CHAPTER ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY TWO: GOLF, PROSTHETICS, DEATH AND POLITICS
CHAPTER ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY TWO: GOLF, PROSTHETICS, DEATH AND POLITICS
February 13, 2016: I’m watching the Pebble Beach Pro Am,
as the fog rolls over the golf course and the waves crash on the shore. Alan
should be there with Abbie and Holden, but so far the camera is fixed on the
likes of Mickelson, Kang and Rose, as well as Wahlberg and Timberlake. The
greens look really bumpy – that was Tiger Woods’ reason for not entering this
tournament most years. Maybe that’s why Mickelson’s putting from relatively
short distances looks so bad. Justin Rose just took the lead, rather is tied
for the lead, at 13 under on the third day. I don’t know the other golfer in
the lead (Hiroshi Iwata?). Tomorrow is the annual Together With Love 10 k
run/walk for the Monterey Rape Crisis Center. I started that race with Linda
Childs more than twenty five years ago. What a joy to wake up at 5 am in order
to schlep over to Lovers’ Point in Pacific Grove to set up for the race. When I
return to California, I just might run/walk in that race next year. It’s for a
very good cause.
Speaking of running, the Admiral and I went to Tampa this
past week and met with Jason and Loi of Prosthetics Design and Research. Jason
says he can design and construct a better prosthesis for me. Hallelujah!! His
technique involves a vacuum pump that forces out all the air and pushes the leg
below the knee out to the sides of the socket. With the leg pushing against the
sides of the socket – all the way around – Jason says that my thigh will be
doing most of the work of carrying the weight while walking. He said it’s too
much to ask my little PRL (partial right leg) to carry nearly three hundred
pounds of weight. I thought so too. All these months I have been struggling
with pain and intense pressure on the end of my leg, at the bone and on the sides,
as I got used to the pin style of prosthesis. I got the pin style in September.
It has been an improvement over the suction style, which I wore from the end of
May until September. But it still ends up putting most of the weight and
pressure on the end of my leg, which is not ideal for walking, let alone
running. Jake has challenged me to run a 5k with her in October of this year. I
get to pick the race. I’m hoping the new prosthesis will make my participation
possible. Jake is already in training, having run 2 miles in 20 minutes. Since
my best time for the mile – with both legs – was about 9 minutes in the 10 k
races I ran, I would say that Jake is almost ready for the challenge.
I spent several hours today mourning the death of
Jonathan and Renee’s 9 year old daughter, Saige, who died suddenly this past
Tuesday morning. She had been sick with the flu, just like everyone else in the
family, including her 4 year old brother and both parents. There was an
autopsy, but I don’t know the results. She had not been ill before she got the
flu, and she had no chronic disease that weakened her. She was a healthy,
talented artist and poet at her tender age. The Catholic Church where the
funeral service was held was packed. Everyone who lives in the Keys must have
been there. The priest noted that the crowd was much larger than what he
normally gets for Sunday mass. There were a lot of young girls and boys who
were Saige’s age. One young girl sat in front of me. She and her family had
just returned from a New Hampshire ski vacation with Saige and her family. This
young girl had been hospitalized for two days this week, having also been hit
by the flu. She survived. Saige died. No one tried to make sense of this death,
but the priest and the fellow who did the eulogy assured us that Saige was now
an angel in heaven looking over all of us, especially her family. She sounded
like such an amazing person, a “bridge” between family members and friends,
wise beyond her years. The eulogist said that God wanted her with Him because
she was so special. Well, hold on there, God. Wait your turn! Don’t you think
her parents and her brother want her and need her a little bit more than you
do? I guess not. And for those who believe in eternal life, Saige is now
enjoying eternal life. I hope her parents have a very strong faith. I would be
very angry; in fact, I am very angry that Saige was arbitrarily taken from
them. And I’m still angry that my sister, Jean, died at the age of 55 in 1996
and my nephew, Doug, died at the age of 37 about ten years later. I’m angry for
my mother, who wanted to celebrate her 100th birthday, but died in
August, 2009 at the age of 99 and ½. Yes, she had a good life, but why couldn’t
she be a centenarian? Was the gift of eternal life so pressing? How about
another couple of years on earth, so she could continue to serve as a role
model for how one “grows old” while keeping one’s intelligence, judgment, wit
and humor?
I almost envy people who have a firm belief in
everlasting life, the rapture, the tribulation, the millennium – the whole nine
yards of Christian belief, as spelled out in Revelations and by various
prophets throughout the Bible. Of course, I would love to see my sister again,
and my nephew, mother and father (who died at 46). But my sister was cremated,
as were my nephew and mother, so what body will they return in? This is where belief
in reincarnation may come in handy. I don’t mean to be glib, but I do have a
lot of questions. Would my mother return in her 99 and ½ year old body, or in a
newer model? Would my sister still have lymphoma? Would Doug have
medulloblastoma? Their bodies were ravaged by their cancers. Are they entitled
to get healthy, new bodies before they return to earth with Jesus Christ? We
are supposed to be very close to the rapture, because we have so many wars
going on in the Middle East. As soon as all the nations join into the Middle
East wars, the rapture occurs. I kid you not. Read Target: Israel. It’s
dense reading, but it spells out all the prophecies and how many things have
already come to pass, just as predicted in the Bible. This is not my usual
reading fare, but a fellow boater lent it to me, and I always finish a book I’m
reading. It was an eye opener regarding the critical role that the nation of
Israel plays in the return of Christ to earth. I had no idea.
If you’re wondering, I believe I’m agnostic, but there is
a part of me, based on all my years of Sunday school teaching and based on
observing my mother’s faith deepen through the years, that really wants to
believe in God, Yahweh, Allah, Buddha – an all-powerful being with a grand
design for humans. But then one of my
close family members dies, and my quest for faith gets a huge setback again.
