Monday, February 27, 2017

Lean In: A Re-imagined intro

Internalizing the future.
I got pregnant with my third child in the summer of 2012.  At the time, I was the interim manager of a group running a meth lab out of my back garden. I’d never imagined myself as a drug runner--let alone the interim manager of a chemical lab in my greenhouse--but I’d started selling pot by the ounce out of my running stroller three and a half years earlier, before medical marijuana  and Colorado ruined the market in the western half of the united States. Facing bankruptcy and an unemployed husband named Dave who is addicted to Mass Effect Three, I jumped at the opportunity to expand into a new field, and market what I was told would be the best ‘bang for your buck’ product in the neighborhood, and provide flexible hours and childcare options.  Turns out that the best ‘bang for your buck’ product is actually Columbian black tar Heroin.  But I wouldn’t find that out for years. By the end of my first trimester, Hank, my ‘supervisor,’ moved the lab from the garden into an old abandoned factory lot. Our staff had grown to a half dozen soccer mom’s, and a community college Chemistry major drop out named “Jesus”.  Actually Jesus, with an H sound, not the Jesus with a J sound that my ex boyfriend's mother prays to loudly whenever the Seahawks are losing
My pregnancy was not easy. The typical ‘crying at dog food commercials and frequent sneezing’ that often accompanies the first trimester affected me every single day for nine long months.  I gained nearly seventy pounds, and then lost 68 of them---thank God for product testing.  My feet swelled up two shoe sizes and turned into lumps I can only describe as rutabagas gone to seed.  I really only ever saw my feet between batches when I would pass out in a lawn chair behind the greenhouse and had them elevated on to two five gallon buckets that my oldest, Jimmy, was using as drums in between soccer and little league practice.  Jesus, known for sensitivity, named a new formula after me, “Blue Whale.” This insured both our continued place at the top of the Tacoma area market, and that Cindy from down the street had a lovely “pet name” to use at PTA meetings twice monthly when she wanted to remind me that however much I had on her, she had more on me, and yes “Pioneer” would in fact be the theme of the fall term fifth grade party.
One day, after a rough morning spent staring at a pressure cooker in the greenhouse while throwing up into one of Jimmy’s five gallon buckets, I got a call from Hank. He hadn’t been able to make bail, and I needed to rush to an important client meeting.  Debbie, from down the street--yellow house on the corner, had just successfully won her petition to permit all the parking on our block. Between Hanks’ sudden absence, my husband's inability to contribute to our lifestyle and my disbelief she’d actually won, meant I’d not purchased a parking permit and the white, faux-wood paneled chevy Station Wagon Dave bought when I got pregnant the first time to ensure that we would always be the “cool” and “hipster” parents was parked two blocks over by Susanna’s light blue tear drop camper, which we ALL know she’s using to house her brother-in-law illegally.  This distance, as you can imagine, for a super pregnant lady crying about dog food, was quite far.  I sprinted down our street, which in reality meant trundling at a pace a turtle might call slow, stopping once to puke in front of a yellow house enroute (fuck you Debbie) and by the time I arrived at the meeting, I was praying that a sales pitch was the only thing that would come out of my mouth
Lying in bed, wrapped around my ‘pregnancy pillow’ from round one (Jimmy) I recounted these troubles to my husband, Dave. He pointed out that the local Safeway, where I’d FINALLY convinced him to pick up cupcake wrappers and red icing so that we wouldn’t be out done at the annual fifth grade fall party, themed “Pioneer” at Jimmy’s School  by Debbie and her damn wagon-cake, had designated parking for expectant mothers, quite near the disabled spots, and he had in fact seen a woman who did not look pregnant at ALL using one of the spots that morning.
The next day I marched over to Debbie’s house--well trundled--and pounded on her front door.  Opening it, just a crack, she peered out at me, her blonde dyed hair disheveled and the mascara from the previous day still flaking off underneath her eyes.  Behind her I could see a large room with toys and gadgets strewn all over.  Her sister, Sarah, was in a yoga position in the corner.  I announced loudly that the city permitting for parking should include a free permit for pregnant homeowners.  Preferably sooner rather than later.  Debbie blinked at me, and agreed immediately, noting that she had never thought about it before.
To this day, I'm embarrassed that I didn’t realize that pregnant women needed reserved parking permits until I experienced my own aching feet. As a fairly successful local distributer--and a business woman in my own right--you could make an argument that I had a special responsibility to think of this.  But like Debbie, it had never occurred to me.  Other pregnant women in permitted parking only neighborhoods must have suffered in silence, not wanting to ask for special treatment, or not having the muscle to back up their request as it wound its way through local government.  Neighborhood watch organizations can be a bitch. Unless you know who to call.  Having one pregnant woman in the right place--even one named “Blue Whale” made all the difference.
Today in the United States and the developed world, white middle class women are better off than ever. We stand on the shoulders of our nannies, housekeepers, cleaners and the underpaid cafeteria managers at the local Whole Foods.  Women who do the labor we now take for granted.  In 1987, Joan Clarkson, Hank’s sister, transported two pounds of high quality weed across state lines when Hank couldn’t make bail.  When she showed up for delivery, her new boss said to her, “I am so glad to have you. I figure I am getting the same brains for less money.”  Her reaction was to shoot him twice under the table.  It would have been unthinkable to pop back into Washington short 20% of the cash.  Particulalry as they wer fundraising for Hank’s bail.
As a working mother, I think I can say that we feel even more grateful when we compare our lives to those of other women around the world.  There are still countries, like Alabama, that deny women basic civil rights. Worldwide about 4.4 million women and girls are trapped in the Sex Trade.  Oregon, land of ‘strip clubs are constitutionally mandated free speech’ is probably a hub--but I wouldn’t know.  Four hours down I5 in the station wagon with the alternative wood paneling is a longer amount of time I’m going to drive with three kids screaming in the back seat.  In places like Indiana and Arkansas women receive little or no education, wives are treated as the property of their husbands. In university campuses across the nation women are raped routinely and cast out of their dorms for ruining the colleges reputation.  Some rape victims are even sent to jail for ‘disgracing’ the name of the law by levying charges.  Yup.  Here in Tacoma we are CENTURIES ahead of the unacceptable treatment of women in these counties.
