The Good Parent

            All parents have dreams for their child.  Often these include living a happy life, being healthy, getting a good job, marrying well, and perhaps even having children of their won.  Many foster a love of learning: from books or from experience.   

            Back in the early 1940s, it was possible to support a family and live moderately without a high school diploma.  College was often seen as only for the rich and the leisurely.  I was raised to believe that my only function in life was to marry early and have lots of children.

There’s a basis for this way of thinking.

My mother completed eighth grade, after three attempts. With her limited education, she was able to find, and hold, several, very different jobs. The one she loved the most was as the head telephone operator for the federal offices in San Francisco.

She came up with suggestions to improve service as well as helping disabled workers find success. The story she loved to tell was about a legally blind operator.

At first, my mother was miffed that he’d been hired. Back then, calls were connected by colored lines being fit into colored slots. Obviously, he couldn’t see either.

On her free time at work and at home, my mother experimented with various simple-to-make devices until she came up with a workable idea. Because of her ingenuity, the man succeeded and she won a cherished financial award.

While her limited education excluded her from high-paying positions, her ingenuity got the approval of her boss.

            My father graduated from high school but was unable to find a job. He finally got hired to work in a bowling alley where he’d jump from lane to lane, setting up pins. It wasn’t satisfying, but he earned enough to move out of the family home.

When World War II started, he enlisted. He seldom got off the ship, so although he sailed all over the world, he had no idea what was out there.

He did learn to be a machinist, a valuable skill that he used in his first “real” job, assembling machinery for National Cash Register in Dayton, Ohio. He soon grew tired of the job, landing next in a company that printed newspapers. He was a good speller, which came in handy as he set type into place, from back to front.

He loved being a typesetter, but by the time we moved to California in 1964, more and more printing jobs were being done by giant computers. From there he tried all kinds of jobs, including being a nighttime security guard, driving rental cars from one location to another, delivering phone books, and doing odd jobs at construction sites.

While we were never rich, except for when we moved from Ohio to California, we had shelter, food, and clothes. My parents placed some value on education, demanding good grades and excellent behavior. Bu they never visited the various schools we attended or talked to the teachers.

Neither of them seemed to value education beyond high school, primarily because they had succeeded without any advanced courses.

My brother and I had different ideas. While they readily accepted that my brother, who they believed was a genius, should go to college, they saw no need for me to do so.

In their eyes, my brother would succeed and go on to a high-paying career. 

For me? I was supposed to marry young and begin reproducing immediately.  That wasn’t what I wanted, and so even when they died, I was a disappointment.

            I dreamed of being a teacher because school was the one place where I felt safe. Many of my teachers were mean, several using physical punishment to reprimand disobedient students. I was smacked with a ruler several times, sat in the corner on a stool, and the most terrifying, clicked at by the nuns. My sins? Lack of attention.

After I became a teacher, I realized that I would have been classified as ADD, Attention Deficit Disordered. While I could sit all day, my mind drifted off here and there, so I often missed lectures and descriptions of assignments. My grades weren’t as good as my brother’s even though the old IQ tests placed me higher than my brother, who was a genius.

After having kids of my own, I finally had the opportunity to earn a teaching credential. I taught a whopping thirty-four years. During that time, I met parents with limited education who ushed their kids to stay in school, wishing that their children wouldn’t have to struggle to survive.

There were parents whose only hope was that their kids find work so as to contribute to the family income. These kids often went to work in a family-owned business, earning minimum wage. In California, such low income meant that the kids were stuck at home.

            On the opposite end of the spectrum, I met many parents who set unrealistic goals for their academically disabled children, wanting them to earn a college degree when reading texts would be nearly impossible without tremendous support. Nothing short of a college preparatory program would do, so they chose challenging courses such as AP Biology or AP English. When the inevitable low grades came in, the parents chastised the teachers.

            Over time I began dividing parents into three distinct types: over-involved, under-involved, and just right. There were some who wavered between categories, putting on bursts of energy at strange, incomprehensible times, and then disappearing for months.

This category of parent drove teachers nuts, for you never knew which parent was on the other end of the line. 

            I began my career as a preschool teacher for children ages two to four. I loved the kids and found teaching them songs and academics fulfilling. What was difficult, however, was dealing with over-involved parents.

