There's No Place Like Home for The Holidays, Until There is No Home
A little box arrived from Chicago last week to my temporary digs here in Washington, DC. Inside were some of the trinkets of Christmases long past. Ornaments that used to hang on trees surrounded by mounds of gifts, plush Mickey Mouse stockings I used to fill with fruit and candy and little toys when my sons were younger, and a candle holder - absent the candle, of course, which had long since been burned on a holiday table brimming with food and with good cheer.
The box holds what is left of those middle class holiday memories. The box has become the only link to a home-for-the-holidays Christmas I can never again share with my children or my grandchildren. You see, like millions of other Americans, we lost our home. And with that loss goes not only the physical security of home and hearth but also the generational ties to stability and security and the sense of well-being that come with being home... with having a home to come to and a home in which to frame the happenings of our lives. We are the new economic refugees of this society. And no bail-outs are pending.
Who among us has not spent a time longing for the comforts of home? And that universal longing has little to do with square footage or amenities and much more to do with a place of comfort and clarity and sameness and steadiness that helps soften the twists and turns of life that we all must experience. But for those of us who become unwilling nomads with no permanent place to stash our stuff, home became a more elusive place - and not really a physical place at all, but a feeling, a memory, a fleeting image of happier days gone by.
Americans now losing their homes to the mortgage crisis and the millions more, like us, who have fallen prey to the healthcare crisis in this nation are losing far more than just an address or an extra bedroom or a driveway or a lifestyle. We are losing the boundaries of our lives - those intimate details of everyday living that make home a safe place to land and place to retreat when daily pressures are too great and - most vivid during this season - a place where our children and grandchildren can return for generational sharing and all the ups and downs that brings to a family.
One of the most heart-breaking losses we've felt in recent years as we tried in vain to cling to some semblance of middle class reality as health crises crushed us is the loss of holidays, the loss of traditions, the loss of intimacy and the loss of respect from our own children who see no home to come to - and no reason to interrupt more exciting holiday pursuits when we can no longer play host to any sort of Smith family soiree with the same sort of meaning.
Oh, folks will try to say that home is wherever the people you love are gathered, but don't believe it. Our lack of financial stability and the lack of that home in which to gather have damaged far more than just the edges of our lives. When pushed, the grown kids say they don't come to visit because we're not grounded - "There isn't exactly a place where we all grew up and you kept to come home to, is there?" asked one of our sons. No, son, there isn't. So, this year, like the past few years, he'll gather his children (our beautiful grandchildren) and take them to another state and another grandma's house that sits on land that the family has owned for many years and to a home with a whole basement converted to play space that holds literally thousands of dollars worth of toys. No, son, I cannot offer that.
I can offer the little toy box I faithfully move from apartment to apartment and a place at my feet to play. I can offer love beyond what I could explain. But I cannot offer stability of place and the home I so hoped to have until I died - or at least until I could no longer handle the physical constraints of home ownership. But the things I have left to own are not things, and our culture thrives on the ownership of things. So, I am the grandma without enough. And my wonderful husband, the man who gave his body and being to creating a home for us for so many years, is now the grumpy grandpa without enough stuff and without a house.
This is what millions of Americans now losing their homes and their jobs are going to go through all too soon. The unbending cruelty of judgment that comes from having lost one's home in the United States - or worse yet, having gone bankrupt in America.
You see, say what you will about forgiveness and love and peace on earth, but we Americans judge one another by our stuff and our attainment of things. Those who don't have a lot must not have wanted it badly enough, we think, or we didn't work smartly enough. And those who attain homeownership and then lose homes or go bankrupt just managed poorly, lived beyond their means, didn't tighten the belt enough... on and on and on we go with our judgments. I just heard it again this week on a mainstream media news program... people who go bankrupt, they mused, are gaming the system somehow and need to learn to behave better. Going bankrupt was viewed as sinful and irresponsible. These old and ugly views are part of our middle class DNA. I know, because I was taught the same way.
But then the bottom falls out. Health insurance leaves you bare to huge financial burdens. Job loss strips your ability to have enough cash coming in to covers the basics, savings dries up, all the bartering and begging to stay afloat begins to give way, and the wealth it took years to build is gone overnight.
And with that wealth goes a great deal more in personal costs. Some relationships are damaged beyond repair while others are twisted and tinged with guilt, shame or anger. And the holidays are packed away in little boxes of trinkets where peace on earth and joy to the world still can dwell, if but for an instant.
Home for the holidays? Never again. It takes years to recover from bankruptcy or foreclosure and for some of us, there are not enough working years left to do so; the big banking interests we just helped bail out will view us as too risky for a very long time. And our government will not challenge that reality. The best we economic refugees can hope for is that we can hang on to that little box of ornaments, stockings and candleholders as we move from lease to lease to lease making sure our rent is paid and we are warm. There really is no place like home for the holidays, and for many Americans, that Norman Rockwell sort of holiday setting will never again be possible.
When home is no longer home for so many, the generational and cultural foundations are crumbling in ways that will forever alter our national being. The ground truly is shifting beneath our feet as 2009 dawns. And this year, home is even more elusive for many. For some of us, it's carried in a little box.
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78 Comments so far
Show AllDonna - I just mentioned to one of my grown kids that I sometimes felt sad during his adolescence when he spent lots of time going to school friends who had pools, beach houses or paid for him to go on skiing trips or even to Mediterranean vacations. (He was extremely popular.) I said I wished I had a better place so he would have felt enthusiastic about bringing his friends here. He was astonished - had never thought of it that way.
I think you should tell them how you feel. At least you have a roof and a heart. Life is too short.
Joe
I just thought of this, since so many people are discussing healthcare in this thread...do you guys think that, since Wall Street and the stock market tanked, that the health insurance corporations are denying even more healthcare to keep down costs now?
oops...
Sioux Rose
Thank You for sharing this time and space with me and humanity. It certainly feels very
reassuring and soothing that the Light is amongst us. We just have to turn off the lights
of our entertainment based surroundings, to bathe in the Light of Love.
I would like to share the events of the most wonderful Christmas Eve I can remember.
(Not including the ones where I was a child, focused of the wrapped boxes around the
tree...;-)
As I am part of a family scattered all over the planet with two permanent feline members
living with me full time, my heart was in Germany, Costa Rica, Oregon, Nevada, South
Africa, Italy, France, Britain, Australia, Spain and Hawai'i, where it formed some union
with my 'six-sense-machine'.
The recession, that had started earlier for me than for most others (I restore Classic Cars)
gave me ample opportunity to internalize the differences between Having and Doing to
Being. With scarce resources, living almost 'funds-less' in a cute little house that belongs
to friends of mine that offered me shelter, for I had lost my last place due to nonsense,
I started to focus on the real Christmas Spirit. Communicating with my children in Costa
Rica I felt the great gift of being a Dad, dearly loved by his kids.
When I appeared at the local restaurant close to the Lava Flow, a young woman cought
my attention, as she seemed not to be from this world. I could never explain to You what
it actually was, but the energy field was very intense. She seemed to be in her early twenties
and compared to the local dressing style of the youngsters she stuck out as dressed more
fit for Washington than Kalapana.