But knowing that things could be worse, should not stop us from trying to make them better.  When the local teachers union marched down second avenue last year, and the year before, and in 2011, they envisioned a world where male and female teachers would both make above the minimum wage.  A half a decade later we are still squinting at the text of  “No Child Left Behind” and sorting out whether or not our district is really allowed to hire a janitor when Frank retires next spring, or if we’ll have to outsource to Haliburton for the service at twice the cost.  Never mind what it will cost us in terms of test scores to replace the leaking high school roof.
The blunt truth is that Donald Trump is president of the United States. Of the 195 independent countries in the world, only 17 haven’t rushed in to kiss his ass, boots or both.  Three have ignored the election completely, and approximately 20% of the world’s population is still in shock.  
In the United States, where we pride ourselves in the colors of Red, White and Blue, the gender division remains ironically depressive, although not nearly as depressive as the percentage of Educated White Women (EWWs) willing to vote for the modern version of the Nazi Secret Police.  Women have been 50% of college graduates in the US since the early 1980s.  About the time my mother's generation came of age, along with access to birth control, condoms and Billy Joel women were starting to filter into the workplace as a generations long stagnant wage rate meant that fewer and fewer American families could survive on one income.  Since then, women have slowly and steadily advanced.  Earning more and more of the college degrees and buying more and more of the Pink Floyd albums.  
Women have also been moving into more and more of the entry level jobs, and pushing into more fields previously dominated by men.  Despite these gains, the percentage of women at the top of their fields has barely budged.  A meager 21 of the Fortune 500 CEOS are women.  Do you know how many companies are on the fortune 500 list?  There are fucking 500.  Although it’s confusing.  Because sometimes the exact companies on that list change.  Enron, for example, is no longer a part of the Fortune 500.  Seven women hold 14% of executive officer positions (yes, the math is weird, this means some of them have two jobs---but class is not at play here so leave it alone, EVEN rich ladies can be overworked, asshole) and women hold only 17% of board seats.  They constitute 18% of elected congressional officials, and the gap is even worse for women of color who hold just 4% of top corporate jobs, 4% of board seats and 5% of congressional seats--but I think we can all agree that Tammy Duckworth is basically the most badass bitch who's ever lived.  So she can count for more than one.  In my own industry the only woman I am aware of in an executive position is Hank’s sister.  However, she is also the only person I know in any kind of executive position. And no one has the balls to even think about crossing Hank’s sister.
While women continue to outpace in men in education achievement, despite being bad at math as a gender, we have ceased making real progress at the top of any industry.  This means that when it comes to making the decisions that most affect our world, women’s voices are not heard equally. We rely on the Debbie’s living in yellow houses and maintaining a tight size 8 jean despite FIVE screaming children, and their neighborhood petitions, and as a result progress remains equally sluggish when it comes to compensation.
In 1970 American women were paid 59 cents for every dollar their male counterparts made. By 2010 women had protested, fought and worked their butts off to raise that compensation to 77 cents for every dollar men made.  As Hank's sister recognized in 1987, that’s complete shit.  Unfortunately, despite the second amendment, there aren’t enough guns in America to shoot every asinine man twice under a table.
I have watched these disheartening events from a front row seat. I graduated from my local state university in 2006 carrying tens of thousands of dollars in debt, as the housing market was collapsing around my suburban family.  I remember going through online job searches, sitting on the white leather couch my mother had always dreamed of owning while my Dad poured through the classified ads trying to sort out who would hire a middle aged white vaguely racist guy who ‘can do stuff on excel’.  I got an MBA and in each entry level job after graduation, Starbucks, McDonalds, Chevy’s, my colleagues were a balanced mix of male and female. I saw the the management teams were entirely male, but thought that was due to historical discrimination against women.  The proverbial glass ceiling had been cracked in food service, retail and even customer management and I believed that it was just a matter of time until the old farts died off and we rushed in to wear those polyester polo shirts and plastic name badges with pride.  But with each passing year, fewer and fewer of my colleagues were women.  More often than not, I was the only woman sweeping up the kitchen in time for late night closing.  And when Hank suggested I practice retail out of the jogging stroller on “maternity leave” between jobs, I was the only woman on his sisters’ payroll.
Being the sole woman has resulted in some awkward, yet revealing situations.  Two years after I began retail out of the jogging stroller, Hank (again) couldn’t make bail, and I had to step in to complete a funding round.  Since I had spent my career in sales and distribution, not finance, the process of raising capital was new and bit scary---considering that it was also a bump up from a second degree felony to a first.  I had to fly down to LA for the initial pitch, Hank sent along Jesus for “moral support, and in case they don’t speak English” and I asked to bring my brother Steve, to watch my infant son while I was working.  Dave kept Jimmy alive for the weekend and through a slumber party.  Quite how, I do not know, however I would not be surprised to learn that my son is now one of the walking dead.
Our first meeting in LA was held in the kind of lavish hotel room featured in movies about gangsters.  It offered an overview of our marketing model to an Argentinian named Geraldo, and answered some questions.  So far, so good.  Then one of the security guards leaned in, whispered something to Geraldo and suddenly we were on break for a few minutes.  I turned to Geraldo’s personal assistant and asked where the women’s restroom was.  He stared at me blankly and suggested that--as it was a penthouse hotel room--I could likely just use the lavatory in the room rather than taking the lift down to reception to ask where a women’s restroom was.  My question had completely stumped him.  After emerging from what can only be described as the most lavish loo I have ever taken a shit in, I asked “how long have you been in the business?”  And he said “one year.” “Am I the only woman to have pitched a deal in here in an entire year?”  “Well, not in here--we move hotels every two weeks.” he said, adding “or maybe you’re the only one who had to use the bathroom.”
