A hero for our times — Aung San Suu Kyi

The Burmese military regime just released the rightful leader of Burma from 20 years of on-and-off house arrest. 

She has committed her life to democracy in the country renamed as Myanmar by the military so much so that she didn’t see her dying husband in London for fear that if she left her homeland she would not be allowed back.

She is a hero by the example of her life and should not be measured by whether or not she brings democracy to Burma.  And no one knows what democracy means to a people under totalitarian rule for at least two generations.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aung_San_Suu_Kyi

I visited Burma on a lark shortly after Aung San Suu Kyi was popularly elected and then prevented from seating her government.  It was a crazy time to be there.  Stupid in retrospect. 

Burma is a beautiful country with natural and archeological treasures.  

The military desecrates these treasures as easily as it does cemeteries, houses of worship and monasteries.  Some of the country is as ungovernable as are parts of Afghanistan, where tribes and drug trade rule.

Unintentionally keeping up with the Kardashians

I went into the local General Nutrition Store to look for topical remedies for peeling cuticles. (Already TOOOOO much information.)

Like most consumers, I left the store with many things — none of them was the purpose of the visit.

Not only did I buy skin emollients which promise youthful transformation in minutes, but I bought whitening stuff for my teeth.  I picked it out and then saw that it was the kind that the Kardashians use.  I paused.  As a point of principal, I should put it back.  But, it is the only non-gunky kind of teeth-whitening I have found in a while.

So, add me — age 46 — to those, reluctantly, keeping up with the Kardashians.  Just the thought alone will make me seek therapy for years.

Reading the fine print

POB (partner of blogger) and I have barely enough time in a day to do anything for us — you all know the drill.  It is a typical day in the life of two working parents.  So we buy everything we can online, at the craziest hours.  POB needed sports bra and I needed underwear.  So, we bought the necessaries on http://www.jockey.com.

All was good.  We received the package with a lovely envelope . . .

that opened to reveal a discount certificate:

But it also revealed that our underwear was packet with extra care by Bob:

EEEEEEEEEEwwwwww.  Bob packed our underwear with EXTRA CARE?  Somethings you just don’t need to know.

Veterans Day

Yesterday was Veteran’s Day.

I was thinking a lot about war and life yesterday.  When I became a mother and god-mother, I understood that if my son (or god-daughters) went to war, I would have to go as well, because anything that is worth my child’s life, is worth my life.  (And the corollary: if you mess with my children, you mess with me.)  Of course, I think it would be hard to take your mom into battle.  But if you know me, you know that the enemy should be really, really, scared.

So, I am grateful to the young men and women who routinely put their lives at risk for the high stakes political chess that our world leaders play with way too much glee and ooky blood lust.

And I am grateful to the veterans of prior wars for their sacrifices.  It is hard to imagine old men and women in their prime, as spies (www.dailymail.co.uk/…/Tragedy-WWII-spy-Eileen-Nearne-escaped-Gestapo-died-alone.html) and soldiers and nurses on the front.  They look so old and enfeebled now.

Today, as I was leaving my office, I saw two old men in wheel chairs.  Using “old” is somewhat euphemistic.  “Ancient” is more appropriate.  Incapacitated and dependent.  When I see random ancient people on the street (as opposed to family), I cannot think of them as once young and vibrant.  I just see strangers with no past and probably not much of a future.

Except the two old men in their wheelchairs with their attendants were wearing war medals and insignias of their military service.  All of a sudden, they were not inconvenient and uncomfortable reminders of my future decrepitude.  I know that when they were young, they were warriors.  Given the number of medals, they were brave warriors.   And they have stories, of war and peace, love and hate, passion and indifference.  Maybe these were good, generous, upright men.  Maybe they weren’t.  Probably, like all of us, they fell somewhere in between.

Two of my uncles were reluctant warriors in WWII.  One was captured and imprisoned.  I know his story, which is powerful (www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/Shapiro.html).  It was hard to know these things about my uncle.  I know it was hard for my uncle to remember, transcend the evil, and have his story known.

It wasn’t until my other uncle, Uncle Al, died about 9 years ago that I learned he fought in the Pacific in WWII.  He never talked about it (or maybe we just didn’t see enough of him to draw him out).  My father thinks he was at Guadalcanal.  Of course, that generation never talked about the war, even when the effects of the war crippled, or at least altered, the trajectories of their post-war lives.

