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Conference turris::womannotes-v2

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 2 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V2 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1105
Total number of notes:36379

980.0. "Rage" by WMOIS::B_REINKE (if you are a dreamer, come in..) Thu Feb 08 1990 22:45

    
    I've copied this note from Human_Relations with the permission
    of the base note author because I felt that it belongs here
    as well.
    
    
    Bonnie J
    
    mother of a 'special needs' son.
    
    
         <<< QUARK::NOTES_DISK:[NOTES$LIBRARY]HUMAN_RELATIONS.NOTE;1 >>>
               -< What's all this fuss about 'sax and violins'? >-
================================================================================
Note 961.0                            Rage                             6 replies
SUPER::REGNELL "Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER!"       309 lines   8-FEB-1990 14:15
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

         Rage

         ---

         Rage. Raging. To rage. I have not done that in years.
         I thought perhaps one grew out of it...like acne. That
         you passed some biological boundary that prevented your
         frustrations with being powerless from rising up and
         devouring whatever urges towards self-preservation that
         you possessed.

         I was wrong.

         I remember the first time I experienced rage. I was
         five, and my dog died. I have written about Bessy
         elsewhere, I do not need to talk about her death again.
         But, I raged that day at my parents' God for being
         merciless and arbitrary. Of course, my universe was ever
         so much smaller in those days; and the rage I felt was
         based on this animal's importance in it. A favored pet's
         death these days brings sorrow and a sigh of
         resignation, but no more rage.

         Then I raged when I was eleven. King Arthur/Knight in
         Shining Armor/President Kenedy's son Patrick died
         "a-bornin" as the old Scotts ballad says. I raged again
         at this God of my parents who allowed one so small and
         untried to die without hope. Again my universe, although
         stretched from the time I was five, was still small
         enough to hold in my cupped hands, and this action saw
         the sands there streaming through the cracks between my
         fingers. My anger at the useless death of infant children 
         is tempered these days by at least adult confusion rather 
         than childlike despair. The adult accepts the way of life while
         still regretting it.

         Or perhaps I just saw too many die on the 6 o'clock news
         during Viet Nam to ever react again to an anonymous
         death in the way that I did when I was eleven.

         And I raged when I was 24. Jan Mullen and I sat with her
         prize show dog and helped deliver a first litter. And
         watched her die while they still struggled from her
         womb. And watched the pups die one by one for some
         unforseeable and unpredictable reason. We fought for
         them. We pumped medicines and formula down their tiny
         throats and held them close so they could feel our heat 
         and our hearts... and still they died. Died as we held them.

         A small thing to rage over you think, the loss of a
         litter of pups? Perhaps it was. But we sat on the floor
         of the kennel covered in dried-up after-birth,
         sorrounded by heating pads and warm formula in
         eye-droppers and cried.

         And then we cleaned the place from top to bottom with
         boiling water and anticeptic and we waited for the rest
         of the dogs to die also.  We were lucky. Some didn't.
         And over mugs of tea and after much raging we came to an
         understanding. Funny, it was that understanding that my 
         Dad was trying to convey about death and life being part 
         of the same go-round; that you couldn't not embrace one and 
         not the other. Maybe we all have to reach the place
         where we see that by ourselves? I don't know.

         But, I do know that after the puppies I raged no more.

         Until this morning. This morning, at almost 40 [just a
         few fleeting weeks left], I felt rage rising up in me.
         It was a surprisingly "unsurprising" feeling. It fit
         like the glove it always had been...and left me spent
         after it had gone.

         Before anyone rushes to my side...no, noone died this
         morning...no cats or dogs or puppies or unborn children.
         No, this morning, I watched someone murder hope.

         I took Eric to the dentist. [Do all chapters in one's
         life start with such innocuous pap, I wonder?]

         When we arrived he shrugged out of his coat and hat and
         went to stand in the doorway to the reception area to
         stare at a poster. It was a wonderful poster of 100 cats
         and one mouse.