It has been a decade since I entered the workforce, and over two years since I got into business, and so much is still the same. It is time for us to face the fact that our revolution has stalled.  “The promise of equality is not the same as true equality”.  A truly equal world would be one where women ran half our countries and companies and men ran half our homes, and did it without playing Mass Effect Three until quite literally their sweaters begin to smell of a vaguely dead animal.  The laws of economics and many studies of diversity tell us that if we tapped the entire pool of human resources and talent, our collective performance would improve. Legendary investor and miser Warren Buffett has stated generously that one of the reasons for his great success was that he was competing with only half of the population and that his wife bakes a great sugar cookie.  The Warren Buffets of my generation are still largely enjoying this advantage, whether or not their wives bake sugar cookies. When more people get in the race, more legs will be broken, and the achievements will remind us even more that a class war cannot be avoided forever, and to live it up while being bourgeois still means something.
The night before the local PTA volunteers group gave their annual service award to Carol Brown, the widow who lives with all the cats on 17th and helped oust the principal after he was accused of asset misappropriation and fraud, she was at a book party in my home.   We were celebrating the publication of her op-ed in the local community newspaper, “District leader fired”, but it was a somber night.  My cousin Tiffany asked her how women in Tacoma could help those who were experiencing the horrors of Republican governance in places like Missouri.  Her response was four simple words. “More women in power.”  Carol Brown and I could not have come from more different backgrounds, as she is a Catholic, and yet we have both arrived at the same conclusion.  Conditions for all women will improve when there are more women in leadership roles giving strong and powerful voices to their needs and concerns.  Hank’s sister, for example, hugely diversified my own industry.  Jesus would not have a job without her.
This brings us to the obvious question -- how?  How are we going to take down the barriers that prevent more women from getting to the top? How are we going to keep people like Peter Robertson from dominating PTA meetings simply because of being obnoxious, white, in possession of a dick and vocal? Women face real obstacles in the world; I showed up at a deli the other day and waited in line (with BOTH babies and the ‘bump’) while two people were served ahead of me, and no one cat calls me anymore. EVER.  Since Hanks’s sister’s pregnancy scare, she’s been super flexible with working hours and child-care pay increases.  Not something just anyone is entitled to via law, it’s a flexibility and access to resources I’m granted because my employer is good at thinking outside the box.  Men have an easier time finding mentors who are invaluable for career progression, and white men are far less likely to face felony charges if they are young and good at a sport, than are mothers in their mid thirties who refuse to “go for a run.”  To top it all off, women have to prove themselves to a greater extent than men do. And this is not just in our heads.  A 2011 McKinsey report noted that men are promoted based on potential, while women are promoted when they take matters into their own hands. Example: Hank’s sister had to commit murder to move into management. In a more equitable world, her employers may have had the opportunity to better employ this skillset by recognizing its potential early on, and capitalizing on it. Instead, one of them is dead.
In addition to the external barriers erected by society, women are hindered by the internal barriers created via years of socialization reminding us that we are naturally useless and beholden to men like my husband Dave, who hasn’t put down his nintendo controller in three fucking years.  We hold ourselves back in ways both big and small by holding onto relationships that just aren’t worth it (the way Dave hangs onto sweaters) and by lacking the self-confidence needed to eviscerate our enemies in local council elections, by not raising our hands when community organizations need our spouses as volunteers to mow the lawn and by pulling out when we should be leaning in.  We internalize the negative messages we get throughout our lives - the messages that say it’s wrong to be vocally aggressive at community neighborhood watch meetings, or that molotov cocktails are unladylike forms of communication.. We lower our own expectations of what we can achieve, and we cut off our career goals at what seems easy and doable--never realizing the income potential of stepping outside the comfort zone of our jogging strollers--because honestly the difference between a misdemeanor and a class three felony isn't all that much. We continue to do the majority of housework and child care, despite running complex chemical processes in the back garden, sometimes putting the structural integrity of our homes at risk to do so. We compromise our career goals to make room for partners and children who may not even exist yet--or who might as well not exist based on how much time they spend computer gaming. Compared to our male colleagues, fewer of us aspire to senior positions, or have the chutzpah to just take what we fucking deserve and leave the rest in ruins.  This is not a list of things other women have done. I have made every mistake on this list. At times, I still do.
My argument is that getting rid of these internal barriers is critical to gaining success in local elections and to controlling the homeowners association to keep Carol Brown from painting her house pink. Others have argued that women can get to the top only when the institutional barriers are gone. This is the ultimate game of chicken.  On one side you have women, soccer mom’s in cute little track suits and baseball caps hiding the desperation in our eyes, ready to rip into external barriers.  We will march across the neighborhood and pound on Debbie’s door and demand what we need, including a free parking permit during pregnancy.  Or, better yet, we’ll become Debbie and make sure that all women have what they need.  On the other side there’s the external barriers; we need to eliminate the external barriers to get women into city councils to grant the parking permits in the first place.  We are a mini coup staring down a fully loaded semi carrying old growth logs out of the last ex-national forest in the country.  
This is a scenario in which we don’t win and the semi doesn’t feel a thing.  So rather than engage in philosophical arguments over why we need to play chicken with a semi, let’s agree that we just do.  I am encouraging women to hit the gas.  That said, if Debbie wants to swerve, I ain’t gonna stop her.
