ter⋅ror⋅ism
-noun
- the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce, esp. for political purposes
- the state of fear and submission produced by terrorism or terrorization
- a terroristic method of governing or of resisting a government
I am unspeakably sickened by today’s murder of Dr. George Tiller, a man who dedicated his life to womens’ health, despite myriad intimidation tactics and at least one previous attempt on his life by psychotic idealogues who piously claim to be “pro-life.” Because my feelings at the news of this loss are so surprisingly strong, my instinct is to say that I’m as devastated as if I had known Dr. Tiller. But that would be insulting to those who did know him and love him, because there is no way my grief could ever compare to theirs. I mourn alongside them, though. And I wish I’d known him. He sounds like the kind of human being I would have liked to have known.
The method and unjustness of Tiller’s death is horrifying. It’s stomach-turning and fist-pounding and knee-buckling all at the same time. That a self-righteous whack-job could walk into a church and gun a man down during his time of worship simply because a part of the man’s job is disagreeable, is an unfathomable tragedy. It’s a tragedy for his family and his patients. But it’s also a devastating tragedy for women everywhere in this country.
It is disturbing on a molecular level because it feels like the proverbial shot fired from the bow of a ship, an open declaration of war. Of course, this war has been on for a very long time as this is not an isolated incident: Violence at the hands of “pro-lifers” is uncomfortably commonplace. But this feels particularly frightening given U.S. Marshals are being deployed to protect workers of women’s health clinics and the patients who seek their services.
Imagine being a woman in Wichita who, tomorrow, needs to walk into a Planned Parenthood to get her birth control pills. Or a pap smear. Or counseling. Or, yes, an abortion. Imagine being the people who work in these much-needed clinics all over the United States, a country whose Constitution protects a woman’s right to choose. Women should not be afraid to make choices about what is best for their health. Doctors and nurses and administrators and counselors should not be afraid to do the work they’ve been trained to do. That it should be so is wholly un-American.
The man who murdered Dr. Tiller is a terrorist and those in the pro-life movement who support what he’s done are terrorist sympathizers. They are Evil-Doers. These vile people are different from those 19 men who flew planes into the twin towers only in the God they worship.
Over lovin’: Trying to mother from the middle ground
“You know I love you, right?” I adjusted the bow on Ruby’s sleeping cap as I tucked her into bed.
“Unh-huh,” she said. Her eyes were closed and the sound of her acknowledgment was stifled by the presence of her thumb in her mouth. The sound was a pasty gurgle, as if she had pudding in there.
“And you know Daddy loves you,” I said.
“Unh-huh.” Sucking, sucking, eyes still closed. I wanted her to look at me, but she wouldn’t budge. I could practically feel her telling me to bugger off.
“Mama and Daddy love you like nobody’s business,” I said, closing in on her face. I felt myself morphing into the badgering Jewish mother who gets talked about in therapy and begrudgingly visited at holidays.
“Unh-huh,” Ruby said again.
She was ready to be left alone, and I knew it. But there’s this thing called self-control, and I had none of it that night. Anyway, I had to make up for earlier-in-the-day parenting indifference. Being euphemistically challenged, I moved in close so my breath touched her earlobe: “We adore every bone in your body, little girl. You’re the world to us. You’re Mama and Daddy’s angel.”
Could I have been any more annoying, you might ask? Oh, yes. Without question. I could actually have been about 1,400-times more annoying. It’s a mother thing.
“Unh-huh, unh-huh, unh-HUH,” Ruby fired off in rapid succession.
And with that toddler version of the pre-teen eye-roll, I saw myself in the future as an overbearing, don’t-forget-to-use-the-bathroom-before-your-solo backstage mother. I had become my mother-in-law, who, back in the day, before we had a child for her to focus on, used to come for visits and stare at my husband. Just—-stare at him. For days. It was weird.
Suddenly, I needed a martini and some steady middle ground.
I’d parented from the other end of the attention spectrum that morning when Sam and I took Ruby to visit her new school. It was the Friday before she’d be there full-time, and the plan was to drop her off for two hours as an acclimating exercise. We’d been talking up all the pluses of this Big Girl school for weeks—that the Trolley goes by every 15-minutes was the toddler equivalent of granite kitchen counter-tops—and she’d been right at home during a previous stop in. We had high hopes that were simply begging to be dashed.
In perfect form, Ruby was clingy to us and standoffish to everyone else. She was pouty and dour. But at the advice of the teacher, we ignored her pleas to go home and peeled ourselves away. I would say it was like Sophie’s Choice, what with my urge to grab her and protect her and run from the building forever. Only, a part of me could not stop thinking about pancakes, and I’m pretty sure breakfast food never occurred to Sophie in her moment of reckoning.
We watched from a window as Ruby stood alone at the side of the sandbox, kicking listlessly at the ground, her hair clips jiggling each time her toe made contact. None of the other kids took much interest in her. Most were oblivious, and those who did take notice simply rubbernecked as they pedaled by on their tricycles. Really, I couldn’t blame them for keeping their distance. While no parent wants her child to be the odd man out, my kid didn’t exactly parade her glee and enthusiasm for launching matchbox cars into each other at high speeds.
When we finally rescued her, she crawled into my arms and immediately went limp. Wouldn’t you know it, the child was en fuego. As in 104-degree-fever en fuego. It was, as parenting moments go, quite a startling revelation: We were those people, the ones who all the other imperious parents tsk-tsk. Like that poor woman in New York who dropped her arguing daughters at a strip mall and drove away (she’s my hero), we made the faux pas of sending our kid to school—the new school!—with what very well could have been swine flu. Well played, Belfers.