         There were angry cats, and smiling cats, and whimsical
         cats, and wiley cats, and frowsey cats, and...well, you
         get the picture. And there was one mouse. Somewhere. We
         both stood in the doorway and hunted the mouse for ten
         minutes until the hygienist came and ushered him away,
         still peering with longing over his shoulder looking for
         the mouse.

         Released, I wandered over to read a magazine, but I
         found my eyes straying every once in a while to search
         for the mouse.

         Sometime after I had been sitting, a mother and her
         daughter came in. I didn't really look at them, just
         sort of perceived their existance and knew from the
         shadow that lurked in the corners of my perfieral vision
         that the girl was looking at the cats poster. 

         I chuckled silently thinking what a creative piece of
         work that was...both the art and the hanging of it in a
         waiting room for children. Then...

         "Come away fromt there! Noone wants to trip over you all
         day!"

         The tone as much as the words jarred me from my reverie
         in which I was reading about the bones of great whales.
         It was....viscious.

         I looked up to see the daughter scurry across the
         waiting room to stand before her mother.

         "Sit down, don't just stand there."

         She sat.

         "Stand up...take you coat off. Does someone have to tell
         you everything?"

         She stood, took her coat off and folded it neatly.

         "Sit down, I said!"

         She sat.

         I was saved from immediate acts of social
         inappropriateness by Eric arriving back on the scene at
         this very instant with the hygeinist in tow to describe
         in detail how:

         "one-of-his-sealants-had-come-loose-but-had-been-replaced, 
         thank you."

         A brief flurry of typical dentist office business
         transactions followed that mercifully removed me from
         the proximity of the parent and child.

         While I stood at the desk, Eric returned to the poster.
         The little girl, who had been sitting like a statue
         beside her Mother wandered unobserved over to stand with
         him. They chatted as stranger children will to each
         other...testing the waters, outlining each's knowledge
         of the furry creatures they were looking at, then
         settling down to an organized search for the miscreant
         mouse.

         They were still avidly searching when I was done and
         ready to "move 'em up" and "head 'em out".

         "Emma Lee! Get out of that woman's way! Who said you
         could stand there? You are blocking the door!"

         I lost it. 

         I stepped in front of Emma Lee. [That was what did it,
         you see...she had a name now...she wasn't "the little
         girl" anymore...]

         "You weren't talking to me were you?"

         "Of course not, that 'girl' is in the way..."

         "But, I am the one standing in the doorway. Emma is just
         chatting with Eric here about the poster...you must have
         been talking to me, because I am the one blocking the
         doorway..."

         "She's always in the way...just let me grab her..."

         "Is Emma your daughter?"

         "Unfortunately, yes..."

         "For her, you mean?"

         "What?"

         "Emma?"

         A tiny voice answered...but eyes never looked up.

         "Yes?"

         "Have you and Eric found the mouse yet?"

         "Yes..."

         "Mom, Emma found it! See it was hiding here..."

         "Emma, it was nice to meet you...I hope we see you again
         sometime when Eric visits the dentist"

         Emma looked at me and I was rewarded with a smile. The
         eyes behind the heavy glasses sparkled with wit and
         pride with her accomplishment.

         "Bye, Eric."

         "Bye Em'...thanks for finding the mouse!"

         "People don't talk to her much...you know...the way she
         is and all....don't let her bother you..."

         "Madam, Eric and I have enjoyed meeting and talking with
         your daughter...she is polite and eager to please. You on the
         other hand exhibit neither of these qualities and
         personally I wouldn't raise so much as my voice to keep 
         you from being run down by a truck."

         The hygienist flashed me a thumbs-up and whisked Emma
         out of the way into the back room.

         "Eric, we are leaving, now!"

         That in the voice I reserve for moments when I don my
         "She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed" hat. Eric jumped and we were
         out the door and down the sidewalk before the woman
         recovered her ability to speak.

         "Mom?"

         "What?"

         "You're not mad at me, are you?"