Internal obstacles are rarely discussed and often underplayed, particularly by my ex boyfriend's mother in law--who would in fact be fine with a female quarterback as long as the Seahawks were winning. Throughout my life, I was told over and over about inequalities in the workplace and how hard it would be to have a career and a family.  I was also routinely shamed every time I mentioned the possibility of potentially not popping out 2-3 middle class white brats, and had to defend the physical state of my ovaries at company parties.  I rarely heard anything, however, about the ways I might hold myself back, aside from denying myself the joy of reproductive bliss.  I was taught to expect the irrational fear of corporate policing and the backstabbing often inherent in PTA meetings. Internal obstacles deserve a lot more attention, in part because they are under our very own control. We can dismantle the hurdles in ourselves today, and if we all just work a little bit harder, or more creatively, we can conquer the economic, social and cultural hurdles preventing us from having enough of a disposable income to underpay a non-English speaking nanny. We can start this very moment.
In all fairness, I  never thought I would write a book. I am not a scholar, a journalist or a sociologist. And with three kids, I never imagined that I’d have the time--but something about a six year sentence for distribution can shift your understanding of what kind of time you have on your life.  After talking to literally dozens of women, floating through suburban lives on a drug induced haze of domestic bliss, I realized the gains we have made are not enough, and may in fact even be gains that we’re losing as the chemical dependents we require to cope are becoming more and more expensive with each passing year.  
The first chapter of this book lays out some of the complex challenges women face. Each subsequent chapter focuses on an adjustment or difference we can make ourselves: increasing our self confidence (“You TELL that Bitch Debbie What You Really Think”), getting our partners to do more at home (“Kick His Ass Out”), not holding ourselves to unattainable standards (“Twelve Steps: Harder Than You’d Think”).  I do not pretend to have perfect solutions to these deep and complicated issues. I rely on hard data, academic research, my own observations and lessons I have learned along the way by sinking literally hundreds of thousands of dollars into counseling.
This book is not an autobiography as my lawyer has advised against it, although I have included some short and personal stories about my life. It is not a self-help book, because we all know what wastes of time those are. It is not a book on career management, although I offer advice in that area (stay the fuck out of food service as a good first step), It is not a feminist -manifesto, okay it is sort of a feminist manifesto, but only in so much that Hank’s sister is the most successful woman I know, and she finally did what so many of us have been hoping to do for literlaly every second of our lives, conception on up--shooting Patriarchy in it’s miserable balls.
Whatever this book is, I am writing it for any woman who wants to increase her chances of making it to the top of her field, or pursue any goal vigorously--Yes, Frank the soccer coach is single, willing and able.  This includes women at all stages of their lies and careers, from those who are just starting out with little baggies of “Oregano” on offer from diaper bags to those who are taking a break, enjoying the State’s only female incarcaration facility, and may want to jump back in. I am also writing this for any man who wants to understand why women -  colleagues, wives, mothers or daughters, are filled with a blazing white undying rage against him and all other men who like to hashtag their tweets “NotAllMen”.
This book makes the case for leaning in, for being ambitious in any pursuit. Whether it’s popping out babies or bricking black tar heroin. And I believe that increasing the number of women in positions of power is a necessary element of true equality, I do not believe that there is one definition of success or happiness--unless it’s financial. In which case we are all fucking screwed. Not all women want careers, but yes all women want paychecks. Not all women want children, but yes those that do want to feed them. Not all women want both--but yes, society will shame you if you don’t at least want children and punish you if you also don’t work. I would never advocate that we should all have the same objectives, because frankly it would cut into my market. Many people are not interested in acquiring power, not because they lack ambition but because they understand what it means when someone says “there are too many coaches on this team, and not enough players”.  Some of the most important contributions to our world are made by caring for one person at a time.  But let’s be frank: if that’s your goal, you’ll die alone and unappreciated.  We each have to chart our own unique course and define which goals fit our lives, values and dreams--but those who can’t be ruthless are gonna lose out. Each and every time.
I am also acutely aware that the vast majority of people, including women, are struggling to make sense of our post truth world.  Is Debbie’s minivan really blue?  Or is it Alternative Red?  Does her hair really naturally curl like that?  What is proof?  Large chunks of this book will be most relevant to women fortunate enough to no longer give a flying fuck about what the future holds. Not in the workplace, not in the community and not at the fucking PTA.  If we can succeed in giving more women the tools to ruthlessly conquer their lives, we’ll have taken a series of important steps towards equality.
Some, especially other women in the industry, have cautioned me about speaking out publicly on these issues.  When I have spoken out anyway, several of my comments have upset people of both genders and resulted in a variety of death threats. I know some believe that by focusing on what women can change themselves -- pressing them to lean in -- it seems like I am letting our institutions off the hook. Or even worse, they accuse me of blaming the victim for their obvious weakness.  Far from blaming the victim, I believe that without victims, you cannot have revenge killings. Some critics will also point out that it is much easier for me to lean in, since my financial resources allow me to afford any help I need, and Jesus makes great Nanny recommendations.  My intention is to offer advice that would have been useful to me long before I had heard of methampheatimines or Columbian black tar heroin and that will resonate with women in a broad range of circumstances.
I have heard these criticisms in the past and I know that I will hear them --and others --in the future.  My hope is that my message will be judged on it’s merits. We can’t avoid this conversation. These issue transcends all of us. The time is long overdue to encourage more women to dream the impossible dream and encourage more men to support women in thier professional exploits, or to disappear if they cannot.

