Running out of Somedays

Originally written November 22, 2013 but not posted – Petra, my former mother-in-law, is still in a nursing home.  

My (former) mother-in-law, the only grandparent my two sons have really ever known, is in a nursing home.  This evening my ex told me that she will now be receiving hospice care.  Just the term “hospice”, although I know they are a warm, wonderful, caring, giving organization, still gives me a shudder inside and all I can think is, Jesus, she’s dying.  Petra, my mother-in-law, is 91.  When I think about her objectively, she has had a good long life.  Up until probably a few years ago, she enjoyed good health and was able to get around on her own, still drove a car, got out and lunched with friends.  She used to tell me how hard it was to deal with all of her friends dying off, and that out of an original potluck dinner group formed back in the 1950’s, she was the only one left who wasn’t in a nursing home, or deceased.

I need to go and visit her, because I want to, but I have to get past my own fears to do so.  I don’t have a religious upbringing, and I never thought there was an afterlife where God will be sitting up at the pearly gates waiting to greet me.  If there is a heaven, I would imagine my God to be a wise-cracking young version of a non-pervy/non-rapey Bill Cosby, fatherly and funny, and he would offer me a martini (Ketel One, shaken hard enough to leave ice slivers, with blue-cheese stuffed olives, thank you very much) while giving me a live performance of his 200 mph sketch.

But if anything, I prefer to think an afterlife would be a nice surprise.  I think when we die, it’s probably like going into a deep, dreamless sleep.  And that’s it.  Lights out, shut the doors, let’s go home.  And that’s ok.  I like sleeping.  I would prefer to have dreams, however, given a choice, since I usually have some very entertaining ones.  Especially the ones where I can fly.  Those are always fun.  But most of the time I think it’s pretty much just silent sleep.  But I don’t like to think of it happening to me.

I’m pretty convinced that I’ll go out of this life with regrets, but I hope not to.  I’ll regret all the things I didn’t do or accomplish or felt I was too busy or too tired to do.  I may never learn any other foreign language other than my I-can-translate-WWII-movies German, and I may never learn to play the piano or develop a singing voice that doesn’t send the cats diving under the bed.  But I hope I do, and there is this part of me that always feels that I’ll get around to it.  Someday.

Yet how does it feel when one’s life is quickly running out of somedays?  If I have the luxury of as long of a life as Petra’s, I have 41 years left to go – almost as much as I’ve already lived.  It would be amazing to have only lived half my life at this point, when it feels so full already.

I’m trying hard to develop a mindset of gratitude, always, and reminding myself that there is much to be said for having gone to one’s grave having been nothing more than a good person who loved and was loved by others.  So much these days is focused on success, striving, a legacy, a lasting impression … to the exclusion of forgetting that it’s okay to just try not to be an asshole and occasionally doing good for others is a pretty damn good thing all on its own.  Celebrities and politicians alike strive to do something memorable vs. doing something right, or just doing the right thing.

I wouldn’t say Petra is a particularly memorable person.  And I mean no disrespect to her in saying that.  She is a good person who, as far as I know, never knowingly set out to hurt or harm anyone, she went to church on Sundays, sorted her trash from her recyclables, kept a clean house, lived an honest and modest life.  I was never that close to her because I inherited my ex-husband’s baggage regarding his mom when I married him.  She could be a cheapskate and a busybody, and liked to always tell people how to do things.  She was convinced our older son started stuttering at age 2 because he either needed his skull adjusted by a chiropractor or he ate too much cheese.  Now that her grandsons are 14 and 12, the last time she took me aside, she expressed a dire concern that they really needed to be enrolled in some kind of summer program to teach them handwriting, and their lives were doomed to failure due to bad penmanship.  (I have to say, in many respects I agree with her, the lack of cursive writing training in schools is downright appalling nowadays.)  I took her quirks with a grain of salt when I was still married; once I was divorced, I really didn’t have to put up with them anymore.

In the years since my husband became an ex, I’ve waxed and waned on my relationship with Petra – I would make an effort to see her, only to be reminded that she still got on my nerves and to come away with a feeling of guilt that I was somehow befriending her behind my ex’s back and that would only increase the tension between us.  She would use a dinner out to Black Angus as a therapy session to tell me everything she found wrong with my ex’s girlfriend and their relationship, and I would come away with a mixed sense of gossipy glee and shame – because this was the kind of discussion she should really have with her son.

When I entered the family picture back in 1989, I was surprised to find that nobody in my husband-to-be’s family expressed much in the way of emotion. In retrospect, I should have taken that as a huge red flag – I grew up in an extremely volatile household, where feelings were expressed far too often and far too extremely – but to me it was a calm refuge, these folks all seemed so normal.  Except they didn’t hug each other at Christmas.  Or ever really told each other what was going on in their lives beyond the most shallow of events and emotions.  As I tell my sons now, when they are old enough to discern the personality differences between me and their Dad, that’s just how his family rolls.