         "No, I am livid at that little girl's mother..."

         "Why does Emma look that way?"

         We settled into the car...pulled out into traffic.

         "She has a condition called Down's Syndrome, Eric. It
         has to do with her genes...do you remember that book you
         were reading that talked about genes?"

         "Yeah...it said they cause eye color and hair color and
         stuff like that."

         "Well, it can also cause diseases or syndromes to
         happen. And that's what Emma has."

         "What does a 'syndrome' do to you?"

         "When your genes get messed up Eric, it makes the whole
         'machine' run a bit rough. Emma has to work very hard
         probably at things you do without knowing you are even
         thinking. In some cases people with Downs' Syndrome are
         really incapacittated...but Emma seemed pretty bright.
         Her physical appearance is affected though. The eyes have some
         extra skin....and are little and closely set. The tongue
         is quite thick and large, which makes it seem to stick
         out all the time. It makes you 'look' ...welll...."

         "Dumb?"

         "Dumb. But Emma wasn't, was she?"

         "Emma found the mouse."

         "Right. Emma found the mouse. Poor Emma."

	 "Does Emma's Mom have a syndrome?"

	 "No, Emma's Mom has something much more deadly..."

	 "What's that?"

	 "Terminal bigotry."

	 "What's bigotry?"

	 "The fear and hatred of anyone and anything that is
	 different from you or what you think everyone should be."

         " I wouldn't want to have her Mother as 'my' Mother."

         "Neither would I....I didn't say that, Eric."

         "Yeah, I know...it was one of those 'private'
         conversations we have..."

         "Right."

         "You're really mad...huh?"

         "I am really mad...huh."

         "I love you."

         "I love you too."

         "Is this a good time to mention that you just drove off
         exit 10 instead of 11?"

         "Yes, I think this is a good time to tell me that...."

         We got back on the highway and found our way home and
         went about our business of the day...Eric to take his
         'ice-cube-keeper' to school for test runs; I to zip
         down the highway in yet-another-snowstorm to build
         someone's high-tech student workbook.

         I hope Emma finds her way home one of these days.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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980.1Further thoughtsWMOIS::B_REINKEif you are a dreamer, come in..Thu Feb 08 1990 22:46220
    This note follows the first one in h_r
    
         <<< QUARK::NOTES_DISK:[NOTES$LIBRARY]HUMAN_RELATIONS.NOTE;1 >>>
               -< What's all this fuss about 'sax and violins'? >-
================================================================================
Note 961.1                            Rage                                1 of 6
SUPER::REGNELL "Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER!"       211 lines   8-FEB-1990 14:39
                            -< Further thoughts... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

         The Dreams of my Parents -- A Parable

         ---

         I used to sing a song by...well, sung by anyway, Judy
         Collins...actually now that I think about it, I think it
         is one she did write. It started out:

         	Father always promised us
         	that we would live in France.
         	We'ld go boating on the Seine
         	and I would learn to dance.

         	We lived in Ohio then,
         	Father worked the mines.
         	On his dreams like boats we knew
         	we'ld sail in time,


         What follows is not truly fact...nor is it truly
         fiction, It is true, but not factual...these
         conversations did not take place...they are based on my
         imperfect and necessarily personal view of what probably
         happened. But they help me to understand.

         ---

         My Father had dreams.

         He dreamed of not being hungry. And he dreamed of not
         being cold. And he dreamed of being someone that his
         children would look up to and ask for advice.  These
         things he accomplished.  For a brief moment in time, he
         even realised that he had accomplished them. And then he
         dreamed some more.

         He dreamed now of the things that his children would do
         that he had never done. The places they would go; the
         people they would meet; the things they would do. And he
         built his life around these new dreams. He sacrificed
         his happiness, his peace of mind, his soul...so they
         would have and do these things.

         And his oldest child said:

         "So, who asked you to do these things for us?"

         "I don't want to be this, or go there, or do
         that...'this' is who I am...love me."