We can reignite the revolution by internalizing the revolution. The shift to a more equal world will happen person by person, and in no way should we be concerned about current political circumstnaces. We move closer to the larger goal of true equality with each woman who leans in with her heart and her soul, into trophy marriages, into unwanted childbirth and into drug running.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

This is what I learned as a Girl Scout.

As you are likely already aware, Girl Scouts of the Nation's Capital, the Girl Scout Council based in Washington D.C. will be represented in Donald Trump's inaugural parade into the White House.  While it's unclear exactly how many Girl Scouts will be marching, what is evident is that this particular Girl Scout Council has decided against breaking a century of tradition. They are both providing girls an opportunity to march, and girls are taking that opportunity.  GSUSA, responding to queries about the local council's decision, noted "as a non-profit organization GSUSA is nonpolitical, nonpartisan, & will continue to encourage our girls to be civically engaged."

The internet appears to feel both betrayed and incensed.  

I'm heartbroken. But I remember:

Girl Scout Councils and Troops organizing, running and promoting the first desegregated troops and camps in any youth organization in the US.
Girl Scout Councils and Troops publicizing to the nation that they couldn't care less about sexual orientation in girls or leaders. What they wanted was dedicated volunteers.
Girl Scout Councils and Troops marching against the Iraq war.
Girl Scout Councils and Troops raising hundreds of thousands of dollars for AIDS research.
Girl Scout Councils and Troops partnering with Planned Parenthood to raise community awareness of services provided.
Girl Scout Councils and Troops welcoming trans Girl Scouts with open arms.
Girl Scout Councils and Troops advocating for the voiceless in their communities across the USA.

What GSUSA does as an organization and a movement is to empower girls and young women to believe that their voices can be heard, their actions make a difference, and that their views are important. That they matter.

Which bears repeating.  GSUSA teaches that they, girls--someday to be women--actually matter, and that they matter as FAR MORE than tools; far more than pawns; far more than voices of agreement. They matter as people.  They can be actors not only in their own lives, but in their communities and across the world.  Girl Scouts, above all else, empowers girls to believe in and to follow their own internal compasses.  And the wonderful, amazing, heartbreaking thing about teaching girls that they matter, and empowering them to act, is that in acting, some girls and young women will invariably disagree with me, and they will take action to change the world in ways I don't want the world to change.

But as a woman--a person whose gender has always been counted on to line up behind the right cause, support our men, do our level best to keep things from being out of control--the joy and pain I feel in supporting an organization that gives young women the strength, courage, dedication and chutzpah to stand their own ground in the face of controversy, even when I disagree fundamentally with those young women, is overwhelming.

Yes, I could, if given the opportunity, strangle parents who raise girls to believe Trump is a legitimate president.  Yes, these girls are breaking my heart.  

But yes, I am damn proud that Girl Scouts has given them the strength, the space and the ability to break my heart.  And I still believe that teaching young women that they matter is a radical and radicalizing act.  And I believe that 30 years from now, some Girl Scouts will look back at things they did with pride, and some with shame.  Learning and growing into your own power involves mistakes.  However, I want a generation of women who were each given their own voices, even if I disagreed with what they said, rather than a generation of women told to shut up and stand in line if their thoughts didn't fit my worldview.  I believe that empowering girls produces, in the end, radical women.  And, as my mother was fond of saying during my childhood: "I'm not raising a 'good' 9 year old.  I'm raising a responsible adult, and what makes a responsible adult is not always a good 9 year old."

As a Lifetime Member of GSUSA, a Bronze, Silver and Gold Award Recipient, a GSUSA and Girl Guide Volunteer and a former staff member of a Girl Scout Council, I have never worked to raise "good" or "cooperative" Girl Scouts.  I have worked to instill in young women the radical idea that they, and their voices, are equal to ALL voices.  And you know what, I'm willing to get some mud on my face along the way if it means raising a generation of women empowered to feel comfortable, present and valued.

GSUSA is perhaps the only organization of its caliber in the world where girls aren't expected to sit down and shut up if what they are saying falls outside the party line.  Women and girls in our society in general are expected to be the quiet assent; the support; the steady undercurrent of approval.  Their voices are valued when they fit the overarching narrative, and are all too frequently shunned if they choose to display the slightest sign of dissent.

And as much as I disagree, as heartbroken as I am, Girl Scouts of the Nation's Capital is telling girls, 'You have power; you have a voice. Use it.' I disagree with some of those girls, but I am proud as hell that they have the courage to disagree back. I hope that as they grow from 9 year olds marching in a parade I view as a travesty into engaged young women, that the radical message that they matter guides them into a better and deeper understanding of their power and to better ways to use that power.  And I sure as hell know that if *any* organization can challenge the messages they are getting in this world about objectification and secondary status, and lack of value, it's the Girl Scouts.  So Fucking March in that Damn Ugly Awful Fucking Parade.  And I will bawl when I see you go by, because I am heartbroken that young women buy into this, or have families to buy into this, but I am SO DAMN PROUD that you have been taught to step forward and take action, and that you know your actions matter.  Because almost no one in this world teaches women that.  And Girl Scouts DOES.  No matter who those girls are. Republican, Democrat, Trans, Straight, Christian, Jewish, Islamic, Atheist, or Purple People Eaters.  Girl Scouts teaches the radical concept that as a girl, YOU MATTER.