I understood that it was hard to leave your child at the door with a stranger. Even after class began, for the first few days of class, a small group of parents peered in the windows, to making sure that Johnny and Maria were safe.

Over time, I began to think of “involvement” as a line on the floor.  If you’re standing on the line, you’re in perfect position to guide your child through academia. On either side of the line, and things don’t always go smoothly. The over-involved parent would smother the child, while the under-involved left the child to drown.

            At the high school level, an over-involved parent might demand college-level course outlines for every class, yet couldn’t be bothered to utilize the online program that helped both parents and students keep track of upcoming assignments. Such parents felt it was the teacher’s problem when the son didn’t bring his trombone home, or when the daughter forgot to complete her Algebra homework.

            I worked with parents who demanded weekly meetings to track their child’s progress. It came off as a highly effective form of intimidation. They challenged every grade on every assignment, wanting to know precisely why Timothy didn’t have straight As.

Then there were parents of intelligent college-bound students who wanted their child labeled as having a specific learning disability. They believed that being identified as ADHD or OCD would get then preferential status on college admissions. They’d spend thousands of dollars dragging the child from specialist to specialist until they found one who applied the desired labels.

            For some parents, failure is not an option, even when the child has chosen that path. This type of parent will blame the teacher if the student sleeps through class, turns in no work, and fails tests. Or it’s the administration’s fault if the student cuts class and walks off campus to spend the day at the mall or the cinema. My favorite was casting blame on anyone who might have come in contact with their child, saying that dear Thomas was only holding his friend’s marijuana, knife, or cigarettes.

            Excuses, excuses, but never place the blame where it truly belongs.  If Bill can’t stay awake during the school day, move the computer, phone, and television out of his bedroom.  If Tess isn’t doing her homework, ask to see it every night.  If Phoung is leaving campus, hand him a lunch bag in the morning. If your child doesn’t feel safe walking to school, drive them or join a carpool. 

There are always solutions, but they require parents taking responsible action.

            Under-involved parents are a real puzzle, especially when the child has a learning disability that makes reading and writing challenging. Many of these parents are evasive, not showing up on Back-to-School Night or on Report Card night, and eve at the child’s annual Special Education meeting.  They never return calls or check grades.

            Where are these parents when their children need them?  My students often shared that their parents worked three jobs in order to pay the rent. There were a goodly number of parents who didn’t speak English and were uncomfortable dealing with school. And in this group, quite a few were illegal immigrants and who were terrified of being deported.

I had parents who were currently incarcerated, addicted to alcohol and drugs, or involved in illegal activities such as ferrying undocumented workers across the border. I spoke with a handful of mothers who struggled with agoraphobia, and fathers who returned home after the child went to bed, are who were asleep when the student left for school in the morning.

            At the high school level, it seemed that “just right’ parents were few and far between.  I understood how hard it is to not be too involved, yet concerned enough to pay attention to the child’s academics. It would especially difficult when your child struggles with decision-making, organization, impulsiveness. 

Do you let the child fail as a learning lesson, or step in?  I only intervened when my child believed that an injustice had occurred, or that the work was confusing, or on those rare times when the teacher was truly wrong.

Every child has to learn to walk independently, for the parent isn’t always going to be there. 

The best metaphor is potty training.  The child has to have accidents now and then in order to understand how unpleasant the results feel. The chaffing and burning teach the child to get to the commode in time. If the child never experiences discomfort, life lessons are not learned.

While I’ve been retired a number of years, I often wonder what things are like now. I’d like to believe that all parents maintain just enough involvement to ensure that their child does the best he/she can.