Man’s Inhumanity to Man – or Just Fucking Stupidity?

Those of you who know me well know that I often have a lot to rant about.  A lot of things piss me off – crime, politics, people, corruption, laziness, you name it.  That wasn’t necessarily my reason for starting a new blog … in truth, I really just wanted to get the domain name “spank my kitty” and figured once I did, I should do something with it.  I do have one cat who seems to have a penchant for having his hindquarters tapped now and again, that would be Whiskey.  I can’t speak for him, but I would say from my own perspective, I think he likes being spanked.  Hence the term.

spank kittyAnd no, I’m not advocating cat abuse, cat spankings, people abuse, or any other such BS.  Don’t go there.

Today my issue is with unions – specifically, teacher’s unions.  I like teachers.  I have good friends who are teachers whom I respect very much.  Like any field out there, there are good and bad extremes.  Unions are, or were, at least, a good thing at one time.  Now I think they’ve spun out of control and no longer stand for what originally mattered to them.  Here’s today’s examples:

From the San Diego Union-Tribune Editorial Board, October 13, 2013:

Teacher-discipline reform: Another fiasco in Sacramento

In 2011, Californians were revolted by revelations that veteran Los Angeles Unified elementary-school teacher Mark Berndt used his classroom to feed semen to his students. To make matters worse, Berndt’s job protections were so strong that school district officials concluded they not only couldn’t fire Berndt, they had to pay him $40,000 to resign.

But instead of leading to basic reforms, the Berndt fallout gave the California Teachers Association and the California Federation of Teachers another chance to demonstrate they own the Legislature. In 2012, a bill that would have streamlined teacher discipline was killed in an Assembly committee. This year, the Legislature passed a fake reform — AB 375 — that would have made it even more difficult to fire teachers.

Last week, Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed the measure. He called on the Legislature to try for a third time to protect students by fixing the teacher-discipline process.

Good luck with that. Democrats in the Legislature — including local Assemblywomen Toni Atkins, Lorena Gonzalez and Shirley Weber and Senators Marty Block and Ben Hueso — all voted for AB 375. Instead of being horrified by a pervert teacher feeding semen to children, they saw it as an occasion to make it even more difficult to fire pervert teachers. This is amazing, and not in a positive way.

Example #2 – related to this same above incident, same school district:

L.A. Unified Voted to Overhaul Teacher Jail (June 11, 2013)

(Excerpt) According to LA Weekly, the average time of teachers’ stay in the “jail” is 127 days. During this period of time, L.A. Unified keeps paying the teachers’ salaries while hiring substitutes to fill the classrooms. The cost is enormous – about $1.4 million a month for salaries and investigations and $865,000 for substitutes, according to the Daily News.

This problem did not cause much attention until the sexual misconduct scandal at Miramonte Elementary School last year sparked a surge of investigations and pushed the number of housed teachers to more than 300. L.A. Unified said it was time to overhaul the system.

So, let’s see, nobody decided that the system needed to be overhauled or maybe even LOOKED AT until over 300 teachers were sitting on their asses being paid to do nothing?  Are you shitting me?  At what point did L.A. Unified forget that they are paid with taxpayer dollars and should be stewards of responsible spending?  Or is that not part of the job?

Great LumburghIf this were a publicly-traded, Fortune 500 company, how long would a setup like this last?  “Yeah, we’re just going to keep paying these employees for unspecified disciplinary issues while we hire in a temp to do their jobs.”

When did we lose sight of things like accountability, responsibility, maturity, and even common sense in situations like this?  $1.4 million a month going to teachers to do nothing but sit in a room all day, while other teachers are laid off?  When a taxpayer gets audited by the IRS and my bank charges me $27 per transaction in overdraft fees, but school districts apparently just get to blow money like they have no tomorrow?  I’m hoping someone can explain this to me.

Back to our buddy Mark Berndt up there in the previous discussion.  I’m not sure what more any rational human being needs to read beyond “used his classroom to feed semen to his students” before you decide that this asshole a) should be left to rot in jail, or b) hauled out and stoned to death by the parents of his students.  I don’t think the issue of whether or not he should be fired or continue to get paid should even be discussed.  I’d like to think that if most normal people showed up to work and saw this:

Cops - the LA Edition

Wouldn’t you think, “uh, yeah, maybe I’ll call in sick today”?  I like to think most people would, as opposed to being able to collect back pay for (again) “feed semen to his students”.   Am I wrong?

NO.  I don’t think anyone needs to quote any law books or invoke any religious beliefs on this one.  This is WRONG.  How have we lost sight of that fact?  Call it a moral compass that’s sitting over a magnet and spinning around in circles, but when the question is whether a guy like Mark Berndt should collect severance pay vs. being tossed in jail for life, we’ve lost our way.