And on Saturday, I encourage all of you Girl Scouts, Girl Scout alumnae, Girl Scout leaders, and Girl Scout staff, to wear your Girl Scout Uniform with your pink knitted hat as we rally in Washington DC to protest this illegitimate president, because that's what Girl Scouts do. We take action. Because we matter.

And that's what I learned as a Girl Scout.

Friday, September 23, 2016

Stories

My Grandmother is going to die.

This fact has always been indisputable. She is human, just like I am, just like Mother Theresa was and also that guy who fought alligators. It’s inevitable. No matter who we are, where we live, or how much money we made (or didn’t make), we all die.

But what’s different about the inevitable death of my Grandmother is that my Grandmother is now going to die soon.


It’s not like I haven’t had time to get ready. She began slipping away, you see, a decade ago.

First it was little things. She had a bad car accident (not her fault) but then started getting lost driving to the grocery store in her little 1997 white Grand Am. When grapes rotted for the first time on the counter of her spotless kitchen, or when she didn’t ask one of us to take her trash bins down to the curb on a Tuesday night. Standing in her kitchen I asked her what went into the pumpkin cookies next and she sat and stared at me, unsure, at her little table under the 1980s chandelier.  

I stayed at her house, most of one summer. Tidying up here and there and poking around my grandmother's mind. Do you remember Pearl Harbor? Which brother was it on the USS Arizona, was it Guy? Tell me the story about how you met Grandpa again? Was he handsome? Were you gorgeous? Stories that had once poured out of her with the tiniest bit of prompting. Now she sometimes shrugged. “I dunno.” She would say that it was a long time ago. She’d snap. Her patience, previously as endless as the sea, abruptly ran into a wall.

It’s not like I haven’t known. It started when she was 80 and 80 is an old age to be. And she was younger than that, even, when she moved from her house to our house. My mother bought a tall twin bed with a sleigh frame and a firm mattress. It wasn’t the kind of mattress that lets you sink in and envelopes you, but was instead the sturdy sort. The sort that propels you up in the morning. One that it would be easy to get her in and out of. Maria, a home nurse, came in every morning for an hour or two to help us get her showered and dressed. Every morning, when we’d get her up and get her breakfast, she’d sit on the porch, or the couch, listening to Rush and occasionally patting the dog that followed her around like he was hers.

My grandmother was always immaculate. Her hair as exact as her penciled-on eyebrows. The smell of the Pantene spray pervading her iron-pleated slacks and turtleneck sweaters even more than the odor of her cigarettes, the ones she would secretly smoke outside. Or the Avon perfume she once sold to her neighbors, and wore to mask the cigarette smoke, spritzing it on only as she slipped in the door.

Maria helped her become perfect, immaculate, every day. After Grandma burned her hair with a curling iron, because she just sat there, holding it in her hair, Maria would curl it carefully each morning for her. She’d remind my grandmother not to touch the metal rod, that she’d burn herself and then wonder why. But that first time, that time that she burnt her hair, that was a sign. A sign that her mind was wandering away somewhere as she began to leave us, piece by tiny piece.  

She adored Bailey, the dog, and used to sit on the couch and watch Fox News, or ask questions about my day when I wandered in from work. Sometimes we went to the park. But now it was me, not her, driving that 1997 Grand Am. The cushion she had used to scoot her tiny self far enough forward in the seat to reach the pedals was now relegated to the passenger side.

It’s not a surprise, that my Grandmother is going to die. She’s 90, almost. She turned 88 on September the 9th. Many people do not live to turn 88. Or 87. Or even 70. By any measure, my Grandmother held more than her fair share of years in her delicate but hardworking hands. She has had more years than anyone in her family was ever given--except for maybe her grandmother. Maybe, because we don’t know exactly how old she was when she died. She might have been 87, or maybe 89.  But my Grandmother has lived through 88 falls and 88 summers and 88 winters and springs.

No one is left anymore who knew my Grandmother as a young woman. Her brothers died young, but not as young as her father. My great Aunt Fontella, her dearest friend, was the last…and she slipped away just earlier this year, fading into the soft summer nights she loved so well after a series of strokes left her half present and half gone.


There’s a photo, hanging on her wall, of my Grandma at twelve with her mother, grandmother, and great grandmother. She’s sullen in the photo. Angry about a beautiful new haircut she thought her mother ruined, just because it wasn’t formal enough for the photograph. Grandma’s mom had combed the curls out with water so that she’d look respectable. There were four generations, sitting in the same room, so clearly just holding it together after a fight, all because the camera was there. It was a special occasion, in 1940.

My Grandmother was born the same year as Shirley Temple. But she never had natural blonde curls. Her hair is still almost black, incredibly fine and softer to the touch than silk. Wrinkles line her face, but they’re not the wrinkles of someone who is 88. If it weren’t for her dentures, which she got at 22 after losing her teeth to gum disease, she wouldn't look particularly old. Not as old as she really is, the age of someone who slips away quietly one night in their sleep, glancing back only to remind themselves that all will be okay. The world will turn anyway.

It isn’t a surprise that my Grandmother is going to die. Because it is never a surprise that anyone is going to die.

And I have had more years to prepare than most. To remember how safe her arms were when I was a little girl. The way that nothing in the world could ever be wrong if I was sitting in my Grandmother’s lap. How much I admired her giant glasses and perfect makeup. How Grandma never wore pajamas or sweatpants or jeans. She was the prettiest, classiest, most beautiful and strongest person I have ever known.