Truth is that I didn’t know this uncle very well.  He was the third of five sons and got short shrift by three generations of our family.  He was a quiet man with great artist skill.  I wonder if I would have interacted with him differently if, while he was alive, I knew to look at his life through the prism of the bloodshed he must have witnessed and (possibly) perpetrated in some of the most grisly fighting of WWII.

Today, we have veterans who need our support.  Whether or not we agree with the politics, their mere willingness to go to war to protect and defend us is heroic.  We owe it to these young men and women to learn their stories, help them re-acclimate to post-war lives, and protect them from their deepest, darkest memories of combat and, yes, deal with the bad things they did “over there”.

It is hard to imagine that some of our warriors and their families have not yet been granted US citizenship.  It is hard to imagine that some of our warriors and their families are treated like second class citizens because of sexual orientation.  It is hard to believe that anyone thinks our returning veterans don’t deserve the very best in medical care and social services.

I just hope that no one has to wonder, when the veterans of our generation are in wheelchairs with attendants, if they will be remembered and honored.  I hope the next generations remember that they once were warriors, protecting and defending us.

Art

My son really wants to go back to the Met this weekend.  If I know my son, it is because of all of the pictures and sculptures of naked women.  I thought about that last night as I was attending an art gallery benefit and auction.

I don’t get art.  But I did see a picture of a nude, so, thanks to my son, I knew it was worth seeing and, well, art.  But most of the stuff I didn’t get. A mixed media work was a paint-on-your-wall with hooks from which dried tea bags were hung.  I couldn’t get past what the art would do to my skim-coated walls.

The auctioneer was a poet, so the auction was led in verse.  The artists were young and funky cool (also funky as in smelly).  One artist wore a crazy snow hat and jeans.

People said things like “[the artist] innovated a new figurative realism and invigorated it against abstractionism”.

I bought something anyway because I liked it, not because I understood it.

Angst

Everyone has “angst” these days.  It is almost as common as indigestion. 

But does everyone really have angst?  Angst is not the same as anxiety or shpilkes or nerves. 

Angst is an existential dilemma — (i) is there a road I must follow to understand who and why I exist in the world and (ii) am I on that right road or the wrong road? 

Of course, you could have a nihilist existential dilemma of (i) how can I prove that there is no road to true understanding and (ii) if there is a such a road, how can I make sure I am another one — the one that leads me irreversibly into an abyss?

Or you could have angst with a side of fries.  It can even sound Jungian if you order it this way: “angst mit fries, bitte”.

But still the word, angst, is overused.  I have anxiety about the world, stress about work, worry about my son and shpilkes when I have to concentrate for 10 or more minutes.  And I can have all of these in one day, or even in one hour, and, still, it doesn’t add up to angst.

It does, however, make me crazy as a loon.

The usual

I bumped into a former colleague and friend a couple of weeks ago who said, “I read your blog from time to time — pretty much the usual: family dinners, why don’t people act better, and a few heartbreaking moments.”

And I think:  What IS so wrong about wanting peace, love and understanding. (With all due gratitude to the Elvis Costello song, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1XYFJUP84lE.)  In order to evoke the true Elvis Costello, please sing along to the Youtube clip, playing your tennis racquet and looking like you have to go to the bathroom and are holding it in.  See below for a visual guide.

Ok, so my blog is pathetically maudlin, navel-contemplating and ego-centric.  I write about what I know and see.  And I write late at night (before that Biblically-promised joy cometh in the morning).

Maybe I should take up something more life-affirming or planet enhancing.  Except I live in a coop and I think if I were to tend a compost, that would raise a stink (as it were).  I am sure that my fellow coop shareholders are relieved that I blog instead.

If I had a good singing voice, I would wax melodic about peace, love and understanding.  You get the point.  I am giving the best that I got to paraphrase Anita Baker (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsMHjbfFEjU).  (Her picture is not instructive.  Think, instead, of Tina Turner singing “What’s Love Got To Do With It?” for the proper gyrations of the mouth.)

I digressed so far that I didn’t even get to talk about President Obama’s trip to India.  Oh, well.  You know the drill — An entree portion of What’s So Funny About Peace, Love and Understanding, mixed in with, I’m Giving You the Best That I Got, with a side of What’s Love Got To Do With It.  So, you could write the blog without me.  Discuss.

