Wednesday, November 30, 2022

1130

 

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

  In bed at 9:30, Andy sent a text at 9:50 re Peter's pick-up, up at 6, 4 pss, one cognac.  Remembering to make Geri's coffee first thing after yesterday's forgetfulness.  25 degrees out with a stiff 21 mph wind directly from the West producing a wind chill of 10 degrees, high of 32 expected.  Winter getting serious.

Jill Lepore, These Truths

I listened to a portion of my Audible copy of this history, the portion relating to FDR, his attempts to provide relief of various kinds during the Great Depression, the resistance of the Business Interests (i.e., Republicans), the inevitable charges of "SOCIALISM!!!".  He and Hitler both came to power in 1932, he at the beginning, and Hitler at the end.  In 1936, a cigar-chomping Texas congressman named Martin Dies, Jr., started the notorious  House Committee on Un-American Activities, intended to ferret out fascist and communist influences within the U.S.  With the Republicans back in charge of the House come next January, I suspect we may see a resurgence of HUAC under Jim Jordan and Marjorie Taylor-Greene.  What Faustian bargains is Kevin McCarthy making in his quest for the Speakership?

LOMW seeing 7 goldfinches perched on the long niger tube feeder and another on the niger sock, thinking of Darwin and evolution, natural selection, niger seeds vs. sunflower seeds vs. millet seeds vs. peanuts and suet.


Nick Fuentes

I continued watching the YouTube 90-minute podcast featuring Nick Fuentes being interviewed at age 21.  He also has me thinking of Darwin and natural selection.  He is clearly quite intelligent, articulate, and quick-witted,  He attended Lyons Township high school and one year at Boston University.  He uses words like "heuristic" comfortably and not ostentatiously.  He has some grasp of historical facts though probably tendentiously, if that is a correct use of the term, historical facts helpful to the positions he advances.  Some of his identity features seem counter-intuitive, e.g., dogmatic Catholic, virgin, incel, but of course he may be simply lying since the ability to lie can be very useful in the media, celebrity world, in a Darwinian-Spencerian world of the survival of the fittest, Trump's world.  There can't be any serious doubt of his racism and antipathy towards Jews.  Re Blacks and criminality, he blames genetics in large measure.  He's good-looking, almost cute, and very upbeat, happy.  Reminds me of Rush Limbaugh.  At bottom, he is a Nazi.

Hakeem Jeffries was elected Leader of the House Democrats today, widely heralded as the first Black party leader in the history of the Congress.  I admire him and remember his performance as one of the 7 managers in the first Trump impeachment trial.  I can't help wondering thought about the political cost of having as one of the principal Democratic spokesmen a Black man from Brooklyn with a name that is one of the 99 names of God in Islam while the Senate Democratic leader is a Jew from Brooklyn nicknamed 'Senator Wall Street.'  Pete Aquilar, a Mexican-American, will be Jeffries's assistant leader.  Jeffries and Schumer are both lawyers.  Jeffries attended Georgetown and NYU, Schumer Harvard and Harvard Law School.  In the 'New Confederacy' the charge against the Dems is that they are a party of and for minorities and coastal elites.  The Democratic congressional leadership will only reinforce that notion and probably make the Republican grip on the 'red states' even firmer.

Boppa Denny was my maternal grandfather, Dennis M. Healy.  He died when I was 11, my first experience with death.  We don't know how old he was when he died.  He was born in the Townland of Slaheny, Village of Kilgarvan, in County Kerry, Ireland.  There were 14 houses in Slaheny: 4 occupied by Healys, 4 by Sullivans, 3 by Peahens, and 1 by Finnegans.  House #5 was a 2 room thatched roof cottage with 2 windows.  The head of household was listed in the census as Dennis' brother Daniel, age 30, who lived with his wife Mary, also 30, their daughter Mary, 4, and their 3 sons John, 1, Timothy, 3, and Jeremiah, 5.  The pater families was Daniel, age 75, and the mother, Margaret, age 55, who also lived in that same cottage.  Dennis gave his age as 24 when he arrived in 1904 at Ellis Island from County Kerry via Cobh on the steamship Oceanic.  Years later when he applied for citizenship he gave his year of birth as 1883 which would have made him 21 at Ellis Island.  The 'holy card' from his wake and funeral gave his DOB as April 28, 1887, which would make him barely 17 at Ellis Island.  The birth registry for my mother lists his year of birth as 1886.  Perhaps he was 72 when he died, perhaps 65, perhaps something in between.  I think of him today because I've been continuing to read in small bits Sean O'Faolain's Bird Alone.  I'm at the part where the protagonist Corny is in London at the Irish pub behind which his Uncle Mel lives.  The group in the barroom sings The Ould Ivied Ruin, referring to abandoned homesteads in Ireland and mournful yearning to return.  "There were cries from time to time . .  or a silence for several verses when the pathos of the thing moved them too much, or thoughts of 'the ould land' they might never see again . . "  My grandfather carried a piece of "the ould sod", a chunk of dirt from Ireland, wrapped in a Kleenex in his pocket.  I wonder what became of it when he died.  I remember looking at it once, unwrapping the frayed Kleenex around it.  When Boppa Denny would come to visit us in our basement digs after he had had too much to drink, he would get filled with emotion and curse the English, especially the "Black and Tans" who savaged the Irish during their War of Independence, long after Dennis was already in the U.S.   I vaguely remember him once trying to dance an Irish jig in our little living room, losing his balance and falling into a chair.  He was a sad man, alcoholic in his old age and probably before, widowed early, left with 3 sons, a daughter, and dim but fervent memories of Ireland.

Geri's Telephone Marathon with Spectrum is on day 3, total of about 7 hours.

Pickup Duties Today: Peter to and from work, Lizzie from Bayside Middle School to home.

Pain today: OK

1129

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

In bed at 9:30, awake at 4:10, up at 4:30, 4 pss, one cup of cinnamon apple tea.  37 cloudy degrees looking to a high of 49, windy conditions forecast again. 

Dining with Devils

On news outlets other than Fox, OAN, and the like, much of the opinion stuff has focused on Donald Trump's dinner at Mar-a-Lago with Kanye West and Nick Fuentes.  Kanye is now best known at least among white people for his "going on death con 3 for JEWISH PEOPLE" tweet on Twitter.  Nick Fuentes I had never heard of but now know to be a notorious 24-year-old, Chicago-rooted, self-described 'Catholic integralist', white supremecist-nationalist, Holocaust denier participant in both the January 6 insurrection and the Charlottesville "Unite the Right" new-Nazi rally.  It's a bit hard to figure out why there has been so much attention given to this dinner since Trump's bigotry has been so well known for so long, certainly at least since his 1989 campaign involving full page ads in all 4 major NYC newspapers  against the 5 Black and Latino youths charged in the Central Park Jogger Case,  As Maya Angelou is reputed to have said, 'if a person shows you who they are, believe them the first time.'  America failed to heed that advice with respect to Trump and we will be paying for it for at least a generation.  The main thing accomplished by the current coverage seems to be to elevate the rancid stature of Nick Fuentes.

VA Thoughts

I'm thinking of simply dropping my Medicare Part D prescription drug insurance coverage now that WPS won't be offering it after 12/31/22. My premiums were about $1,000 per year and for the last several years I have received all or most of my meds from the VA without charge to me because of my disability rating.  It was only in the last year or so that Trulicity was added to the VA's formulary; before that I got it at Costco pharmacy and thus received some benefit from the Part D insurance.  It was probably the case that the total benefit exceeded the annual premiums but I've never done the calculation and I probably don't have the records to check it out now.  Also, I have started using the generic form of Jardiance in the last couple of years and I think it may also be a fairly recent addition to the VA formulary.  The cost for the 2 drugs w/o insurance is more than $1500/month, about $18,000/year.  AS I WROTE THIS, I changed my mind and enrolled in Cigna Saver Rx in case I'm  in an accident or suffer an incident and end up in a hospital other than Zablocki VA Medical Center.  $12/month.

I also discovered serendipitous that, under the PACT ACT enacted this year, hypertension is now conclusively presumed to be related to Agent Orange exposure in Vietnam.  I need to pull out my records to see if HBP is listed on my disability finding.  If not, I'll apply for an additional benefit.

Life in CyberAge: Spectrum

Geri has been on the phone for 2 hours with Spectrum trying to get our phone accounts straightened out so that her new AppleWatchSE will work as advertised.  This is Day 2 of this runaround.  Yesterday she was on the phone for what seemed like 3 hours.  Somehow she manages to stay courteous, civil, 'cool, calm, and collected' through hour after hour people on the other end of the line not knowing how to correct their system or who within their own company can deal with it.  Unbelievable.  Not just the Spectrum people, but Geri's phenomenal patience.  On the other hand, she may be looking for me to mix a martini or pour a grappa when (if ever) she gets off the phone.

