On Thanksgiving morning Maggie
laid down on the living room floor and died. She was
old and had been sick for a while, the kind of "dog
sick" that you know to not even go to the vet for
tests lest you get a 500.00-2,500.00 guilt trip.
While the kids finished loading the car with turkey,
dressing and pies to head north to my parent's house,
I dug a hole and buried my wife's favorite dog. I
read Psalm 103 of Vespers over her grave. That is
our family tradition for pet funerals. "What Thou
givest them they gather, Thou openst Thy hand, they
are filled with goodness. Thou hidest Thy face, they
are troubled, Thou takest away their breath and they
return to their dust. Thou sendest forth Thy Spirit
and they are created and Thou renewest the face of
the earth..."
We left a ham and some extra dressing at home for
Maw and her son for their Thanksgiving. Maw wouldn't
dream of invading our family time as a stranger to
my parents. Maw is an old, old friend from our
former church. Maw let me stay at her house for a
few weeks when I got divorced and was excommunicated
from our church. I shot her dog for her in her back
yard and buried him when she couldn't afford to have
him put to sleep. They called us when they were
evicted from their apartment and were going to stay
with us for 3-4 days until they got their own place.
That was 5 months ago now. Maw is sixty five and
looks like 90. Her face is like a powdered walnut,
deeply lined from years of two packs a day and a
life of bad relationships and mentally ill kids. She
lives from crisis to crisis.
She has been on disability for 20 years and is
medically addicted to morphine due to a botched back
surgery after she broke it lifting a patient when
she was a nurse. Her son is her only child who will
help her. He is bipolar and can't afford his
medication unless he has a job with insurance and
has a hard time getting a job without his meds. He
spent two months in our basement wailing. He
stabilized and found a job recently but lost it when
he had a manic episode on the job and had to be
taken to an emergency room. We are still trying to
find a place for Maw to live independently that she
can afford on 900.00 a month disability. She sleeps
on our couch because all the guest rooms are in our
basement and she can't navigate stairs. She is
constitutionally guilt driven and knows she is an
imposition. She spends her days while we are at work
cleaning house, doing our laundry and dishes and has
dinner ready when we get home. Thank God she's a
good cook. We are grateful for her help and don't
try to stop her. Her worst nightmare is to feel
useless and like a charity case.
I spent
Christmas Eve with my daughter and grand baby at
Superior Court and the Sheriff's Department taking
out an order of protection against her boyfriend.
The very short story is, it took over a year for her
to see what I saw in him within a couple weeks. My
daughter says she got the "only learn the hard way"
genes from me. Probably so. But he is gone and out
of my daughter's life now and I didn't have to do
anything I'd have to do time for. Speaking of the
grand baby, this is my pride and joy... Sorry,
pregnant people, she has used up all the "cute" in
the universe.
In spite of
another stellar performance review at my school
job, I spent most of my Christmas break working
on applying for a job with a Fortune 500 company. I
also painted a friend's house for him. I survived
four interviews at the Company. I also survived
climbing ladders and hauling materials for 4 days
with my semi-fresh knee replacement. By the end of
my Christmas break I knew I couldn't punch a time
card for someone else and move human data around on
an Excel spreadsheet again for a living. Thirty
years of self-employment was calling me back, even
if it hurt. That, and I made two weeks' school
take-home pay in four days doing construction, even
at a "friend and family discount price".
After looking at my student's fall semester grades
and the upcoming semester schedule for standardized
testing, I also knew I couldn't continue to hold the
educational flaming hoops and crack the whip for my
students anymore.
After two years as a "guidance counselor" I learned
that Education is an industry. It is not about "no
child left behind". Education is really about "no
federal dollar left behind". Yes, there are sincere
people who love to teach and have the best interest
of the students in mind. God bless 'em. Most of the
teachers I know are fundamentally discouraged with
the state of American education. The bottom line is
that the students are now the product that is being
sold to the State and Federal education departments
for money. Standardized test scores, graduation and
drop out rates and attendance hours are the
benchmarks for payment. The thing no one wants to
address in the latter days of our American
self-image culture is this: No, not EVERYONE can be
ANYTHING if they just try hard enough. The fact of
the matter is there are kids who cannot do upper
level algebra and physics and pass a standardized
test for rocket science and English in order to
graduate from high school. The fact of the matter
is, some kids might do better in a trade track that
doesn't require them to know pre-calculus or how to
write a coherent essay according to Six Traits
Writing.