While I received my coffee and chatted with an Angel that works at the restaurant, the young
woman came and sat down at a table close to where I stood, without being a customer to
the restaurant. She looked at me and her face reflected a blend of innocence and suffering.
She suddenly asked me "Are You Going Somewhere?"
I responded "Well I came from somewhere, so it is likely that I will go somewhere when I leave."
It was intended to be a joke, but she asked me "May I come with You?"
I said "Well, I am not sure whether You want to go where I go. I am going into the Lava Field
to visit my friends that live there." "Can I come with You?" she asked again and I said, feeling
the distress in her energy field "Okay, today is Christmas Eve, where I come from that's the
day we celebrate, so if You like You can come with me. It's just a few miles into the Lava. I
want to see a good friend of mine."
cont.
I made room in the truck for her and off we went. Leaving the parking lot I found out that her
name was Julia. She started to cry immediately. I asked her whether there would be a specific
reason to cry and she told me under tears that her father had just died and her grandma is
dying in a hospital right now. I replied that death is an illusion in my eyes, over rated at such
and that our real essence, Energy, is immortal. I kept asking her questions and found out, that
she had nowhere to go.
After we arrived at my friends place, he joined me in the sense making effort to find out what
had happened to her. So we went to the Lava Flow, where My Beloved Goddess Pele had
decided to remain calm, without signs of activity. Yet, I sensed this great Energy coming from
the Flow Field, the eerie expectation of something coming about to happen.
The indifference of our young guest was stunning. When it suddenly began to rain, the most
wonderful Rainbow ever appeared. It was a full double rainbow, spreading from the volcano
on the left side all the way to the Ocean on the right. People were applauding and cheering
to it, it was really beautiful beyond description.
We walked through the rainbow and went back to my friends place. There, Julia showed us
her Eagle feathers and did some routines I would call a ritual. At this time she did no longer
appear to be from this world and she disappeared while my friend and I took a look at his newly
created vegetable garden. After an hour I started to worry, as she would not come back and
my friend agreed that she was confused and disoriented. I went into the old Lava Field looking
for her with no result.
I decided to take a look at her bag to find out more about her. She had a Canadian passport
and student passes, but no local reference. When I saw her passport I was totally blown away.
She was born on the same day as me, only with a 'few' decades between us. Now I knew that
something was going on here. I went into the Rain Forest to find her meandering around.
I told her that we were concerned about her and that I had looked at her passport, revealing
that we were born on the same day.
She was skeptical at first, but after I showed her my ID she was convinced she could trust me
somehow. At this time my friend and I had figured ot, that she did not know how she got to
Kalapana, that she did not know where that is and where she belonged. I had heard times
before that sometimes a severe trauma can cause a total loss of orientation. I decided to go
back to the restaurant and ask my Angel for advice.
As the Angel had already left to be with her grandchildren and nobody else seemed really to
care that there was a pretty young woman who did not know where she is and how she got there
and where she belongs, I called 911 for an ambulance. It was kind of difficult to convince the
dispatcher that even there was no blood or loss of consciousness involved, the situation required
medical attention. At this time Julia tried to make phone calls, but the numbers she dialed were
too long for the public phone and even though the money was falling through, she pretended
to talk to somebody.
The arriving responders were skeptical but realized quickly that she was indeed in danger and
that it would be reckless to leave her behind, knowing about her condition. Two police cars showed
up and after they had talked to the para medics they thanked me for my help and Julia disappeared
in the ambulance and drove off into Christmas Eve with unusual 'Christmas Lights'.
Then I went back to pick up my friend to invite him for Christmas Eve Dinner, as my mom always
told me, that the occasion asks all of us to help the ones that have less than us. I served spicy
Rigatoni and we ended up walking out into the Lava Field, where Pele awarded us with some
spectacular displays of her joy over the events of the day.
Finally, a young tourist couple 'dared' to approach the Ocean Entry and we decided to go back to
the truck, after all the cracks around us started to smolder. No sooner than we reached the parking
lot, the first rain drops of a tropical storm started and we felt very, very blessed by Source Energy.
Merry Christmas to all of You
It's just Karma
May all Beings be blessed.
Sioux Rose
IT'S JUST KARMA: Thank you for sharing the beautiful story that shows, through the message of the rainbow and shared birth imprint that on a spiritual level we ARE all one.
Years ago I had a very traumatic experience, was in my 20's and probably resembled that young woman. A gay friend of mine invited me over to someone's home I'd never met before. The guy was so intriguing to me... although gay, his energy was unbelievably compelling to me. I said, "What sign are you?" He answered, "Leo." And then, "What day?" It was my own. August 9. And so was his year. We were sort of astro-twins and as I said, I was so captivated by his ENERGY. Then I realized he mirrored my TRUE energy, that is, when I was not feeling so traumatized. He was a Latin-Taino Indian mix and said to me, "When was the last time you went to El Junque?" (The rain forest). I realized he was prescribing the cure my soul needed. And I went, and gradually the light returned to me.
Years later a friend took me to a medicine man who told me I was a daughter of the river, Auchun, who inhabited, as Spirit, the rain forest river waters. And I would go up into the jungle by myself, where possible find a flat rock within the folds of ancient water falls, and do Yoga to center myself. For a while I had a young companion (same year and vintage as the current one, things certainly come full circle for me), who joined the U.S. parks service in part to discover new trails in the rain forest to turn me onto when I'd visit. I got him to hike with me to the top of the jungle in the dark, without use of any artificial light source so we could feel like the indigenous who dwelled there in times past. Whenever it rained, we would always have some kind of tree for shelter at the right moment.
And when my first daughter was born, I waited at the beach till the sun went down before going to the hospital. A double rainbow appeared... it's a powerful totem to me.
Anyone reading this, if the time comes that you meet someone born on your day (especially if it's the same year), pay attention. A message is waiting for you via that sacred encounter.
Again, I am honored that you shared this wonderful story with me.
itsjustkarma:I've been thinking about your story. You did the good thing. Are you able to do a follow up on the ambulance taking the young woman to the ER? If you do not feel OK about doing it, is there an advocacy group for mentally ill/disabled who you can tell about the story and ask them to do a follow up, to find out if she got good care? (The hospital has an ombudsman, usually.) I do not wish to scare you, but you might google "Esmin Green",who did not get good care in Brooklyn, NY a few months ago, in a Psychiatric Emergency Room.
You are definitely right. Even though those para medics are secretive as I am
not related to Julia (other than my birthday...), I was inquiring with friends that
know the ER where they took her. It is to be known as a very good mental
health care ER (Hawaii...), but I will surely check on her well being.
Thank You Very Much - Mahalo Nui!
May all Beings be blessed.
That was really beautiful, bra! Mahalo!
I'm sorry but I won't join in the pity party.
Adult children are the product of their environment and upbringing. They have to learn beliefs and behaviour somewhere and the over importance you have shown to the feast and gifts consumed in the past is a good place to begin.
Instead of pining for past christmases and raling over ungrateful children try helping out at your local soup kitchen.
With All Due Respect, but You are sorry.
Why? Because of Your statement "...I won't join the pity party."
