On Being Married to Big Foot

Alright.  I admit it.  I married my wife because she has big feet.

Now before you get the wrong idea (Fetishism? Instep Envy?) allow me to add the following facts about Connie to the minimalist memoir she has so graciously provided below.

She was a guide dog trainer in the New York metro area for years.  The Bronx. The subway system.  Helping dogs and blind people.  Connie you see can fill a pair of big shoes.

She is the one who on vacation in foreign countries goes parasailing.  I just keep track of the beach chairs.  Know what I mean?

She’s the one who cheerfully talks to poets, whether they’re sober or not, even though she grew up smart and yes, understood early that High School English is the tar pit of mentation.    

She can clean dog hair off the kitchen floor in less than two minutes with her feet.  This is a kind of domestic dancing that even the ancient and labyrinthine Gods and Goddesses of Knossos would take their hats off to, but of course they didn’t have hats, which is probably why they died out if you stop and think about it.

She can put up with my facial ticks.  Briefly: I have this unfortunate tendency to pull in my lips so that they seem to disappear.  I do this unconsciously.  Unfortunately the habit makes me look like a very old
man who has swallowed his false teeth.  If you can see, and if you live with someone who does this all the time, well, you must have solar patience.  Imagine living with the old farmer from the famous Grant Wood painting.  Of course I like to think that my jokes and extemporaneous songs are better than those offered up by Grant Wood’s farmer.  Just look at Mrs. Farmer.  And although Connie will pretend otherwise, I can actually make her laugh.  Why just last night, oh, never mind…

Connie can drive a barge.  Yep.  She once drove a fully loaded barge across Lake Winnipesaukee on the 4th of July when the famous lake was awash with amateur drunks and weekend sailors.  She is a tiny woman.  She looked a little like Olive Oyl at the helm of Merrill Fay’s borrowed industrial barge.  And that’s another story: Merrill is the owner and proprietor of Fay’s Boat Yard in Gilford, New Hampshire and he’s a real Yankee, and trust me, he doesn’t let just anybody borrow his barge.  Trust me.   

I think this is number 8: she can ring handbells in churches and make real music. Even Olive Oyl can’t do that.

S.K. 

Goosed.

Blue Girl has thrown me a curve ball. 

She KNOWS my husband is the writer in the family.  She KNOWS he’s the clever, witty one.  The one with the extensive vocabulary. The one who can talk a blue streak about anything, anywhere, anytime.  The one who can make people laugh and cry at the same time while speaking at his own father’s memorial service.  The one who can make a large conference room full of people join him in singing "Oh I wish I were an Oscar Mayer Weiner". 

So what does Blue Girl do?  She gooses me.  Not Steve.  ME.  So now I’m supposed to write 8 facts about myself and I’m supposed to do it after she has already written hers.  Talk about a hard act to follow.  Steve could do this in twenty minutes.  Me?  Who knows how long this will take.

Well now, so there you have it.  My first fact about myself…

NUMBER 1:  I’m intimidated by Blue Girl’s writing.  She’s clever.  She’s witty.  She has an extensive vocabulary.  Boy can she make me laugh.  Oh, and yesterday I learned she sings.  At weddings.  Yet another reason to be intimidated.  Now you know why I’m dreading this exercise.  But I’ll do it anyway BG – for you.

Let’s see now.  There’s so much I could tell you but if I did it all at once you wouldn’t bother to revisit this blog.  We like visitors. 

OK.  I confess:

NUMBER 2:  I lied to my mother.  My brother, my sister, and I were a captive audience in the back seat of the car.  She wanted to know:

a) how did the Hustler magazine make its way into the house?    and

b) what happened to it? 

We all knew my brother brought it into the house.  Duhhh.  He and his cronies – all boy scouts supposed to be setting a good example by the way.  Impostors.  I stumbled on this magazine completely by accident.  I was young.  I was naive.  I was NOT going to get caught blushing over the images on those pages.  I stole the magazine from my brother’s room so as to gawk behind my own locked door.  I’m telling you – at the age I was at, there was just too much *information* on those pages if you know what I mean.  After denying I knew anything about this magazine to my mother, repeatedly,  I snuck it back in to my brother’s room.  Who did I think I was fooling?

