Friday, July 31, 2009

Muggable Me

Some people are huggable, but me, well, I am muggable. I've been mugged in some of the supposedly safest places in the world: Moscow (Russia), Urbana (Illinois), and Amman (Jordan).



In Moscow, it happened at Kropotkinskaya Metro Station. I was on my way to see a friend and stopped to don my coat as I exited the frosty metro station that had been warmed by a massive blanket of bodies that moved in flowing ripples out of the train, up the long, rapid escalator, and out into the cold Russian fall. I just put my purse down for a moment, a bad habit born in the days of the crime-free Soviet Union, and there went my exposed wallet. I did not even see who took it. So, there I was, with all the money I had in the world at the moment gone.

I met my friend outside, and we walked together to the nearby militia station. There I presented my passport, and one of the two militia on duty at the time tried to copy the information onto the document needed to record the crime. However, he could not read the English. "Would you like me to help?" I asked.

He agreed to the help and gave me a table to work at. After filling out the document, I was instructed that I had to write out the details in an open-form "zhaloba podpolkovniku militsii" (letter of complaint to the lieutenant colonel of the police force). So, I wrote. As I wrote, the militiaman who had been reading over my shoulder looked over at his partner across the room. "Akh," he said, "kak gramotno ona pishet" (Oh, how educated her writing is!)

I had to try very hard not to laugh. There is a Russian joke about why the militia always works in groups of three (one certainly does see this grouping frequently): one can write, one can read, and the third likes to be among educated folks. Here we were, a living example of that joke: I could write, the militaman looking over my shoulder could read, and the third apparently liked to be among educated people!

After we left the militia station, my friend loaned me ten rubles to make it through a day or two. Soon, others heard what happened, and they, too, stepped forward with a few rubles here and there -- plenty enough for me for the duration of my stay. None of them had much money, but they liberally shared what they had. Americans stepped forward, too. I was in town with several colleagues, all senior professionals in our field, where at the time I was junior, to attend an international conference. One of them opened his wallet and said, "Take whatever you need; your credit is good with me." I took nothing; I had enough rubles. I did thank him -- more for his trust than the offer of money. However, when we were at the airport on our way back, one of the Americans slipped a $20 bill into my pocket and said, "No arguments; you will need American money as soon as you reach New York. Pay it back when you get home." It was almost worth being ripped off to learn a part of the culture (how the militia works) that I would never otherwise have seen and, more important, to learn what compassionate friends I had!

Meanwhile, the lieutenant colonel from the police force came to my hotel room and berated me, telling me that I had been in Russia often enough to be considered a "resident" and should have known better than to look away from my wallet. Well, yes, in Russia perhaps, but it was only 1990 and I was still used to the Soviet Union. His words, though, confirmed another widely held belief by my Russian friends: the Soviet government knows everything about everyone. Amazingly, I got my wallet back with credit cards minus, of course, the money, further supporting the notion of the efficiency of the police and of reputation of Moscow as a safe city. This was in the days before cell phones, so I had sent a telegram to Donnie, my husband, to report my credit cards stolen. As with my previous experiences with telegrams sent to/from the Soviet Union, I arrived home in time to intercept the message when it appeared two days later.


The second mugging happened 13 years later in quiet Urbana, Illinois. It was the evening before the Lake Homan wedding of Lizzie, my daughter, and Blaine, the young man who had come to live with us 12 years earlier. As I walked alone across a parking lot to join the others who were already in the restaurant for dinner, I felt everything around me go pale blue and pleasantly warm. It took me a minute to realize what had happened. I had been tazered by a thief who had grabbed my purse, and by the time I realized this, was half-way across the parking lot and moving at a full run. No way to catch him.

The Urbana police were less interested and less thorough than their counterparts in Moscow and never caught the thief. A bank south of Urbana helped me out. A branch of my own bank, they were able to get my signature faxed to them and let me write a counter check for travel funds. So, I had money, but I still had a problem: I had to fly to NY for a short meeting with a UN committee and then back to California, and I had no ID. A quick survey of my memories brought to mind an organization I worked for in Washington DC that kept a photocopy of my passport on file in order to get me visas when they needed to send me abroad. I called them, and they faxed a copy to the hotel. That photocopy and the police report allowed me to travel and allowed a bank and an organization the chance to show compassion. The mugging had no bad effect on the next-day wedding, and I was even able to add a line about the mugging to a comical poem I had written as as a toast at the reception.


The last mugging took place four years ago in Amman, Jordan. It was an early evening during the month of Ramadan, right after nightfall, and I was walking with Donnie on back roads to the campus of the university where I worked as academic dean at the time. During Ramadan, we held evening classes after iftar, the meal that occurred after the sun set, the breaking of the day-long fast that Islam requires of all healthy Muslims and other people living and working in a Muslim country. A car drove by slowly, and the driver put his head out of the window, as if to ask for directions. When I approached to see what he needed, he grabbed my purse from my shoulder and sped off.

So, once again I found myself at a police station in a foreign country to report a crime. Unfortunately, my Arabic is not as good as my Russian, and I ended up calling the university for help. "Don't worry," I was told, "Adel is on the way there to translate for you." How interesting! Adel did not speak English. However, he turned out to be the perfect "translator" since he was able to interpret from shrty-Arabic (police-Arabic) to Beth-Arabic. Our having worked together for two years, he as head of security and I as head of academics, had created the ability to communicate in more than just rudimentary ways. Another advantage? He had been the chief of police in Cairo, Egypt and knew exactly what the police should be doing -- and made sure that they did everything possible for "Doktora Beth."

While being mugged is a far cry from a pleasant experience -- one feels violated in some sense -- the memories are not entirely negative because of the compassion that flowed from it in each location. I suppose some might ask why God did not prevent the muggings to begin with. My view of that (I admit my limited understanding of how God works) is that if free will has been put in place, then God cannot and should not always intervene. If we are protected from every possible negative, i.e. if our life is always under control, then when do we get to have free will? When do we get to experience the rich chaos and drama of life? When do we get to see any of the miracles of daily life when God does intervene. (Again, I don't presume to understand why those instances happen, either.) There is an awe that comes from being a part of situations where God turns individual bad into widespread good; where God shows us the good in the bad; where God lets us be us and learn about each other, about the best and the worst of life, and about the Divine, from our experiences; in short, when God trusts us to understand, at least a little.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

To Conserve or Not To Conserve; That Is the Question

They say that little children have little problems and big children have big problems. They also say that the only difference between men and boys is the price of their toys. That seems to be the case with our children. As they have grown up, we have encountered significant problems needing our assistance, perhaps far less frequently than the near-weekly emergencies in their youth (which is good for our sanity), but the problems are bigger and cost is higher.

In Tuesday's post on Doah, I mentioned that he is not conserved. Whether or not to conserve him (make ourselves his legal guardians or allow him his adult independence to the extent that he can manage it) has been a difficult question, one that was posed when he turned 18 and one that we have not yet answered even though Doah will be 30 in November. It is a significant decision in many ways:

(1) Once done, my understanding is that it cannot be undone unless something changes dramatically in his life, and I cannot imagine what that would be. To conserve him, we have to show that he is not mentally fit to take care of himself, and we can argue that in either direction.

(2) With an IQ score of 52, two points higher than "moron" (Who on earth thought up that label?), we could easily convince a judge that he is not capable of taking himself. However, he is able to take care of himself under most circumstances. We have worked hard to get him to that point. When a psychologist who did not know him recently interviewed him without conducting an IQ test, she listed "mild mental retardation" -- a label that would put him about 20 points higher than he really is. When HOPE volunteers worked with him years ago, I overheard one say to another, "This is probably the greatest delta below low potential and higher actuality than you will ever see." I am afraid that conserving Doah will undo some of this hard work and send him the message that we don't think he can take care of himself -- and will also create situations when city, state, and federal regulations will not allow him to take care of himself.

(3) On the attractive side of conservation is the fact that doctors will not be able to undertake treatment without our consent, and there is a possibility (we are checking this out) that he will be able to be carried on our insurance, which will allow him access to a PPO, rather than the state-provided MediCal doctor, who is often someone considered to be lesser talented than the private doctors. This benefit was particularly attractive to us this morning as we headed up to San Jose to talk to Doah's doctor.