         And he said:

         "I have slaved my life away to show you these things. If
         you do not take them, you do not love me; and I cannot
         love you..."

         And his oldest child said:

         "So be it."

         Now his younger child was more naturally inclined to
         follow in her Father's footsteps. She was not more
         inclined to agree however, and when...as it must...there
         came the time for her to also become herself instead of
         her Father's shadow, he said again...

         "I have given you everything I have to give and still
         you do not appreciate it."

         And the younger child said:

         "You have taught me to be strong, and resourceful, and
         to stand on the truth. So, I stand here."

         And he said:

         "So be it."

         And some years after that, when he died, he died
         thinking that these children who owed their existance to
         him...who admitted freely to everyone else in the world
         but him that he was the guiding light of the adults they
         had beco...he died thinking they did not love him.

         And until he died, they never knew that he told everyone
         he met how talented his two daughters were...how proud
         he was of them. The dreams got in the way.

         ---

         My Mother had dreams.

         She dreamed early-on of escaping the farm; of having
         beef on the table more than just in the fall when they
         butchered the beef-cattle; of having sandwhiches of
         something other than mustard and bread. And she dreamed
         of more than one suit of clothes and fancy stockings and
         dancing. And she dreamed of a man not in her home town
         to take her away from it all.

         And she got these things.

         And then she dreamed more dreams.

         She dreamed of the young women that her daughters
         would become; how they would be pretty and exsquisitly
         drressed; how they would marry well and raise their
         children to come and sit at her knee. And how they
         would be so correct and polite and soft-spoken' how they
         would know the old songs and the old people.

         She didn't have a chance.

         Her knight-in-shining-armor was busy making them into
         his likeness; and although he would not be pleased by
         the outcome either...they would certainly ressemble him
         more than they ever did her.

         And although her determination took her away and set her
         free, her duty brought her back and chained her. Freedom
         was a momentary chapter and she came back to her
         beginnings to take care of her ailing Mother and other
         dreams were shattered.

         And she said:

         "How can you say these things and do these things?"

         And her oldest would say:

         "You never cared to intercede for me when I was little
         so don't bother me now."

         And her youngest would say:

         "Mother, we were raised to be this...and we are...so why
         are you surprised?"

         And she would say:

         "Where have I failed? I must have failed to have such
         daughters..."

         And her daughters would say:

         "Never thought of myself as a failure...but If you think
         so, then so be it."

         And she would lament:

         "Why don't you come more often..."

         And they would say:

         "To listen to you complain about who we are? Forget it."

         And so, this day, she sits at home; or travels to
         Florida and everyone thinks she is wonderful. But her
         daughters are wary; and she thinks herself a failure
         because they are who they are.  And they think her
         cold-hearted and proud because she never defended them
         or herself when it might have made a difference.

         ---

         I met...no, that is too strong a word...I saw a Mother
         today. And I went right home and wrote about her in
         RAGE. I was not only rude to her, I was righteously
         angry with her and let her know it. I did what I was
         raised to do. I fought a dragon. And my Daddy would have
         been proud...and Mother (although she would have
         deplored the fact that I actually spoke rudely to this
         woman) would even have approved.

         But I am reminded by several of my dearest and most
         trusted readers...to ask why and how this woman got to
         be a killer of hope.

         Perhaps, she had dreams?

         And perhaps she made the same the mistake that my folks
         did with her dreams...and dreamed them "for" her children
         instead of just "about" them. And then her child not
         only would not fulfill her Mother's dreams but created
         in their place nightmares.

         Perhaps she had too many dreams break so that she
         herself broke along with them and all that remains is a
         husk that mimes the action. Perhaps it is a miracle that
         she even has the energy left to be a kiler of hope?

         ---

         I guess we none of us handle the loss of dreams very
         well. I hope not all of us are so beaten that we attack
         those that do not fullfill them; but I suspect that even
         the more reserved of us harbor resentment.

         ---

         I have dreams.

         And I have a child.