Instead You join the blame party.
Lessons of my recent life show me clearly where our most telling 'glitches' are.
Nothing new actually, but to internalize the understanding that all our troubles
are derived out of our incessant stream of judgments towards others.
It is not that Your statement would not be true at the core, but the way You
convey the message, leads me to believe that You are convinced of being
already 'there'.
Without the first sentence I would certainly presume that You have reached
a higher level of understanding. Yet the blame part prevents that to a large
degree.
Last but not least, it is a good thing to help out in a soup kitchen, it is far better
to not let it get that far in the first place, meaning to prevent people to become
homeless, starving and melting away in sheer despair.
May all Beings be blessed.
Not blaming nor attributing a value . Just seems to me that Donna seems so bewildered at her current "predicament" while it's not that hard to figure out.
Maybe I should explain myself better, I often come across as harsh when that isn't my intent.
Be happy for what you have now, be happy with your past both good and bad.
We should never expect children to be grateful because they never asked for what we gave them.
If we attribute so much meaning to material goods we will never be satisfied . Sure nice things are nice but really we can live without them.
There are many many people who never even had what Donna had. That seems lost on her. In fact most people have always lived the life she has now or one that's even poorer.
I'm not American so maybe the dream of a "home" doesn't have such a loaded meaning.
And please don't include me in your blessing, the assumption is very insulting and condescending.
re soup kitchens, there will always be people who for one reason or another fall through the cracks, no matter how good our social programs.
I never blessed You.
To call an expression of Buddha insulting tells it all.
May all Beings be blessed.
I appreciate your comments. I don't spend much time in pity parties -- and do spend a great deal of time working hard and volunteering. That doesn't mean I don't hurt, but I don't let it stop my work. Ever.
And your point about grown children being a product of their upbringing is not lost on me. I do think I often missed the mark as a parent as I tried to shield my kids from harder times and issues. But, all of my children are strong and decent adults in their own communities. They volunteer and work very hard as well -- sometimes too hard to see or spend time on issues closer to home. But they have also been products of a money-driven society -- as I was as well. As I have said in other messages, I am blessed beyond what most other people in the world will ever have. That's not lost on me either -- and I have said so many times.
Without the past I have experienced I wouldn't be doing what I am doing now. But that does not mean I want more trouble so my future experiences might be enhanced.
Thanks, again for the comments. I am informed by all of them.
Donna Smith, American SiCKO
Sioux Rose
Good morning, all. This particularl thread reinforces my belief in the goodness of man and woman-kind.
SHADOWDANCER: Wonderful post! Thank you for reminding us that the treasure IS within, and so many Masters have taught this.
IT'S JUST KARMA: Thank you for the comparison with Germany and your wise articulations.
TRUTHTELLER: Loved your post.
NYCARTIST: I appreciate your informing us about the developments in N.Y. Perhaps the richest (?) city in the world, with poverty just outside its shiny shop windows.
DONNA: Deliverance comes in strange and unexpected ways.
ARDEE & KLEVER: You are both so kind, and I appreciate your acknowledge.
As the saying NAMASTE goes, it means, "seek, find and validate the LIGHT in one another, for we all come from the same Source." Blessings to all.
Life upon planet earth where anything that can happen for one or to one can happen to you, too. Yesterday's homeless person can be tomorrow's new neighbor.
Since I attended Indian 101 as well as the European Style of Schools I was taught to live in & under most any circumstances presented me. I was taught life is an adventure & that the adventure of the journey of passing through this world may include many many many things perceived or unperceived.
Many tribes were uprooted from their homelands, & marched too other places that would become their Reservations/Rez's. This was not a matter of their economics but a matter of the economics of those with gold also bought their guns so they could do such things. They dressed themselves up & called themselves "The Law," but essentually weren't any different from evil men before their time or evil men to come after their time who loved worldly power & worldly wealth.
Jesus's original followers who did not call themselves Christians, but called themselves followers of The Way tried to live as Communalists but they were still living in a money/mammon based world. Jesus would not have appealed to a lot of people in Israel at that time telling people to sell their possession, give the money to the poor, & to follow him.
To people who had money & wanted more money what good was a person to them like Jesus who didn't have political, religious, & business connections in the world?
At the same time the Tribes of Turtle Island were living as Tribal Communalists in a non-money-non-mammon based world even through there were great trade routes.
The Tribes referred to the way they lived upon the earth as The Old Way, or the Original Way.
Now a matter of economics & anyone can lose their home pretty much anywhere upon the planet. If their job goes they could lose their apartments & such if they don't own a home in the dog eat dog world some refer to as the rat race.
I never pretend that every person of Native Heritage was perfect or could do not wrong, but like all other peoples we had the Spiritual Gift of forgiveness when wronged by others, or when we wronged others. Essentially the individual tribes loved one another & understood their survial was dependent upon each other where this world survial can come to what money you have in your pocket for the cash registers. The dog eat dog world. The rat race.
Yet within the dog eat dog world, the rat race, there are people of all Heritages that do try to help one another & others in what ways the are able as basically the planet orbits getting nowhere & going nowhere while the human race bumps along in this thing called journey as each person as an individual makes their journey through this world.
I am happy to be a part of God's creation, but I am only a part. I am happy to see & live within God's creation even if it means living under another people's type of wordly Govt & way of life that I find to be strange. Even though I live in the modern day world I am very old fashioned. Yet too many because I am a tribal communalist I would appear as a left wing liberal because they have no idea about tribal communalists or the old way, but I don't have any worldly politics at all.
Many economists are still saying what is happening now around the planet is going to get far far worse. I've been following the housing bubble stories for a long time.
Peace, love, & happiness are things that come from within & rarely have little to do with the outward trappings of the world. When asked by the Pharisee's when the Kingdom would come Jesus told them the Kingdom is within.
They knew not what he spoke just as most people today including the modern day Religious Political Pharisees wouldn't know about the things he spoke as Jesus did not teach religion, nor did he give any indication he came to start a new religion. Jesus taught his Father's Spiritual Kingdom that is not of the world of man, this world.
Jesus knew men would take his name & God's name & use them for nothing more than their own evil ambitions upon the earth just as he told the religious political factions of Israel that their father was the devil who was a liar & a murderer from the beginning. Doubtful that garnered him many dinner invites.
And men did & do in this very day still take his name & God's name in vain using them for nothing more than their own evil ambitions upon the earth as they keep trying to make things about this world.
When peace, love, & happiness come from within then everyday is Christmas as it is not based upon the outer trapping of this world, power, & wealth.
Life is good.
That was beautiful ShadowDancer. The Old Way may yet become mainstream again. Yes, life is good. May beauty surround us. ~Moondoggy
This touching piece reminds us that 21st century Amerika is not far removed from Charles Dickens's 19th century England.
Donna-
My heart goes out to you with your feelings about how your grown children are staying away this Christmas because you no longer have a 'home' that they can 'come home' to.
It is sad that sometimes our children mistake a 'home' for family, when it definetely isn't.
The reality is that YOU are the root of your family, and someday they will realize their mistake and will regret their choices.
But maybe this year you could do something different to keep your mind off their absences- like volunteer in a children's ward at a hospital or in some other way.