We wanted answers:

1. Why did the emergency room pay no attention to the fact that I had told them that Doah reported vomiting blood, that he had severe side pain and the inability to urinate, and that he was running a fever. My concern was that the blood might indicate possible esophageal damage from 30 years of GERD due to an unrepaired/unrepairable hiatal hernia and that the combination of retention of urine and fever might mean a urinary tract infection. I was definitely not reassured when his group home monitor told me he had been sent home, with tylenol, on bed watch. How does tylenol help an infection?

2. In preparation for an appointment with his primary care physician which we requested as an immediate follow-up to the emergency room visit, I researched all the medications he has been taking under the oversight of the social worker who follows him in his group home. There were 15, some of them pretty severe and not at all related to any problems he has: medicine for epilepsy (he is not epileptic) and for bipolar disorder (he is not bipolar), among others. These had been prescribed by a psychiatrist. Others, mostly for the 63 allergies he has, made sense; those had been prescribed by the primary care physicial.

So, off we went this morning, with a bit of trepidation, to confront her about the quality of Doah's care. Although we should have been used to such confrontations, considering that I don't remember how many dozens such meetings we have had with the doctors in the past, we were nervous because few doctors accept MediCal, and without having access to any other insurance (What insurance company will insure, outside of a group plan, an individual with 18 birth defects and monthly medical follow-up needs? Just one of the difficulties of needing medical care in America...), if we were to tick off Doah's current doctor, she might decide not to keep him as a patient. Unless she were totally incompetent, she would be better than no doctor at all.

As it turned out, we were in for quite a surprise. Contrary to a number of our previous experiences, she turned out to be patient (with us), quite knowledgable, and committed to Doah. This was the first time we had met her because until we ran into this latest complication, we had thought that Doah's medical care was under control. And, for the most part, it apparently is. The doctor agreed with me that there are some pointed questions to be asked of the psychiatrist (Oh, I will do it! Just have to get that meeting set up!), but she reassured me that the emergency room team had taken the proper action and had indeed listened to my concerns. They had used an NG tube to find out what Doah could have been vomiting and found out that while it had the color of blood, it was not blood. They also confirmed that there was no urine infection before they sent him back home; their final concern and the reason they put him on bed watch was the fever. Whew! I should have retained my normal optimism, but with Doah's traumatic and dramatic history, I sometimes put aside my willing suspension of disbelief, to quote Aristotle's theory of poetics (and drama). The whole problem came from the fact that once the doctors learned that Doah was not conserved, they no longer felt constrained to let me know what was going on. After all, Doah could sign all the paperwork for himself. So, they never bothered to let me know what they had done -- something that would not have happened had Doah been conserved.

The primary care doctor ordered some additional tests to find out what had really sent Doah to the emergency room and what is really happening with his esophagus and hiatal hernia. Those will be done tomorrow, with the results in next week. So, maybe we don't have to conserve Doah after all, if he has a capable doctor. Nonetheless, we only had a say in his care today because she "allowed" it. The psychiatrist, with whom we will be speaking soon, may not allow it.

So, we still don't have an answer, but fortunately I don't have to have one right now. We are on track to better management of Doah's health.

In any event, Doah already has a conservator and a lawyer: God. That, in my book, is enough. I am sure God will lead us to an answer when and if an answer becomes necessary. In the interim, we trust God to take care of Doah -- and so does Doah.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

The Extra Manager at Today's Meeting

We are reading 1 Samuel in our Bible Studies class through an interdenominational scripture class published by SEEK. Tonight, we discussed chapter 23, in which David twice seeks the counsel of the Lord. One of the personalizing questions posed in the SEEK study materials is "When was the last occasion that you went before the Lord with a decision that needed to be made? Did you have a sense that God did lead and guide you?" (For me, that would be, ah, like, every day, given the life complications that I routinely run up against.)

The question immediately brought to mind the first meeting I had had this morning. Without revealing confidential information, I can share that two senior managers and I, their supervisor, had been called by our Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) office to a pre-mediation discussion with our organization's attorney and Human Resource director about an age discrimination complaint that had been filed by an employee from one of our branch offices who had been fired for absenteeism and poor performance by his first-line supervisor, Shirley. Prior to this meeting, I had, as usual with such meetings, asked God for guidance. (I don't like to play with people's lives without that kind of assistance.)

Once assembled, we introduced ourselves and our roles since our organization is quite large and not everyone knew everyone. The role of most of the members of the assembled group was clear. Roger was Shirley's supervisor, and I was Roger's supervisor. However, why Marvin had been called in was a puzzle to everyone, including to the EEO specialist who had set up the meeting and sent out the meeting invitations. Marvin, like Roger, was a senior manager, but he was not in Shirley's chain of command. We all agreed that it looked like an accident that Marvin was there, but he might as well stay because he had ridden there with Roger and me and would be stranded until we were ready to leave, anyway.

It appeared that Shirley had done an adequate enough job of counseling the employee and had some documentation to back up the firing. Curiously, the employee had only asked for reinstatement for six months as a redress for discrimination. I moved the discussion away from whether or not we could give a non-discriminatory reason for the firing (we could) and whether or not we could back that up with documentation (we could) to why the employee would only ask for a 6-month reinstatement. Well, it turned out that this was the amount of time he needs to be in the organization in order to qualify for retirement -- and, having started with us pretty late in life, he is already of retirement age. Based on this information, I ventured that we not look at this complaint as one in which we could justify whether we had done things right (all the correct documentation, following the rule book) but rather as one in which we could justify whether we had done the right thing (the humane approach to a person's life). Doing the right thing rather than always doing things right, a leadership concept introduced by Warren Bennis in his book, On Becoming a Leader, is an approach that I vigorously advocate for all the supervisors within my division.

Now, the problem with doing the right thing -- retaining the employee long enough for him to be able to retire (Where else, at an advanced age, would he be able to start the whole process all over again so that he would enough time to earn a pension?) -- is that continuing to work for his current first-line supervisor would be very problematic and probably impossible for a number of reasons that I cannot share. Hmm...Just as it started to seem that there would be no choice except to support the first-line supervisor's decision to cut the cord in advance of retirement and the lawyer and HR officer began moving in that direction, I looked at Marvin and got a "scathingly brilliant idea" as Hayley Mills in the lead role of Mary in the movie, The Trouble with Angels, was wont to say. Marvin is the senior manager of our Internet products, one for which the employee could work from his current branch office location on a flexi-place, short-term basis. Marvin acknowledged that he could probably find six months of work on a special project for the employee and stated that he would be willing to take him on. Voila! A chance to the right thing!

"Now I think we all know why you were called to this meeting!" I told Marvin.

Oh, yes, to answer the question from tonight's Bible Study class, I did indeed get a sense that God did lead and guide me today!

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Doah, This Time

Just when one thinks the past is in the past, someone comes up to prove that time is simply overlapping layers. Late Sunday evening, the past, present, and future all came together for Doah, our mentally challenged son who suffers from CHARGE Syndrome and 12 other birth defects, and us, when Doah was taken to the hospital from his group home by ambulance. Doah had been vomiting blood and retaining urine. He also had a very high fever. The doctors desperately tried to reach us for permission to treat Doah, but once they found out that he was not conserved, they failed to keep us informed of progress. We learned that Doah had been sent home with Tylenol and put on bed watch at the group home by periodically calling the group home in the morning until Doah appeared.

This may seem like strange treatment but is pretty typical, in our experience, for MediCal patients in California. (Doah is too old to be insured by our policy and therefore has to be covered by MediCal, which seems to restrict doctors to caring for symptoms, not isolating causes of health problems.) A year ago, we could have lost our daughter, Noelle, who has spina bifida (including paraplegia, hydrocephalus, and epilepsy) through this kind of policy. She was ambulanced with neck pain to Salts Memorial Hospital. The ER doctor doped her up on morphine, and she was dead to the world when I arrived, checked her shunt for the hydrocephalus, and found it sluggish. I explained to the doctor how dangerous the morphine was; if Noelle had gone into acute hydrocephalus, she could have stopped breathing and simply died without being able to tell anyone she was having any problems because she was too doped up to know. I vigorously shook her out of her morphine stupor to the point that she could, struggling to semi-consciousness, communicate with me and confirm that she had a shunt malfunction. It took considerable effort (read that: bitchiness) to get the doctors to send her to Stanford for a second opinion. The Salts diagnosis: neck pain. The treatment: pain killer. The Stanford diagnosis: shunt malfunction. The treatment: surgery -- placement of a new shunt. Thank God for bitchy mothers, if I do say so myself.