Breaking News:  Oath Keepers founder (Elmer) Stewart Rhodes and member Kelly Meggs found guilty of Seditious Conspiracy



Monday, November 28, 2022

1128

 Monday,  November 28, 2022


In bed at 9, up at 5, 3 or 4 pss, no alcohol.  500 CC vs. 1200 night before.  26 degrees out, high of 42 expected, frost on the ground and the trash cart.

Through my window I see good neighbor John McGregor out for his early morning walk, breath looking like steam in the cold air, shaming me with his discipline walking schedule, he and I both born in 1941, he carrying the mark of his childhood polio.  John gets as far as County Line Road before turning around and heading home, his discipline yielding to his good judgment.  He'll be out again as soon as his breath doesn't condense in the cold air.

Early Morning Reading  Dexter Filkins book reviews in The New Yorker, 9/13/2021:  Did Making the Rules of War Better Make the World Worse?  "On the evening of March 9, 1945, the United States sent an armada of B-29 Superfortresses toward Japan, which for months had resisted surrender, even as a naval blockade brought much of the population to the brink of starvation. The B-29s were headed for Tokyo, and carried napalm, chosen for the mission because so many of the city’s inhabitants lived in houses made of wood. The bombing ignited a firestorm that sent smoke miles into the sky; the glow was visible for a hundred and fifty miles. In six hours, as many as a hundred thousand civilians were killed, and a million others were left without homes. In the words of the raid’s architect, Major General Curtis LeMay, the Japanese were “scorched and boiled and baked to death.” Five months later, the United States bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and Japan surrendered." The American government rewarded LeMay by promoting him to lieutenant general and then full 4 star general and making him commander of the Strategic Air Command where his bellicosity became a bit of a problem, encouraging the bombing of Russian missile sites in Cuba over JFK's embargo/blockade strategy and bombing North Vietnam "back to the Stone Age" rather than LBJ's strategy of restraint.  He ran for Vice President on George Wallace's ticket ('Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever). "But the real origins of our predicament, Moyn says, date to the outrages of the Vietnam War, including the My Lai massacre and the devastating bombing campaigns in Vietnam and Cambodia, where napalm was routinely deployed."  Part of our campaign to win the hearts and minds of the peasants who we forced to move into 'strategic hamlets' before we bombed and burned their homes.




Flannery O'Connor

I watched again a PBS American Masters feature on Flannery O'Connor.  Somehow I missed it when it first aired on 3/22/2021.  Earlier today while working in the basement, I pulled out my copy of the book containing most of her letters, The Habit of Being.  It was there I years ago discovered her wonderful statement which rings so true to me: "I don't know what I think until I read what I say."  It's the process, the exercise of writing that forces us to clarify our thoughts, at least as best we can.  Talking comes easy for most of us, words coming out of us without too much thought behind them.  Putting thoughts into writing, putting them down on paper, forces us to look at them and wonder whether they are true, or at least defensible.  I can't say I am all that into O'Connor's writing, at least the novels, but reading her letters brought me closer to her and her groundedness, a groundedness that I've never quite been able to find.  She was a true,l blue Catholic and it shows in the letters.  She sparred with Mary McCarthy over transubstantiation and the "True Presence": "Well, toward morning the conversation turned on the Eucharist, which I, being the Catholic, was obviously supposed to defend. [Mary McCarthy] said when she was a child and received the Host, she thought of it as the Holy Ghost, He being the 'most portable' person of the Trinity; now she thought of it as a symbol and implied that it was a pretty good one. I then said, in a very shaky voice, 'Well, if it's a symbol, to hell with it.' That was all the defense I was capable of but I realize now that this is all I will ever be able to say about it, outside of a story, except that it is the center of existence for me; all the rest of life is expendable."  Well, if it's a symbol, to hell with it.  Favorite story by her was "The Displaced Person" exposing the murderer in all our hearts.  Other great thoughts from her letters:  “I have what passes for an education in this day and time, but I am not deceived by it.” and “Total non-retention has kept my education from being a burden to me”

She raises in me the same questions as Reinhold Niebuhr, how can such good, gifted, brilliant people believe in God, but they very clearly do. “Let me make no bones about it: I write from the standpoint of Christian orthodoxy. Nothing is more repulsive to me than the idea of myself setting up a little universe of my own choosing and propounding a little immoralistic message. I write with a solid belief in all the Christian dogmas.” 

Pain is back, yesterday and today, despite no coffee, soda,or wine for a week.  Scary.


Sunday, November 27, 2022

1127

 Sunday, November 27, 2022


In bed at 8:45, up at 3:52, many, many pss, no toddy.  Bait bucket thoughts flitting through brain.

Chef de Cuisine

Not really.  Geri is the chef de cuisine in this house.  She does however tolerate my making homemade soup and bread.  I've been wanting to make more of each category lately.  Yesterday I went to Sendik's intending to pick up some beef shanks to use in making the brother for a sweet sour cabbage borscht.  Whoa.  No beef shanks at the store, no cabbage borscht.   Last night however we were at Whole Foods and I picked up some vegetable brother and a head of cauliflower so I could make a pot of cauliflower bacon soup, which I did this afternoon.  It's been so long since I made it, I couldn't tell from the looks of it whether it seemed to be the same as my last batch.  Time will tell. . .   3 p.m., had some, very good.😋

Not much to look at, but delicious for those who love both cauliflower and bacon

Recorded Memories

This morning on CBS NEWS SUNDAY MORNING, filmmaker Joshua Seftel had a segment on his mother who was recovering from a quadruple heart bypass at age 85.  What caught my attention was his statement "Several years ago when my father died, I bought my Mom an iPad and started FaceTiming with her. We recorded more than 100 conversations, several for this show."  I made me think, not surprisingly I suppose, of my 5 or 6 years of daily text conversations with Kitty and the fact that I've never erased or deleted any of them from my iPhone or MacAir laptop.  In fact, I have made several attempts to print all of them and had some success but found that it's not all that easy to go WAY back in time to pull up old texts for printing.  I'm not entirely sure why I have wanted to print all those conversations.  Whenever I look at them, I recall how much a part of each other's life we were, how much a part, a fortifying part, of each and every day those morning conversations were.  How many mornings?  2000?  1900?  I've been a bit beset by the thought that when she died a part of me died with her and I think it is true.  No one can take her place in my life and I know no one could take my place in hers.  We spent 15 years together as children, from her birth in 1944 until I left for college in 1959.  She shared with me more than once something I never knew until she told me, that she was devastated when I moved away to another city.  I was surprised when I learned that but on reflection it's not at all surprising.  I suspect my mother was too.  I'm appalled by my self-absorption and insensitivity at having no clue what my leaving home might mean to my mother and my sister.  I have no notion of how my father may have felt since the relationship between the two of us was so complicated.   But I suppose it's true for some of us, perhaps most of us, that we undervalue our significance to significant others in our lives.  And perhaps until we reach old age, we probably undervalue the significance of others to us.  We don't know how much someone means to us until they are gone except that the older we get the keener our recognition of the importance of those close to us.  The good news is that we can try to tailor our behavior toward those significant others to reflect our deep connection to them.  The bad news is that we are so aware of our vulnerability to loss and pain when we painfully and usually involuntarily imagine life without the other.  I think of Jimmy and Nancy Aquavia, of Jimmy and Nancy Cummings, of my mother and father., and mostly I think of Geri and me and of fear.

 Old friends, old friends  . . .

How terribly strange

To be seventy

Old friends

Memory brushes the same years

Silently sharing the same fear.

Simon and Garfunkel


So if you're walking down the street sometime

And spot some hollow ancient eyes

Please don't just pass 'em by and stare as if you didn't care

Say, "Hello in there, hello"

John Prine

PP Returned Today with Plumbing Distress   Despite having no coffee, wine, or soda for 5 days.  The body's a scary mystery I live in.  39 days to see doc.

Saturday, November 26, 2022

1126

Saturday, November 26, 2022


In bed at 8:30,  up at 3:00, many pss, no coffee, soda, or wine since the trip to VA on Tuesday.  Woke thinking of an old friend I saw at Sendiks on Monday (?), thinking of all the friendships I have let expire, such regret, reminded of Vacillation and the metaphor of 'the Final Judgment' as a mirror in which we see ourselves clearly. 

Thanksgiving

In bad shape emotionally and iffy shape physically with PP and plumbing questionable, not 'fit company for man nor beast.'  Received an email greeting card from Sarah and Christian, wrote back begging off on an anticipated phone call, wanted to beg off of Andy's brunch but bit the bullet and went and, as usual, had a lovely time, even better than usual enjoying the company of each of the grandchildren and of Andy and Anh.  Lots of good conversations, lots of laughs, really lovely get-together and I'm so glad I didn't beg off.  One scary moment sent me to the bathroom, away from playing Drew's game of "Apples to Apples."  Skipped David's Thanksgiving feast in the afternoon, fearful of a large crowd from half a dozen different households, Sharon down with some infectious malady, my plumbing and my endurance.  Missed spending time with David and Sharon and Ellis and with Steve and Nikki.  Aware of the danger of social isolation and wallowing in 'the Slough of Despond',  guilty of being such a distant drip with Geri, but weighed down with 'the miseries.'   Fearful of the return of Hunner's ulcers, especially since I was almost crippled with pain at VA until I was able to empty my bladder, hard time walking to the examination room, talking with the resident and his supervisor, all signaling, to me at least, the return of the ulcers and chronic pain problem.  Since Tuesday, I've drunk nothing but water, 2 cups of licorice spice tea, one small snifter of cognac, and another of Benedictine, neither of which seem to trigger any pain.