         God help me "not" make my dreams for him.  God help me
         teach him to dream his own and set him free with them.
         And may I have the strength to rejoice in his dreams
         even when they are not mine.


980.2NRADM3::KINGFUR...the look that KILLS...Fri Feb 09 1990 08:263
    Thanks Bonnie for posting those 2 notes... especially the base note...

                               Rick
980.3ASABET::STRIFEFri Feb 09 1990 08:483
    To the author of the base note -- Eric is lucky to have you for a Mom
    and the world is doubly lucky because of the kind of person he'll grow
    up to be. 
980.5SYSENG::BITTLEnancy b. - hardware engineer; LSEFri Feb 09 1990 13:1219
	re: .0, .1 (Melinda Regnell)

		Way to go, Melinda.  That took guts.  

		Eric is indeed lucky to have you for a mom.  

	re: thinking about the subject title

		Rage and terror are 2 of the strongest, most overwhelming,
		and most unpleasant emotions I have ever felt.  

		In recalling how they felt, they seem very similar, 
		except that terror is this strong overwhelming emotion
		directed inward (for oneself), while rage is this 
		strong overwhelming emotion directed outward (at 
		someone or something).

							nancy b.

980.6Lost Rage= Lost PassionUSEM::DONOVANFri Feb 09 1990 13:3615
    RE:.0
    
    I think I've found life easier since I've lost my rage. It's also
    much more bland. My highs were too high. My anger was too angry.
    I was driving myself crazy.
    
    Since I've lost my rage I think I've lost my passion. I used to
    want to change the world now I feel helpless. But sometimes, when
    necessity rears its ugly head, there's fire.
    
    If I was an as eloquent a writer as the basenoter, I could have
    written the same note.
    
    Kate
    
980.7Blessed are the children, For someday they may be parentsCSC32::K_KINNEYFri Feb 09 1990 18:1621
    
    		Well Bonnie,  I thought the base note was
    		very well written and I applaud the writer
    		for standing up for Emma. It never ceases
    		to amaze me when I see persons with incredible
    		power, misuse that power.
    
    		A parent (either mother or father) has infinite
    		power with a child and if they do not recognize
    		this consciously and use it with care, they
    		can decimate that childs future. I wish there
    		was some way to get people to see that, but we are
    		all only humans after all, and therefore subject
    		to our shortcomings. The price can be high. And I
    		am so sorry when I see a child have to pay it. Their
    		pockets are not deep enough. 
                                            	kim
    		(mother of Scott who had many strikes against him when he 
    		started but he learned never to let them strike him out! 
    		He is a helicopter crew chief in the Army.)       
    								*8^} 
980.8SNOC01::MYNOTTHugs to all Kevin Costner lookalikesSun Feb 11 1990 18:1520
    I didn't feel rage, I just sat and fumed in a similar situation.
    
    We were at the movies, I was waiting for friends to arrive.  A group of
    Downs kids arrived for the same show, and one sat down with me.  We
    started discussing the various coming soon films, and who was her
    favourite actor/actress.  There were two spare chairs at the table, and
    two elderly well dressed women sat down.  (We are talking about a very
    very up market, overpriced area this cinema is in).  When this young
    girl and I started talking again there was silence on the other side of
    the table, so she asked them a question.  They not only ignored her,
    they got up and found another table...
    
    The film we finally saw was My Left Foot, and it wasn't those kids who
    talked during the show, there were others up the back.  Those who know
    me, would probably be surprised I didn't make a scene, I usually do,
    but I was so angry I didn't know what to do.  But I remember those
    ladies and if I ever see them again, they'll know it!!! 
    
    ...dale
    
980.9MSESU::HOPKINSLOVE is all you needMon Feb 12 1990 14:308
    Reading the base note I just about began to cry.  I will never forget
    being at Childrens Hospital with my daughter and a little girl told
    Tina "you're lucky...you have the best mother in the whole world".  She
    said "I know" so matter of factly.  It broke my heart because EVERY
    child should think they have the best mother in the whole world and
    this little girl had a mother who just didn't care.  I'd take all of 
    the unwanted ones if I could.  Thanks Bonnie for sharing that with us!!!
    