Changing the Bed

Mindlessly, I pulled the pillows off the bed

Thinking about what my husband had just said

About feeling adrift in a world gone mad

Fighting over things that folks once had had

Pillowcases not so gently tossed aside,

My mind roamed to all those soldiers who had died

Fighting against the wind in lands far away

Laundry on a line, too tightly bound to stray

The plaid coverlet dumped carelessly on the floor

Landed, with aplomb, blocking the bedroom door

So many paved paths deadlocked by tragedy

Murdered teens drowning in the filth of the city

Layer by layer I stripped my place of rest

As if preparing for a traveling guest

Who’d put alterations in my troubled brain

Inspiring change, much like a runaway train

It came to me, then, the trouble we are in

Referred back to when the world began to spin

Dirt drifted down, quickly tarnishing the soil

Sturdy stains from which all men would recoil

Yet, like drawn to the fire of a brand new day

Cleansing ideas floated in with the sway

Influencing hearts to always seek the truth

Strive to avoid the repulsively uncouth

Gathering the detritus of my hard work

I realized that there is one mammoth perk

When assembled together, my bed will please

Only then did I relax: my mind at ease 

               Despair

Crispy, crunchy bits on the floor

Remnants of what was once me

Speak in sequestered voice

Whispers for none to hear

Memories masked in flimsy gauze

Distort into moaning miseries

Slices of soul oozing through my eyes

Trek along determined trails

Hollowness hails each morning

Darkness so deep that no light gleams

Heaviness haunts my limbs

Paralyzes rational thought

No hope, no light

Nothing but everlasting midnight

Covers my heart

Entrapped in cement, I wail

           A Grain of Sand

Nothing more than a grain of sand

one among a cast of millions

arose and accepted the burdensome

yoke of humanity, the drudgery of life,

the pains, torments, tears, and fears

until love entered his heart.

Nothing but a tiny grain of sand

now filled with a woman’s love

beaming broader than the sun,

wider than the Milky Way

standing tall, strong, proud, and fearless

with her vision in his mind.

Nothing but a proud grain of sand

knelt by her side, making his

wishes known, the dreams of his soul,

the secrets of his heart,

the projects, plans, ideas, and thoughts

searing his vision.

Nothing but an exultant grain of sand

stood with his love at the altar

pledging faithful love, devotion,

a lifetime of togetherness,

trials, tribulation, joys, tears

traveling the path of marriage.

Nothing but two grains of sand

forged through the world

casting aside the millions to

focus on the other, the others that

they create, the little ones, children,

loins of our loins and loves of our love,

for now and forever. Amen.

Solo Traveler

            I hated traveling with my family. In fact, going anywhere with them was grounds for potential disaster on the emotional scale.

            My mom would criticize everything my dad did, and that I did or did not do. She protected my siblings from my dad’s wrath, but would set me up for punishment, deserved or not.

            My first solo trip was a backpacking outing organized by the community college I was attending. I was ill-prepared with the wrong equipment, clothes and fitness level, but I didn’t know all that until we began climbing a never-ending hill.

            I was scared because I didn’t know anyone, even the young woman whose tent I shared. I talked to no one, but then, no one spoke to me either. What I did enjoy was freedom from criticism, endless arguments, and constant put-downs.

            That excursion taught me that I could, indeed, function on my own.

            When I left for college, I traveled with my brother as my parents wouldn’t let me go alone.

            What they didn’t know, couldn’t have predicted, was that once on university grounds, I cut the cord to my brother and struck out on my own. Without fear of reprisal, I made a few friends. I dated a black man who I really liked, but at around the same time we both realized that neither of us could bring the other home.

            After him, a handsome Hispanic man asked me out. Jorge was smart, easygoing, and pleasant. I did bring him home for one of the breaks, but that didn’t go over well. We remained friends even though my parents had treated him poorly.

            As I grew older, I began doing more and more things independently. I joined an on-campus religious group just so I could go on the retreat into the mountains. I found the eye clinic on campus and volunteered to try out new contacts. I loved how I looked without the thick glasses frames my parents made me wear!

            During summers, I found on-campus jobs that provided housing and meals. The independence was intoxicating.

            I traveled to Yosemite and Marin County with a date, spent a weekend at his parent’s home and even flew to Minnesota during winter break to see him!

            When I ran out of resources and jobs, I had no choice but to move back into the family home, placing me under the microscope once again. I saved and saved until I could buy a car (the dealership made me get my dad’s signature! God, I hated that.). After car, I began investigating apartments.

            Once again, I saved until I had the necessary deposit. When I locked that door behind me, I was able to breathe. I could stay up as late as I wanted, get up when I wanted, eat what I wanted, swim in the pool or sit out on my tiny balcony, whenever I wanted.

            You don’t understand how intoxicating it is to be free unless you’ve never lived under a microscope.

            My husband and I have been traveling for several years now. Most of the people we meet are couples of some kind, married or not, makes no difference. But we’ve also met solo travelers.