New Oven

Geri bought one today at Best Buy, with delivery and installation on 12/7.  Heating temperatures on the current oven are erratic, maybe because of damage from the 'clean oven' high temps.

Memory Lane

Geri & I went to Whole Foods on the East side this afternoon.  Drove over on Locust Street through Riverwest, past my old chiropractor's offices.  Such an interesting neighborhood, working class, old frame single-family homes and duplexes, some apartment buildings, lots of young people, integrated,  Through my old Lake Park neighborhood, down Downer where we used to shop at the original Sendik's, watch movies at the Downer, browse in the book store, haircuts at Lnus Malarkey's, Coffee Trader before the era of Starbucks, Alterra, Collective.  Returned via North Ave, Oriental Theater, von Trier's tavern, Ma Fischer's, Brewer's Hill, St. Francis of Assisi parish, Black Holocaust Museum, Garfield Avenue School now apartments, Judge Reynolds' school busing order, the North Avenue Reservoir and the weeping mulberry, my enjoyable drawing lessons in the teacher's attic, memories everywhere I turn.  A long adult life lived in this city, so changed in the 63 years since I arrived, barely 18, starting a new life in the new city.  How much have I changed in that time?  how little?

Friday, November 25, 2022

1125

 Friday, November 25, 2022


In bed around 9, up at 6, many pss, one Benedictine.  Pain situation better today after days of abstaining from coffee, soda, wine.  Keeping fingers crossed.  Emerging from funk.

1124

 Thursday, November 23, 2022

Thanksgiving Day

In bed around 9, up at 4.  2nd anniversary of TIA.

Thursday, November 24, 2022

1123

 Wednesday, November 23, 2022

In bed at 9:30, up at 6:10, pss at 11:30, 1:30, and 4:10 with PP, no vino.  

Mass Shootings So Far This Year in the Land of the Free

606.  The best defense against 606 bad guys with a gun is 606 good guys with a gun.  Still counting.


No comment.

Tuesday, November 22, 2022

1122

 Tuesday,November 22, 2022

OMG   I can't believe it.  I started to type 'November 22, 1963', the day the world fell apart.  Later.  In bed at 9:30, up a little before 5, thinking of my mother, the movie of The Five Sullivan Brothers, 'sole surviving son' regulations in the military/naval forces, my mother crying over the movie. Kennedy dead now for 59 years, a lifetime for many.  My mother dead for 49 years.   So many thoughts.  So very many thoughts.

What I think of when I feel guilty about spending money on art supplies and suchlike

GREEN BAY ‒ One — perhaps the only — benefit from the Green Bay Packers losing six of the last seven games is tickets becoming more affordable.  The average get-in price for two of the Packers' remaining six games are below $100 and all but one dropped in the last week after the Packers lost to the Tennessee Titans at Lambeau Field on Thursday. Prices are determined by averaging the lowest prices at 10 secondary market sites.  The average lowest price for the Packers game in Philadelphia on Sunday was $197 on Monday, down from $255 last week.

Veterans Administration

I sent an email to my primary care doctor, Kumkum Chattopadhyay, "Dr. Chatt," late last Friday.  This morning I got a call from her nurse, Kim Kitzke, informing me that Dr. Chatt wanted me to come in for an "Urgent Care" visit today or tomorrow.  Turns out Dr. Chatt has been on vacation but she checked her email, or Kim called her about it, and she had Kim call me.  I have been impressed with the medical care I have received from the VA from the moment I was enrolled in the system.  I've journaled before about the good feeling I have after each visit there because of the sense of connection with the other mostly old vets in varying stages of decrepitude and the simple acts of kindness, care, and helpfulness I often see while there.  I have the same feeling and judgment about the doctors, nurses, and therapists. ***** As if to prove my point, Nurse Kim just called.  The Urgent Care scheduler had arranged an appointment for me for tomorrow at 2:30.  Kim called to say she could get me in to see a Gold Clinic physician at 1:00 this afternoon.  All along the line, professionalism and care demonstrated, by Dr. Chatt ensuring I would come in today or tomorrow to see a doctor even though she is on vacation,  by the scheduler outside the Gold Clinic getting me an appointment tomorrow, by Kim following up and getting me an earlier appointment within the Gold Clinic today and taking a history of the pelvic pain I've been experiencing, my prior history with IC, chronic pelvic pain, Hunner's ulcers, etc.  Republicans keep warning us of the horrors of 'socialized medicine,' universal health care, and the like.  The VA is socialized medicine, provided by the federal government.  Dr. Chatt, Nurse Kim, and the scheduler are all federal employees, yet the service they provide to me and other vets is personal, professional, competent, and caring.  'nuf said.

    Back from the VA: I was seen by a young resident, Dr. Kenkel, and by his supervisor, Dr. Hayes.  By the time I saw Dr. Kenkel, I was in a lot of pain and had difficulty walking, paying attention to the questions he asked, and focusing on accurate answers to them.  When he stepped out to consult with Dr. Hayes, I went to the bathroom and emptied my bladder.  Voila! pain disappeared.  Suggests that my problem is bladder-related - again.  A referral was made to the urology clinic, so I'll wait for a call to schedule a visit.

 Mother

My mother was wonderful, a saint, a hero.  Incredibly strong, brave, and loyal to family and friends, even when my sister and I wished she would be disloyal to our father.  She was also 1st generation Irish, both parents Irish immigrants and sentimental.  I wrote of the Sullivan brothers above, and the 1944 movie The Fighting Sullivans.  The Sullivan boys all enlisted in the Navy together after Pearl Harbor and did so on the condition that they be assigned to the same duty station, in their case, a Navy cruiser, the USS Juneau.   The Juneau was sunk by a Japanese submarine in the battle of Guadalcanal and the Sullivan boys, and most of the other crewmen, all went down with their ship.  Thereafter, the War Department adopted the 'Sole Surviving Son' policy forbidding assigning all siblings to the same unit.  My mother had seen the movie once, it seems, but thereafter couldn't watch it.  Too hard on her, perhaps with memories of her husband and all of her brothers having served overseas during the war, and the submerged dread she must have felt every day during the war with so many loved ones in service.  In any case, I woke up this morning thinking of her, thinking of the Sullivan boys on the Juneau, and thinking of her relationship with their story, their fate.  Here is some of what I wrote about her in the memoir I wrote for my children:

____________________________________________________

    "My mother’s early life reads like a melodrama.  Born of poor immigrant parents, she was motherless by age 5, left the only female in her family.  She was 7 years old when the market crashed in 1929 and a child and adolescent throughout the Great Depression.  Her father was almost certainly an alcoholic during her childhood and there were times (I know this from her) when the Salvation Army left baskets of food at the Healy doorstep.  She left high school before graduation to get a job either to support herself or to help with the expenses of the family, or more likely, both.  (It’s uncertain whether she lived with a couple of aunts for a time before she married.  My Aunt Monica says yes, my father thinks not.)   She became a bride at 18, a mother at 19, a victim of a brutal sexual assault at 25.  Her husband was drafted before she turned 22, leaving her with a 2½-year-old son and a daughter on the way.  For support she had $22 each month from my father’s $50 private’s pay and an $80 military dependents’ allotment from the government.  Her father was 64 years old and probably an out-of-control drinker by the time her husband was drafted and all three of her brothers were away in the services.  Her husband fought in the worst slaughterhouse battle in the Pacific theater, with Marine casualties so horrific that William Randolph Hearst wrote an editorial calling for a change of top command in the Pacific Theater of Operations and TIME magazine wrote about the furor over the editorial.  When the war ended and her husband came home, he was one of the thousands of hidden casualties with no missing limbs but with a hole inside him where his heart and soul had been and with a mind full of horrors that, like the Japanese defenders on Iwo Jima, crept out of hidden recesses to terrorize him.

    My mother suffered greatly in her too-short life.  She suffered from the absence of a mother, she suffered from an alcoholic father and alcoholic brothers, and, after the war, she suffered from an alcoholic husband with a terrible case of long-term PTSD.  She suffered from James Hartmann’s vicious attack on her in her own home.  These were in addition to the “ordinary” sufferings that life brings to each of us.  

    I would create an altogether inaccurate picture of your grandmother, however, if I were to paint her as some sort of long-suffering victim and martyr.  Of all of us in the family, it was she who was the strongest and the most life-loving, the least self-pitying and least blaming, the most aware of life as a blessing and a gift, the most religious and Catholic, and the most grateful for all that she had, especially her children.  She was the most loving and the most loyal, even to those who did not return the love or loyalty.  She was no whiner or sniveler.  She sang and she danced.  She laughed.  She liked people and people liked her. She was not naïve or Pollyannaish, but she was optimistic and hopeful.  She saw goodness and promise and dignity in people who were down and out after the Depression and the war, (including her husband, her father, and her oldest brother.)