So, here we are in a similar situation with Doah. Donnie (husband) managed to get us an emergency appointment with Doah's primary care physician on Thursday. I want to know what she plans to do about the presenting symptoms of urine infection & fever (my guess: urinary tract infection -- antibiotics, I dare suggest, would be more effective than Tylenol) and vomiting blood (my guess is either an ulcer -- preferable -- or esophageal damage from 30 years of gastric reflux due to a hiatal hernia, which is worrisome because it can lead to esophageal cancer). All of Doah's records -- whole boxes of them -- now exist only in my head because he has been followed by so many places and much has been archived, and we will need to build a website for him like we did for Noelle last year, so that doctors can check the details not available from local records.

Doah, in his lifetime, has presented us with exciting (as in "get it correct immediately or he dies") opportunities to learn more about health and become more directly involved with the medical profession. First, doctors gave him a 0% chance to live. Then they helped him breathe by giving him a tracheotomy. After that, they wanted to do some experimental gastroenterologic surgery, and when we refused consent because Doah was weak and losing weight and the surgery had only a 25% survival rate, the doctors went to court to get custody so that they could do the surgery against our wishes. While they were in court, I sneaked into the hospital just like in the movies and stole Doah. Donnie drove us immediately to the hospital, and I flew from Pennyslvania to Massachusetts where the doctors agreed with me. Doah thrived there, and ultimately, through my research at the medical school (I tricked my way past the ID guards), we found a doctor in Cincinnati who could save him from the subglottic stenosis that he had developed right after birth.

Doah routinely brings us episodes that we would enjoy more on television than in our lives. However, we don't call those shots, and it looks like we are smack in the middle of the next episode, like it or not.

The positive side of our very own television series is that Doah is clearly God's child. God has watched over this one: five cardiac arrests, two heart failures, an incredible number of apneic episodes when I was able to get him breathing again, my finding the only doctor in the USA who could have saved him, a pediatrician who supported me through it all (including knowing about the planned theft from Renboro Hospital years ago), and much more. As he has grown, Doah's connection with God has become clearer. Doah would know things that no one could possibly know and yet they would turn out to be true. Doah today will often say, "God told me this" or "God told me that," and those things turn out to be true, too.

I love our little mission town, and Doah does, too. The connection he seems to have to God really resonates here. I remember his first visit. He looked at me, and the first thing he said, with obvious satisfaction, was "God here." I think that says it all! And that is why, even though I have to put in the effort to force doctors to take proper care of him, I don't truly worry about Doah. He is, after all, God's child, and God takes care of him.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Monday Morning Meditation #1: And God Saw That It Was Good

Where better to start a meditation series called Monday Morning Meditation than at the beginning? That was the question that posed itself when I began thinking about where I should look for the first posting in the series. So, figuring that there is nothing more "at the beginning" than Genesis, I shall take the first chapter of Genesis.

Reading: Genesis 1: 1-31

Meditation: In reading this chapter, the first thing that leaps out at me are the words, "And God saw that it was good." Those words repeat over and over. What that means to me is that everything we have is good. The world is good. Most important, we are good. While sometimes our lives look dark, dangerous, and depressing, that is only on the surface and from our limited ability to understand our world. We should rejoice, rather than ever thinking about ourselves in negative terms. There is no reason for low self-esteem if God found everything He made "very good." Nor should we find other people "bad" if God has found them good. We need to see the God-seed in them and love them, no matter how we would really like to judge them! Where we or the world is not good is where we/mankind have made it not good. These words also mean to me that everything in this world that God found good -- the people, the animals, the environment -- we are beholden to do everything we can to keep good.

And that is far as I can go with you on this Monday morning. I will now retire to prayer (to thank God for all the goodness that He has put into the world and into my life and into the people around me) and contemplation and will let you do the same.

If you pick this up as a weekly devotional activity, please share with me and others your own experiences in doing so. What words did you choose for meditation? What insights did you have? What have you been given to understand that would be appropriate to share and from which we might all benefit?

Have a good day and a good week!

Sunday, July 26, 2009

On the Unwiseness of "Taking Things Back"

Usually, if I ask God for help, I ask once and go on to other things, finding that God has a way of taking care of things better than we can imagine, especially if we are not asking God to help with our agenda -- which is what I think goes wrong with the prayers of the teenagers in my catechism class (e.g., they want an A on a test without having to study). But sometimes I am foolish enough not to put any worry aside after prayer. Silly me! What an unnecessary waste of energy and emotion!

I had a very dramatic experience with this a couple of years ago, one that came back to mind today through a post about prayer on Kari Brodin's Honest2God blog, to which I responded with the example I am giving here. (Kari, by the way, can use prayers for her health; please check out her site.)

A couple of years ago at work, I had made what could have been a career-ending mistake (even jail time if someone really wanted to press the matter) by signing off on a document without reading it thoroughly. By doing so, I had committed the US government to paying thousands of dollars, and I had no authorization to make the commitment. There needed to have been an authorization document from our resources department, and there was not, and I missed this detail. Still, I was the ultimate, responsible party. Media attention was threatened on Friday by the party not getting the thousands of expected dollars, and all ##$$&&** broke loose. I left the office not knowing what the situation would be, come Monday, but the next-higher office was clearly frightened by the whole situation. And then the day ended.

Needless to say, I fretted all weekend. Of course, I asked God for help right in the beginning, and then I fretted and fretted. On Sunday, as I fretted when I should have been praying, I suddenly saw the image of the kind of rope used in a tug-of-war game, and while I saw no tuggers, I immediately understood that the rope symbolized my work problem. At the same time, I heard the words, very clearly, "Let Me have it!" Startled, I immediately dropped my end of the rope, which went slack, and then the image disappeared. So had the worry disappeared. No more fretting. I could pay attention to real prayer.

Truly, I left the problem behind. In fact, I completely forgot about it and went on peacefully with the rest of Sunday since now God really did have the problem, and on Monday went to work, still in a peaceful mood.

I had nearly completely forgotten about the whole issue when I got a call from one of my boss's assistants who said he had been asked to come in early and work on "my" problem. In so doing, he found this major glitch in the system that could cause all kinds of unauthorized spending. It was being fixed, the party expecting payment was actually going to get paid, along with a dozen parties who were discovered to have performed services and not been paid in the past! Not only that, I was so not in trouble that I was being lauded because my mistake uncovered a serious problem with the system government-wide.

I was not going to go to jail! I was not going to lose my job! I was a hero!

And now I had another example of God knowing best, of God turning bad into good, and of the fact that we can, and should, trust God with anything and everything AND NOT FRET! As they say, just "let go, and let God..." :)

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Doah Went to Court, or God Knew Best

With another interesting comment coming in early this morning on the topic of God (not) answering prayer, I am thinking again about the post about my catechism classes and the teenagers' frustration when God does not give them exactly what they want -- and, in reaction, they declare that God is dead or does not exist. (Of course, much of that is for the dramatic effect on us teachers, and the rest of it is to keep up the "cool" image of the cheerleaders and ball players in the class.) What I tell them is to look beyond their own agenda and see what God might know that is better than what they want.

A highly troubling personal example bubbles to mind when I think about prayer and God knowing best. When I first returned from Jordan three years ago, I learned that my mentally challenged son Doah had gotten into some serious trouble at the local mall. At the time, he was living in a group home for disabled adults and working at a sheltered workshop, as he does now. He was in his mid-twenties, but because he never surpassed 4'7", he never seemed to be older than 8-10 years old, which is the outside limits on his mental development as well. A very affectionate person, he had seen a young girl he knew at the mall. She was with her parents. He went over to her and hugged her. At that point, all manner of chaos broke loose. Although Doah's size was the same as the girl's, the girl was only 13. The parents freaked; Doah does look "different." Mall security seized Doah, and off he went to jail. The group home director got him out of jail, but the district attorney wanted to prosecute even after the parents, who had finally figured out what was happening, dropped the charges. The DA had a goal: Get retarded people off the streets of Salts, the city where Doah lived.

Lizzie, my oldest daughter, was visiting at the time that Doah's first appearance in court took place. We had only about a day's notice. I had just returned from a long time out of the country, and the group home was not used to my being around to inform about such things and had somehow also missed informing Shane, who looks out for Doah when Donnie and I are not around. Donnie was still in Jordan. So, Lizzie and I went to court with Doah. However, because Doah is not conserved and is of age, neither of us was allowed to appear with him. We had to sit in the back of the courtroom.