There are others who have much greater losses, and it does help to put things into perspective.
However, I do understand your plight and my prayers go out to you.
Merry Christmas, Donna, and from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan (where I live) where poverty and hardship are always just a heartbeat away, I am proof that you can make it through this. God Speed.
Thank you all for your comments. I hope that I do send a message of service in the world to my children -- and they do volunteer in their communities. I am most proud of them. In our family, as in many others, seeing the suffering among your own and finding ways to help are laddled with all sorts of other influences and histories.
And I am blessed beyond what most people on this earth will ever experience -- that is never far from my mind. I do just truly believe we can do better for one another -- and if each of us or even just enough of us fight for justice for all, especially in the area of healthcare, we'll move to better places.
Merry Christmas to you.
Donna Smith, American SiCKO
Donna,
Your article is truly moving, with both the unrelenting power of truth and the tenderness of a mother's heart.
We are all about to experience changes of a magnitude most Americans are unprepared to comprehend. The suffering will be staggering and nearly universal. The only way through, it seems to me, is to face it with compassion for each other, to help each other and to re-learn a value system that places human dignity, caring and respect for each other, our fellow creatures and the planet itself above creature comforts, profits and mindless consumption.
Your article and other endeavors are important and appreciated.
If things are about to get so bad as you and so many others predict, then I think it's time that the average person take up gardening. If I didn't already have an established garden I would be seriously looking into joining a community garden and be ready to begin planting by early Spring. Now's the time to take gardening classes, study seed catalogs and learn about growing food.
In my humble opinion one of the best threads of the year. Thank You Donna
for Your openness and the sharing of matters of Your heart.
So many pointed comments and encouragement do feel great. That is one of
the reasons I love Common Dreams.
My take on this is rather simple. Born in Germany, I grew up with a 'Constitution'
(Grundgesetz) that was the direct result of the most infamous times mankind has
ever witnessed. 'National Socialism'.
Article one of the German Constitutional Law states:
'Die Wuerde Des Menschen Ist Unantastbar' which I translate into
'The Dignity Of A Human Being Is Inviolable'
Compared wit the Declaration Of Independence:
'We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal,
that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,
that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.'
Unfortunately, Dignity is not an unalienable right in the US. Instead
for the last 200 + years, Life and Liberty have been caved out by people
who saw fit to argue those rights. As a single most important fragment,
'the Pursuit Of Happiness' was isolated and held against Life and Liberty.
Thomas Jefferson was a great man with an even greater vision. Yet, he
could not possibly know, how 'the Pursuit Of Happiness' would be grossly
perverted in a society that misinterpreted 'Happiness' with wealth.
From a philosophical point of view (as well as my own), Happiness cannot
be pursued per se. Happiness is the result of a keen understanding, that
it is something that dwells inside us. It is the realization about who we Are,
not what we pursue to Have or to Do.
America became notoriously famous for the story of the dishwasher that
turned millionaire. Most of the world still believed that, until the very last
President of this once great Nation proved different.
Entering a time in which Having And Doing becomes a mantra of the rich
and a curse for the very people the Declaration was ought to protect, Being
will be the sole focus of the tortured mind.
Only the acknowledgment of Being as the one and only standard of
Happiness will bring peace to a society that has been brainwashed for the
last hundred years into raw consumerism as recipe to achieve aforementioned
Happiness.
In conclusion I would like to point out to all fellow humans here in the US and
elsewhere (global recession), that not to have anything anymore and not to be
able to do the things one did before, warrants a great opportunity to realize, that
Happiness is neither Doing, nor Having. Happiness is Being. Being is Happiness.
Nobody can take my happiness away, it is my innermost reason to Be.
To Donna, all those remarkable evolved Common Dreamers and everybody on
this beautiful Planet, that knows how to cherish Being, I wish a heart full of joy
in these turbulent times.
Peace on Earth and in You.
Happy And Meaningful Holidays to You.
It's Just Karma aka Wolfgang Exel Watson
May all Beings be blessed.
Itsjustkarma, aka Wolfgang,
Thank you. You share keen observations, also
kind thoughts for the Common Dreamers.
Happy holidays to you and those you love.
Middle-class devastation is impossible to quantify. So are the number of willing victims. Folks are either part of the problem or part of the solution. Donna takes ownership of being part of the solution. Very few acknowledge being part of the problem.
Acknowledgement requires cognizance. Being oblivious is a national pastime ... until one's own oxen are being gored. Then hell hath no fury like those who blame themselves.
There is no conspiracy. The systemic cause-and-effect doesn't require rocket scientists or doctorates in sociology. Given the opportunity and the prospects of reward, many people will and do steal, defraud, deceive, and otherwise further their personal interests. Personal interests find fertile ground in corporate, unregulated environments. The Russians have followed America's lead and the Chinese are well on their way.
Our sports events are invariably accompanied by umpires, referees, and judges. They are not there to be decorative or to add aesthetics to the games or matches. They are there to ensure fairness.
When referees have been corrupted by some form of payoff, unfairness prevails, an imbalance is struck, and one team has been designated a loser before the game begins.
We cannot have fairness in a democracy absent vigilant referees aka regulators aka elected officials. Pay-to-play is the cancer that metastasizes and envelops almost every aspect of our lives. Filthy water and toxic air are fueled by it. The absence of a rational universal healthcare system is sustained by it. Fraud is enabled by it. Greed is rewarded from it.
Healthcare is only the most apparent human requisite transformed into a commodity by a corrupted society. One family's suffering is another family's upward mobility. The Smiths of America suffer; the insurance brokers thrive. Many other families file bankruptcy because of unconscionable medical bills; hospital CEOs are paid six and seven figure salaries. Americans die and suffer for lack of medications; Big Pharma enjoys unparalleled profits. We anxiously await results of Oscar trophies delivered by esteemed CPA firms; they turned a blind eye to ENRON, HealthSouth and hundreds, if not thousands, of other execs when they cooked the books and committed massive fraud.
The government comes to the rescue of companites gone crooked en masse. They are enabled by those who are rewarded ... with campaign funds, junkets, meals, and/or lucrative jobs post-public office ... for failing to referee.
Most people who signed up for sub-prime mortages were told they could afford them. The mortgagees trusted them. It was their only sin. Credit card companies perfected the trick. Anyone ever try to read Terms and Conditions upon presentation of a credit card application? The print is microscopic and not because financial service companies are trying to save trees and ink.
A great line from the last courtroom scene in A Few Good Men sums up what we wanted from our President and Congress, Governors and state legislatures:
Lance Corporal Dawson tells Private Downey, "We're supposed to fight for people who can't fight for themselves."
We have lost sight of the purpose of government, which is to protect us from threats and enemies foreign and domestic. Government has no higher purpose.
even a dead fish can go with the flow
This is all very sad, I just had my 61st birthday yesterday and am buying a house, the closing is scheduled for 1-30-08.
It is small but well maintained, cheaper than rent, low taxes,crummy neighborhood, but there are no gov. subsidized apts. that will allow me to keep my two dogs and one cat and they will stay with me as long as I am able to care for them.