Your grandmother was the biggest baseball fan in the house, listening to or watching White Sox games, cheering when they won and grousing when they lost.  She knew that Nellie Fox played 2nd base with a chaw of tobacco the size of a golf ball in his cheek and that Chico Carrasquel and then Luis Aparicio were terrific shortstops and not to be confused with Sammy Esposito who played 3rd base.  She loved to listen to the announcer introduce the lineup, especially when he chanted in long drawn out tones “and in left field, Orestes “Minnie” Minoso!”  She was excited when the Sox would play the Yankees and Billy Pierce would take on Whitey Ford in one of their many pitching duels.  She knew Billy Pierce was a better pitcher but she had a soft spot in her heart for Dick Donovan, who, after all, was Irish.  I don’t know whether she suggested to Uncle Jim that he take Kitty and me to Comiskey Park or whether he came up with the idea.  I don’t know who paid our streetcar fares or admissions to the ballpark.  It could have been either of them or they could have pooled their change.  In any case, they made me into a true blue White Sox fan, rooting for the team and my favorite player, right fielder Jim Rivera who would stand near the dugout gate and sign kids’ baseballs or scorecards before the game began.  I remember the excitement of getting off the Halsted Street streetcar at 35th Street and making our way on foot in the gathering crowd east to Shields Avenue and finding our way to the right field grandstand to be near Jim Rivera.  What I don’t remember is my mother, the No. 1 Sox fan, ever going to a ballgame herself.  She sent us and listened to the game on the radio or, later, watched it on television.  What I also have no memory of is my father getting excited about the Sox or the Cubs or about either of Chicago’s two NFL teams in those days, the Cardinals and the Bears.  Enthusiasm for life’s daily blessings came to us from Mom, never from Dad. 

     When I reached the age at which I was to attend my first dance, it was your grandmother who taught me to dance the two-step and the jitterbug while we listened to music on the radio, Elvis or Jimmy Rogers or the Four Lads.  I would practice the steps with Kitty or with our downstairs neighbor and friend Kathy Semrau before the dance.  There is a much larger sense, however, in which your grandmother taught me to dance, indeed to live.   I was reminded of her when I saw a bumper sticker that read: “Those who dance appear mad to those who don’t hear the music.”  Despite the lousy hand that was dealt to her as a girl and a young woman, Mary Healy heard the music.  That was part of her saintliness.  She refused to be a loser or a loner, a whiner or a sniveler, a victim or a mope.  That was her heroism.  She was as alive and spirited and as open to life as my poor father was the opposite, emotionally dead, dispirited, and trapped within his haunted self.  

. . . . . . .

    I want to close this terribly inadequate portrait of your grandmother by repeating my central point, that she was my first, best, and most lasting model of a saint and a hero in a world that I eventually came to see as full of saints and heroes and miracles.  Through strength of will and strength of character, she was a happy person despite all of the obstacles, all of the excuses for unhappiness.  If Kitty and I had not had her model for happiness in adversity, had we only had our father, our grandparents, my uncles and my aunt as models, I don’t know that we would have known any happiness in our lives or that we could have transmitted any sense of happiness to our own children.   It took effort, it took strength, it took heroism for my mother, not to feign happiness, but to be happy in spite of everything.  

She was also a circle-breaker.  Her father, her brothers, her husband, her in-laws, all were unhappy people for one reason or another.  It is easy enough to say that they ‘had every right to be unhappy’ and to wallow in the ‘slough of despond.’  But no one had any greater ‘right to be unhappy’ than my mother.  If she had chosen to live a life of self-pity, however, she would have transmitted an attitude of self-pity to her children, and to her husband, and to all around her.  Attitudehave s are contagious.  Your grandmother’s attitude was one of courage, of continued engagement with life, of not giving in to despondency.  She transmitted that attitude to Kitty and to me and although we have faltered along life’s road, it is her attitude that still sustains us.  It is her attitude that we have tried to transmit to you.  I hope you can from this wholly inadequate word portrait garner some idea of why your grandmother is, for your father and for your Aunt Kitty our patron saint, our guardian angel, and our hero. "

___________________________________________________

Little wonder why I woke up this morning thinking of her almost half a century after she died.  And to be honest with myself I need to acknowledge that it is in remembering her I experience a great regret, that of not staying closer to her after I moved away from home in 1959 to go off to college and on into the Marines and law school and getting on with my life.  There were reasons for it but none of them excuses it.  It is her I think of when I read as I so often have, the stanzas of W.B. Yeats' Vacillation:

Although the summer Sunlight gild

Cloudy leafage of the sky,

Or wintry moonlight sink the field

In storm-scattered intricacy,

I cannot look thereon,

Responsibility so weighs me down.


Things said or done long years ago,

Or things I did not do or say

But thought that I might say or do,

Weigh me down, and not a day

But something is recalled,

My conscience or my vanity appalled.



Monday, November 21, 2022

1121

 Monday, November 21, 2022

In bed at 9, up at 4, 2 pss, one snifter.  Woke up with thoughts of my old law firm and partner and fellow Leo H. S. alumnus John Finerty.  Warmish out at 31, degrees and high of 39 expected.  Geri let Lilly out at 4:25, I let her in 5 minutes later.

Max Hastings, Vietnam: Epic Tragedy 1945-1975, Operation Starlite

Watching the Ken Burns documentary and spot-reading Max Hastings' book resurfaces some very old memories.   Another memory stirred.  I was the Senior Air Controller for the launch of "Operation Starlite a few weeks after I arrived at Danang.  I remember it being a BFD, and indeed it was.  In the official 250-page USMC history THE U.S. MARINES IN VIETNAM: THE LANDING AND THE BUILDUP 1965, chapter 5 is titled "Operation Starlite: The First Big Battle."  There was considerable excitement around Wing HQ about it.  Maj. DuBois attended the briefings at Wing HQ and then briefed us junior officers who would be in charge of the TACC during the operation.  The Marine ground force commanders considered the operation a success although, according to the official history, the ARVN generals weren't impressed and my best recollection half a century later is that we TACC center officers weren't too impressed either.  Reading the official history now through a 'retrospectoscope,' i.e., with hindsight, is a painful experience.  Starlite was indeed the Marines' first "big battle" in Vietnam and whether it be considered a 'win' or not, the history foretold the ultimate futility of the massive U.S. military effort.  Some telling excerpts: 

"Civilians in the combat zone presented complications.  The first attempts to evacuate them were difficult; the people were frightened and did not trust the Marines.  Eventually, most of the local populace were placed in local collecting points where they were fed and provided with medical attention.  Although attempts were made to avoid civilian casualties, some villages were completely destroyed by supporting arms when it became obvious that the enemy occupied fortified positions in them."

and

"At 0615, 15 minutes before H-Hour, Battery K, 4th Battalion, 12th Marines, which had displaced to firing positions on the northern bank of the Tra Bong River in the Chu Lai TAOR the night before began 155mm preparation fires on the helicopter landing zone.  The artillery was soon reinforced by 20 Marine A-4s and F-4s which dropped 18 tons of bombs and napalm on the LZ."

The Operation Starlite "big battle" receives the following attention in Max Hastings' book:

" . . .Capt. Andrew Comer was executive officer of the 3/3rd Marines during the August 1965 Operation Starlite, an amphibious assault on the Batangan Peninsular near Danang.  Although his superiors reported success, he assessed the battle as a shambles.  He described how the commander of a tank "fired with its machine gun on a boy of about 10 years of age at a range of 75 yards.  Comer ran to the ditch where the boy had taken refuge, "saw that he was unarmed and unhurt and sent him on his way."  Seeking to remonstrate with the shooter, he could not make himself heard above the roar of the tank's engine.

An amphibious tractor driver succumbed to hysterics under incoming mortar fire.  The man repeatedly reversed his vehicle over wounded men, killing five prostrate Americans beneath its tracks.  . . The captain gazed in revulsion at the helmeted head of one of the victims, a man he recognized: this lay at his feet, while the rest of the remains were caught beneath the tractor's tracks."

What fools we were, what deluded lethal innocents, 'young struggling democracy', 'first to fight for right and freedom and to keep our honor clean.'  'Civilians in combat areas presented complications,' 'people were frightened and did not trust Marines,' 'villages completely destroyed,' '10-year-old boy, unarmed'.  Mene, mene, tekel upharsin.  The writing was on the wall already and we junior officers could read it; so could Lyndon Johnson, Robert McNamara, Ho Chi Minh, Gen. Giap. and Le Duan.