Does anyone really understand why we end daylight savings time?

Does anyone like that it gets dark at 4:30pm?  How many people really benefit from extra sunlight in the morning?  (Not being a morning person, I need some help here.)

My favorite day of the year?  December 22.  Why?  Because the days start to get longer.  Let there be light.

First, fire the pundits. Second, let’s talk about race.

Yesterday op-ed by Bob Herbert of the New York Times really got me nuts.  It was the straw that broke the camel’s back.  I don’t care which party “gets it” or not.  That is not even a relevant question.

That we have a president named Barack Hussein Obama is in fact a delivery of his campaign promise of change.  The fact that he is decried as not that much different from other presidents is another delivery of his campaign promise of being President of all citizens, not just blue states.

You see, you may not have noticed, but the President of the United States is African-American.  Now, I am a middle-aged, white, Jewish lesbian (MWJL).  And I have no idea what it is to be anything or anyone other than who I am. But from my perspective (for what it is worth):

The President may be post-racial, but the country is not.  (We are making progress and, as we do, sometimes there is backlash that makes us think we are losing ground.)  The fact of his presidency is a challenge to much of the nation.  The fact that he is continuing some of the Bush policies in matters of war means that his opponents (the Grand Old White Man Party) need to frame his domestic policies as so radical as to threaten our very existence as a nation.  Thus, the charged rhetoric.

Because it is, at least in part, about race.  (Please no eye rolls — I am a MWJL, remember?)

Lest we forget that John McCain and Sarah Palin got a lot of votes and stirred up fears of the end of the reign of the Old White Man.

Remember when he let a little of his anger show when Professor Gates was arrested?  You would think that he created an international incident.  All he did was call the actions of white cops stupid.  Imagine George Bush doing that.  Not even a blip on the radar.

Listen to the racist language of the Tea Party.  These people are scared that they will be treated the way they have treated minorities.  They know that karma can be a painful boomerang.  So, now that the Establishment is run by an African-American, they are fighting the Establishment tooth and nail.

I had an epiphany the other day about DADT.  The President is Commander in Chief of a military run by conservative white men.  When he leads, they need to follow.  So, he needs to show he will listen, too.  So, maybe he needs to protect DADT for now as it winds it way through the courts and the Congress.

The President is the embodiment of the American dream, with the picture-perfect American family.  But he is not a reflection of America yet, but an aspiration of what America can be.  We all have some work to do.

A Morning at the Museum

Yesterday, POB (partner of blogger), SOPOBAB (son of POB and blogger) and I joined HOSOB (husband of sister of blogger) and FOB (father of blogger) went to the Met to look at the Kubla Khan exhibit (everyone now spells Kubla in a more authentic way, but it was 10am on a Saturday and that kind of information will not get absorbed into my brain).

SOPOBAB is studying Chinese and the information on a significant dynasty was appealing to him.  Also POB talked up the portraiture galleries which had pictures of Revolutionary heroes, etc.  SOPOBAB has read a lot about that, too, and seemed interested.

Great, I think, ancient Chinese dynasties and portrait galleries, could there be anything else I would want to see LESS on a Saturday morning at 10am?  Arms and Armor.  Ok, I am lucky I think.  At least no trifecta.

As a child I hated going to the Met.  It was an overwhelming place with furniture exhibits, armory and ancient Greek statues.  None of it mattered to me.  As an adult, I enjoy the Modern Wing and some of the African art, probably because I have studied some about the art in these areas.

I actually enjoyed the Kubla Khan show, most especially because I watched SOPOBAB find things of interest and talk to FOB and HOSOB about portions of the exhibit.  SOPOBAB, at 8 years old, is a young man who can navigate an exhibit at a museum.

The American Wing was closed for renovation.  The gods were smiling on me.  No portraits of American heroes.  Phew.  Waaaaaitt!!! Where are we going now?  Not to the diner for lunch?  no?  Arms and Armory?  Really?

Ok, so I walk through the exhibit that totally freaked me out when I was a kid.  All of this body armor.  I am a sport and try to focus and learn something.

I look at the body armor and read about the history.  And then, in a moment, the one sight that compelled a blog entry:

It is hard to see, but Kind Ferdinand of Spain needed a lot of extra space for his genitals.  No other body armor has this.  I think this was a message to his adversaries.

So, I learned that in every exhibit, there is something for everyone.