Life in Wartime

 

 

There are bodies that stay home and keep living.

Wisteria and Queen Anne’s Lace

But women & children too.

& countless men at gasoline stations.

Schoolteachers who resemble candles,

Boys with metabolisms geared to the future,

Musicians trying for moon effects…

The sky, which cannot expire, readies itself with clouds

Or a perfect blue

Or halos or the amoebic shapes

Of things to come.

The railway weeds are filled with water.

How do living things carry particles

Of sacrifice?  Why are gods talking in the corn ?

Enough to feel the future underfoot.

Someone is crying three houses down.

Many are gone or are going. 

 

SK

 

Now see folk singer Nathan Bell performing "Names" at the Blue Bird Cafe:

 

 

 

Insomnia and Richard Nixon

So last night after a beautiful evening with my friends Eric Gnezda and Blue Girl (wherein we deconstructed the mercenary BS of post-industrial capitalism and told dirty jokes) I went to bed in the Ohio State University's luxury hotel (named after a convicted hedge fund trader) and owing to the coffee and the Graeter's ice cream I was wide awake. So I started reading Nixon Land and found myself in the failing lemon groves of baby Nixon's childhood. And page after page baby Nixon experiences humiliation after humiliation. He can't go to Harvard because his family has no dough; he goes to Whittier College and the "swells" treat him badly; he goes to Duke University's law school before it's really "Duke" and Wall Street won't hire him. On and on. And all I could think was: "Man! What a mealy mouthed complainer Nixon was! He had no apparent disability, people paid attention to him; he got jobs; he went up the ladder from poverty to acceptance. And yet, poor Dick Nixon was affected by the miserable and soul crushing narrative of American success–so much so, that he never felt successful, merely mean, toxic, and vengeful. I read all night, heaven help me. Baby Nixon. Who hit another boy over the head with a hatchet. Who, as a grown man in the White House, discussed Viet Namese body counts with Henry Kissinger while eating cottage cheese with ketchup. This put me in mind of today's presumptive GOP nominee. Romney is the very type that Nixon hated. And like Nixon, Romney is charmless. Unlike Nixon, Romney hates the poor. One might do better than Nixon, but not with this year's GOP nominee. Where's Gerry Ford when we need him?  

Hey Hey TSA! How Many Kids Have You Scared Today?!

TSA Got Too Aggressive With 7-Year-Old Girl's Pat-Down, Dad Claims
(CBS)
April 25, 2012

NEW YORK, NEW YORK– [Excerpt provided by Inclusion Daily Express] The Transportation Security Administration is once again the subject of national scrutiny, this time after aggressively screening a 7-year-old female passenger with cerebral palsy which caused her family to miss their flight.

The girl, identified as Dina Frank in a report by The Daily, was waiting with her family on Monday to board a flight departing from John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York headed to Florida.

Since Dina walks with the aid of leg braces and crutches, she cannot pass through airport metal detectors, and must instead submit to a pat-down by TSA agents.

Dina, who is also reportedly developmentally disabled, is usually frightened by the procedure. Her family reportedly requests that agents on hand take the time to introduce themselves to her.

However, the agents on duty at the time began to handle her aggressively instead.

Entire article:
Family Misses Flight After TSA Gives Pat-Down To Girl With Cerebral Palsy

http://tinyurl.com/ide0425123a
Related:
Father: TSA Got Aggressive With Cerebral Palsy-Stricken 7-Year-Old From Long Island

http://tinyurl.com/ide0425123b
Dina's Miracle — How Botox Helped Girl With Cerebral Palsy Walk
http://tinyurl.com/ide0425123c

 

Actor Noah Wyle Joins Scores Of ADAPT Activists In Protests, Arrest

Actor Noah Wyle Joins Scores Of ADAPT Activists In Protests, Arrest
(ADAPT)
April 24, 2012

WASHINGTON, DC– [Excerpt provided by Inclusion Daily Express] Noah Wyle the star of Falling Skies and more than 75 ADAPT activists were arrested today demanding Congress fully and wisely fund Medicaid. Most important to ADAPT is to prevent cuts, like in the Rep. Paul Ryan budget, to home and community options that will keep people from being forced into expensive institutions and nursing homes.

ADAPT is in Washington DC to reinforce the message from the September rally last year that “My Medicaid Matters.” The largest direct-action disability rights organization in the nation has proposed positive ways to make Medicaid more cost efficient and service effective; however ADAPT must defend the Medicaid program from broad and unwise cuts.

“Cutting or changing Medicaid without thoughtful reform has very real life or death consequences for people with disabilities and people who are aging who live on fixed incomes that are significantly below the poverty level,” said Marsha Katz of Montana ADAPT. “Washington should be putting our tax dollars into cost-saving community based services, not costly nursing homes and institutions. The time has come to get real about how we spend Medicaid dollars. Medicaid really does matter.”

Hundreds of ADAPT members lined up in color groups this morning and headed out at 9 a.m. Tim Sullivan, Noah Wyle and Mike Oxford lead the march up to the Canon House Office Building. ADAPT marched “loud and proud” up Capitol Hill and avoided the rain and wind that the group had faced yesterday when ADAPT held its Fun*Run for Disability Rights in Upper Senate Park.