Thoughts of my father

Watching Ken Burns' segment on the Marines at Con Thien and Marine Harris' comment: "People get blown to bits, literally blown to bits" reminded me of course of my father on Iwo Jima, only 20 years before  Con Thien.  We rarely talked about either Iwo Jima or Vietnam, like millions of other veterans, but he told me once that he and the other Marines on Iwo weren't afraid of getting shot.  They were afraid of getting 'blown to bits'.  He was a radioman in the Joint Assault Signal Company, the JASCO, and spent 27 days  at the communication center on the landing beach.  William Manchester, himself a WWII Marine, wrote a memoir Goodbye Darkness, in which he described the landing beach on Iwo Jima: 

    "It resembled Doré’s illustrations of Inferno.  Essential cargo – ammo, rations, water – was piled up in sprawling chaos.  And gore, flesh, and bones were lying all about. The deaths on Iwo were extraordinarily violent.  There seemed to be no clean wounds, just fragments of corpses.  It reminded one battalion medical officer of a Bellevue dissecting room.  Often the only way to distinguish between Japanese and Marine dead was by the legs; Marines wore canvas leggings and Nips khaki puttees.  Otherwise, identification was completely impossible.  You tripped over strings of viscera fifteen feet long, over bodies which had been cut in half at the waist.  Legs and arms, and heads bearing only necks, lay fifty feet from the closest torsos.  As night fell the beachhead reeked with the stench of burning flesh."

My father told me, perhaps in the same conversation at his kitchen table in Florida where he told me of the fear of being 'blown to bits,' that the Marines didn't want to discharge him when they did, shortly before Thanksgiving, 1945.  The war with Japan had been over for 3 months and 8 months had gone by since he offloaded from Iwo to some amphibious ship carrying Marines back to Hawaii.  He was stationed at  Great Lakes Naval Base north of Chicago.  Though he didn't say it, it was clear that the Marines didn't want to keep him on active duty because he was a valuable or useful Marine.  He had left boot camp at San Diego as a buck private, E-1, the lowest enlisted rank.  He was discharged as a buck private, not even a PFC.  Even after enduring the horrors of Iwo Jima, he carried the lowest possible rank in the Marine Corps.  The government didn't want to discharge him because he was an emotional "basket case," not fit to be returned to civilian life.  But he did return and my 23-year-old mother, my 1-year-old sister, and I lived, as best we could, with the emotional, spiritual wreck the war had left him.  How many times my poor beloved heroic mother said to my sister and me 'he loves you, he just doesn't know how to show it.'  He remained haunted by his service in the war for most, perhaps all, of the rest of his life.  My sister and I carried the secondary effects of his PTSD through our lives, collateral damage.  So when I hear from the Marines at Con Thien (and other battles in Vietnam),  I suffer some with them and with their wives, children, siblings, and parents they came home to.  And I think of all of them every time some politician beats the drum to 'send in the Marines' to someplace on the face of the earth where the type of government or some other condition is thought to be threatening to America's "national security" or "vital interests."   I thought of all of them in March 1991, when just after his victory in the first Persian Gulf War, the offensively ebullient President George H.W. Bush told a group of state legislators, "The specter of Vietnam has been buried forever in the desert sands of the Arabian Peninsula.... By God, we've kicked the Vietnam syndrome once and for all."  Of course, he was unfortunately correct, as demonstrated by his son in the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan.   I suppose Ken Burns' might describe each of those misadventures the way he did Vietnam: "It was begun in good faith by decent people, out of fateful misunderstandings, American overconfidence, and . . .  miscalculations."

A painting I worked up many years ago of George H. W. Bush and Margaret Thatcher after the First Gulf War.  Barely visible in the white background are the spectral faces of ghosts, those who died in the war, looking on as Bush solicits and revels in cheers from a surrounding crowd.

Webb telescope spots the earliest galaxies yet, and they are cosmic oddballs

The two bundles of stars formed shortly after the big bang, offering a long-anticipated window into the origins of the universe.  One of the two galaxies dates to about 350 million years after the big bang, making it the most distant galaxy ever discovered. . .  Although 350 million years seems an unimaginably long time after the big bang, it is relatively early in the life of our universe.  “The universe is 13.8 billion years old. We’re looking back through 98 percent of all time to see a galaxy like this,” said Garth Illingworth, an astronomer from the University of California at Santa Cruz.

Meanwhile, back on Wakefield Court, Village of Bayside, Milwaukee County, State of Wisconsin, USA, North America, Planet Earth, the Universe, the Mind of God, the morning sun drifting further south each day and shining through the window through which I watch the world pass by moves closer to its winter solstice endpoint on our fireplace, when and where it will reliably reverse course.


Sunday, November 20, 2022

1120

 Sunday, November 20, 2022

In bed @ 9, lay awake for awhile, woke up at 2;30, out of bed by 2:50, 4 pss, no vino.  12 degrees out, wind chill 1 below zero.  Geri let Lilly out at 3, I let her in about 4 minutes later.

Packaging Neurosis

Geri told me long ago that I am eccentric.  I had to agree, not least in the sense that everyone is eccentric, off-center, precisely because of his or her uniqueness, 'singularity.'  I suspect my hobbies of drawing and painting and reading poetry are not terribly common among men.  My political leanings are decidedly left-of-center.  A lot of eccentricities to acknowledge.  But Geri was kind enough not to tell me that I am neurotic, but I am that too.  Some of it I attribute to growing up in a home beset with PTSD, first with my father, then my mother and both of them.  Some of it I attribute to having been "raised in the bosom of the [Irish Catholic] Church."  I doubt that I've ever had a healthy relationship with sexuality because of it, 'temple of the Holy Ghost,' impure thoughts and deeds, proximate occasion of sin, and all that.  You can take the boy out of the Church but you'll never take the Church out of the boy.  Pernicious influences take their toll.

My latest neurosis is with packaging and containers.  I'm resistant to discarding the 'stuff' that purchased 'stuff' comes in.  Maybe it started when I minded how much cardboard moving/storage boxes cost at U-Haul.  Now when I received something from Amazon or another supplier of 'stuff,' I notice what a nice box it came in and am loathe to just toss it.  My favorite booze is Costco's Kirkland Cognac, which comes in a very heavy bottle.  I can't get myself to just trash them when I finish a bottle.  Alone or filled with water they make great weights to flatten things that need flattening, but how many thing need flattening and with how many bottles.  Neurotic!  I suppose part of this compulsive hoarding of containers started with needing jars to use when engaged in painting, jars for water for gouache or acrylics, jars for turpentine or mineral spirits for oils, jars to hold paint brushes, palette knives, Sharpies,  or other terribly important stuff,  "Ooh, that's a great jar, Geri, please don't throw it away."  Most recently it came to me that plastic lids on containers can serve as little disposable palettes. Thus it was that I spent a portion of this afternoon cutting apart a collection of 'great boxes' I had hoarded next to the doorway to the garage, throwing away the unusable pieces, but saving nice clean flat surfaces that I can use to paint on instead of canvases.  Now I have a stack of nice flat cardboard downstairs waiting for inspiration to hit me.💥😎😳

I had no sooner finished typing the last paragraph than an Amazon delivery guy brought Geri's squirrel baffle to the back door notably in a lovely, unsoiled, uncrushed, cardboard box.  O frabjous day . . .





Burns & Novik, Vietnam War, Con Thien

John Musgrave & Roger Harris, U.S. Marines at Con Thien.  Musgrave:  "Time at Con Thien was time in the barrel.   We were the fish, they had the shotguns they stuck in the barrel and blasted away.  And they were going to hit something every shot because Con Thien was such a small area and they pounded it with that artillery from North Vietnam.  They couldn't miss.  I sat in water, I slept in water, and I ate in water, because our holes were full.  I mean a flooded foxhole can drown a wounded man."  People get blown to bits, literally blown to bits."  Harris: "A lot of mud, blood, and artillery.  Like almost every hour there would be a barrage.  People get blown to bits, literally blown to bits.  You find a boot with a leg in it, and so is the leg white or black?  Like, who was the white Marine who was here?  Who was the black?  So you try to remember and you tag it and you put that in the green bag.  And that's what goes back as Marine lance corporal so and so.  And so, but sometimes you're not even sure because the body has literally been blown to bits, and the only thing that's left is a foot or a piece of an arm."

I can't watch these programs without reliving feelings of survivor's guilt and shame.  When it came time to pick an MOS, I shied away from the killing jobs, or at least the direct killing jobs, O3 Infantry and 08, Artillery.  My friends and roommates, Jerry Nugent and Tom Devitt did the opposite.  Jerry became an infantry officer, Tom an artillery officer.  I became an air defense control officer, a job that turned out to be an anachronism in Vietnam.  There were no enemy aircraft to defend against; I just kept track of all the A4 and A6 attack aircraft and the F4 and F8 fighter jets used as attack aircraft.  I was a Marine but I didn't want to shoot anybody and I didn't want to be shot at by anybody.  It worked.  I never had to shoot my Colt .45 at anyone and came under fire - of sorts - only once on January 25, 1966, when the airbase received VC 120mm mortar fire at night.  My most vivid memories: (1) having a snootful of booze from drinking at the "O" club before lights out; (2) running with my .45 and my helmet to my 'battle station' at 'the Bubble', or TACC, and (3) fear of being shot in the dark not by the VC but by another Marine.  I wore the same uniform as the thousands of other Marines who served in RVN but I hardly had similar experiences as the Marines 'in the bush.'  I worked at Wing Headquarters.  I was what later came to be called a 'REMF,' one of the 80% or so of Vietnam vets who served in support roles, not direct combat roles.