When the judge called Doah, he read him the charges: sexual molestation. (For a hug!??!) The judge then asked Doah if he understood the charges. Of course, he did not. He appeared quite confused, and the judge repeated, "Please answer me. Do you understand the charges?"

Doah responded, "You give me credit card? I buy something?" Now the judge was confused! He looked around the courtroom, somewhat desperately, and saw Doah's social work leaning over the barrier.

"Are you with this young man?" he asked.

The social worker identified his name and position and was allowed to approach the bench. He told them that there was family in the area and that the family wanted a private attorney. (The judge had been about to assign a court-appointed attorney, and, I fear, that would have been a railroad job. The DA would have had his highly visible case that could have turned into sanctioned discrimination against an entire class of people.)

We have a friend who is considered one of the best defense attorneys in Salts. I had actually been instrumental at one point in putting him on the fast track to practicing law in California so he helps us out from time to time. He took Doah's case gratis. He thought it would be open-and-shut, but it turned out that the DA would not budge. He had a chance to make a name for himself and get his agenda implemented, and he planned to do it. Our lawyer was temporarily stymied, and Doah was definitely going to be put on trial. There were only two possible outcomes of such a trial: (1) jail for a year, or (2) probation and identification for life as a sex offender.

So, if Doah were your son, which outcome would you pray for? Being in jail would have taught my little imitator how to do many bad things that would have followed him the rest of his life to his detriment. Probation was fine, but being labeled as a sex offender would also have followed him all his life to his detriment. So, I asked God for the only thing I thought could possibly work: for God to make the decision on what would happen to Doah.

The morning after that prayer, our lawyer called me excitedly. He said he had turned the case over and over in his mind and saw no way to win; he had spent a couple of days trying to convince the DA that what he was doing was wrong-headed and not appropriate in this case and still saw no way to win, given the DA's stubbornness. Then, when he got out of bed that morning, a thought from nowhere had tumbled into his head: the DA has a supervisor. So, he went to the DA's supervisor, explained the whole case, told him that he had known Doah since Doah was 9 years old, and that what had happened was only a result of Doah's generally friendly nature. The supervisor agreed that there was more than met the eye, requested a psychological examination, and said that a third option would be added: If the psychological examination confirmed the lawyer's analysis, then Doah would be put on probation for a year and if there were no further incidents all court records would be expunged as if nothing had ever occurred.

And, so, that is exactly what happened. The psychologist said that Doah had the mental acuity only to determine whether a behavior was good or bad but not the ability to understand that a good behavior becomes a bad behavior depending upon circumstance. That would be too fine a distinction for him to make. In other words, hugging is good at home, school, church, parties where you know everyone, but it is bad at the mall. Doah could not possibly draw that kind of conclusion, given his mental capacity. So, option three was taken by the court, and a year later the DA himself requested that the case be withdrawn and the records removed.

How blessed we were that God had a third answer. How happy I am that I did not ask for one of the only two options that I knew about. (I suspect, though, that if I had asked for one of those options, God would still have introduced the third, better, one.)

So, yes, I say to my catechism students, God does say "no," and we should be grateful that God knows best!

Friday, July 24, 2009

What I Wrote on Genny's Wall


Since I do have to get some sleep before leaving Duke University, where I have been this week at a conference, I decided to take the easy way out and post here something I wrote on Genny's site, about which she commented on my post about panhandling. (That's not really cheating, is it?) Genny was complaining that her house was full of bugs because her son loves them, but she finds them, well, a little off-putting. What I wrote to her was the following:

My son's house is filled with bugs, like yours, because my 7-year-old grandson, Nathaniel, is fascinated with anything that flies or crawls. We think he may grow up to be an entomologist -- he knows the scientific details of hundreds more bugs than I do. For example, we were walking to a local art fair downtown (downtown being three blocks in our 6x8 block town), and I pointed out a butterfly sitting on a hedge to him. "Grandma, that's not just any butterfly," he responded. "It's a painted lady." Well, pardon me! His wish list right now is for a black widow spider -- he thinks the red hour glass is beautiful. We do have them, but I don't want to be the one to try to catch it.

Still, it is all an improvement over his little scientist father who at the age of 9 nearly burned our house down twice with his fire experiments. (1) The bathroom: he set two candles with the same amount of parafin on fire -- one short and fat, one long and lean, to see whether shape affected speed of burning; on that experiment, we lost our bathroom. (2) The roof: I caught him dropping burning objects from the roof. When confronted, he responded, "Newton said that two objects fall at the same rate regardless of mass, but if one were to be on fire, wouldn't there be thermal uplift, retarding the rate of fall?" Oh, my! We spent the next nine years, throwing out every match we found and conducting daily treasure hunts for matches.

Stick with the bugs -- they won't destroy your home! ;)

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Loving Impossible People

We all have them in our lives: the “impossible” people. They are cranky; nothing is ever right; we are a bad relative or bad boss or bad neighbor whenever we do something that is not quite to their liking; they don’t seem to bond well with colleagues in the work place; they resist new ideas or assignments that they do not like; they may approach us in passive-aggressive ways. I am sure that you have met your share of such people, as have I.

At least in the workplace, I adore them! I seek challenge, and they give me what I seek. Meister Eckhart says that there is a God-seed (a little bit of God) in everyone, and I can see that buried deep down in these “impossible” people. I love watching that seed take root and grow. It makes me feel part of a miracle.

For example, one day at work I noticed that some of my favorite “impossible” people were extra cranky. Food and attention, I have found, usually help in these situations (just as they do with cranky kids – I am convinced that mothering 7 children has immensely helped me to mother my current 307-and-expanding staff). So, I ran out and bought several packages of oreo cookies, dumped them into a big bowl, and began the management-by-walking-about effort to deliver the cookies to each employee personally – not just the cranky ones, but everyone who happened to be in the office and not traveling (60% or more of my staff travels regularly). It took all morning, and my paperwork languished, but I enjoyed catching up on all their stories as they munched on their cookies. First, I enjoy stories – the more the better. Second, their stories tell me a lot about them, and especially with the “impossible” variety of employee, I find some insight into how best to manage them. On the oreo morning, we had a very important visitor from our headquarters, who had dropped in to work with one of our teams. Oops! I had forgotten about that, so when I came upon that team, I offered him a cookie, too. At the end of the day, I ran into him as he was leaving and asked him how his day had been. He offered that it had become “much better after the cookie!”

The “impossible” people returned the favor, as they generally do. One of the teams invited me to their ethnic lunch, in this case, some of my favorite Arabic food. These “impossible” people (and a lot of “possible” people) regularly bring me food (I think that they are convinced that I cannot cook, and they are not far from wrong), invite me to their social events (weddings, birthdays, picnics), scold me when I am ill and don’t see a doctor, and jump in without asking to help when I am attempting some physical work that looks to be beyond my capacity. “Why are you so good to me?” I have asked them upon occasion, and the answer is always the same: “Because you love us.”

Once a middle manager who worked for me asked me how I dealt with difficult people, and I told him that he would not like the answer: you have to love them – sincerely, not just pretend to love them (although sometimes initial pretense leads to eventual sincerity). I was right. He did not like the answer. He looked at me sadly and said, “I cannot do that.” In that case, I fear that he will always be surrounded by difficult people.

There have been times when I ignore my own advice, when I get caught off-guard, when I stupidly forget about the God-seed. That happened recently. A very troublesome employee had signed up to see my boss during his open-door hours. He called and asked if I knew what might be the topic. I could guess at a dozen possibilities since she was always complaining about her manager (who worked for me), her assignments, her seemingly slow raises and promotions, concern that management did not understand how far superior she was to everyone else in her division, even the fact that she was expected to come to work on time and put in a full day. I suggested to my boss all the things that came to mind and added several negative comments about the difficulty of supervising her. My boss called after the meeting and told me in a somewhat curious tone, “All she wanted to talk to me about was to tell me how kind you are.” I am glad it was a phone call because I know my face was red with shame.

The most important thing about that event? I lost out on being part of the miracle of seeing the God-seed grow a little more. My boss saw it, but my head had been in the sand that day – and when our heads are down in the sand, all we can see is dirt.

