Intimate News



–after Borges


I was walking in the garment district of Manhattan, making my way down the
shady side of the street. I was careful in the way of all blind people
since I couldn¹t tell the pavement from the sky, couldn¹t find the bottoms
of puddles.


Being blind is, finally, to become a kind of working angel: life graces your
desires but you must keep moving.


Then my guide dog walked me around a dress maker¹s dummy. I thought how
the womanly torso and the darkened man were both pared to their essence:
she swayed in wind and traffic, I dipped in the weighted seconds.


Androgynous couple, we respectively saved reality¹s honor.

On Being Avuncular

By Angel Lemke

“[I]f having grandparents means perceiving your parents as somebody’s children, then having aunts and uncles, even the most conventional of aunts and uncles, means perceiving your parents as somebody’s sibs–not, that is, as alternately abject and omnipotent links in a chain of compulsion and replication that leads inevitably to you; but rather as elements in a varied, contingent, recalcitrant but re-forming seriality, as people who demonstrably could have turned out differently–indeed as people who, in the differing, refractive relations among their own generation, can be seen already to have done so.

—Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick

“Tales of the Avunculate: Queer Tutelage in The Importance of Being Earnest


For a host of reasons outside the scope of this post, I spent very little time with my biological aunts and uncles during my childhood. Still, there were other important adults in my life besides the biggest influences of my mother, grandmother, and teachers. This group was pretty much exclusively composed of my mother’s friends.

I guess it shouldn’t come as such a surprise that when my relationship with my mother turned sour, they all disappeared. They were, after all, “hers.” But as I was growing up, they were occasional babysitters and frequent dinner companions; many of them attended my high school graduation; some of them sent me little care packages when I was away at college. I had conversations with all of them that did not involve my mother. I thought they were at least a little bit “mine,” too. But other than our now-routine Facebook birthday wishes, I haven’t heard a word—not one word—from the adults who peopled my childhood. Were it not for my grandmother and maternal aunt, I would now have absolutely no connection to the adults around whom I grew up. In freeing myself from one toxic influence, I lost a whole generation of elders.


I’ve become avuncular myself over the past couple years, as I’ve reached the age when many of my peers are parenting young children, and as I’ve consciously sought out more connections with kids, given that the odds of my parenting my own children are steadily declining with each passing day. No matter how dear their parents may be to me, I can’t imagine that if I learned, thirty years from now, that one of them was no longer on speaking terms with her mother, or that one of them was in financial distress after an emergency spinal surgery and two years of unemployment, I wouldn’t at least drop a note to say, “Geez, kid. How ya holdin’ up?”


One friend of my mother’s has checked in with me over the past six months; she first met me as an adult, just a couple years ago. I have to wonder if this doesn’t have something to do with it, that in her recollection, I was always an adult (read: person). For everyone else, I am “Jean Ann’s kid.”


I don’t know why, but that seems to make me somehow none of their business.

The other day, I recalled sitting on my grandmother’s front porch as a young adult, arguing with my mother about her controlling ways; one of her friends was there, too, a friend who had long been my favorite and who I thought—and still think—to be one of the most reasonable adults I’d ever known. I appealed to her to support my claim that my mother was being manipulative, offering example after example of ways she’d constrained or attempted to constrain my passage into adulthood. She listened and nodded and even tried to recast what I said in terms that my mother could hear, but she never, ever said, “No, Jean Ann. You’re just wrong. I disagree with how you’re treating this kid.” Later, when I tr
ied to recall the support sh
e had offered, my mother said, “I asked her about it later, if she thought you were right, and she said she didn’t understand what you were so upset about.”


There’s a very good chance that my mother’s representation of that latter conversation is distorted, that the friend in question chose to exercise careful equivocation rather than selling me out wholesale, but I felt then, and feel that much more now, the absence of another adult saying, “No, this is wrong.”