One could argue we should have known she was sick when she crawled back into bed that morning and passed out for an additional hour, highly uncharacteristic behavior for a 3-year-old. But we’d chalked it up to a psychosomatic thing, and there was no way she was going to feign illness to get out of her first day of school (such shenanigans will come later). This show had to go on.
And on it went, child protective services be damned. We strapped our ailing girl into her car seat and did what most other parents in our situation wouldn’t do: We drove straight to The Mission for breakfast. There was still that unresolved pancake hankering, and even Ruby in her stupor had a taste for The Mission’s delectable blueberry/blackberry pancake.
Of course, she slept on my lap while Sam and I gorged on our food, and when she didn’t eat hers, we ate that, too. Then we ate her side of bacon, ordered a round of coffee refills and two mimosas. Just kidding. We didn’t order mimosas. That would have been self-indulgent.
We paid the bill and shuttled the child home to some Tylenol and her bed. I tucked the blankets under her chin and planted a single kiss on her forehead in a tender but non-smothering manner. There was no adoring fanfare or desperate enumeration of all the reasons I can’t stop loving her. As mothering moments go, I’d momentarily found the right balance. It wasn’t too much. It wasn’t too little. It was just right. And it was fleeting.
Because then I sat myself down next to her bed and stared at her as she slept.
(This ran in CityBeat on April 29th but I forgot to post it. Mostly because it isn’t one of my favorites. But here it is, nonetheless.)
What I really worry about in the current situation
SignOn San Diego, the San Diego Union Tribune website, is reporting this morning that an SDSU student is suspected of having the swine flu. What concerns me is not that the student might have gone to my gym or perhaps even played basketball outside of my house last week. What concerns me is the seething outward racism and hatred aimed at Hispanics in the comments section of this and other related articles. For the record, these types of comments are ubiquitous on this particular website. But the swine flu causes me to worry a great deal about race relations. Here is a sampling of thoughts from people that live in my community (I do hope they’re outliers):
Does anyone think there will be mass marches of Illegal Aliens from Mexico in the streets this friday? After all it is May 1 (May day). This has traditionaly been the day of large public gatherings of illegal Aliens demanding rights in this country. How about free health care? Did you know that health care is socialized in mexico?
and
IF THE ILLEGAL ALIENS FROM MEXICO KNOW WHAT IS GOOD FOR THIER CAUSE, THEY WILL CRAWL UNDER A ROCK AND HIDE THIS FRIDAY.
and
Mass public gathering of Illegal Aliens from Mexico. Mass groups of Illegal Aliens demanding rights, all while waving the Flag of Mexico and other foreign countries. This Friday is May 1. I DON’T THINK SO. NOT THIS YEAR.
And…I just received this from a friend who’s a high school counselor in Texas:
“Today a friend of mine who works in another district has been receiving phone calls, emails and hand written notes from parents requesting their kid not be allowed to sit next to a Hispanic – in class, in testing, in the cafeteria, on the bus.”
A Catastrophizer + Google = Bad Idea
Thanks to the sub-sub-par genetics of the man who fathered me, john allred, I have astronomically high cholesterol. My combined HDL/LDL score is 359 and the doctor who discovered this almost had a myocardial infarction himself when an MRI of my heart came back clear of any blockages. He practically begged me to drink copious amounts of red wine every night. Then he put me on a statin.
That was five years and four physicians ago, so a new doctor ordered blood work this past Monday to make sure I’m taking the right doseage of a drug so popular, that it’s wide use is footing the bill for the Carribean vacation homes of Pfizer higher-ups. Recent research has shown that statins are somewhat of a racket. Unless of course, you suffer from familial heterozygous hyperlipidemia. In which case, you swallow the bitter pill every night before bedtime.
So Dr. Farber walks into the exam room yesterday afternoon and the first thing out of his mouth was, “So, how you been feelin’?” His brow was scrunched. He looked concerned. “Fine.” I said, freaking out. “Why?” Turns out my CPK levels are in the excessively high range. Maybe it’s due to the statin, he told me, which happens to be working very well at pummeling that LDL. But maybe it’s due to something else, a hard workout at the gym perhaps. He was generally elusive about the implications of the value and I implored him to break it down for me before I typed “C” and “P” and “K” into a search engine. (Big NO-NO, I know, but who can resist under the circumstances?) He didn’t give me much to go on besides an order for follow-up blood work in three weeks.
Guess what I did this morning? Yeah, and here’s what Medline Plus via Google had to say about it:
What Abnormal Results Mean
High CPK levels may be seen in patients who have:
- Heart attack
- Myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle)
- Central nervous system trauma or stroke
- Convulsions
- Delirium tremens
- Dermatomyositis or polymyositis
- Electric shock
- Muscular dystrophies
- Pulmonary infarction (lung tissue death)
Additional conditions may give positive test results:
- Hypothyroidism
- Pericarditis following a heart attack
- Rhabdomyolysis
So basically, I’m dying, right? I mean, we’re all dying. I’m just dying faster than the average person. Awesome! I’ve spent the morning trying not to blame my mother for copulating with such an undesirable specimen but then, it wasn’t like it was all that pleasurable for her in the first place. Why make her feel bad now? Right before Mother’s Day? And anyway, if she hadn’t done what she calls “the deed,” I wouldn’t be sitting here right now, worrying about my premature death or contemplating how I should spend the rest of my life to make it truly meaningful.