Monday, July 20, 2009

The Positive Power of Failure

Something wonderful happened to my daughter, Lizzie, her 8th grade year when she return to her Arlington, Virginia high school after spending months living and attending school in Russia: she failed algebra and band. Until then, she had not only always been an A+ student but also, with a fall birthday, she had started kindergarten as one of the youngest children in the class and then proceeded to skip second grade and then seventh grade. Promoted to the eighth grade at the age of 11, she was placed in the high school, college-prep classes for high achievers: algebra, freshman English, French, earth science, and music (band). While Lizzie could keep up with her other subjects during her time in Russia, learning to play the flute was not a possibility. Russian schools are either regular schools, i.e. a little bit of everything, or specialized schools (spetsshkoly). Music schools, math schools, foreign-language schools, and sports schools are among the choices. Lizzie attended a foreign language school. Her knowledge of humanities and science did not suffer at this school; it blossomed. Music and math, however, were another story. The math "deficit" was actually a surprise. At the time, Soviet students were significantly outperforming American stduents in math, according to United Nations' statistics. And therein lay the problem. Lizzie also could outperform her peers in her American algebra class because they have not yet been taught the mechanics for performing algebraic operations whereas Lizzie and her Soviet peers had been practicing solving equations all year. Actually, the Soviet children had arrived already knowing how to do basic equations, so over there Lizzie had had to play catch-up, which she did rapidly, thanks to the encouragement of the math teacher, who never withheld approbation for even the slightest improvement and on the first day that Lizzie walked to the board and successfully explained the solution of a problem rewarded her with a warm molodets (an untranslatable positive label for a person who has done something remarkable; in English, "Way to go!" might come close). In her American classroom, however, Lizzie's peers had not begun the mechanics of algebra; they had been concentrating on theory and concepts.

So, when Lizzie, returning home for the last six weeks of the school year, tried to learn a year’s worth of of algebraic concepts, the formidable task overwhelmed her. A series of Fs was all she could pull on weekly tests until the last two weeks of class when the teacher, who happened to be the junior high school principal, introduced calculations. Whiz! Lizzie’s scores soared to A+. “I don’t get it,” the principal confided to me. “She does not know the principles of calculation, yet she never gets any wrong!” Yes, that would be true. Practice makes perfect, and she had had much practice in calculation.


Of course, Lizzie had to attend summer school to make up her never-acquired conceptual algebra skills. It was a fast-track class – 5 mornings a week for 6 weeks. At the end of the course, her summer school grade replaced the F on her report card. She had learned her algebra lessons well enough to earn an A. More important was the other lesson she learned: Don’t fear failure; it can be the first step toward success.


That lesson was reinforced as she took steps 2, 3, 4 and more. In the fall, as an entering freshman, she took the geometry course. Another A. By senior year, she was out of math classes and was allowed to take a calculus course at the local community college; another A. And, of all things, one day she ran into the junior high school principal there. He had retired and was now teaching at the community college. He was considerably surprised when he learned what Lizzie was doing in the corridor of the college.


Band class had been an equally miserable failure for Lizzie. She returned, still trying to figure out how to get actual tones, rather than whispy puffs of air, from the flute, to find her band class playing ensemble music. There was no summer school course for band, and the F would remain on her report card. The question was about her freshman year. The junior high band teacher emphatically stated that there was no hope for Lizzie to be part of the high school band; it was too late. Band instruction began in earlier years, and 8th grade was the last chance to get initial instruction.


Yet, Lizzie really wanted to learn to play the flute and was willing to practice, and I don’t believe in a no-hope scenario. So, we advertised for a tutor, and the most marvelous person appeared on our doorstep: a flautist from the US Marine Corps band who was stationed in Washington, DC. He came two evenings a week, and our house was filled with beautiful flute solos. Surprisingly soon, Lizzie was playing awkwardly along with him, then better and better. When the school year began, Lizzie talked to the high school band director and asked if he would let her audition. He agreed, she did, and she was in!


Over the next four years, she played ensemble and solos with the marching band, the school orchestra, and the drama club’s pit orchestra. Her junior year, she won third place in a national flute competition. The following year, the marching band was one of several nationwide selected to play in the inauguration of President Bush (the father). She did not play the flute there, though. She played the saxophone. At the end of her junior year, two senior-year saxophone players graduated, and there were no incoming saxophone players to take their place. So, she and a friend volunteered to teach themselves to play the saxophone over the summer, and they did. When Lizzie graduated from high school, she received that year’s Most Valuable Player for the band.


The sax and flute now lie forgotten in a closet somewhere in Lizzie’s apartment as she busies herself with the daily work of a college professor of cognitive neuroscience. However, Lizzie has never forgotten failure’s lesson in hope, risk-taking, and perseverance that dynamited her past what she might otherwise have settled for.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

What Do You Do for Yourself?

A number of years ago I had a chance conversation with a new-age-type psychologist. We chatted about work, kids (at the time I had four, three of them in pampers), home, travel, writing. I suppose I was streaming my non-stop chatter past her in my usual too-much-to-take-in, high-energy style because suddenly her eyes glazed over briefly, then re-focused, and peered at me intently as if she were trying to locate some specific inner center sourcing this energy, a center which I do not have. My energy comes from without, gathers strength and builds to a crescendo within me, and then explodes onto whoever happens to be in my path.

"Stop!" she commanded. I stopped.

"What do you do for yourself?" She looked at me as if she already knew the answer.

For myself? I had never entertained that thought. I mumbled something about teaching my daughter's Girl Scout troop to canoe, homeschooling a highly gifted son, mentoring some talented employees with what I considered to be high potential, and, oh, yes, probably something about Donnie although he is a big boy and usually does a dandy job of taking care of himself.

As I thought would be the case, my psychologist-acquaintance was not impressed. Immediately, she began pressing me with rapid-fire questions. I could see where she was going, but I compliantly answered her questions anyway.

"Do you get physical exercise?" she asked. Sure. Three floors to traverse at home. Toys to pick up on them all. Vacuuming, dusting, washing. Chasing kids. Watering plants. Yep, lots of exercise. And remember those canoeing Girl Scouts? I was usually in the lead canoe. BLEEP! WRONG ANSWER!

"Okay," she continued. "So, do you read?" Oh, yes, a lot -- in preparation for teaching classes and for writing books and, of course, to the kids although, being the oldest child, daughter Lizzie does a lot of that, too. BLEEP! WRONG ANSWER! THAT DOES NOT SOUND LIKE READING FOR RELAXATION!

"Well, then, how about time alone with your spouse?" Oh, yeah, that's an easy one. Quite a bit of time with him, in fact. As a photographer, he has dozens of stock photos and other pictures every week that have to be sorted, catalogued, and filed -- we spend hours working on them together. BLEEP! BLEEP! WRONG AGAIN!

"Arrggh! All right, there must be something you do for yourself! How about vacation time? Where do you go? What do you do?" Exasperation had not simply crept into her voice; it was jumping up and down. Vacation? You've got to be kidding. I live in the Land of Splat!, remember? We can't afford a vacation. We have to buy pampers, as well as incontinent supplies (such as catheters) for Noelle and a myriad other medical support items for both Noelle and Doah; pay for doctors and hospitals, medicine, and hospital parking; take care of school costs; cover transportation to work; and, when we can afford it, pay all of the utilities, not just the most urgent of them (often, though, we must forego something, such as gas in the summer--who needs heating in the summer, anyway). Besides, vacations require planning, and planning is not an option: Noelle (3o surgeries and counting) and Doah (working on his second dozen) spend unplanned time in the hospital far too frequently to even consider making a plan for the next day, let alone for a vacation weeks away. I do accumulate many use-or-lose annual leave hours at work, so the potential for vacation is there, but reality and potential have no way to meet, so I give the spare hours away to chronically ill employees who would otherwise be without income.

The psychologist sighed deeply and gave me "that" look, the one that indicates she is evaluating me for institutionalization. "You really need to do something for yourself in order to keep up your energy and maintain your sanity."

"Ah," I replied. "That's what you were after. Sure, I do something for myself. Let's see. I have one-on-one night outs (or day outs) with each of the kids every couple of months. I took Lizzie to Moscow with me on a work assignment, Noelle to Hawaii, Doah to New York City, and Shane to Finland. Last week, I taught the neighborhood kids to make pysanki (Ukrainian Easter eggs), and a few weeks before that, I assisted Lizzie and her friends in building a tiny rocket launcher in the backyard, a rather neat science experiment, if I do say so myself!"