            I admire them so much! I doubt that I would have gone on a cruise by myself. Or hiked around Europe on my own. Or driven cross-county just because I could. My parent’s constant belittling had convinced me that I lacked the intelligence, wherewithal and basic knowledge to keep myself safe.

            As a teacher, back when there was money, I often traveled to attend conferences and on one occasion, to recruit potential teachers. I flew or drove by myself, arranged my own hotel, ate by myself and in the evenings, watched what I wanted!

            Each trip strengthened my ability to travel solo.

            While I missed my husband and would have loved someone to share ideas with, being on my own was incredibly intoxicating.

            As we get older, more and more of us will be on our own. We’ll be solo travelers, negotiating our way through life. We’ll need to understand finances, balancing budgets, logical planning, and how to get the most for our bucks.

            The thing is, we can do it. We can travel alone. We can make decisions. We can talk to total strangers or be content inside our own heads.

            Many of us will need practice to get there. I built my confidence by taking small trips, perhaps just over to San Francisco for a conference. Or driving down to Monterey or up to Sacramento. I navigated unfamiliar highways, slept in hotels chosen by the conference, ate by myself when meals weren’t part of the package.

            I learned not to fear aloneness. I now embrace it, enjoy it, lavish in it, even though I know that my husband is waiting for me back home.

            The thing is, I might outlive him. If that happens, I will be traveling alone. I won’t like having him gone, but I know that I can and will be okay as a solo traveler.

    A Teacher’s Lament

 I spoke with your teacher today,

And this is what she had to say:

Please tell Billy I like him a lot

But not when he licks each tiny spot

Of food off his plate.

It’s just plain gross.

It’s not polite to pick your nose

That’s why tissue’s good for blows

Putting snot between his teeth

Makes kids stare beyond belief

You just don’t do it

It’s just plain gross.

He needs to keep his shoes on his feet

The stench smells like rotten meat

While in the playground yard

Children find it too hard

To forgive him.

It’s just plain gross.

People don’t put their hands on their butts

And scratch until they make big cuts

Blood through the clothes

And a stick up the nose

It’s just plain gross.

Wedgies are not fun to receive

And when he complains, I believe

He only got what he deserved

Get back that which you served

And whine not

It’s just plain gross.

As far as work, Billy’s losing out

He wrinkles papers and runs about

Seldom sits for more than a minute

Pencils in places where they don’t fit

He’s failing

It’s just plain gross.

There’s not much more that I can say

Except that you should be on your way

To talk to Billy.  Tell him I care

For him I’d go anywhere

To find him help.

He’s not that gross.

Being Me

            For the longest time, I really didn’t like myself. I knew, because I’d been told, that I wasn’t pretty or girlie. I wasn’t interested in dolls or fancy clothes, although, at the time, girls wore dresses pretty much everywhere.

Because I was deficient in many, many ways, I understood that I was not the child that my parents wanted. That’s a hard cross to bear. And bear it I did, until they died when I was a grown woman.

            My hair was a mousy brown that lacked body. It tangled easily, and since I was outside as much as possible, it fell out of its braids. I was fat, but I blame my mother for that. She insisted I eat lots and lots of food. I had to eat even when I was so stuffed that that extra bite made my stomach roil. I couldn’t get up from the table until I’d devoured everything she’d put on my plate. So I got fatter and fatter. So fat that it was hard to find school uniforms in my size.

And my classmates made fun of me, commenting of the width of my thighs, the roundness of my face, and even accusing me of smelling like urine.

Add to that a lack of female I talent. I had no interest or skill in cooking. When it was my turn to prepare a dinner meal, what I put on the table was declared inedible.

Supposedly I walked like a boy, taking long strides with shoulders back. It I was permitted to choose my clothes, I went for shirts, shorts and jeans. I hated hair ribbons. And the bulky glasses frames that my mom selected.

I was also called stupid because it took me a long time to learn things. My memory was not the best, so I was inclined to repeat the same mistakes even when punishment would be severe.

            I hated long hair. It took too much time to brush it, and then what I got older, it was difficult to style because I had no skill in that area. When I was a teen, teased hair was in vogue. It meant sleeping with uncomfortable rollers, wrapped in a roll of toilet paper. After creating a rat’s nest, then I’d smooth the outer layers out until they gleamed. Lastly, there was the mantle of hair spray. I looked terrible, but at least I was like other girls my age.