Entire article:
Noah Wyle busted chanting “My Medicaid Matters!”
http://www.adapt.org/freeourpeople/2012/report03.php
Related:
Noah Wyle arrested at protest in Washington (Reuters)
http://tinyurl.com/ide04241201b
Capitol Police arrest 76 protestors, including actor Noah Wyle (The Hill)
http://tinyurl.com/ide04241201c
Disability Rights Group Protests Medicaid Cuts, More Than 100 Arrested (Democracy Now)
http://tinyurl.com/ide04241201d
HUD Secretary Donovan visits ADAPT to affirm commitment to affordable, accessible, integrated housing
http://www.dimenet.com/hotnews/archive.php?mode=A&id=7496;&sort=D

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Veterans Need More Help

From today's New York Times:

 

"The Department of Veterans Affairs says it plans to hire 1,900 psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, clinicians and clerical employees, a 10 percent increase in its mental health staff. That’s welcome progress for a system that is struggling to meet the needs of veterans. But there are questions about whether it will be enough — and whether the department is truly facing up to its problems."

 

See full editorial:

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/25/opinion/does-the-va-get-it.html?_r=1&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

Living with Cats

By Andrea Scarpino

I’m not naturally a cat person. I grew up with an 100lb Standard Poodle names Jacques who was one of the smartest dogs I’ve ever met. When he would eat something he knew he wasn’t supposed to eat, he would punish himself by lying down on the bathroom mat and staying there—in the bathroom—until we had forgiven him. When it was time for me to come home from school, he would wait at the backdoor until my mother opened it, and then run through the neighbors’ backyards to meet me at the bus stop. One of my best childhood memories is of Jacques bounding through knee-deep snow as he ran to meet me.

But in college, when I missed having a pet, the apartment in which I lived only allowed cats. I’d never spent much time with cats, but I figured I would give it a shot. Orion came first, adopted as a tiny kitten from a local shelter, then Lillith, all white and deaf, and finally Kato, named after OJ Simpson’s famous houseguest because Kato also moved in one day and never left.

And while I still miss living with a dog—their glee at spending time with you, how clearly you are their one true everything—I’ve come to appreciate the mysteries of cats. How they mostly couldn’t care if you’re around; they have their own projects, their own secrets. Some people say cats are “independent” but I think it’s more “indifferent”—they have their own lives, and while happy to connect with a human when it suits them, they mostly do their own thing.

A dog will watch you carefully, will learn from your movements and daily routine. Jacques would walk to me from across the room if I made eye contact and nodded my head. Cats are mostly too self-consumed to pay attention to a human’s goings-on. Even though I spend most of each day working in my office with Orion curled up nearby, he rarely shows any interest in actually interacting with me. If I lean down to pet him, that’s great. Otherwise, he’s content thinking his own thoughts.

Right now, our cats’ favorite thing is spending time in Narnia, which is what Zac and I now call one of our lower kitchen cabinets. Kato will stand at the closed cabinet door scratching his paws up and down and meowing incessantly until one of us lets him in. And whenever a cat is missing, it’s a good bet to check Narnia—she’s probably curled up asleep behind the potatoes and flour. Mysterious cat-things happen in Narnia, things no human could understand.

And that’s one of the best things about living with cats: learning to appreciate the mysterious around us, the mysterious inside us; that each of us, no matter how connected to another, holds vast, deep secrets no one else will ever know. Rilke describes something like this when he writes, “But once the realization is accepted that even between the closest people infinite distances exist, a marvelous living side-by-side can grow up for them, if they succeed in loving the expanse between them, which gives them the possibility of always seeing each other as a whole and before an immense sky.”

Living with a dog taught me loyalty, joy, unashamed and overwhelming love. But living with cats has taught me boundaries, give and take. Has taught me to be my own person, even in relationship with others, to always have my own projects. That it’s okay to be a little mean sometimes, to show indifference sometimes. Living with cats has taught me the joy of spending time quietly, even if not alone; of living side-by-side; of embracing “the expanse between” myself and others; of trying to see another “before an immense sky.”

– Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Villanelle in the Morning

When I break apart I really break.

I can’t say what’s coming, this blind day.

I walk to move, sometimes I shake.

Sometimes I laugh, sometimes half the day.

When I break apart I really break.

I don’t recommend it, it’s just my way.

I walk to move, sometimes I shake.

Here’s to blindness, my true brother.

When I break apart I really break.

My brother takes on the coming day,

Sightless, he never looks for cover,

We laugh together, sometimes all the way.

Here’s to blindness, my one brother.

Here’s to laughter, never taking cover.

We walk, sometimes we shake.

When we break apart we really break.

Essay: Russian Tea in Memory

It’s not the real glass of tea, amber colored and tall. Tea of my boyhood. The Strindberg Cafe, Helsinki, end of day, late winter, candles burning, and the imperial drink tossing red on a blind child’s retinas. The real glass of tea vanished long ago. The tea in memory is what’s left, more beautiful day by day, pouring from the samovar of a little boy’s fascinations–tea of beginnings; tea from a wishing well; sunset in his father’s hands.