree and am glad that I took some photos of it while it was still standing.  I think of it every time I pass the spot where it used to proudly stand guard duty over the nearby graves, reminding me of the old guys I see today in honor guards, wearing their VFW or American Legion hats. 

6 Years Ago

May 25, 2020

A photo of my favorite tree at Wood National Cemetery in Milwaukee.  It's old and gnarled and shades a few of the more than 36,000 veterans buried there.  I usually visit the cemetery every time I visit one of the clinics at the Zablocki VA Medical Center that care for me and more than 64,000 other veterans every year.  For decades I drove past the National Cemetery on I 94 heading to or from Madison or some other westerly destination.  Now I stop in and visit, taking in its beauty and its peacefulness. Many of those buried here lived in the Milwaukee Soldiers Home next to it, authorized by Abraham Lincoln shortly before his assassination to provide care for Civil War veterans.  Thankfully, after falling to near ruin, the Soldiers Home and its supporting facilities are being restored to provide housing for veterans who need help.

     I never visit Wood, or Zablocki, or the grounds of the Soldiers Home without feeling some emotion, mostly gratitude and a sense of kinship with the 'motley crew' who comprise the other visitors, temporary at Zablocki and permanent at Wood.  I'm always conscious of the fact that each of us is special because none of us is special.  The medical caregivers at Zablocki don't ask what branch of military service we were in, whether we were officer or enlisted, or whether we served in a war zone.  They know we all served somewhere sometime, as ordered.  Each headstone in Wood is the same size and material, regardless of the veteran's rank or when or where he or she served.  They remind the few visitors who come that each is special because none is special.  They almost inevitably bring to mind the adage found on the walls of VFW posts everywhere: All gave some, some gave all.

     I still wear on a chain around my old neck the dog tags I wore in Vietnam in 1965 and 1966.  Not because I'm a militarist since quite the opposite is true.  But because they remind me of my abiding kinship with all those vets at Zablocki and all those vets buried at Wood and all who have served and who serve now.  And they remind me of our right to expect more of our national leadership than what we have. 


 

I made my annual pilgrimage to Wood National Cemetery this afternoon.  I waited until 1 p.m.,, to avoid the Memorial Day ceremonies and speeches around the flag pole which started at 9 a.m.  When I got there, all the oficial stuff was over,   I even managed to avoid the crowds and traffic arriving for the Brewers-Cardinals game at the stadium.  There were handfuls of individuals and small grounps walking among the headstones, presumably of loved ones or family members of some sort.  Some had small bunches of flowers to leave at the gravesite, others didn't.  I drove very slowly throughout most of the cemetery and was caught up short by one headstone that read "Geraldine, wife of . . ." with the years of her birth and death.  I don't know any of the thousands of former soldier, sailors, Marines, airmen, and Coast Guardsmen (and women) buried there, but I've long felt a relationship with all of them because of our one commonality: we all served in the country's armed forces, from the time of the War of 1812 until more recent times.  The cemetery isn't accepting new burials anymore.  It has pretty much run out of space. and new burials from this area are interred at the national cemetery at Union Grove in Racine County.  If I could be buried at Wook, I would sell my space at Forest Home Cemetery and chose Wood as my final resting place, but it is not to be.  I wasn't there for very long this afternoon and left, as usual, feeling better than I did when I arrived.  It seems a bit wierd, but I love the place, not just the natioaal cemetery, but the whole federal compound between I-94 and National Ave,  The Old Soldiers' Home, and all the related builldings, the huge medical center with its related buildings, the Fischer House, etc.  I call the place my "second home" and with good reason since I spend so much of my time there in my old age.  Twp years ago, when I counted up and did the computing, I found I had visited the medical center twice every two weeks, or about once ever 10 days.  I have done the tabulating for this year, but I suspect my current rate is at least once a week, including the 10 days of in-patient care, a few outpatient surgeries, and s.everal trips to the ER.  Truly the only place where I've spent more time is our home in Bayside.  On my way home, I listened to my playlist of great female C&W singers, including Emmylou Harris singing Calling My Children Home, which always gets me near tears:

Back in the years with all together

Around the place we'd romp and play

So lonely now I oft' times wonder

Oh will they come back home some day

I'm lonesome for my precious children

They live so far away

Oh may they hear my calling, calling

and come back home some day

As I suggested to my old pal LOA the other day, it's hard to beat great country music for emotional impact.   This song ralways eminds me of when my kids were little and I would take them on weekend mornings to Lake Park, or to Back Bay Park, or Cathedral Park, or to the Sports Show or the Boat Show.  'Around the place we'd romp and play,' etc. etc.😢  

Geri and I took another trip to the Grafton Home Depot this afternoon for another 10 bags of mulch, then to Sendik's for hamburgers and buns, then to Trader Joe's for low salt potato chips.   A long, good busy day.