"No! No! No!" She interrupted me. "You don't get it! What do you do in order to be happy, for your own happiness?"

So much for what began as a pleasant, casual conversation! There really was nothing more to say. It had become clear that she did not get it. I do not need diversion to be happy. My family is my happiness. Writing is my happiness. Teaching is my happiness. Helping Donnie with his photo work is my happiness. Being able to help my colleagues make it through a few more days through the transfer of annual leave hours does bring me happiness. I don't have to go looking for happiness because I already have it.

That was then. Now is now. Some things have changed. The kids have grown up. They now have children of their own, and I have acquired a new title: Grandma. The source of my happiness, though, has not changed, and I still think that psychologist did not get it. However, I do have a better answer for her these days. Now I do have something I do just for myself, for my own happiness, and I do it often. It is called prayer.

Friday, July 17, 2009

The Art of Panhandling & the Act of Giving



I love the books and recordings of Fr. Richard Rohr -- I don't know anyone who doesn't -- and feel privileged that I was able to hear one of his lectures about a year ago. It did not disappoint this Franciscan.

Fr. Richard seems to reach into the very heart of things, lifting us from the earth's mud-holes to the sky's glories. One of the muddiest holes for me is how to deal with panhandlers, whom I frequently encounter in my travels, especially those travels that take me to large cities in the US although there are panhandlers in other countries as well, some of them harder to ignore because in places like Tbilisi (Georgia) and Tashkent (Uzbekistan), children are sent out to do the begging, in spite of social norms against that.

I don't know about you, but I don't have the resources to give to every person who holds out a hand. To give or not to give becomes an on-the-spot, difficult-to-make decision. Give or not give -- I hesitate: what goes through my mind unbidden are questions whether the money will be used to buy alcohol, whether the person in front of me is really insane and could be in a shelter but chooses not to (as some psychologists have suggested), whether this is someone who has been put in my path deliberately or put himself/herself there quite by coincidence, and on and on, until I simply cannot decide and the decision is made for me by the appearance of a wealthier-looking target.

By giving to panhandlers, I have wondered on numerous occasions, are we giving to the poor in the way that Scripture instructs us. Or are we just maybe handing out a few coins (or, okay, big bucks -- it's all relative to our own income, anyway) as a matter of "paying" for being better off than the person on the street with his/her hand out? And where does that feeling of guilt come from when we just walk by or a moment's hesitation takes a panhandler off in a different direction? Is it guilt that we are not on the street, too? Is the feeling of guilt perhaps a feeling of unworthiness, that we have no more right to the material goods that we enjoy than should have the destitute people we meet on the street? (Perhaps "meet" is the wrong word in most instances.)

In discussing gifting and almsgiving, in Chapter One, "When Charity Is Not Love" of Grace in Action, which I am currently reading, Fr. Richard writes, "The spiritual trap was that we always remained in charge; we decided who was worthy and unworthy of our love, and we garnered significant self-esteem as a byproduct."

Three situations come to mind where I had either the time or the resources to react in perhaps a more responsible way (here I am referring to responsibility before God), when I did have a chance to meet the people asking for help.

The first instance took place in Moscow, Russia. I was providing consultation to the Ministry of Higher Education, and every day during the three weeks or so I spent there I had to pass through the tunnel connecting transfer stations at Metrostantsia Biblioketa imeni Lenina (then called Lenin Library Metro Station; with the re-naming of the stations, I am not sure that the name has remained the same, but it was one of the stations very close to the Kremlin -- and that has not changed!), where, I would pass by a squatting woman, dressed all in black, with her hand held out and her head hung down. Beside her, a little girl of perhaps 3-4 years, was sometimes leaning against her knee, sometimes squatting in a similar posture with her hand also held out, and sometimes twirling around, dancing from tile to tile that lined the metro floor. Mother and daughter, I assumed. Passersby (more frequently than I usually see happening in the USA) would drop some coins or press some paper money into the woman's hand. I never saw anyone speak. This scene was more remarkable because it was occurring right after raspad (the dissolution of the former Soviet Union); during Soviet Union days beggars were unheard of and, for that matter, not permitted. Panhandlers and beggars were a new-order phenomenon, one with which contemporary Russia would become all too familiar. What put this woman on the streets, I wondered? I, too, was unused to seeing beggars in Russia and certainly not a mother and child. Although I never handed out any alms to her and cannot say why I did not, I felt uncomfortable each morning and evening that I passed her. The last day I was in Moscow, I was making my final trip back to where I was staying with friends and realized that I had forgotten to change my leftover per diem rubles to dollars. My friends would not be able to do that for me; they did not have dollars -- it was still too early in post-Soviet history for dollars to have appeared in the households of everyday people and too early for the appearance of those exchanges that now appear on every street corner in large cities like Moscow. Further, I was leaving at pre-dawn hours, long before the airport exchange would open, and once I got back to the USA, the money was useless. Rubles are not tied to the gold standard and hence cannot be converted into other currency outside Russia. Moreover, I had more than the amount that visitors were allowed to take out of the country so the money would have been confiscated by Russian customs with the chance of getting in trouble. Just then, I came across the lady and girl. It was before the great evening hordes would sweep through the tunnels and carry anyone standing still past their preferred stopping points, and so I had a chance to meet these two. I squatted beside the lady and asked her why she was on the street. She told me a little of her story, much of which I have forgotten. It rang true: an abusive alcoholic husband without a job (being on the street was safer than being at home and certainly she did not want to leave her child at home with him when he was drunk) and the vicious cycle of not having money to obtain care for her child (child care was not a problem in the Soviet days of ever-present yasli, or children's centers) and having a child with her getting in the way of getting a job, plus a depressed and changing economy where many of the traditional jobs were no longer viable. And, of course, there was that problem with lack of knowledge (how to survive in a more capitalistic manner, how to be independent, how to problem-solve) that comes with mother's milk in the USA and had not been required before the raspad in Russia. In an instant, she became for me an archetype. Anyone could have been she, given a similar unfortunate set of circumstances. In fact, there were times that, except for God tossing me some contemporary manna in the most critical moment (only God knows why because while I desperately needed it, I did not particularly deserve it), I could have been she. Talking to her, I realized that I knew how to handle my per diem money. While I could have used those dollars at home for any number of things, they were, in reality, "spare" rubles that I should have spent for per diem but had not needed because friends had seen to it that I was well fed and had a bed to sleep in (although I did share it with the daughter in the family, Russian apartments being miniscule by American standards). I explained my dilemma in converting rubles to dollars to the lady and asked her if she would take them for her child. Giving her that many rubles straight out could have been quite embarrassing, but for her child, nothing would have been embarrassing. The amount of money would either keep her off the streets for a couple of months or provide her with the means to look for work; I hoped she would choose the latter but have no way of knowing how things turned out. The thought that she would not simply be benefitting herself but would also be helping out a foreigner (whom Russians feel committed to help) let her maintain a sense of self-respect. I suppose the self-respect of a panhandler should not have been important to me, and actually the self-respect of a panhandler (i.e. stranger) would not have been. However, thanks to our short conversation, I had now met this woman. She was no longer a stranger. She mumbled something about God bringing us together for mutual help, but at the time I was an atheist and did not understand what she meant. I do now.