The Bubble



Saturday, November 19, 2022

1117

 Thursday, November 17, 2022

"I write because I don't know what I think until I read what I say."

Flannery O'Connor

In bed at about 9:30, awake at 4:30, up at 5, 5 pss, no vino.  31 cloudy degrees, high of 32 predicted.  Brr.  High temps below freezing next 3 days.  First visitors to the bird feeders after sunup are the chickadees and of course the squirrels.  Geri has ordered a squirrel baffle for the new shepherd's crook, alas!  Now the finches and a song sparrow (pine siskin?), a woodpecker and a big nuthatch are on the feeders, snowbirds on the ground.

Republicans Win House; McCarthy Carries Caucus Vote

Here we go again.  Bengazi, Bengazi, Bengazi will turn into Hunter, Hunter, Hunter.  Maybe hearings on age restrictions for office-seekers? The threat of default on the National Debt, financial chaos, and plummeting value of retirement accounts.  Lincoln said a house divided against itself cannot stand.  How do we survive so much governmental power in the control of those who hate the government?  And will the Dems finally kill the filibuster rule in the Senate?  Sinema, Manchin.  The greatest government money can buy.

Likely abusive investigations by next House majority: Hunter Biden, origin of covid-19, 'politicization' of DOJ, Afghanistan withdrawal, impeachment of Biden, AG Garland, who ilse?

Most Despicable Human Being in Government?

What a tough call!  Lowest lowlife?  Scummiest scum?  Skuzziest skuzzbucket?  Kevin McCarthy?  Marjorie Taylor-Greene?  Mitch McConnell?  Ted Cruz?  Louie Gohmert? Josh Hawley?  Kyrsten Sinema?  Sam Alito?  Clarence Thomas?  Jim Jordan?  Matt Gaetz?  Ron DeSantis?

Michael Gerson dead at 58

An enigma to me.  He appeared to be a good man, a decent, humane  man, a kind and generous human being, a thoughtful and philosophical writer, exactly the opposite of the group aggregated in the preceding list of 'deplorables.'  An evangelical Christian, a graduate of Wheaton College north of Chicago, a true believer.  And a true Republican, at least in the pre-Trump Republican Party.  He worked as a speechwriter and policy advisor to Chuck Colson in his prison ministry, to George W. Bush in the White House, to Bob Dole and Dan Coats.  None of the Republicans he worked for were loathsome, far from it.  Even Bush, with his regrettable reliance on Cheney and Rumsfeld, had redeeming qualities, notably his compassion for immigrants from the South.  Gerson was a right-hand man for all of them, saw power politics up close, knew the intrinsic venality of political life, the constitutional weakness of American government and the human soul, and yet he was a believer, reminding me of Niebuhr.  He suffered from cancer for years, a cancer that has now taken his life.  Yet he maintained faith in a benevolent personal God.  He must have had a poetic insight into the otherwise ridiculous myths of Christianity.  In his WaPo Christmas column last year, on December 23, 2021, he wrote:

"No matter how we react to the historicity of each element, however, the Nativity presents the inner reality of God’s arrival.  He is a God who goes to ridiculous lengths to seek us.  He is a God who chose the low way: power in humility; strength perfected in weakness; the last shall be first; blessed are the least of these.  He is a God who was cloaked in blood and bone and destined for human suffering — which he does not try to explain to us, but rather just shares. It is perhaps the hardest to fathom: the astounding vulnerability of God.  And he is a God of hope, who offers a different kind of security than the fulfillment of our deepest wishes.  He promises a transformation of the heart in which we release the burden of our desires, and live in expectation of God’s unfolding purposes until all his mercies stand revealed.

There is an almost infinite number of ways other than angelic choirs that God announces his arrival. I have friends who have experienced a lightning strike of undeniable mission, or who see God in the deep beauty of nature, or know Jesus in serving the dispossessed.

For me, such assurances do not come easy or often. Mine are less grand vista than brief glimpses behind a curtain. In Sylvia Plath’s poem “Black Rook in Rainy Weather,” she wrote of an “incandescent” light that can possess “the most obtuse objects” and “grant / A brief respite from fear.” Plath concluded: “Miracles occur, / If you care to call those spasmodic / Tricks of radiance miracles. The wait’s begun again, / The long wait for the angel. / For that rare, random descent.”

Christmas hope may well fall in the psychological category of wish fulfillment. But that does not disprove the possibility of actually fulfilled wishes. On Christmas, we consider the disorienting, vivid evidence that hope wins. If true, it is a story that can reorient every human story. It means that God is with us, even in suffering. It is the assurance, as from a parent, as from an angel, as from a savior: It is okay. And even at the extreme of death (quoting Julian of Norwich): “All shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.”

. . .

The most telling words in his essay are, I suppose, "if true."  Struggling with all the thoughts, including fears and sorrows, that his cancer triggered, he reminds me nonetheless of the story of the optimistic boy who wanted a pony for Christmas and, finding horse manure under the tree on Christmas morning, exulted "With all this horse manure here, there must be a pony somewhere."

Vietnam by Max Hastings

I listened to Hastings' book on the way to and from Costco this morning.  It is very instructive about (a) the reverence and affection most Vietnamese had for "Uncle Ho", (b) the cruelty practiced by the Vietminh towards Vietnamese who stood in their way, (c) the cruelty practiced by the French forces towards the Vietnamese who stood in their way, (d) the fact that the majority of French forces in Vietnam were not ethnic Frenchmen, but mercenaries from Africa, Madagascar, and Vietnam itself.  Above all, with the benefit of hindsight, the stupidity and ultimate futility of French and American colonialism/imperialism are painful to read about and to be a small part of.  Few good guys in this saga.  "The two sides competed in ruthlessness."  I am demonstrably ignorant of most of Vietnam's history, especially its exploitation and oppression by foreign invaders, and my personal knowledge of Americans in country except in the early days when I was one of them, but from what I know today it seems to me that, early on at least, our hearts were 'purer' than the ancient Chinese, the French, the Japanese, and the Nationalist Chinese invaders who preceded us.  Whatever naive innocence we might have laid claim to, however, disappeared rapidly, inevitably, ineluctably, inexorably., nolens volens.

Costco: Tout Va Bien

There is a striking 10-minute scene toward the end of this Godard film set in a modern supermarket.  A long tracking shot of line after line of customers checking out with shopping baskets full of goodies.  It's a chilling depiction of our consumer culture.  I was reminded of it as I shopped at Costco this morning.  I arrived 10 minutes after the store opened and the store was jam-packed.  All of us happy shoppers parading down long aisles jam-packed with stuff, including stuff to hold stuff, stuff to store stuff, stuff to hid stuff, stuff to carry stuff, stuff to clean stuff, stuff to power stuff. stuff to . . . And I loved it.  A new  HP printer, a bottle of my favorite cognac, 48 cans of V8, a heavy plastic-wrapped bunch of thin plastic bottles of Kirkland water,  a big collection of AAA batteries, and a roasted chicken.  I live in the world I live in and I am a part of it, for better or worse, tattooed in the cradle, and complicit.

New Printer

Exactly the same model as the old one we will recycle Saturday morning, which broke down after a bit less than 2 years.  Keeping our fingers crossed that this one works well and works longer.  It turned out to be easy to set up and get connected to our WiFi.

Nancy Pelosi Won't Seek Reelection as Speaker of the House

She is 82 years old.  Steny Hoyer, House Majority Leader, is 82 years old.  Jim Clybourn, Whip, is in his 80s.  Pelosi and Hoyer are stepping away which is a good thing.  Having said that, she is one of the my heroes, not for any particular policy she has championed (other than the Affordable Care Act), but for her courage, her speaking truth to power (though she is Power in her own right, of course.)  I wonder if I am the only guy in the world other than Paul Pelosi I suppose who has a photograph of Nancy Pelosi hanging on his bedroom wall, the iconic one in a large conference room in the White House, she is the only woman at the table, across from a bunch of military generals/admirals, standing, looking Trump right in the eyes as she points that every-moving finger at him, saying "With you, all roads lead to Putin" while all the 'suits' at the table look down sheepishly.  My hero.






1119

 Saturday, November 19, 2022

In bed at 9:30, up at 6:10 with a dream of being in Traverse City, MI, looking for Mary Keenan and Mike McChrystal, on foot, struggling to find my way around, being told Mary is very ill and in the hospital. 4 or 5 pss, no vino.  Mary died several years ago.  January weather, 21 degrees out heading up to a high of 27.

WaPo: President Biden Is Turning 80. Experts Say Age Is More Than a Number.