I wanted short hair cut in a “boy” style. When I finally did get it sheared off at shoulder length, it angered my father so much that he called me foul names and wouldn’t look at me for the longest period of time. That turned out to be a blessing.

            In terms of schoolwork, I was not brilliant like my brother. He excelled in science. I excelled in nothing. No, there was one thing that I could do better than him! I could write beautiful cursive. I was also a better athlete at a time when girls didn’t get to play sports.

            My teachers often yelled at me because I was slow to learn. Every teacher assigned me to tutorial during lunch, In their minds, it was a punishment, which it was when the evil sister was supervising. But, when the kind nun was in charge, which turned out to be more and more often, I loved it for she helped me understand what was expected of me. Because of her, I began to learn and do better in school. It also kept me off the playground, away from the taunts that plagued my days.

            In high school I discovered my talents in math and languages. I quickly soared to an A student in Latin, and then when we moved to California, Spanish. I was the best student in every math class I took. It was probably good that I graduated when I did, for there were no more Math classes for me to take.

            I was still awkward. I was still not pretty. I was still not girly. Because of changing norms, I could now wear shorts and jeans at home, but still had to wear dresses to school and church. I felt fat and dumpy. When I sat, the width of a single one of my thighs matched the width of both of anyone else’s combined.

            My brother and I spent endless hours in the backyard playing all kinds of sports. I beat him at badminton and then after my twelfth birthday when my semi-pro dad taught me how to bowl, I beat him there as well.

In fact, I was so good that I played on three high school teams: bowling, badminton, and Junior Varsity basketball. My family bowled game after game on weekends, trying to earn Green Stamps. I wasn’t as good as my dad, but I beat my brother and mom.

For the first time I had something to crow about. I held my head higher and walked prouder. Until the day my school enrolled me in a badminton tournament at the local community college. I was humiliated by my opponent’s lighting fast serves, which when combined with spins, made it impossible for me to return even one volley.

I quit playing badminton.

            I still remember Geoff. He was the other nerd in my eighth-grade class. He asked me out several times. I was embarrassed and declined several times. Until he suggested going roller-skating. I thought I would be pretty good at that.

At first, we skated side-by-side, but after quite a few turns going around the rink, when Geoff reached for my hand, I accepted. His hand was sweaty and disgusting.

I didn’t date again until we moved to California. Living in a duplex across the street from us was a man in his early twenties. I was sixteen when he asked me out. I’d hoped that my parents wouldn’t approve, but Andy owned his house, had a good job, and seemed to be a nice guy.

He was okay-looking. Dorky with thick-rimmed glasses. Sleeked back hair. Chunky, with no defined muscles. Not what I wanted, but my parents insisted.

If they’d known what Andy would do to me, they should have said no. At first, he was gentle and kind. But every date ended up in his house, on his couch. His kisses did nothing for me. Not the tingle in movies or TV shows. But I accepted his amorous fumblings because I had no other options.

Andy really, really liked me. He spoke of marriage, which terrified me. I wanted to go to college, to “be” something other than housewife and mother. But he taught me that I was capable of being loved, something my parents had said would never happen. I also began to understand that beauty is not defined by what you see in magazines, but how you see yourself.

            When I left for college, Andy stayed in touch, first by postcards and letters. After I’d been gone a few months, he drove down to Los Angeles to see me. We went to Disneyland and out to dinner, more than once. But whatever feelings I’d had for him had weakened.

When he proposed, I declined. I never saw him again.

I blossomed in college. My professors appreciated my skills in math and languages. I struggled in English, but nevertheless, my heart swelled with pride.

            I had been wearing the ugly glasses that mother had picked out for years. I looked like a dork. When contacts came on the market, I entered a trial program offered on my campus that gave them to me for free. I loved contacts!

Without my glasses I didn’t feel old-fashioned or clumsy. For the first time, I felt pretty. And bold, so bold that I dated several men at the same time! Wow! Imagine how it felt to be popular for the first time!

            I smiled when I walked about campus. I greeted casual acquaintances and sat with people I barely knew. I worked in the bookstore and found myself a valued employee. I was a good roommate and a good friend.