I have already lost a home in 1990, it was sheriff saled because I couldn't
pay my mortgage, my children left home & here in Pittsburgh we've been in a recession since the early eighties due to losing US Steel.
If you want to read a truly heartbreaking story go to today's issue of URUK.net,
it concerns a Palestinian family of ten, living in a cave and the Israelis are
planning to demolish their cave. It is the most shockingly abusive story of gov. power that I've ever read.
Donna Smith:
Thank you for this article.
I have what may seem like a simplistic suggestion.but here goes.In gentle tone but unequivical words,tell your children that you and your husband are hurt by their not visiting.Perhaps settling on brief visits because of size limitations would suit everyone's needs.
Siouxrose:I'd like to second the compliments above.You lose me on occasion when you delve into the arcana of astrology,but I always brighten up when I see your "handle".
Sioux Rose
KLEVER: When I was a little girl my father would eat cheeses that to me had odd smells. He would say, "You develop a taste for it." That's the analogy I can best associate with bringing the esoteric perspective of astrology and its cycles into this forum. In the beginning my clients could not keep up with what I was trying to show them about their lives, but over time, and the evidence of things stated coming quite often to pass, they have developed an ear for it. It is a language of complex associations, the likes of which we are not taught to recognize; but it's underlying structure is utterly LOGICAL. (astro-logical, in fact!) May the stars be with you... this holiday season.
Sioux Rose: When I was a little girl, my father ate Limburger cheese. It smelled bad. From Brooklyn, to Florida (although I'm older), and my dad said the same thing as yours....it's a small world indeed.
Sioux Rose
Dear Lady, I am a native New Yorker, who's traveled a good deal, born with the gypsy blood it would seem.
Do you mean me "dear lady"? Where in NY?
Sioux Rose
Yes. Are you not a dear lady? Born in Brooklyn, raised in Woodmere, then Huntington, attended University of New York at Albany, and then many elsewheres.
Well......not a lady. To spouse, I am "dear". Brooklyn, Yay. I don't know Long Island much. I went to Oswego when it was a state teachers college. Lots of my classmates were from Long Island. I went only because a pal in Brooklyn didn't want to go alone. She backed out at last minute to stay with dad. Lake Ontario. Snow. Dead fish in summer on the shore. You are in North FL? I loved travel, but always home to NYC. I love the variety of faces, languages... I could put myself in Paris for awhile. I could manage in London. I loved Florence, Italy. Haven't been to FL since folks tried to get work in Miami in 1941 when I was an infant, during the Depression. They came back. Dad enlisted after WWII started.
Thanks for the comments. I enjoy everyone's comments and learn a great deal from them.
As for the grown kids, some day I know I'll grow smarter in their eyes as their own lives unfold -- I just always hope for lessons more easily learned for them. My mom seems incredibly wise to me now not because of her increase in knowledge but because of my own willingness to honor her effort and her love.
Donna Smith, American SiCKO
This is what happens when GREED becomes the driving ethic of a nation instead of community.
When will we all join together and help one another out.
The SYSTEM is not working!
it just isn't working.. very soon I will be in this very same situation.it is frightening, saddening and the world just keeps on turning...
Donnasicko:Donna Smith, hello. I can empathize with you. Not sure where to begin:easiest "small things". Yes. There's a radio producer on WBAI www.wbai.org Sidney Smith, who is now homeless, has all his belongings in some boxes and about 6 back packs, near age 60. (shows are online,free, Sidney Smith's show "Carrier Wave" and he was talking about it last Sunday. I am a longtime listener. He once had a house. His mom died. He paid off all her medical debts. Community radio has mostly volunteer producers.) He talked about what small things he's holding onto, doesn't care about his furniture and some things in storage. Gave all the jewelry to relatives.
Also, the book title and why "The God of Small Things",novel by Arundhati Roy.
I went through bankruptcy due to disabling illness. Didn't own a house, am a renter. Spouse is working, can't afford to retire on soc. sec. (bank loans for his PhD will go on forever; creative interest for when you have to defer month or months' payment). Education cuts can take away his job.
Just remember no one is ever the only one. (That's for the readers. Donna knows that.)
I just listened to WBAI Evening News. www.wbai.org (The Pacifica station in NYC.)www.pacifica.org
Interview with two people,workers from Coalition for the Homeless, in NYC. A good group. www.coalitionforthehomeless.org
There are 1300 families per month going into the shelter/homeless system in NYC at this time. Higher than ever in the history of the city of NY keeping records for 25 years.
The Gov.and Mayor are planning cuts, so that the preventive services to keep people in their homes, are going to lose money=more people into the shelter system which is "many thousands of dollars more expensive" per family than helping to pay the rent for a short time. The Mayor has also stopped giving Section 8 vouchers to homeless families. "An ounce of prevention..." Many are people who have just lost their jobs or foreclosure victims. NYC had been prey to predatory lenders in minority communities. Where people had formerly been redlined by banks (and couldn't get mortgages in certain neighborhoods of color), predatory lenders came in, you know, that housing bubble, and when the people got hit a year or two later with gigantic increase in monthly mortgage rates, they couldn't pay. (Source for comment on redlining,predatory lending:NYC Councilmember Charles Barron.)
People who are younger, in good health, have money in the bank, inherited a family business or job in one, or have good family connections tend to be the most nonempathetic. It doesn't take a lot to learn. One job loss, one chronic illness...I am so happy that I am well enough to do this comment and have a computer, used, older.
Donna Smith, thank you for your telling your story. I lost family members when I became ill:fear. I lost professional and old friends:fear. People run from their fear of severe illness or disability. I have heard it so many times from other artists. And I have CFS/ME. I can only imagine what someone with AIDS has gone through. I made new friends. My beloved spouse didn't "run away".
My good wishes to Grandpa. Thank you for your service Donna Smith. I remain hopeful for all of us. Humor goes last, is my motto. And, as Jesse Jackson always reminds, "Keep hope alive.".
Thank you. I have so much compared to others -- my husband, an apartment and the ability to write. I am warm while many are not. I am fed while many are hungry.
I even get to comment in circles of power and pray my words sometimes make a difference. A year ago, I had much, much less.
I just want us to create a more just system in which we truly value life and one another -- and we do so in the most efficient and cost-effective way. Single payer givers people dignity and gives much more to the nation. Dignity is good for the economy, it turns out, not just the soul.
Donna Smith, American SiCKO
donnasicko:Donna Smith:One last thought, when I read you say that you have so much more than others. It reminds me of when I got ill and people started telling me how others were in worse shape. My spouse pointed out:everyone's pain is important. That's the best I can explain it. I was pleased to see your honoring of your mother. Our mothers and grandmothers have been through very tough times and taught us "survival". Good holidays to you.
I'm very sad to hear about your situation Donna.
I know we chatted before regarding one of your previous articles on Healthcare.
The only suggestion I can make is possibly moving to Massachusetts.
They have a very imperfect universal healthcare system in place, very similar to the one Obama desires.
Every person is forced to buy health insurance. Those with little income get it for free.
Their program is already collapsing under the weight of its own stupidity. One estimate I read said the program might not last another three years.
But if you need access to healthcare run to Massachusetts and get what you can.