His race is another factor. The life expectancy for the average white, 80-year-old man is another eight years, said Dr. John Rowe, a professor of health policy and aging at Columbia University. “And that’s the average,” Dr. Rowe said. “A lot of those 80-year-olds are already sick; they are already in the nursing home.”😱😱😱

Once people reach 65, the risk of dementia doubles every five years, said Dr. Gill Livingston, a psychiatrist at University College London, who led a commission on dementia in 2020 that was convened by The Lancet, a medical journal. In general, she said, in high-income countries like the United States, dementia will affect 10 percent of people aged 80 to 84 and 20 percent of those aged 85 to 89.😳😳😳

Neotoma floridana

I am a packrat, a localized hoarder.  I kept piles, mounds of my stuff about my settings, most especially my chairs.  Crossword puzzle books, notebooks, sketchbooks, magazines, remotes, mail I haven't dealt with yet, catalogs I'm hesitant to throw away yet, eye drops, eyeglass spray and wipes, flashlights, writing instruments, and books.  Never just one book, a collection of books.  Books of poetry, history books, and other nonfiction books.  It all comprises clutter, the assemblage of stuff that generally offends me whenever anyone other than I assembles it.  I've resolved to attack some of the clutter today, to follow my Aunt Monica's exhortation: "A place for everything and everything in its place."  Where to begin?  NYT Crosswords for a Long Weekend; LA Times Sunday Crossword Omnibus Vol. 6; my untitled memoir; The Atlantic; Mother Jones;  Vanity Fair; 2 New Yorker(s); Selected Poems of William Carlos Williams; Collected Poems of T. S. Eliot; A Mencken Chrestomathy; Reinhold Niebuhr, An Interpretation of Christian Ethics; Stefan Zweig, The World of Yesterday; Frank Whitford, Expressionist Portraits; Barbara Chase-Riboud, I Always Knew; Marc Riboud, 50 Years of Photography; Vaclav Smil, How the World Really Works; Max Hastings, Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy; 3-ring recipes binder; rubber-banded 3x5 index cards; 2 saved von Dongen portraits from the trashed waterlogged book in the basement; large sketchbook; small sketchbook; small spiral notebook; small side bound notebook; the remote for the smart TV; the remote for the Blu-Ray; the remote for Roku;  . . .  Ah, it will feel so good to deal with this mess so I can surround myself again with more and different stuff.  A packrat is a packrat.

Winter

Went to Sendik's at 5, temperature at 20, wind chill 4 degrees, low tonight around 11.






Tree Hugger, Leaf Lover

A favorite tree on Fairy Chasm Road

A maple leaf on our stoop


. . . as common as a field daisy, and as singular



1118

 Friday, November 18, 2022

In bed at 10:30, woke up at 4:30, p at 4:45, several pss, a snifter of cognac.  22 cloudy degrees, a dusting of snow on the ground, high of 28.

Vietnam: Burns' film, Hastings' History

It was 57 years ago and my head is still haunted by Vietnam.  So many feelings, survivor's guilt, Moon Mullins and Jay Trembley and 58,000  more, shame at cowardice in avoiding the direct killing MOSs, confusion at my what? ambivalence about those fighting there and the protesters, relived anxiety about CACO duty in Philadelphia, cynicism about politicians and the Pentagon, Kent State, Cambodia, Sterling Hall bombing on my 29th birthday, turbulence at secular Madison, quietude at Marquette, religion and God and Catholic culture, how many dead, how many injured, physically, emotionally, genetically, ignorance, indifference, red pill blue pill, go along to get along, complicity, and it all resurfaced with Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Classified memo from Robert McNamara to LBJ: "The picture of the world's greatest superpower killing or seriously injuring 1,000 non-combatants a week, while trying to pound a tiny, backward nation into submission, on an issue whose merits are hotly disputed, is not a pretty one."


Remembering Michael Gerson

Ruth Marcus: 

A few days earlier, Mike and I had lunch. The speechwriter who had written so many words for others told me he was nervous about baring himself so publicly, and he asked if I would read a draft. He also confided that he had been living in a shadow where, at times, he wondered whether those who meant the most to him would be better off — unburdened — if he weren’t around.

In his sermon, he put it this way: “I suspect that there are people here today — and I include myself — who are stalked by sadness, or stalked by cancer, or stalked by anger. We are afraid of the mortality that is knit into our bones. We experience unearned suffering or give unreturned love, or cry useless tears. And many of us eventually grow weary of ourselves — tired of our own sour company.”

Gerson on the Legacy of Obama

Obama is the first Democrat since Franklin Roosevelt to win back-to-back majorities of the national popular vote. But members of his party who venture beyond the 18 acres of the White House will find political ruin. Since he took office, Democrats have lost 13 Senate seats, 69 House seats, 11 governorships, 30 state legislative chambers and more than 900 state legislative seats. In border states that not long ago produced national Democratic leaders — such as Arkansas and Tennessee — the Democratic collapse is especially pronounced. Few presidents have done better for themselves and worse for their parties.

And perhaps most disturbingly for America’s liberal party, trust in government to do the right thing is near historical lows. According to a Pew Research Center average, just 19 percent of Americans trust the government to do the right thing all or most of the time. The whole of the Democratic agenda, the whole of Hillary Clinton’s agenda — from gun control to immigration reform to reducing greenhouse gases — requires some modicum of trust in the capacity of government to act in the public interest. What is liberalism without public trust in government? A college class.

Declining trust in government is part of a larger decline in the trust of institutions generally. But it is fair to say that the launch of Obamacare, the Veterans Affairs hospital scandal and the Internal Revenue Service political targeting scandal did little to halt the slide. Obama was either complicit in the trend or helpless against it.

The same could be said of political polarization — which Obama eventually decided he could not fight, and joined with enthusiasm. Or the rise of an angry, anti-establishment populism. More than 10 years of belief that the United States is on the “wrong track” has hardened into outrage and cynicism and left some Americans vulnerable to ideologues and demagogues. These will be remembered as the characteristics of the Obama era — not hope, but anger and cynicism. It was a time when many Americans learned to rage.

Gerson on Dogs

Jack is a puppy I picked up last week, eight months after the death of my much-loved Havanese, Latte. As soon as I brought Jack home — a powder puff of black and white, curvetting in the grass, all fluff and playful fury — I was reminded of the quandary and question that greets dog owners: Why do we take new dogs into our lives, knowing we will be decimated by their deaths?

I grieved hard for my Latte, who was the dog equivalent of St. Francis of Assisi — a little hairy mammal (Latte, not Francis) who radiated universal benevolence. She was a consoling, healing presence during the worst of my struggles against depression and cancer. In a very real sense, Latte was a better person than I am — a daily practitioner of the hardest parts of the Sermon on the Mount. She was meek, merciful (except to those godless squirrels), peaceable and pure of heart. At her departure, I was the one who mourned.

In human relationships, the transforming presence of love is worth the inevitability of grief. Can dogs really love? Science might deny that the species possesses such complex emotions. But I know dogs can act in a loving fashion and provide love’s consolation. Which is all we really know about what hairless apes can manage in the love department as well.

Love Changes Everything by Andrew Lloyd Webber

Love, love changes everything, hands and faces, earth and sky

Love, love changes everything

How you live and how you die

Love, can make the summer fly

Or a night seem like a lifetime

Yes, love, love changes everything

Now I tremble at your name

Nothing in the world will ever be the same


Love, love changes everything

Days are longer, words mean more

Love, love changes everything

Pain is deeper, than before

Love, will turn your world around

And that world will last forever

Yes, love, love changes everything

Brings you glory, brings you shame

Nothing in the world will ever be the same

New House Democratic Leadership?

Presumptive leaders: Hakeem Jeffries, Katherine Clark, Pete Aquilar.  African-American male, Woman, Mexican-American male.  Is this a great demonstration of commitment to diversity or a hurtful demonstration of prioritizing urban minority groups over Sarah Palin's "real Americans"?



Wednesday, November 16, 2022

1116


 Wednesday, November 16, 2022


In bed around 9:30, up at 4:45, no vino.  32 cloudy degrees, high of 38 expected, cloudy all day

Favorite Rhinestone from Trump Announcement Speech

“I’ve gone decades — decades — without a war, the first president to do it that long.”

Nowhere Man

He's a real nowhere man

Sitting in his nowhere land

Making all his nowhere plans for nobody

Doesn't have a point of view

Knows not where he's going to

Isn't he a bit like you and me?

He's as blind as he can be

Just sees what he wants to see

Nowhere man, can you see me at all?

Nowhere man, don't worry

Take your time, don't hurry

Leave it all 'till somebody else lends you a hand

He's a real nowhere man

Sitting in his nowhere land

Making all his nowhere plans for nobody

Robin Vos says he's willing to make filing a police report a requirement to prove rape or incest for obtaining an abortion

The vast majority − 77% − of sexual assaults are not reported to police, according to 2020 data from the U.S. Department of Justice.  "If the only way to access abortion is for a victim of sexual violence to report to law enforcement, they're going to have to engage with a system that most survivors don't want to engage with," said Ian Henderson, policy and systems director of the Wisconsin Coalition Against Sexual Assault.