The second event took place at a metro station in Rosslyn, Virginia. I had arrived almost an hour early to meet a friend and former colleague from my days of working at the US Department of State. Since he lived considerably far off the public transportation trail, he was picking me up at the nearest metro and driving him to his home for some casual evening catch-up with him and his family after several years of not seeing him. I emerged from the bowels of the station, blinked at the clock on the station wall as the setting sun beamed into the open portal, and saw that I would have a considerable wait. Not a problem: I usually have a book to read and I always have a notebook for whatever book or article I am currently working on. I spied an empty bench and walked over to it at about the same time as a foreign-looking man perhaps in his forties, clearly a panhandler, did the same. We nearly collided in the attempt to sit down. He apologized and moved to the edge of the bench, and I sat down on the other side. No one sat between us during the 3-4 minutes that lapsed while I debated whether to read or to write. As I reached into my purse for my notebook, I felt the panhandler's eyes on me and turned to look at him. He had a kindly and curious expression on his face. Perhaps because I did not avert my gaze, he asked me what I was waiting for -- typically commuters rush off to the buses for the various suburbs. During peak hours, there is almost never a wait. I explained my poor planning to him, and he commented on the perfect weather for such a long wait. Now that he had had the audacity to ask me a personal question, I felt that I could do the same and asked him what he was doing on the bench (sounds like a neat title for an article: Strangers on a Bench!), and he proceeded to tell me a little about his life. As the conversation continued, the distance between us narrowed psychologically and physically. He did not ask me for money, but the subject of food came up and he volunteered that he was hungry. I suggested that we get a bite to eat at the Roy Rogers across the street. He initially declined, saying that he had been given just enough money that day to be able to launder his clothing and that was important to him. (Ah, self-respect again!) I insisted, explaining that I was a world traveler and had picked up the social norm of some other countries where the person who does the inviting does the paying. That was acceptable, and off we went for some good roast beef and an hour's conversation. I learned that the person I had met was a computer scientist from India and for a variety of reasons found working in the USA as a computer scientist both stressful and not what he wanted out of life. (There was a new thought for me.) He gave me all the details of his daily and weekly life, how he usually obtained enough money to take his clothes to a laundromat in Georgetown across Key Bridge. He would take them off, revealing a clean set that he wore underneath, wash & dry the outer garments, and then in a public restroom would put the cleaned clothes on as the bottom layer and keep the former bottom layer as the outer layer. It sounded pretty ingenious to me. He also told me that he usually was given enough money by commuters, some of them on a regular basis, to keep himself from starving although there were days when he was hungry. Other than clean clothes and an occasional meal, he wanted nothing else from life. He enjoyed watching passersby and was delighted with an occasional conversation with someone. That meal at Roy Rogers was one of the best I have ever had.

The third event occurred in the tiny mission town in which I live. Panhandlers here are nigh unto non-existent. Once in a while, someone who is a bit down-and-out might spend a few hours sitting on one of the benches outside the small wooden complex that houses our local grocery story and post office. And then one might offer to share a cup of coffee or deli sandwich as my husband Donnie, who has more daytime hours for deli experiences than I do, has done upon occasion. But no one here had ever panhandled me personally until one day about a year ago when I pulled up to the post office to check our mailbox. A man on a motorcycle had pulled in ahead of me, had disembarked, and was stopping passersby, who were all shaking their heads and walking on. I paid scant attention, just a bit curious as to what was going on but since this is essentially a crime-free town gave little thought to the scene, and entered the post office. Having gathered all my mail, I started back to the car, but the motorcycle man intercepted me. He explained that he had encountered financial devastation in Ohio (the economy and all that -- who has not experienced at least a taste of the current economic crisis?) and had made arrangements to move in with his daughter in southern California one more day's drive away. He had run through all his food money and had just enough money for gas for the rest of the trip. He wondered if I could spare a dollar or two for a meal to tide him over. He even showed me his driver's license to prove who he was. I guess he had quickly picked up on the fact that people here are not used to panhandlers. Now I had to do something because once again I had met the panhandler. Unfortunately, I had no cash with me, not even a couple of pennies. When I told him that, I could see the hope fade from his face. "But, wait," I added. "I have plastic. Plastic is good everywhere. Let's just go into the grocery store over here beside the post office. You pick out what you need, and I will pay for it." He picked very judiciously -- healthy food that would hold him over calorie-wise; just the absolute essentials to keep his stomach from growling for the remaining eight hours of his trip. I picked up strawberries for dinner; they were two for the price of one. As we walked out the door, I handed him the second container of strawberries. "They were free," I told him. "It would have been a waste of money to buy only one container, but it will be a waste of money to take both home because my husband and I cannot eat both before they spoil. Take them as a memory of our little town where strawberries grow in abundance." He thanked me and said he would never forget me or this town. He probably won't because I haven't forgotten him.

Of course, I have also from time to time dropped spare change into the hand, pan, hat, or cup of a panhandler. However, those people I don't remember because I did not meet them. The difference with the lady from Moscow, computer scientist from Virginia, and motorcycle man passing through my part of California is that for a brief time we shared a common moment, a union, a piece of ourselves. I will remember them and they me precisely because we touched each others' lives. These were good experiences, ones that made both me and the recipient of my small largesse (I suppose that's an oxymoron) feel better about ourselves and good about each other.

That latter part, the feeling good about each other, I think, is very important and leaves me with the dilemma I started with because it is rare that I have the time needed or the money needed to do what I did in these instances. So, I am back to the question as to whether I should throw coins into a cup held out by someone I suspect will use it not for milk but for beer (am I contributing to a deterioration in his/her health, and am I, by thinking this very thought, judging him for which I have no right and, as Fr. Richard might say, deciding whether or not he or she is worthy of my love) or place a bill in an extended hand as I hurry into a metro station (I have often wondered what one of those panhandlers would think if instead of putting money into his/her hand, I simply shook it and introduced myself).

In conclusion, I don't have a conclusion to this post because I have not been able to resolve the dilemma. Is there someone who can provide some guidance here?

Monday, July 13, 2009

Nikolina Update

This will be a brief post because there really is not much to tell. Nikolina came through the surgery just fine. It turned out that of the prolapsed intestine, the doctors only had to remove 2 cm.

The surprising main difficulty was finding an intensive care unit for her post-surgery. Because OEIS Complex is so rare and so complicated, none of the pediatric intensive care units felt comfortable taking her. That was a bit unnerving -- if nurses are afraid of her being too complicated to care for, what does that mean for us, her parents and grandparents? I suppose that the saying, "ignorance is bliss," is rather pertinent here. If one doesn't know enough to be afraid, then one ends up treating her just like any other baby--and enjoying her, leaving the harder stuff to God.

Nikolina did find a post-operative home. The NICU (newborn intensive care unit) is not supposed to re-admit babies who have been discharged (germs from the outside world and all that), but since no other unit would take her and the nurses in the NICU have two months of experience in taking care of her, there is where she is. God willing, she will be back home with her parents soon.

Thanks to those who have told me that you are praying for her! She is also back on the prayer list at our Old Mission Church.

Good night to all! I am looking forward to a positive update in the morning.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

What I Was Going To Write Today

This will be a brief post because there really is not much to tell. Nikolina came through the surgery just fine. It turned out that of the prolapsed intestine, the doctors only had to remove 2 cm.

The surprising main difficulty was finding an intensive care unit for her post-surgery. Because OEIS Complex is so rare and so complicated, none of the pediatric intensive care units felt comfortable taking her. That was a bit unnerving -- if nurses are afraid of her being too complicated to care for, what does that mean for us, her parents and grandparents? I suppose that the saying, "ignorance is bliss," is rather pertinent here. If one doesn't know enough to be afraid, then one ends up treating her just like any other baby--and enjoying her, leaving the harder stuff to God.

Nikolina did find a post-operative home. The NICU (newborn intensive care unit) is not supposed to re-admit babies who have been discharged (germs from the outside world and all that), but since no other unit would take her and the nurses in the NICU have two months of experience in taking care of her, there is where she is. God willing, she will be back home with her parents soon.

Thanks to those who have told me that you are praying for her! She is also back on the prayer list at our Old Mission Church.

Good night to all! I am looking forward to a positive update in the morning.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Today's Drama

Ah, Saturday! Yes, I can sleep in! I rolled into bed rather late last night, or more accurately, early this morning, secure in the knowledge that I could get an unusual full night's sleep. Well, no, apparently. Just a few hours later, a ringing intruded into my dreams, whatever they were, and soon I was emerging into the not-yet-daylight. Fumbling for the alarm I had forgotten to turn off, I finally realized that it was the phone ringing--just as the caller hung up. I turned on the light and saw that it was Lizzie (my daughter) and Blaine (the young man we had raised from teenage years who ultimately became Lizzie's husband and our son/son-in-law), calling from Illinois.

Lizzie and Blaine! Something must be terribly wrong because they never call; they always send an enote. By now, Donnie was awake, as well, and called them back. Blaine answered. Yes, something was terribly wrong. His cousin, Alana, had just reached him. Her husband had arrived home drunk and had beaten her to the point that she had difficulty walking and was in pain. She needed some place to stay for the day and perhaps night while she was sorting through her options.