I do have insurance -- that's a good thing. But I'll admit I always worry about the co-pays and deductibles and that's still scary to me, so I avoid going to the doctor now.
I always feel like I'm being worked in the current healthcare system. I'm a source of revenue not a patient. It bothers me and makes me mis-trust the information I am given as I wonder what the financial motive is behind the treatment offered. So, honestly, I try not to access the system much anymore and use lots of OTC meds to "treat" things that might be better treated otherwise.
Donna Smith, American SiCKO
.You are very aware, I am certain, that 50% of all bankruptcies are health care related. Those folks thought they had health care also, and, once a life threatening situation occured, they found they were not going to be covered.
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Sioux Rose,
it's not a "sin against nature." it's ruling class rape. are you ready to take whatever means necessary to stop it and build a better society?
tom arnall
arcata
Sioux Rose
TOM: I'll concede to both! How's that. What do you have in mind? The Bahai faith sees the teacher as a high calling, and I consider myself one. I try to educate people and have made that a lifelong commitment. If you're asking me to join a revolution or use firearms, that's not my style. I think it's better to pre-empt violence then get embroiled and find one's self on the front lines of defense or offense.
Sioux Rose,
Your visionary contributions on these pages are educational and they are appreciated.
This online community indeed holds some promise!
Sioux Rose
WC652: Your kindness is deeply appreciated. Happy holidays to you and those you love.
Sioux Rose,
Thank you.
And I extend best wishes to you;
happy holidays to you and those you love.
In Canada the Medical Care Act of 1966 was the final component of a developing medical care system. It was introduced by a minority Liberal government pressured by the New Democratic (socialist) Party, that held the balance of power.
I have always considered that the US abhorrence of socialism (which many treat as profanity) and the cult of individualism underlie the current lack of social services.
Change will require a paradigm shift and consequently be extremely difficult to bring about. However the current economic crisis provides some hope, especially recognizing that the Chinese word for crisis also means opportunity.
Remember Donna, home is where the heart is and good luck.
"Good times are coming...but they sure are coming slow." -Neil Young
Not to be judgmental, as surely every bankruptcy and foreclosure situation is different. But it's true, that many of us have been living beyond our means for many years, even decades now. Credit is too easy to get, much harder to pay back.
I don't want to sound like a know-it-all or an I-told-you-so kinda guy, BUT... I saw this coming. For me, personally I made up my mind in my early 20's that I would not use credit cards and would not borrow money. I also decided I would never buy a house, nor pay rent, nor ever buy a new car.
So what did I do? I did all the above, except buy the house. But I saw the trap I was setting for myself, so I payed off that credit card and by my 30th birthday I was debt free. I've been living within my means ever since.
Now I'm in my late 40's living simply in a log cabin, with no mortgage. Lucky? Just smart I guess. Not that smart, really, I just don't like to enrich people that are rich already. Every time I get a credit card offer, I use it for fire starter.
I see a way out of this crises, but we can't repeat the mistakes from the past. What worked before no longer applies. I see a future in communal living and living within our means. Living on credit is based on a lot of supposition and fantasy. Time to wake up and get real America!
You were just plain lucky too... what if you did all of that smart living and then got sick? And didn't have enough savings even if you sold everything? And what if your insurance, your disability insurance and your healthcare savings account wouldn't cover all the bills? I suppose your answer would be to die rather than take on medical debt.
And maybe that's what we've come to. Those who foresee enough, plan enough, earn enough, work enough, save enough and stay well enough may be OK for a while if they get sick. But those who get cancer or some other costly illness and exhaust what they have -- well, to borrow an old author's thoughts -- should just die and help reduce the surplus population? I cannot accept that.
I cannot live a perfect life and have not lived one. And I believe healthcare is a basic human right that even the imperfect among us are worthy of having. Everybody in, nobody out.
Donna Smith, American SiCKO
Hi Donna, thanks for the article, and reply to my comment.
Yeah, luck was part of it. But also making choices that most people would shudder at. I have never had a high paying job. I just didn't throw my hard-earned paychecks away at trying to live like someone with money.
I worked as a seasonal forester for many years while camping in the Forest to avoid paying rent. I got lucky a few times house sitting for extended periods and payed or worked off low rent living on ranches. I spent many years living in a tent and a tepee.
I met my wife later in life (age 35) who also lived in a tepee for 9 years. I won't go into great detail because it's a long story. But we bought a piece of raw land in Montana for dirt cheep. We built this place from scratch trading out labor.
Every day it gets better, little by little. We grow about half the food we eat in a garden we developed on a rocky bench above the river. I built the top soil myself from shoving peat and horse shit bringing it in by wheelbarrow. We heat our cabin with wood we cut ourselves.
Most people would think we are crazy, and one week spent with us and most people wouldn't be able to hack it. We work hard, and I mean hard. With frozen fingers and toes! But we don't owe anyone except the tax man. We pay about a thousand a year in property taxes.
We don't have health insurance, except just being careful, and knowing how to heal with herbs and homeopathy. Risky? No more risky than living it up in a McMansion with a 3 car garage and a corporate job down the freeway, with bills up the ass. We just live without all the silly luxuries most people "need". And we rarely travel.
We made a conscious decision early in life to live simply. Read Henry David Thoreau, and simplify. Get together with other like-minded folks and pool your resources, even if it's just a talent for cooking, gardening, building, writing, massage, or however you may contribute.
We need community now more than ever.
I think living in a log cabin or communal living--while great for people who prefer it--is just circumventing the problem. That is, the problem isn't so much "living within our means" as you say.
The problem involves the inequality of income distribution.
It's about people being able to maintain a livelihood--to actually hold a job that affords material well-being.
Hey Greg, I hear ya. See my comment to Donna above.
It's also about not throwing your money away. It's about being willing to cut corners and tighten your belt. It's about not being afraid to live within your income bracket. It's about sacrifice. It's about ingenuity. It's about entrepreneurship. It's about a shift in awareness and consciousness.
For me, living in a tent is preferable to an apartment if you have to pay some wealthy landlord a thousand or more dollars per month. And who needs cable television? Who need a new car, or a car at all? Who needs to be strapped paying bills for frivolous luxuries?
Yes, there is inequality in income distribution. It's criminal that CEO's are making 400 times more than their entry-level employees. But it's easier to change yourself than to change someone else. Revolution begins at home, er in your heart.
Hey doggy,
Yeah, anything real is gonna begin in your heart... but that's only the half of it.
You concede there is inequality in income distribution--might as well add to that inequality in healthcare distribution too!
So clearly, and as Donna's note to you points out, "being willing to cut corners and tighten your belt" is not going to help.
That approach is only another manifestation of today's culture to turn inward--to feed off whatever feelings of superiority and resentment that can be squeezed out of a false sense of responsibility.
Yo Greg,
As you say "as Donna's note to you points out, "being willing to cut corners and tighten your belt" is not going to help." I concede that yes, that may be true in the big picture, to some degree, but it has helped us on our path.
And I concede that yes, there is a huge and ugly inequality in health care. It has forced us (my family) to back away from being major participants in the system, and forced us to "go it alone" which is an attitude that so many Republicans admire and espouse.