980.10DZIGN::STHILAIREFood, Shelter &amp; DiamondsTue Feb 13 1990 11:5731
    When I read the base note I felt sorry for Emma, of course, but
    I also felt sorry for her mother.  How can any of us know what she's
    been through?  Maybe if she had gotten more support in being the
    mother of a handicapped child she wouldn't be such a mean sounding
    mother now.  There is also the possibility that this woman may not
    always be so cruel to her daughter.  It sounds trite but she may
    have been having a very bad day.  Maybe sometimes she's very loving.
     How can we know unless we could know her whole life story.  All
    we know is one brief episode.  Don't we all have brief episodes
    in our lives where we have acted unpleasantly?  I would hate to
    be judged for all time on the way I may have acted on one of the
    worst afternoons of my life.
    
    I know that would never want to be the parent of a handicapped child.
     I would not want to have to put that much of my life into having
    to be with a person who had problems that bad.  If I ever were pregnant
    and found out the baby had Downe's Syndrome, I would have an abortion.
     I know that it would be wrong for me to bring a child into the
    world that I might not be able to love, so I wouldn't do it.  I
    also feel that life is tough enough for people without handicaps,
    nevermind with.
    
    I guess the reason that I feel sorry for Emma's mother is that for
    all I know, if I were in her place, I might not be able to do any
    better.  I was luckier, and I got exactly what I wanted when I was
    pregnant.  My only child is female, smart, pretty, healthy and personable.
     She thinks I'm a good mother and we get along great.  But, it's
    been easy being a good mother to her.
    
    Lorna
    
980.11PENUTS::JLAMOTTEJ &amp; J&#039;s MemereTue Feb 13 1990 15:3524
    Although I understand some sympathy for Emma's mother...I found
    Melinda's piece extremely good writing and it brought to my mind
    someone who I admire a great deal.
    
    Bonnie Reinke and her family have done an excellent job with their
    son and brother Steven.  Steven was evaluated recently and he has
    exceeded all expectations for a child with the handicaps he has.
    Clearly this was achieved through love, acceptance and a lot of 
    patience.
    
    I wonder if Melinda would have missed the exit after she visited Steven
    and observed him in the Reinke household.  I think she might have...
    and she might have written a very different story a lot better then
    I could tell it.  But her reason for missing the exit would not have 
    been RAGE it might have been JOY.
    
    The handicapped are out of the closet...they might require some extra
    energy but they can be loving members of families and productive
    members of the community.
    
    Personally I don't have time for Emma's mother...but I have time for
    Stevens!
    
    
980.12Parenting and Self-EsteemCSC32::DUBOISThe early bird gets wormsFri Feb 23 1990 14:5724
<    It sounds trite but she may have been having a very bad day.  
<    Maybe sometimes she's very loving.

This is very possible, but I don't think it excuses her.  Just by the
statement that she considers it unfortunate that Emma is her daughter
indicates the harm this woman does without thinking.  She decided to
keep the child.  In my eyes this means that she must do her best to bring
the child up happy and safe.  Happy, to me, includes a good sense of self.

My mother is similar.  She is a warm, loving person, *most* of the time.
However, when she last visited us she called Evan (age 1 1/2) by a term
that we consider negative and which she used "affectionately".  I have no doubt
that she *meant* him no harm.  Nevertheless, this was the type of thing
that she and my father did to me, and my self esteem suffered for it.
This was the type of thing that my father did to her, and her self esteem
suffered tremendously.  We brought it to her attention, and asked her not
to do this any more.  She was still fuming over it days later.

This (and other events that weekend) brought up many other things that I had 
endured growing up, and Shellie and I are now considering changing over our
Wills so that she will not be named guardian of Evan should we both die.
I love my mother, but I do not want Evan to grow up as I did.

          Carol