Each death seems so cruel. And the cancer before the death is devastating. So I
get angry at the unjust treatment of my loved ones. They are/were extremely
good people – they deserved to live longer. They deserved to be healthy. My
sister had a strong faith in God. My nephew was a brilliant electronic engineer
who never hurt anyone. Let me say that again: my nephew. Never. Hurt. Anyone.
He helped a lot of people, who talked about his great support for them at work
and his ability to explain difficult problems so that they could solve them
with him. When I had shoulder surgery, he came from his home to mine – a drive
of 4 hours – to help me curl my hair in the mornings. Really. It was
unbelievable. He didn’t even know what a curling iron was before I showed him
mine. He had already undergone a ton of chemotherapy and a bone marrow transplant.
But he wanted to help me. So I don’t get why he died at 37 years of age. I just
don’t get it.
It’s Saturday night on President’s weekend at the marina,
and one very drunken man is screaming obscenities at the top of his lungs. What
a way to celebrate a holiday! Washington and Lincoln would be so proud. I
wonder who he supports for President. Don’t get me started. On the other hand,
start me up. I think I wrote a rant about the adjective “untrustworthy” and how
it is wrongly applied to women. You may remember the history of criminal laws,
where women are the victim. No man could be convicted of the crime of rape, for
example, unless there was evidence to corroborate the “untrustworthy” woman.
Women were not allowed to be witnesses or jurors for a very long time – they
were too “untrustworthy”. Everyone should take at least one class in the
oppression of women down through the ages – in high school. Then perhaps we
would not have female college students telling national political reporters
that they do not support Hillary Clinton because she is “untrustworthy”. I
place the “untrustworthy” label at the door of the men and women who still
believe that most women are “untrustworthy.” Now most of these female college
students have no clue about the history of this word and how they have been
gulled into regurgitating the old sexist view that women, in general, and
Hillary, in particular, are untrustworthy. They would feel a bit foolish, I
hope, if they knew how they had been duped. Or not. It’s extremely hard to
prove that a woman is trustworthy, after the “untrustworthy” label has been
affixed to her. It’s so sad that they do not even realize how sexist this term
is, as applied to women over the centuries.
Give Bernie Sanders his due: he knows how to go after a female adversary
without appearing overtly sexist. Or he just picked up where the Republicans
left off with their impugning of Hillary’s reputation. Hey, no one wants an untrustworthy person for
President of the U.S. So I guess we’ll never have a woman President, so long as
every new generation buys into what the older generations have been selling for
years. This is what Gloria Steinem and Madeleine Albright need to be talking
about.
Hillary Clinton is the best candidate for President,
hands down. She happens to be a woman. And just like every other woman, she has
been subjected to discriminatory treatment all her life. Why should the
Presidential campaign be any different? I knew that women would be her toughest
critics, especially young women with no history of the women’s movement – how can
they call themselves feminists? Women have always been tougher on women than
their male counterparts. Try to pick a jury in a domestic abuse case or rape
case – women jurors frequently feel superior to the female victims and vote “not
guilty” because THEY would not have gotten beaten or raped, so why believe the
women victims who are supposedly pouring their hearts out on the witness stand –
everyone knows that women are UNTRUSTWORTHY. There it is again.
How many times in the past 5 decades have I heard: “I
support women, just not THIS woman. There is always something wrong with the
woman in front of you, who deserves to be believed. But since birth, you have
been ingrained with the notion that women should not be believed. Maybe one day
a woman will come along in whom you can believe, but that’s unlikely. At any
rate, you know for sure that you cannot trust THIS woman. In politics, I hear
some women say they would support Elizabeth Warren – we’ll see. If a Bernie Sanders
type opposes her, and she is perceived as “untrustworthy”, the women will flock
to the more “trustworthy” man – again and again. Those women who now support
Bernie most likely supported Barack Obama against Hillary too. He was for “hope
and change.” And Hillary wasn’t? Look, I’m not saying we should rally around
any woman who runs for office – Sarah Palin is a very good example of a
woman-hating woman who should not garner our votes. Hillary is the opposite.
She is not a queen bee. She has fought for women’s equality and racial equality
all her life. She is a very good person. She is also super intelligent. And she
came from a rock-ribbed Republican family. But once she saw how the world
treated women and minorities, she started to work to improve our positions in
society. She is the real deal. There will never be a better woman candidate,
ever. There may be women candidates who are equally good, but they will not be
better than Hillary. My first image of her is in Founders parking lot at
Wellesley speaking out forcefully against the Viet Nam War – 1966. It wasn’t
easy to do that, but she had the courage of her convictions – and she still has
the courage of her convictions. I know we want women candidates to be perfect –
she should have voted against the Iraq War. But we certainly don’t hold male
candidates to a standard of perfection. Remember Bernie’s writings about raping
women? Oh, it was just a fantasy, that’s right. And it was so long ago. Certainly,
he has changed his attitudes toward women. Maybe he has. But that’s not the
point.
It is time to stand up for Hillary. She has earned our
respect and she has earned our vote. Please don’t reject her with the sexist
term “untrustworthy”. This just shows your lack of historical perspective on
how that word has been used to keep women down and to keep them out of public
service. If you are going to call yourself a feminist, know the history of
feminism and learn about the battles we have been fighting for all women for
the past 50 years. Is it time for a woman President? Of course, it is. It’s way
past time –we should have women Presidents going back to the era of Gold Meir
(originally from Wisconsin) or the times of Margaret Thatcher. Not just any
woman president – not former Governor Palin – but dammit, when the most
qualified person in the race is a woman, and that woman is Hillary Clinton,
VOTE FOR HER! You need to be able to tell your daughters and sons that you did
the right thing in 2016 – for yourself and for them.