As The Canadian gentleman observed, us gringos are afraid of socialism. We are afraid it'll make our taxes go up. Here's another quote from Neil Young, "How do you pay for war and leave us dyin' - when you could do so much more, you're not even tryin'!"
It's evident to me it's the insurance companies and the drug companies that are the root of the problem. That's why I refuse to support either one. Risky? Maybe, but my conscience is clear.
I sure hope we get universal single-payer health care in this country before I get old!
I really appreciate this thread... thank you both for commenting so thoughtfully. T
I learn so much more that I don't yet know.
I just believe we can be better to one another in so many ways. Community. Healthcare. It all matters.
Donna Smith, American SiCKO
Hi Donna,
Thanks, and thanks for this excellent article. My response could and should have been more compassionate. I've been thinking about this the past few days, how fortunate we are to have a roof over our heads. My good friend in Seattle rents out a tiny office to live in, and gives what he has left over to homeless people. He regularly gives out 5 and 10 dollar bills, food and blankets. It would be a bad winter to be homeless, especially up north here.
We have much to be thankful for and little to complain about. I'm truly sorry you are experiencing hardship. I'm sure it will all work out. Think positive. If you haven't already read it, I recommend a book by Ekhart Tolle called A New Earth, or it's prequel, The Power of Now.
May peace, happiness, health and prosperity be yours! Moondoggy
Moondoggy,
The difference between you and yours and the family with the corporate lifestyle is if/when you get cancer or some other serious illness, you'll die sooner and still go bankrupt.
I hope your luck holds out.
Because if I get cancer in my position (46, owner of a used bookstore, no insurance) my only really logical choice is to stare down the barrel of a .12 gauge. That way I leave at least something to my sons.
Yo Kegbot1,
What a sad, fatalistic attitude! Surely there are better options than that. That is not a logical choice at all! And what would you leave to your sons? For one, a huge mess to clean up all over the walls behind what used to be your face. And something much more odious would be the stain of that horrible choice you made for yourself upon their minds and hearts. They would carry that horrible feeling in the pit of their stomachs for the rest of their lives. They would have nightmares. Nothing you could leave behind for them could possibly make up for their loss and grief. And not only your sons, but everyone else who knows you, including all your customers.
You need to have a better plan than that. Where's your faith? The choices we make for ourselves have more to do with skill and less with luck. When one door closes, another one opens. Is the glass half full or half empty?
Are you worried about getting cancer? It could happen to any of us, whether we're living the corporate lifestyle or like me the lifestyle of an artisan/organic gardener. We all must face changes, but do we see it as crises or opportunity? And how much are we responsible for our fate? We make choices every day that affect our future well being.
I made many changes early on that have enriched my experience immeasurably. When I was 29, about to turn 30, I took stock of my life. I was already well on my way, but some commitments hadn't yet been made, so I made them. I decided that I would no longer throw anything away. So I began to recycle. I also made a commitment to only eat organic foods, no matter that they are more expensive (my body is worth it as it's the only body I got). Within 5 years I weaned myself off meats except wild salmon and organic buffalo, and in another 5 years gave up on meat and animal proteins completely. I've been a vegan for 9 years now (since December 31, 1999). It's not as difficult as you may imagine. And I almost never get sick, and the rare times I do, it's short lived.
Luck? Choice.
Have you studied up on how people heal themselves from cancer? It's usually by going on a strict regimen of raw organic fruits and vegetables. I decided long ago rather than wait to get sick, then try to heal myself, I'd take preventative measures before hand and live as if I was healing myself from cancer. You are 46, so I don't believe it's too late for you to make some positive changes. But you have to want to change. We can't wait for the government to come along and save us.
You got the power! I suggest you leave the shotgun behind and grab a hoe. This spring dig up a little turf and plant some carrots, spinach, radishes, peas and nasturtiums. Also plant some fruit trees and berry vines if you can. Get a lot of antioxidants into your system. Give up coffee (at least moderate) and drink herbal teas, yerba mate and the like. And support your local farmers market. As I've said before, revolution begins at home. It's up to you.
Thank You Moondoggy for this excellent advice!
You hit the nail right on the head.
kegbot1
Do Yourself the favor and rethink Your Fear of becoming sick. It is
that fear that makes us vulnerable to all kinds of nonsense. For years
I was befriended with one of the most influential humans on the planet.
Her name was Filomena Dingle and she lived in Makawao on Maui,
where I spend the first seven years of my Hawai'ian Life. Filo, as we
caled her, lived with her brother Raffaele (they were originally from Italy
and I still chuckle and laugh about their Italian accent after living for
most of their lives in Hawai'i ), because Filo had a stroke when she was
40 years old. That stroke gave her the ability to heal people. And that
was what she did until she went where she knew she would be -
with her God.
They were living in a tiny cottage and the little space they had was
occupied by water containers of all sizes. The water that they collected
would be blessed every night by Mother Mary (something I always had
trouble to believe in) and was then available for the sick.
'The Sick' were people from all walks of Life. Any disease You can
imagine walked in and out their always open door. Cancer, Diabetes,
Aids, Leukemia, Arthritis, You name it, Filo took care of them with
'Blessed Water'. Since Dr. Emoto we know about the properties of
Water. That's where I kicked in and were eager to find out what all this
was about. Because the people that drank Filo's blessed water all
recovered from what was bugging them.
To see how somebody that has skin cancer in a progressed state,
recovering without 'medical help' was incomprehensible. Years later
there was a study in Germany in regards to cancer and they found out,
that if You don't eat anything after 6 pm, your body will be able to digest
what's in Your tract before You go to sleep. Only with an empty digestive
tract, Your body starts to produce a serum like chemical that has the
ability to reverse cancer cell growth.
Sounds interesting if You consider that most people in America eat
round the clock. And junk. So when Filomena prescribed her blessed
water, she actually told the people as well to change their eating habits.
We live in a world in which fear has become the ultimate means to control
people's mind and health.
In the western world, health insurance means insurance from health.
No pharmaceutical company wants healthy people. The money is made
with ailments, illnesses and diseases.
The so called 'war on terror' is a war on our health. Through a perpetual
state of fear. Fear eats up Your soul. It makes You weak and vulnerable.
Moondoggy rose out of that state of fear, or was never really in it. His
lines reflect that. And I could not agree more. My life has turned away from
mindless consumption to mindful care of my whole Being. Health comes
from the inside, not form the outside. A very famous German actor turned
105 recently and he won't stop smoking. In a country that follows the US
way of prohibiting smoking wherever possible, he sits in a TV studio
lightening one up. "You are not allowed to smoke here!" they told him in
front of the cameras. He answered "You got to be kidding me, right? I am
105 years old, I do what I want!"
So please, ponder about this and use the internet to search for what I
mentioned. Don't buy into the fear our own governments are instilling on
a daily basis. World wide. Free Your Mind and live as long as You like!
May all Beings be blessed.
.I do love your narratives, but, seriously, noone is named Filomena Dingle...;-)
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
http://www.divine-heart.org/filomena2/index.html
;-)
May all Beings be blessed.