NUMBER 3:  Asparagus makes my urine smell shall we say, um, unusual.  In high school I had a crush on my AP Biology teacher.  We were studying genetics and fruit flies and somehow he brought up the fact there is a recessive gene that makes some people’s urine "smell funny" after eating asparagus.  So THAT explained it!  Mr. U  went on to explain that he had heard of this but knew of no one…does anyone here…?  I never would have raised my hand except for the fact I adored the man.  The next thing I knew I had agreed to pee into a bottle for him.  I agreed to this in front of the entire class, dedicated scientist I thought I would one day be.  The peeing I would do In the privacy of my own home of course.  My mother cooked asparagus for dinner.  I peed.  I stored the sample in the fridge that night.  Apparently that was a mistake.  Mr. U did the sniff test the next day and was unable to detect anything unusual.  Oh how humiliating.  I thought I had lost all credibility.  I did get an A+ on my final that year however.

Three down, five more to go…

NUMBER 4:  Now let me tell you about my AP English class.  I hated it.  And I didn’t like Ms. V much either.  So when it came time to study for my senior finals, I made the conscious decision to focus on the biology, and eliminate the English altogether.  I hate to say this,  I am married to an English professor after all, but Shakespeare does nothing for meI can’t help it – I do not care who said what in which scene, in which act, in which play Shakespeare wrote.  I just don’t.  (Lance, you won’t think less of me now will you?)  So, I did the math and I knew that my grades in the class were high enough that I could afford to fail the final.  And fail it I did.  I didn’t know for sure until Ms. V informed me of that fact – at a graduation party in the President’s house on the Vassar College campus.  (The president’s daughter was in my class.)  I just smiled.  I still had a low 80 something as a final grade in the class and I knew it.

NUMBER 5:  My daughter had me beheaded in a past life.  If you believe Marsha, Tara’s preschool teacher that is.  One day we were standing in the parking lot talking about Tara’s defiant, independent streak when Marsha, who is a firm believer in reincarnation said: "I think Tara must have had you beheaded in a past life.  I think she was a princess and you were her servant.  A teacher actually.  You must have pissed her off royally, ha-ha and as a consequence she arranged to have your head lopped off.  Now, in this life, she’s paying for it.  It’s karma.  In THIS life you’re the one in charge; she doesn’t like it one bit and she’s letting you know it."

I was genuinely amused.  But gosh darn it – it’s the best explanation I can come up with for my daughter’s very strong-willed tendencies.  (For the record, Tara is about to turn 21 and she’s a lovely, Phi Beta Kappa student at the U of S Carolina.  I’m very proud of her.)

NUMBER 6:  Oprah didn’t impress me much.  Steve was one of several guests on the Oprah Winfrey Show back in ’98 when his book Planet of the Blind came out.  It was clear by her trivial questions she hadn’t read his book.  How disappointing.  She could have made us millions had she read and recommended the book!  I sat in the audience with Steve’s parents.  I kid you not – every time she spoke and new she was on camera she looked interested and engaged.  When she knew the camera was on the guest, as he or she answered her questions, she busied herself by looking around at members of the audience.  I remember there was a lady with a big floppy hat that frequently managed to catch her attention.  During "commercial break" she had almost nothing to say to her guests.  I thought she was dare I say it (?) – rude.  Oprah, you do good work what with your Angel Network and all your charities I’ll grant you that.  But geez.  Treat your guests with a little more respect won’t you?   Look at them when they are talking to you whether they can see you do so or not.

NUMBER 7:  I have big feet.  I’m 5’2" tall and wear a size 8 shoe.  My father has told me more than once that when I was born the doctor held me up and said "wow, she has big feet!"  Don’t tell anyone please.

NUMBER 8:  Fleas find me particularly delicious.  Years ago I went to visit a friend in Virginia Beach.  She was single and lived in a little apartment just several blocks from the beach.  My son Ross was just a few months old.  I was sitting on her sofa breastfeeding my baby when I noticed fleas, many fleas, jumping all over my lap, my abdomen and yes, my boobs.  My friend was mortified as was I (and as she would be reading this post)!  "Oh my gosh.  I’m so sorry.  I didn’t even know I had fleas in the apartment…I’ve never been bitten…"  I assured her it was "OK".  At least they didn’t appear to be in the bed I had slept in the night before.  Well that night they found me.  I had flea bites up and down my back and all over my legs by the next morning.  My friend had not a one.  I’m tellin’ ya.  I am mmmm, mmmm goooood! 

NUMBER 9:  I love my husband.  Why the other day….oh wait.  I’m finished!  I only needed to share 8 things about myself with you.  So there is no need to tell you this!  I’m off the hook!  Whew.

Now what?  Now I have to "goose" 8 more people?  OK.  But I have to get ready for company now.  I’ll revisit this and post again later, otherwise I’ll never get Blue Girl off my back I’m sure. 