Poetic Outlaws

 "We need a new cosmology. New gods. New sacraments. Another drink."~ Patti Smith

Two Kinds of People in the World, Those Who Like Squirrels . . .

My increasingly reductionist mind enjoys dichotomies like 'the world is divided into Nazis and Jews' and '2 kinds of people in the world, those who go out of their way to avoid running over a squirrel in the road and those who go out of their way to run over a squirrel in the road.'  My beloved wife would never purposefully run over any animal in the road.  On the other hand, she has no tolerance for squirrels climbing up the bird feeders and noshing on food intended for the birds.  I on the other hand love watching their resourcefulness and agility.  C'est la vie and vive la difference.



Diabetes

Video conference with Jill Hanson at Zablocki VAMC today.  A1c is 6.6.  Great news.  Jardiance and Trulicity, both expensive medications provided to me gratis by the VA, along with all my other medications, 8 pills every morning, 7 more in the afternoon, another 1 in the evening.

Yale and Harvard Law Schools Abandon U.S. News Rankings

A disservice to those who relied on them from the get-go.  A cause of anxiety for all law schools except the wealthiest which serve the wealthiest client-class, i.e., schools like Yale and Harvard.  A pander to Americans foolish infatuation with rank-ordering lists.

Washington Trip

Geri reserved seats on Southwest for December 16 - December 19.  Report from Katherine today: Jimmy more confused than ever.





1115

 Tuesday, November 15, 2022

In bed at 8:50, up at 3:50, a good 7 hours sleep.  Snow flurries

War, Race, Sin, Guilt, Shame, Reinhold Niebuhr

After zapping the one cup of coffee left in the pot from yesterday, I opened my laptop to the long Atlantic essay by Clint Smith "Monuments to the Unthinkable." He wrote How the Word is Passed about how here in America the Confederacy, slavery, and the Civil War are memorialized and remembered in places where they are memorialized and remembered.  The Atlantic essay addresses how the Holocaust is memorialized and remembered in German.  The essay is thoughtful, provocative, and piercing, as his book is.  I read half of the essay yesterday, and the other half this morning after waking up.  Toward the end of it, in addressing the unwillingness of many Germans to memorialize the crimes of their nation, he reports the differing attitudes among older and younger Germans.  "Rosh said that young people were the most supportive of her efforts [to build a Holocaust memorial.] I asked her why that was. Then Olaf raised his eyebrows and said, “The old ones were soldiers in the war.”  “People did not want to show we were guilty,” Rosh said. “But the Holocaust memorial shows …” Olaf completed her thought: “Yes, we were guilty.”  I think of course of Vietnam.  of Jim Crow.  of block-busting in Chicago, White flight, and Msgr. Malloy's "undesirables." of Indian wars, broken treaties, Indian boarding schools run by priests and nuns, Sand Creek and Wounded Knee.   How much of that American history was, as Peter Coyote mellifluously intoned in Ken Burns' film "begun in good faith by decent people, out of fateful misunderstandings, American overconfidence, and . . . miscalculation."  We were, I was, soldiers in the wars, bearing some guilt.

Eighth Air Force

Randall Jarrell - 1914-1965

If, in an odd angle of the hutment,

A puppy laps the water from a can

Of flowers, and the drunk sergeant shaving

Whistles O Paradiso!--shall I say that man

Is not as men have said: a wolf to man?


The other murderers troop in yawning;

Three of them play Pitch, one sleeps, and one

Lies counting missions, lies there sweating

Till even his heart beats: One; One; One.

O murderers! . . . Still, this is how it's done:


This is a war . . . But since these play, before they die,

Like puppies with their puppy; since, a man,

I did as these have done, but did not die--

I will content the people as I can

And give up these to them: Behold the man!


I have suffered, in a dream, because of him,

Many things; for this last saviour, man,

I have lied as I lie now.  But what is lying?

Men wash their hands, in blood, as best they can:

I find no fault in this just man.

Barely visible in this photo of the space between my tent at the airbase and the next is the puppy we played with.

I think of Solzhenitsyn's'line between good and evil' and Niebuhr's Moral Man and Immoral Society and am flattened.  



LTMWATW

The snow flurries don't keep the goldfinches from long dallies on the long niger feeder.  On the other hand,  the tall shepherd's crook without a baffle permits the squirrels to climb to the top, leap over to the top of the baffled feeders and do their best to extract seeds.  Greatest success: the suet.  Snow becoming more than flurries.  It's sticking on the back fur and tail of the squirrel perched atop the feeders.  Incredibly agile, acrobatic, and resourceful.  Very much like high wire and trapeze artists at a circus.  At 8:50, 9 wild turkey hens show up, briefly looking under the feeders but briskly moving on to greener pastures. . . . The turkeys returned at 3:15, 11 of them this time.

I had forgotten

how much I enjoy oatmeal for breakfast.  Made a big bowl with butter and brown sugar this morning instead of my normal daily CBH w/ basted eggs, cheese, adobo and sriracha.  

Israel prepares to swear in the most right-wing government in its history

Bibi's back, allied with the Kahane mob.  How much will US tolerate?  How far with Netanyahu push us.

Investigators see ego, not money, as Trump’s motive on classified papers

A review by agents and prosecutors found no discernible business interest in the Mar-a-Lago documents, people familiar with the matter said.  Is this a prelude to a decision not to prosecute???

Old Latin Mass Finds New American Audience, Despite Pope’s Disapproval

The traditional Latin Mass, an ancient form of Catholic worship that Pope Francis has tried to discourage, is instead experiencing a revival in the United States. It appeals to an overlapping mix of aesthetic traditionalists, young families, new converts and critics of Francis. And its resurgence, boosted by the pandemic years, is part of a rising right-wing strain within American Christianity as a whole.

This one I pray in.  That one I wouldn't set foot in!😂

A  Visit to the VA

Two appointments at Zablocki this morning, a blood draw and a visit with lymphedema specialist Deena.  I usually return from Zablocki feeling uplifted and I did today.  It is hardly Nirvana.  You see, as are one of, a bunch of pretty broken-down old veterans there, mostly male, guys in wheelchairs, guys with walkers and rollators and canes and some crutches.  White guys, Black guys, Hispanic and Native guys.  Former officers, former enlisted men,  all sorts of backgrounds, religions, politics.  It's not a 'hale fellow well met' kind of place, with a lot of visible fellowship or camaraderie, but it's rare that I don't see some act of kindness or consideration, some demonstration of respect or concern, some helpfulness of some sort while I'm there.  It sounds a bit corny, but it's really a bit heartwarming.  All the vets are there because of some medical or other need of some sort, some condition that requires the help of a doctor or nurse or therapist or staff member.  I suppose it's that shared neediness coupled with the shared history of military or naval service that creates a quiet bond of some sort.  

Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy 1945-1975 by Max Hastings

Started listening to this Audible book on my way to and from Zablocki and ordered a hard copy from the library.  Same challenge as with all recorded books, especially when listening while engaged in some other activity requiring some level of attentiveness: missing or failing to focus on some matters as the narration goes on whether you would like to stop and think or not, but I think I'm going to find the book helpful.  

The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne

Irish-Catholic life in Ireland for a spinster.  "The drink."  "If there's no other life, then I've wasted mine. "Dark night of the soul."  Despair.  Depression.  Maggie Smith is magnificent.  Bob Hoskins, Wendy Hiller.   Hopeful ending seemed a bit contrived.

I've Long Wondered What's With Guys in Cowboy Hats?

Why do guys who wear cowboy hats think it's OK to wear them everywhere?  I've seen a group of male Trump supporters in the Oval Office, nobody wearing a hat except a couple of dudes wearing cowboy hats.  At Trump rallies with people sitting on bleacher seats, guys with cowboy hats leave them on their heads blocking the view of the people behind them.  Political candidates delivering stump speeches indoors wear their cowboy hats while speaking.  Why?  We don't see other candidates wearing their fedoras indoors, or their berets, or knit hats, or Greek fishermen hat or beanie.  Why are cowboy hats privileged?  I have little doubt that its a sex-thing, toxic masculinity, machismo.  Pathetic.

Watching Trump's  Big Announcement

We have Erin Burnett on the TV because neither of us tolerates Joy Reid well.  The screen shows the crowd gathering at Mar-a-Lago waiting for Trump to announce his third campaign for the White House.  Who are these people?  Why are they (presumably) supporters of Trump?  Fascists?  Cultists?  They look very White, rich, and privileged.  I see only a few red MAGA baseball caps; these folks don't look like baseball cap types, very unlike the people we would see at Trump political rallies.  Is it just the tremendous bonding effect of common great wealth and intent to preserve and maximize it?  The alliance of the advantaged?  the fraternity of the flush?  the guild of the gilt?  Are they Christian nationalists?

Trump's speech - no surprise except for his listlessness.