.I trust you understand I was not disbelieving but joking. Thanks for the link though.
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Sioux Rose
IT'S just karma: You're on a roll, friend. Love this story! Water, key to life. Did you see "What the Bleep do we know" where they show the monk meditating on water alters its crysalline structure? When I spent time in Nepal at the Buddhist monastery, on our last day we went into the little home of a high monk and they kept as relics some of his hair follicles and blood to show how these items crystallized. His hair looked like copper wire, and the blood looked like gems forming or red caviar. There are so many things that happen to the holy that science is yet to understand, or as Rajneesh put it, "And lovers have often known what saints have not." So much. An open mind can accept a miracle...
"...And those who attain homeownership and then lose homes or go bankrupt just managed poorly, lived beyond their means, didn't tighten the belt enough... on and on and on we go with our judgments."
That's pretty much what my sister and her husband told me last month when I visited back east for Thanksgiving. It came in response to my mentioning something I'd recently heard on the radio:
http://www.radioboston.org/stories/2008/11/20/toms-story/
Specifically she accused the guy of probably buying a "fancy" car.
Like so many--my sister and her husband are good people struggling to make ends meet--working two jobs. But they're firmly ensconced in the kind of myth of individual responsibility that's such a part of today's market-mindset.
It's like they and everyone else are in a cult.
On the way to the airport for my flight back, my sister stopped at the bookstore while I waited in the car. She picked up "The Secret"--which she's already read--just for me. She even got it wrapped, dear God.
And now she's reading Rick Warren's "purpose" book.
For my part, I tried to explain the role the 72 trillion dollar shadow CDS market has played in the financial crisis as well as get her to watch "Critical Condition" when it aired back in October. Not much luck there, but she does wear the Nader shirt I gave her! And in January I'll ask her to call Kennedy's office and her local rep regarding single-payer.
All said, it ain't easy but you have to lov'em anyway.
The for profit health insurance industry is draining this country dry of it's finest resource...WE THE PEOPLE.
It is baffling to me how any sane person would argue that their existence is a good thing? For profit health care should be universally despised IMO. It destroys fine people's lives, as per your heartfelt and bittersweet essay, and literally kills them by denying and delaying treatment.
They want to make it illegal for you to not have it and penalize you if you don't...What are we...Cars?!
From the Boston Globe...
Penalties for uninsured to rise next year
"The maximum penalty for 2009 for an uninsured adult who is 27 or older and makes at least $31,212 annually will be $89 a month, for a total of $1,068 for an entire year of noncompliance. That is $156 more than the top penalty for this year.
By law, the penalty is tied to the cost of insurance, and insurance premiums are increasing because of rising health costs and a state requirement that insurance plans include prescription coverage in 2009. "
To model our country's health care plan after this one is a huge mistake.
Thank you for your post and I wish you a peaceful holiday.
Sioux Rose
Poignantly written article. I have a modest home, but my children grew up in the 80's, the epoch of greed, and don't understand conservation or frugality, they think these are quaint post-hippie notions. So one daughter doesn't even want to visit my place! Meanwhile, as I watch her live beyond her means, young enough to eventually mend her efforts, I have "room at the inn" if the economy her corporate job rests upon further implodes.
What's even more disheartening about this article is the fact that an embarassment of riches was just lavished on the bankers who helped orchestrate the fiscal implosion now moving like an earthquake in slow motion across the land. That these bastards are still giving each other massive bonuses and paying for lush junkets is a sin against nature, particularly when we think of all those their jumbled numbers made homeless. Cheney should be the poster child for this decade, for ours is indeed a HEARTless nation, at least on the part of policy makers.
Dear Rose - I think your children may come to embrace your ways. The hard times to come may propel them back to you, spiritually or even physically.
One of mine, who always ridiculed my "commie" notions, has been telling me over and over recently that he sees I was right, and if anything I did not describe the corrosive greed and lack of ethics of Wall Street in strong enough terms. Our very modest apartment will soon be a stopping place for one of my married children as he and his wife are making changes in their lives from corporate work to some kind of community service. The change would be much more difficult if they could not live rent-free for a while.
In any case, it makes me happy to be able to provide a refuge and a place of love that they can always turn to if they need it. Same goes for some of our friends.
Joe
.An eloquent response to match an equally elegantly written article. Thanks Ms. Rose.
We have all (well most) been brainwashed to believe ultimate happiness can be purchased with credit cards. That one will never be truly happy doing so, that one becomes a profit center for those who benefit so much from a culture and a system that ruins lives and , ultimately, threatens the world itself, may very well be the greatest tragedy of our time.
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We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Sioux Rose
ARDEE: Fate cast us as accomplices in our defense against a certain someone. Nonetheless, I appreciate your intelligent postings and virtual friendship, and wish you warm holidays in these cold cold times.
.Thank you and the very same good wishes to you and yours. We will, I have absolutely no doubt, triumph at last. Perhaps not in our lifetimes but we will conquer hatred and greed.
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We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
we wil quickly begin to see multi-generational living under a single roof here in America becoming more and more common, which should start to change the subjective 'superiority' associated with ownership, hopefully replacing it with the respect due responsible living of any kind...there are a number of industries who have marketed, very successfully, the false notion of success as measured by acquisition...many long-passed-on, and, therefore, long-held, beliefs about life's purpose and human social development will need to be dissected, with many being tossed out and replaced with more realistic ones...the mindset behind development must be purged...
Sioux Rose
DUBET: Yesterday (I believe) NATIVE SON posted a description of life within the tribe and how cooperation and working together were a given. It is that sort of thing America must learn from those it once laid siege to. And of course, it would be a natural outcome if and when your prediction of more communal sorts of living arrangements comes to pass. (I believe you are correct there.)
So many becoming homeless every day, and empty houses all around - "Water, water, everywhere, and not a drop to drink!" Welcome to the new america.
There was a story here on CD a few weeks ago about this guy in Miami who broke into abandoned or foreclosed homes so homeless people could live there...sounds like something that needs to be done all over, since Miami isn't exactly inhospitable outside during winter.
In Appalachia, http://www.wisecountyissues.com we are loosing our home to Greed.
>>When home is no longer home for so many, the generational and cultural foundations are crumbling in ways that will forever alter our national being. The ground truly is shifting beneath our feet as 2009 dawns. And this year, home is even more elusive for many. For some of us, it's carried in a little box.
In Vancouver a few days ago a 47 year old homeless woman died when the shelter she had built for herself caught fire as she was lighting candles to keep warm.
It was one of the colder nights of the year. The police had come to her a number of times offering to take her to a shelter and she refused. A number of people from the shelters in the region had implored her to come inside and she would not.
The problem was that all of her possesions were in a small shopping cart that she pushed around with her and for whatever reasons, the shelters can not allow in these carts or peoples pets. (Tragically they were at work constructing shelters that would allow pets and shopping carts and the first one opened the very next day)
She died by burning when the candles she had lit to keep warm set the tarp and shelter ablaze . She used a lighter the cop had leant her.
And maybe in her cart were some of the things that grounded her somehow. It seems so silly to feel so attached to small things. But sometimes that's all people have left.
Donna Smith, American SiCKO