An old friend of my generation, remarking on the breakdown of my relationship with my mother, said, “Well, it seemed like you and your mom were always fighting, but this is different.” The truth is, it wasn’t; the only real difference was my willingness to stop thinking that she could be convinced by me, by her friends, by the passing of time, to treat me differently, to treat me as a person rather than as a possession. It had been going on my entire life. And in greater and lesser ways, all of the adults in our world knew it. I wish one of them had done more, and done it before I was grown.

bell hooks writes, “Childrearing is a responsibility that can be shared with other childrearers, with people who do not live with children. This form of parenting is revolutionary in this society because it takes place in opposition to the idea that parents, especially mothers, should be the only childrearers.” Claudia Card builds on hooks to argue that such “revolutionary parenting” is “an alternative to mothering as a social institution.”


Many feminists approach the institution of motherhood in terms of injustice toward women, their “second shift” duties and such; what hooks and Card foreground is the injustice done to children when the responsibility for their well-being is vested in one other human being—or at best, two. As the title character of About a Boy says, “two people isn’t enough.” With more than two, as in that film, the effects of my mother’s mental illness on me would have been drastically mitigated. If only because I might have felt less alone.


I usually think of my own role as an other-adult in the lives of the children I love as something like Sedgwick’s formulation above, as one of the many people they can choose to use or not use as a model, as offering them the lesson that there are options other than replicating your parents, and that you don’t have to choose one or the other, but can sample from all. Most of the kids I see regularly have pretty good parents, all things considered, so I don’t imagine they need me as their protector against parental injustice. Most of the kids I see regularly have parents that seek out other opinions about the best way to raise their kids, who actively provide their kids with a range of adult role models.

Still, one of the lessons of this last year is undoubtedly about being a better elder than many of the ones I’ve known. And for me, that has to mean that my avuncular responsibilities must begin and end in a recognition of my nieces and nephews as people rather than as someone else’s kids. People for whom I will stand up, even, if need be, against their parents. If only so that they learn it’s an option, that there are people who will stand up. If only so that that, whatever other options they take from this other-adult, they know that this is the kind of people I hope they all become.



About the author: Angel Lemke has always relied on the kindness of strangers, which seems to work out a lot better than you’d expect.

Carl Perkins & Friends

Carl Perkins,Blue Suede Shoes - A Rockabilly Session,UK,DIGITAL VERSATILE DISC,365326

Alright, I defy you to feel low and rotten while listening to this album, “a Rockabilly Session” featuring Carl Perkins, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, Roseanne Cash, Dave Edmunds, and, oh yeah, Eric Clapton. I became aware of this amazing cd only recently and I’m sorry for all the lost time when I could have been rocking to it. But the gods and goddesses of rock & roll found me praise be.

Ending the "R" Word

Full article at:

http://www.InclusionDaily.com

Spread The Word To End ‘R-Word’ Day Gains Supporters, Momentum
(KIMT)
March 7, 2012

MASON CITY, IOWA– [Excerpt] There’s a new campaign that is picking up speed. It’s called “Spread the Word to End the Word”.

It’s an on-going effort that is educating people on how hurtful the words “retard” or “retarded” can be, and that message is being heard all around the nation. We caught up with some folks locally who are happy to see the “R” word go away.

“It makes you sick.”
“It’s not really that nice to call people that.”
“It’s hurtful when people hear that.”

The reactions to the word “retarded” are pretty strong with this group.

Lisa Yunek, whose daughter Alecia has Down syndrome said, “no one ever means anything good when they say you are a retard.”