            As my circle of friends grew, so did my self-esteem. By the time I graduated, I must have had at least fifteen friends! A record number for me.

            After college I had no choice but to return home, back to the environment in which I was less-than my siblings. I was subjected to cooking lessons which I never mastered, forced to clean the entire house, including my sibling’s rooms, something I considered grossly unfair. I felt like a servant.

            To make matters worse, I couldn’t find a job. I applied wherever I could. I was rejected over and over because potential employers didn’t like that I was a college graduate with no office skills. I wasn’t even hired to distribute cards from store to store! What skills would that require?

            The longer unemployment went on, my self-esteem plummeted. At home I was that unhappy, unfeminine little girl. I was worthless because I lacked domestic skills and had no desire to learn. My activities were monitored, so I was not allowed to seek social possibilities. I could only go out when my activities were chaperoned by an adult. (I was twenty-one!)

I legally could drive and vote and drink.

When I finally got hired at a now defunct furniture store, I was out of the house forty hours a week. I bought a car. I rented a studio apartment. I was free! And once again I began to like myself.

From there I developed into the person I am today. It was not an easy road. I spent hours alone in my apartment, but I also went skiing with a friend from work, saw movies with an occasional date, and ate out with colleagues. A young man took me to see Joan Baez in concert.

I went camping with friends in the Santa Cruz mountains. I took a class in backpacking and went with the group. It was tough! My backpack was canvas on a metal frame. By the time it was on my shoulders, I fell over backwards! But I went.

The rest of my story, my story of learning to like myself, was like climbing a ladder. Each rung up taught me that I could do things, that I could succeed, that I had value.

When I look back and I realize how long I struggled to overcome those early years, it’s amazing that I emerged as me.

These are the lessons I learned:

No matter where you are in life, never give up on yourself. Fight against whatever forces hold you back. Find something that you do well. Anything. It doesn’t have to be academics. It doesn’t have to lead to career, but it could.

Believe in yourself. No matter how others treat you, no matter those who try to hold you back, know that in you, there is value. You have much to offer the world.

Like yourself. Be you.

The Crowd Around Me

I transferred to USC at the end of my freshman year of college, completing a number of requisites at the local community college. I’d wanted to got to Ohio State where I’d live with my grandma. She needed help: I needed a place to stay. But my parents wouldn’t let me although I never understood why.

Even though we lived just south of San Francisco, they shook their heads when I asked to enroll at San Francisco State. At that time, freshmen had to live on campus. The university was in a safe neighborhood, but that didn’t matter. For some bizarre reason, my parents felt it was a hotbed of rape.

My brother and I had both applied to USC, both were accepted, and both got state scholarships that covered my entire tuition. Because he was going there, that was the only college my parents accepted.

At that time, back in 1970, the football team was a powerhouse, winning game after game, going to the Rose Bowl my first year there. Students got in free, or almost free. My brother’s friends invited me to tag along.

I was sued to Tommy Trojan riding in on his white horse, the song, the yell, the roar of the crowd, but everything was amplified in that stadium.

USC won, but I couldn’t tell you the score all these years later. I do recall my jubilation and the excited voices as we streamed out and headed toward the car.

My junior year the team, once again, made it to the Rose Bowl. This time I didn’t go with my brother’s friends, but with a young man I’d met in my dorm.

We didn’t have assigned seats that year, so we joined the crowd building outside the stadium.

Fencing had been installed, closing off all points of entry. As my friend and I walked from our car to where we’d wait, we were pulled by the flood of humanity. There was an electrical feel of excitement, almost as if someone had dropped live wires in our midst.

There was yelling, cheering, and pushing. And more pushing. At first, we didn’t mind as we were up against the fence, practically ensuring good seats.

We’d arrived hours before the game. Pasadena can get hot even in January, and it was that day. I stupidly hadn’t worn a hat, but I was still a teenager, likely to do stupid things.

It was also before people carried water bottles everywhere, so with the sun streaming and the suffocating crowds, I began feeling a bit off. There was nothing to be done except stand and wait.

The crowd got restless and began screaming to be let in. Police officers were deployed to where I was, on the opposite side of the fence. The protests grew louder, and profanities flew.