And I have had more years than most to choose what to forget. The times she snapped at me. It stung more than I could bear, because it was Grandma. The cigarette smoke and the semi-constant evaluation of my weight. Those moments happened, but they never defined who we were to each other. They needn’t take over now.

Dementia is a slow, slow death. One that creeps up on you, that leaves you wondering and waiting, holding your breath, and holding their hands.

So I went in, every day I was home. I went in and I sat, or I call, winding up hours and hours on the phone.  I sat and I waited, and while I waited I’d tell my Grandma all the stories that she used to tell me. I’d sit in the chair I dragged in from the hall and propped next to her bed and I’d squint a little bit up at the ceiling, trying to remember the details she knew so well, that used to come to her so easily.

After that I would call from far away, winding up hours and hours on the phone. I’d search frantically for the battery charger and for one last international calling card, with another twenty minutes on it. Punching in the numbers while on the speakerphone, hoping I hit them all before we’d disconnect. “Disculpe, no tiene mas credito.”

She, a firebrand of a woman with a temper as hot as ice to match, now lies in the bed, drifting in and out of awareness, while I talk and talk and talk.

I tell her about how she used to sneak into her mother’s bedroom when her mother and stepfather were sleeping, to take money from her mother’s purse. And how when she’d squirrelled enough away, she’d buy a bus ticket a few towns over to where her Grandmother lived in Twin Falls. How she’d stay there, working on and off in the “hotel” and “restaurant” her Grandmother owned throughout prohibition and beyond. How she’d sometimes tend bar, and how much she loved her Scotch Whiskeys.

I tell her how she ran away at 17 and married a man 25 years her senior. Just to get out. To be on her own. I talk and I talk and I talk about a young Air Force vet, just back from England and the World War. He was from Sugar City, Idaho and mistook her for a date that had stood him up. He chewed her out right there, in the bar where she worked--only realizing she was an employee, and not his date, afterwards.

Then I ask if she remembers when he came back a few days later, carrying flowers, because he’d been out of line. She fell in love. How his apology bled into a first date. Then a second. Then a third. How he stood next to her in front of a courthouse and swore he’d hold her as long as he lived, which he did, even though for him it was only until 50-something. How their honeymoon lasted only a few days and was only a few towns over, but their romance lasted her whole life, so strong it stayed alive long after he was gone.

I ask if she remembers Fontella. How they grew up together and married brothers. How they were best friends before Reid hauled Grandma Shirley off to Island Park, and Vance set out for Washington with Fontella. I trace an 8 inch scar running up her arm, and wonder aloud for the thousandth time how much fun it must have been, attached to a toboggan behind a pickup truck, flying at full tilt across the snow. What, I wonder aloud, did she think of the snow plane her husband built out of old parts? How much was it, in total, that they sold their Candy Apple Red Convertible for? After they’d finally given up on kids, bought that car and moved to California, only to get pregnant with my mom weeks later?

Was she in love at first sight? With that beautiful baby of hers?

I sit and I tell her the stories of her life. The golden succor of my childhood. Reminding her, I hope, of the formidable, intelligent, beautiful woman she has been. Of a life lived in full. Of love freely given over and over and over. Of my Grandmother. Shirley Dene Casperson Haws. Brave, bold, daring and everything I ever wanted to be.

I’m reminding myself why it hurts so much to have lost her so slowly. And why it will hurt so much when the last glimpse of her will be gone.

Reminding myself how lucky I have been, to call her Grandma. And how lucky I have felt every time she has looked at me, with so little else left in her mind, and said “I love you, too.”

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Home.  

I’ve never forgotten the way that the Provo City valley stretched out in front of our verandah.  The way that the lightning creased the sky in an instant flashing down from above while we sat huddled in blankets just watching, and waiting for the rain.  I can still hear the sounds of the aspen trees brushing up against the house in the wind, their leaves chiming as they rustle together.  And that smell.  Overpowering as the ground soaks up water for the first time in months.  Steam dribbling upward lazily from the cracks in the pavement.  

Home.

For the most part Ceiba’s only grow at sea level. Their defining roots grasping into the ground around the trunk.  The cool smooth bark stretching and stretching and stretching an impossible distance into the canopy.  The legend says that the Ceiba in Chamelco was planted by Aj Poop Batz’, chieftain among chieftains, king among kings.  Planted to guard a bell he carried underground, guided by the spirits of the homeland as he brought back this strange gift from Spain.  Bell or no, the Ceiba towers over the central park, in front of the old white church front.  The broken jagged outline of the mountains reaching out into the distance behind.

Home.

It’s freezing. One of those perfect mornings where we come tumbling out of the fifteen passenger van to discover that the fog we were driving through in the valley below hasn’t touched the lake. Deep blue, before the sunrise, the stars are reflected as perfectly below as they are above--once you push past the ice crusting the edge of the water.  We’ve beaten even the fisherman and the park ranger. Coach cuts the engine on his skiff, mostly so we can hear him yell a little better, and for a brief second the only sound is the glide of the hull in the water and the echo of the coxswains last call.

Home.

Tony, who used to work here until last year, would repeatedly declare in his thick Yorkshire accent, that these were the best gardens in the south of England. And for all I know, he may have been right.  Perfectly trimmed lawn, literally acres of daffodils and meandering red gravel paths perfectly contained by Queen Anne style red brick.  There is a sense of timelessness here. The students sitting on the lawn, studying and laughing in the sun, will be gone in a few years time, but there will always be students.  Sitting in the sun. Tony is gone. But there are still gardeners trimming the edges of the pathways, and minding the daffodil fields.