As my son would say:

"Toodles"!

~ Connie

I hope there are no children lurking…

Saw this link over at Blue Girl’s (the goody two-shoes) and naturally I couldn’t resist.  There are some things we just need to know.  Like how is this blog rated?

Online Dating

This rating was determined based on the presence of the following words:       
       

  • death (2x)
  • dead (1x)

I told Steve not to use those words but did he listen to me? 

"I forgot" is what I’m predicting he’ll say when I ask him about this. 

Now why would I think that?

~ Connie

( Description of "THIS BLOG IS RATED" logo:  Green rectangle with black border.  In capital letters the first line says "THIS BLOG IS RATED", the next two lines are each contained in smaller rectangles centered in the middle of the larger one.  Next line (in caps) says "PG Parental Guidance Suggested" followed by small oval logo of some kind.  Third line (in caps) says "Some Material May not be Suitable for Children".  At the bottom there is one more line  written in green print  inside the black border.  It says (in caps) Click here to find out what your blog is rated")
 

Laughing Burglars

There’s a great short essay by Mark Twain in which he recounts how he made the mistake of putting an electric burglar alarm in his house outside Hartford, Connecticut.  At first he was satisfied that he was up to date and completely in the vanguard of contemporary technology.  Twain loved gadgets.  He was one of the first American writers to use a typewriter and he absolutely adored the telephone.

Accordingly, when the alarm salesmen descended upon him,Twain was easily convinced that he should spend profligately to protect his house from burglars.

I won’t spoil the essay by disclosing what happens for if you haven’t read it you are in for a treat.  But I will say that at a certain point in the essay even the burglars laugh at Twain.

And that, it seems to me, is one of the salient features of true comedy.  In fact, this might be a motto of sorts: "Are the burglars laughing?"

Twain is at his best when he pokes fun at human vanity.  He can have a good laugh at himself just as he can go after the corrupt senators in Washington or the sleazy confidence men who ride up and down the Mississippi.

Now I happen to think it’s funny when I walk into the wrong classroom and start teaching a class.  And I think it’s even funnier when the real professor shows up and I have the raw temerity to tell him he’s late.

My general view is that we are losing the principle of the laughing burglars in America right now.  We have far too many talking heads and politicians running around without the ability to laugh at themselves.

Ann Coulter needs a sense of humor.  God knows Paris Hilton does.  The Vice President?  Well, maybe it’s too late for Dick Cheney.  But I like to think of the Veep having a good laugh at himself.  I have a hard time imagining what might occasion a bit of rueful self-mirth from Dick Cheney.  Maybe he would laugh if he discovered a long train of toilet tissue was stuck to his shoe and following him.  And he would quip: "Look, I really do have a paper trail!  Call the National Archives! Thank the Lord!”

I think it was Camus who said that both death and colors are impossible to describe.  I’ll add Ann Coulter’s sense of humor to that list.

In the meantime, in case you thought I’d forgotten the subject: the advent of the "iPhone" is good news for burglars.  By this I mean street burglars, "pick-pockets" for there’s nothing better than a vast population of pedestrians walking and browsing the internet while simultaneously ignoring their wallets.  As Twain has already pointed out, there’s nothing like a new technology to make a burglar laugh.

S.K.

Disability Blog Carnival # 17: Laughter, The Best Medicine

About a week ago Steve wrote a post titled of Comedy and Disability as a means of introducing this Disability Blog Carnival.  The theme we chose is "Laughter, The Best Medicine", borrowed from the column with the same name in The Reader’s Digest Magazine.   

Simply put, we felt we needed to laugh.  Things had gotten much too serious around the Kuusisto household and we figured we might not be alone in that regard.  No sooner had we made this decision when, coincidentally I think, Penny wrote a post inspired by her young daughter called Call the people at Marvel Comics… posted at Disability Studies, Temple U.  My hubby Steve was delighted by this post and couldn’t help but add his thoughts.  We felt we were off to a good start.  We hope you’ll agree.  More importantly, we hope you find reason to laugh.  We sure have thanks to all these wonderful contributions…

Continue reading “Disability Blog Carnival # 17: Laughter, The Best Medicine”

[with]tv: "a television channel of, by, and for people with disabilities…and everyone else."

I’ve written about this before in a post called Must See TV.  I’m pleased to do so again in support of [with]tv because folks, this is information that needs to be shared.  It’s simple really.  Steve and I want to do what we can to help spread the word about this "television channel of, by, and for people with disabilities…and everyone else" currently under development.  We have no doubt that once YOU spend just a few minutes researching [with]tv links you will be eager to do the same.  This is a project  just exploding with potential and we, as in all of us, have an opportunity to play a role in its development and success.  Just take a look at this FAQ page for starters…

See what I mean? 