That’s because they have all had some sort of personal experience with it

Entire article:
Eliminating The “R” Word
http://tinyurl.com/ide0307121b
Related:
Special Olympics works to end ‘r-word’ (Notre Dame Observer)

http://tinyurl.com/ide0307121a
Quinnipiac aims to spread respect (Quinnipiac Chronicle)
http://tinyurl.com/ide0307121c
Colorado State fraternity spreads the word to end the word (Collegian)
http://tinyurl.com/ide0307121d
Editorial: Evaluate Your Language, No R-Word (The Ram Online)
http://tinyurl.com/ide0307121e
Spread the Word to End the Word strives to end derogatory usage of ‘retard(ed)’ (Daily Illini)
http://tinyurl.com/ide0307121f
Spread the Word to End the Word
http://www.r-word.org

Man and Guide Dog, Streets of New York

Inside a man is a man is a man. Inside his dog is a dog is a dog. They go walking with their six legs, four eyes, two hearts two hearts. Together they lose their grip on customary words words. Life fulfilled, careful exercise of duties. Let go. Together, man and dog are two hidden treasures, opened, side by side, intimate and fast in the world the world.

 

Lily's Latin Grammar and Rick Santorum

It is customary to learn old tricks and dead languages the hard way. It’s customary to know something about argument as an art if you want to succeed. Charlatans will fool you if you don’t know what’s being said. Propria quae maribus, baby!

When I saw Rick Santorum’s announcement that he was pumping iron in a Steubenville, Ohio high school weight room I saw that synecdoche and pathos are alive and well but just so, the body politic, especially that of the GOP may now be too dumb to vote. Really, Mr. Santorum? Lifting a dumbbell in an impoverished school takes the place of a substantive jobs and education plan?

Given how tawdry and soulless this campaign has been its easy to overlook this moment of rhetorical stenosis.

Blogging on Amtrak

The guy across the aisle has driven my wife mad. He’s typing on his laptop like a man fighting with the buttons on an elevator–he’s pushing every key with a kind of life vs. death forcefulness. Connie has fled to the next car, so unbearable is this dude’s telegraphic desperation. The problem is that now I’m aware of it. And the dude, who is now my dude, also has some dread form of sinusitis so he makes a sporadic noise like a whale at an arctic breathing hole. Meantime the prevailing temperature in the rail car is around 80 degrees. You can smell the deodorant of the other passengers. The only bright spot is that there’s no wailing baby in this car. Not that I’m against wailing babies–they have human rights that are equal to everyone else’s and by God I’m no 1% snob. Hell, I don’t even mind smelling other people’s deodorant, it’s better than riding a train in some parts of Europe. You know what I mean…

I knew a guy in college who had the same kind of sinus squeak as the dude with the computer. The guy in college wound up having his own floor in the library.

Don't Miss Andrea Scarpino in NYC

Hello Friends,

We received the following from Andrea. Dust off your saddle shies and get out the door!

 

SK

 

 

I’m jaunting to New York City this week for a wonderful series of poetry readings! Well, I’m only doing two of the readings, but I’m helping with the others and they are going to be fantastic. I hope to see you and your friends!

 

First, my readings:

 

Friday, March 9 at 7pm, Bluestockings Cafe: The Politics and Poetry of Clean Water. This is going to be FANTASTIC; I’m reading and discussing with Florencia Ramirez, who is also writing a book on clean water issues. As she said, it’s going to be a great night for clean water. Please join us! Here’s a link: http://bluestockings.com/events/

 

Sunday, March 11 at 7pm, Bowery Poetry Club. I’m going to be reading with three other Red Hen Press authors and if you know anything about Red Hen Press, you know they don’t mess around. I overheard someone this week in Chicago say, “Man, Red Hen is taking over Los Angeles!” And they weren’t wrong. You’re going to want to come to this baby. Here’s a link: http://www.bowerypoetry.com/?#March_11

 

And now, the readings I’m helping with:

 

Thursday, March 8 at 6pm, Cornelia Street Cafe.

 

Saturday, March 20th at 4:30pm, Poets House.

 

Here is a link: http://redhen.org/events/rhp-in-new-york/

 

Seriously, can you believe what’s happening this week in New York City? This is going to be one amazing long weekend of beautiful words. Do please join us–and do please bring your friends!