We made arrangements for her to be dropped off near our mission church. In a plan reminiscent of my experiences in eluding the KGB during the Cold War days in Moscow, I walked up as the taxi dropped off Alana and all the possessions she had been able to pack in a hurry while her husband was out of the house. She had to leave behind her beloved bike. (I suggested to her that she not give that a second thought. After all, bikes can be replaced; people cannot.) She did manage to bring a favorite cactus house plant and four suitcases of clothing and other possessions. We waited on the sidewalk until the taxi disappeared, and then I called Donnie who had been parked out of sight nearby. He drove up, and we put all the possessions and a very traumatized Alana into the car, then, learning that she had not had breakfast, had her pick out what she wanted at the local deli. We returned an hour later for pain medication. (I am probably the only mother in the entire country who raised seven children and never seemed to need an aspirin for them or for myself! Someone should give the condition a name: HPTS, as in High Pain Threshold Syndrome.)

At our house, she made some calls, often tearfully. Finally, a plan emerged to stay overnight for a few days with a cousin in northern California and then move in with her mother in Nevada, in order to begin to put her life back together and to shake her husband (hopefully, about to become her ex) off the trail. We drove her to her cousin's house this evening. It was a two-hour trip one-way, and we have just returned with sore bottoms from four hours of car-seat-sitting. We think the calluses-to-appear were for a good cause.

I tried to get her to see a doctor because the bruises and limp were obvious. She did not want to do that. I also tried to get her to turn her husband into the police; battery in California is mandatory imprisonment. She did not want to do that, either. Since she did not know us (but she knows several of our children), accepting guidance from me was not a natural thing to do. I left her with the story of my sister, Victoria, who kept going back to a husband who beat her, blaming herself for "pushing his buttons," until the day that he took a knife to her. Then, after the police jailed him, she divorced him and raised her two sons, happily, as a single mother. I take hope in the fact that after our discussion, Alana asked to borrow the computer and researched battered-wife sites. That was a reasonable, unemotional thing to do in response to a very emotional experience.

Some things are slow to change, however, or so it seems. Women are still blaming themselves for abuse. They are still afraid to tell doctors what has happened for fear it will make them look bad or be embarrassing. They are also afraid to pursue their beaters and molesters legally for fear that when they get out of jail, they will look up the person who put them in and beat them even harder. Somehow, women and we as a nation, not just those who comprise the group of the abused, have to learn to face down those who act in base ways and just stop the beatings, not with temerity but with reasoned courage. (See my post on abuse.)

Fortunately, unlike many other women in similar circumstances, Alana has a support system--the cousins, friends, mother, father. I have to hope that this will make the difference that will keep her from returning to an abusive situation.

After we dropped Alana off this evening, I said a prayer for her. She will need God's love in order to accept herself as a lovable person, and she will need God to give her strength as she takes one new step after another toward a saner and safer environment. I will continue to pray for her in the days ahead, and I ask anyone reading this blog to add her and all abused women and children to your prayer list.

Friday, July 10, 2009

God Has Filled My Life with Priests

As promised yesterday, here is the post about priests. It seems to be an appropriate topic, given that this is the Year of the Priest.

This week I received (1) an enote from Fr. Ed, our parish priest, who is currently on the East Coast, substituting for a parish priest there who is out of town, (2) a Skype message from Padre (Fr.) Julio, a priest in Colombia who substituted at one point in our parish (followed by a voice conversation with him in English and then his mother in Spanish), and (3) a phone call from Fr. Barry, the director of our local Franciscan retreat center (and monastery). That concatenation of interactions reminded me that it is indeed the Year of the Priest. Thank God for priests! God has filled my life with them, and they in turn have filled my life with blessings.

I realize what a special gift God has given me when I look around and see that many parishes have no priest or borrowed priests and when I see that many of my friends' interactions with priests are only for significant life events (weddings, funerals, emergencies), during confession, and after mass. The extreme irony of this gift is that until three years ago, I had only ever met three priests (all of them Orthodox) and then only once each for a solitary greeting and mass, as a result of catering to the spiritual needs of Shura, the Russian Orthodox Siberian child artist dying from spina bifida whom I took into my home years ago.

I often wonder why God feels that I deserve this amount of interaction. Perhaps it is more that I need a greater depth of instruction, being a person that He pulled from the wayside and plunked down, totally bewildered, in the middle of His flock. Maybe, too, He was worried that I would stray away from the flock and begin happily cavorting in the bramble bushes again. No fear of that! He has filled my life with priests!

First and foremost there is 80-year-old Fr. Barry, whom I dearly love. He seems to have seen everything there is to see. He has traveled the world, studied a variety of religions, spent time in the Holy Land (where I lived for an awesome two years), holds several degrees, including one in psychology, and made a film on the significance of each part of the liturgy. A Franciscan and a deeply spiritual and knowledgeable mystic, he was the perfect RCIA instructor for me. He has since left our parish--he was an interim priest here--but has remained in our town as director of our local retreat center & monastery. Since leaving our parish, he has become my de facto spiritual advisor. When I have received "messages" that have totally startled me and point me in directions where I am certain I am not capable of going, I have run to Fr. Barry for guidance. He accepts these spiritual experiences and helps me sort through what seems to be authentic and what may not be authentic -- and he convinces me that if I am pointed in a direction, I should go where it leads, trusting God to provide me with the wherewithall to follow (and, of course, God always does -- which, on a very deep level, I do fully trust will happen).

The second priest in my life is Fr. Ed. An Irishman by birth and rearing, he is a down-to-earth 50-year-old with an immense sense of humor and adventure. He has held mass on a local mountain top, serves as chaplain for the fire department (and rides along), and can be found jogging around town mornings, often underdressed for the weather, or participating in marathons to raise money for a good cause. Being a catechist, I have come to know him pretty well, and he has been very supportive in the matter of our granddaughter's health. A very important thing for our parish (and me) is that Fr. Ed is a wonderful confessor. He sees very clearly to the heart of nearly any matter. And, if he is jovial in his homilies, he is engaged and spiritual in the confessional.

And finally, there is 30-something Padre Julio from Colombia. Padre (Father) Julio used to substitute at our parish's Spanish-language masses. Over time, he became an integral part of our family. It started with my family volunteering to create a website for his project to bring hope to seven rural towns in Colombia through building a school and self-supporting farm, for which he had formed an organization, Por Amor a Los Ninos de Colombia (For the Love of the Children of Colombia). I translated the original documents from Spanish into English for the website text. My husband, Donnie, designed the graphics. Our son, Shane, did the basic programming, and when we ran into difficulties with more complex programming, our son, Blaine, a professional web designer, flew home from Illinois, to put on the difficult finishes. During that time, our younger daughter, Noelle, who has spina bifida, experienced failure of the shunt that controls her hydrocephalus and ended up emergencied to Stanford University Hospital quite some distance away. Padre Julio drove the distance (even more since he got lost for over an hour, trying to navigate strange terrain in a strange country in a strange language) to visit her and pray for her with all of us together right before her surgery, which did, indeed, turn out fine. At that point, it became clear that Padre needed to learn some English if he were going to be living in this country, and I began to teach him since foreign languages are one of my specialties. The timing was fortuitous because the bishop about then decided that Padre had been here long enough to start offering the English masses. Immediately, our "textbooks" for English classes became the English-language Bible and online audio homilies (for developing listening skills). Padre learned to speak English, and eventually I met his mother who claims I am the daughter she never had (she had 7 sons, three of whom became priests). Indeed, we became family. Moreover, all those English classes? I believe that they benefited me more than Padre for I had a private 3-hour tutorial on Catholicism three nights a week as I helped Padre put into English the various thoughts he wanted to express in his homilies. In practicing English, we would get into extended discussions of concepts, and because Padre Julio is as spiritually oriented as Fr. Barry, I was able to share my spiritual experiences very deeply with him, especially those that contained the grammar and vocabulary components of the topic if the day. While others worried about our granddaughter's disassembled condition and expressed sympathy, Padre Julio's immediate response was very different: "You are blessed!" He definitely understands our family and God's role in our lives!

There have been other priests, of course, along my so-far rather short journey of faith. I assume those relationships are more typical although, not being a cradle Catholic, I have no idea what a typical relationship with a priest is supposed to be. I just know that I deeply love Fr. Barry, Fr. Ed, and Padre Julio, and I cannot imagine my life without them. They have so thoroughly enriched my life that I don't know what to say other than "Thank you, God, for spoiling me!"

Please tell me, especially those of you who are long-term Catholics, what role priests have played in your life. How important have they been to you in decision-making, spiritual development, and maintaining sanity in a crazy world? How often do you end up thanking God that they are in your life?