Let’s get started shall we?

Here is a link to this brand new blog as well as a request to sign this guest book as a show of support.  (Tell ’em the Kuusisto’s sent you!)  But there is more to be done.  We encourage you to continue following links to learn more. 

Join us in this effort won’t you?  Help us spread the word…

Happy Blogging!

~ Connie

What is Poetry?

What is Poetry?

A friend relates that she once asked an English professor "What is poetry?" with the additional disclosure that at least in that class, the answer was not forthcoming. 

Most of us suspect that poetry can’t be defined.  This is why we continue to ask the question.  We are all similar to children who want the answer to something ineffable.

Walt Whitman saw that while we can’t define a poem or a blade of grass, we have choices about how to live and that these choices are essential to the work of intelligence.  Poetry is the art of consciousness and it is conveyed in language that celebrates the astonishing mysteries of our physical and spiritual curiosity.  I do not know of a better definition of poetry as a life force than these justly famous lines from "Leaves of Grass":

A child said What is the grass? fetching it to me with full hands;
How could I answer the child? I do not know what it is any more than he.

I guess it must be the flag of my disposition, out of hopeful green stuff woven.

Or I guess it is the handkerchief of the Lord,
A scented gift and remembrancer designedly dropt,
Bearing the owner’s name someway in the corners, that we may see and remark, and say Whose?

Or I guess the grass is itself a child, the produced babe of the vegetation.

Or I guess it is a uniform hieroglyphic,
And it means, Sprouting alike in broad zones and narrow zones,
Growing among black folks as among white,
Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressman, Cuff, I give them the same, I receive them the same.

And now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves.

Tenderly will I use you curling grass,
It may be you transpire from the breasts of young men,
It may be if I had known them I would have loved them,
It may be you are from old people, or from offspring taken soon out of their mothers’ laps,
And here you are the mothers’ laps.

This grass is very dark to be from the white heads of old mothers,
Darker than the colorless beards of old men,
Dark to come from under the faint red roofs of mouths.

O I perceive after all so many uttering tongues,
And I perceive they do not come from the roofs of mouths for nothing.

I wish I could translate the hints about the dead young men and women,
And the hints about old men and mothers, and the offspring taken soon out of their laps.

What do you think has become of the young and old men?
And what do you think has become of the women and children?

They are alive and well somewhere,
The smallest sprout shows there is really no death,
And if ever there was it led forward life, and does not wait at the end to arrest it,
And ceas’d the moment life appear’d.

All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses,
And to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier

A Great Summer Evening

Last night Connie and I had the opportunity to attend the opening ceremonies of the Ohio Special Olympics as guests of speaker and songwriter Eric Gnezda who wrote the Special Olympics anthem "Everybody Wins".  The event is being hosted this weekend at the Jesse Owens Track and Field Stadium on the campus of The Ohio State University.

Now, truthfully, (ever Moi?) I don’t particularly like the term "special" whether it’s used for education, sports, or an advertising pitch for laundry detergent, and I long for the day when people who happen to be disabled are allowed their natural differences without sentimentality.  We need to go deeper with our descriptions of disabled people.  I can’t imagine an Ohio State football player doing what some of the Special Olympics athletes can do.  I mean, imagine that football player being asked to wear restraints and bags of bird shot around his ankles while running.  There has to be a better word than "special"?  How about "extra stamina" just for starters?

But I digress.

If you need to be reminded why America is a great country think about this:

We sat last night in a stadium named for an African-American athlete (and a "Buckeye") who showed up Hitler at the ’36 Olympics.  And the Olympic flame was carried across Ohio by relay teams of police officers and those same officers brought the torch into the ceremonies with a full motorcycle and helicopter escort. Those officers then handed the flame to the disabled athletes who in turn lit the cauldron.

Now that’s America.

Whenever you are weighed down by the daily news and your optimism index is drained, just remember that in the USA our police forces celebrate the physically challenged because they are truly our neighbors and friends.

I know we have lots of problems.

But as Senator Clinton might say, "when we think like a village, everybody wins."

I got all choked up last night.

Take that Hitler!

Thank you Eric for bringing us along.

Even my guide dog Vidal got a little choked up.  Perhaps in his case this had to do with the fact that I wouldn’t let him eat popcorn under the stadium seats?

S.K.

P.S.  Brian has posted a couple of great photos at Columbuser.com