I came to the conclusion that I was a salesman for a
product I didn't believe in once I got immersed in
it. Yes, I had bright and wonderful kids and
parents, but I also had kids who I knew were being
screwed by the system and I had no alternatives to
offer them that would not negatively impact my
performance review, our school's State rating and
ultimately our school charter and funding.
So, a couple days before I returned from Christmas
break I emailed about 30 of my old clients and told
them I was considering returning to construction and
asked if they had any projects they needed done,
The response was overwhelming. I had several
months' of work lined up immediately.
When I returned to school after the Christmas break,
I knocked on my Principal's office door and said,
"Do you have a few minutes?" She said, "Only if you
aren't going to resign." I turned and walked away
and she said, "Oh, no... come on in." It was hard to
leave the job. I told her it would be much easier
if I was pissed at someone or hated the people I
worked with, but the fact of the matter was, I loved
my co-workers and the essentials of the job: I
loved my students and families. I told her the
financial bottom line was we were going deeper and
deeper in debt and I needed to make more money,
whether it was with the Fortune 500 job or
construction. It wasn't worth getting into the
philosophical education issues. Discussing
philosophical issues is a luxury that people can
engage in if they aren't starving.
I wanted to leave without anyone knowing I had
resigned, just slip out the back door on a Friday
afternoon. I hate "goodbyes" from my years as a
Navy brat and moving every 2-3 years as a kid. But,
there was too much stuff to turn over to other
people to keep it a secret. I did manage to avoid an
office going away party and hugged a few special
folks before I left.
I've been back at construction now for two weeks and
have more work than I can do if I worked 16 hours a
day, seven days a week. The trick now is juggling
work, not finding work.
I've been attending Church services again somewhat
regularly for the past few months. I didn't attend
for over a year, now I pretty much go to services
and leave. I'm not privy to any inner workings, I
don't attend parish meetings or ask about
leaderships' decisions. I help chant services and
sing tenor if needed, but mainly I pick up my grand
baby from our daughter on Sunday mornings because
she has to work. So my main job is I take the grand
baby to Church. It is probably the most important
thing I've done at church since I've been a
Christian.
Over Christmas our rescue Rottie started looking
lethargic. We took her to the vet and ran a bunch
of expensive tests which, of course, were
inconclusive. They put her on some antibiotics etc.
She didn't improve so we took her to another vet who
did an X-ray. She had several masses on her spleen
and other internal issues. They said she wouldn't
make it through the weekend. Toward the end she
couldn't get up. I came home from work and she
couldn't lift her head, but her stubby tail wiggled
when she saw me. She lived another 3 days.
"A
dog is better than I, because a dog loves and does
not judge." (Abba Xanthios) I look forward
to reuniting with all of our dogs that are buried in
our back yard. They will sit at the right and left
hand of God before I will.
I was painting a house this week. An old Mexican
couple were cleaning for a couple days. They spoke
enough English and I spoke enough Spanish to get by.
The husband asked me, "Are you Christian?" I said
yes. He said, "...my spirit told me so." I left
the job that evening and the owner called me and
said "How far away are you? My (seven year old)
daughter made you a Valentine and is crying because
you left before she could give it to you." I turned
around and went back for my Valentine.
I remember forty years ago a young man asked me, "How
can I be like Jesus?" and I told him, "be the kind
of person who, when you walk into town, children run
to you." I don't know why I said that, but I like
it still and always hoped to be that person.
All in all I
suppose if you have a chance to keep someone from
sleeping behind a dumpster, your presence transcends
language and dogs, and if children like you, what
more can you wish for in life?