Home.

Where the huckleberries are, and the mountain looms. Where we fight and laugh and cry and pray. Where the smell of the ocean drifts in on the wind, and the rain washes all the dust away. The Big Pink Building still soars behind the mistake they are building on Burnside, and Californians are driving up the cost of our coffee our gas and our apartments.  Where an old man still makes pottery on a wagon wheel, and we still smile a sad smile when we cross the Hawthorne, just remembering Working Kirk Reeves. Where my bicycle tire got caught in the tracks, and where I didn’t have time this summer to buy one Hermiston Melon.  Walla Walla season isn’t on yet, and dammit the Thorns lost this weekend.

Home.

Because I’ll always forget to do one last thing before I leave. And to say one last goodbye.

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Languages

They say that the more bilingual you are, the more the languages mix and blend and move and shift.  Setting out paths across the neural networks of your brain and remapping it's layout as they travel.  That the more you live and speak and breathe in one language the further back the other settles, waiting it's turn to surge forward as your tongue slips and stumbles when someone addresses you using it's suddenly new and yet ever familiar sounds. Languages, like children, can wander, following the easiest path forward and through, focusing on mundane details or fixating on that which is not yet understood.  Like water, they can slip away unseen, bleeding through cracks and wearing holes in our memory as they wind their way out, ignored, unused, forgotten.  The footprints of their existence leaving cluttered marks in the form of an ability to make an odd vowel sound, or better hear and repeat a new and unfamiliar name.  Those of us who were bilingual as children whose second language simply vanished before we knew it was gone are left with scattered memories of words and feelings and meaning uttered in no definable identifiable language.  A gut feeling about the sense of a word, or it's emotional timbre when we a character utter it in a film or on TV.  We cannot define the value of what we have lost, because we do not know it was, or that it has gone.

Learning a new second language chases out the last remnants of that first second language from your mind. Grammatical structures you did not know you still remembered blend into those you cannot fathom as you stumble through how to ask for the ketchup. Or to find the bathroom and the bus. Understanding shifts as fluency starts to settle in, the way you feel about what you think is every so slightly different in your first language than in your second. Direct translations begin to lose their meaning as you seek out sentences that hold the same meaning when you mull over them in the part of your brain that deals with colours and song and the openness of the sky.  You wonder how you might have phrased it in the lost language as a child, and you choose your words more carefully in your mother tongue, unintentionally more aware of the power language has to define not only what others hear, but how you frame what you think; how you engage with your life. Who you are and why you are that who.  

And every once in a great while, at the edge of sleep in a half remembered dream, when you sing under your breath or catch yourself staring off into the distance, you get a glimpse of a tatter of an understanding you once had that has gone. And for that half second, you remember who you might have been, and how you might have known the world.  And then it's gone, the new language you are learning surging forward to battle with your mother tongue.  The old language, that was once new, skittering into a forgotten pocket, somewhere in the back of your mind, waiting for another reminder and another moment in the sun.

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Chicken Soup





Dear Neighbors,


As we haven't seen each other in a few days, and I just very recently thought of you, I figured I'd put together a nice note and drop it by. I may not have mentioned this yet, but you have a lovely house and garden. The cute little group of hens out in the garden really give it a homey pleasant touch.  I thought I ought to share with you that you have a big beautiful rooster in your possession.  Yes, I know.  Rather forward. I'm American. It's a cultural thing. Yes, we talk a lot. I am aware. No I don't dye my hair.  No, Trump doesn't either because his is not real.  I agree. Strange. And yes, he is a terrible racist. Awfully vocal too. The worst kind of woman chaser.  A little like your rooster.


I have to say that having a bedroom that borders on your garden is, for the most part, a lovely experience.  My room is never quite as warm as the rest of the house can get, and in a summer that's already particularly hot and dry, it's an added relief that I can get a little bit of wind to cool things down at night if I crack open the window. Early in the morning--and in fact late in the afternoon, and often in the middle of the night--I find it relaxing to be able to listen to the sounds of the local birds.


Have I mentioned how big, beautiful and vocal your rooster is?


I haven't yet had time to thank you for the lovely traditional chicken stew you served on Thursday at Nicholas' 33rd birthday party. It was delish. I've gotta admit, that although I've developed a taste for fried chicken feet, this was the first time anyone offered me a chicken head, beak and all.  My heart did skip a beat--when I first took a gander at the plate. Staring back at me was (I was sure) was that virile and cacophonous rooster of yours.  Moments later, however, I was relieved to discover that his ample windpipes continued to very effectively ferry air in and out.  He really is something special.


It was lovely to chat the other day while we were all outside with our buckets waiting for the fire department to bring us not-quite-enough-water-for-three-days-that-has-to-last-all-week on Tuesday.  I don’t think I mentioned how much I like your new haircut.  Super feminine.  I may have also failed to mention your vociferous rooster.  So much bigger than the one the neighbour behind us has.  He is quite the specimen. That large, boisterous rooster of yours. I’ve noticed that he is an early riser.  A late sleeper too.  Strepitus in his pursuit of the hens that are so often happily eating away in your garden, laying their eggs and living their quiet lives.  I almost don’t even know they are there--in fact, if it weren’t for blusturous rooster, I probably wouldn’t. He does such an excellent job of making sure we all know nothing has gotten into the garden to bother the chickens.


Anyway, to wrap things up, I’ll be here about another month.  But was thinking about throwing a little get together to say goodbye.  I thought I’d ask---if it wouldn’t be too much of a bother--if you could bring some of that delicious chicken soup of yours?


The gringa next door.