Around twelve-thirty, only thirty minutes began kickoff, a surge began behind me. Elbows pressed into my back as I was shoved against the fence.

I grabbed the metal wires, hoping to stay on my feet. My right cheek was smashed against the bars, forcing my head as far left as if could go.

My friend tried to shield me, but someone squeezed in between us. I could just make out the top of my friend’s head, but with my arms pressed against metal, I couldn’t reach out for his hand.

The crowd continued pushing, making it hard from me to breathe. I opened my mouth wide to try to take in air, but it didn’t help. I began feeling lightheaded and yelled my friend’s name, but he couldn’t hear.

A larger wave, a crush of people, surged, lifting me off my feet. I thought I was going to die, even though this was before we’d heard of people dying by stampede.

I let go when I felt the fence move. As it collapsed, the crowd forced me to step on the twisted metal.

As soon as I was on stadium grounds, the crowd roared past me. I found a bit of shelter close to the building. Tears poured down my face because I was frightened, I still couldn’t breathe, and I understood that I almost died.

My friend found me, thank goodness, and together we entered the stadium. The best seats were gone by now, but we didn’t care. From where we sat, we were able to see the game.

Most importantly, we realized what a terrifying experience that had been.

USC won.

Commitment

the story of a marriage

is one of

trials

and

tribulations

forgiveness

and

letting go

of errors made

love

and

anger

compromise

and

patience

walking together

through life

sharing times

good

and

bad

most of all

reveling

in each other’s

company

until death

do us part

Haircut Woes

            When our kids were young, we didn’t have a lot of money. I was a stay-at-home mom until our youngest turned two. By that time, I was interested in teaching preschool. I enrolled in classes at the community college that would lead to that goal.

            I learned a lot about designing appropriate curriculum, classroom management and organization. I got hired by the local recreation department to teach two classes per day, five days a week. For a whopping $2.50 an hour.

            My husband worked for the federal government making a good salary, but with all the expenses of owning a house and raising three kids, we had to cut corners wherever we could.

            I’d buy powdered milk and mix it into a half-gallon of milk, just to expand it. I’d water down juices and buy pretend cheese slices and ice milk to give the kids a treat.

            When I needed a haircut, I’d go to the beauty school. The free cuts were upstairs, theoretically under the constant supervision of instructors. Well, that was a lie. More than once too much would be chopped off or things would be lopsided or the perm wouldn’t take. I’d look funny until the next cut.

            Then I’d have a new, weird look.

            I got tired of unevenly cut hair, short on one side, longer on the other, so I moved one level up where things improved. Somewhat.

            The supervision was more consistent, the cuts more uniform, the perms looser. I did have to pay a nominal fee, which I didn’t mind as at least my hair was getting taken care of.

            At my job, I decided that preschool should have an educational component. With my nominal salary, I bought resource materials, put lessons in place, and saw my students learning at an astonishing rate. Parents wrote letters to my boss (I didn’t tell them to do that!) and soon I got a raise to $2.75. Yippee!

            Because our kids were bigger, they ate more, needed more. Thrift store clothing was harder to find. School supplies had to be new. Uniforms as well. Shoes, well, most of the time they could be handed down.

            Generic food items appeared on shelves, in yellow labels so you’d know you were getting below-standard shapes and sizes of pears, noodles, juices.

            My kids were playing soccer, a sport I knew nothing about. I studied the rules of the game. Went to referee school, then started working at least four games per weekend. Each game paid ten dollars.

            There was a lot of construction in the area. I’d take my kids out to the sites. We’d walk about, looking for cans to recycle. Sometimes we’d find money. One time I saw a bill sticking out of the dirt, dug it out: twenty dollars! We stopped at the grocery store on the way home.

            Meanwhile I composed an instruction manual for Tot Time teachers, a complete resource that covered all aspects of curriculum, from song and dance, to arts and crafts, to physical activity.

            My boss was impressed. Had it copied and given to all Tot Time teachers, then gave me a raise. I now made over three dollars an hour!

            I decided that the time had come to move to the main floor of the beauty school, to the side where more skilled students trained. There was less supervision. Sometimes the students cut my hair sort of like I wanted, but most of the time they got creative. I’d never know what my hair would look like.

            I don’t like surprises. Not birthday parties, not drop-in visitors, and definitely not hairstyles.

            I’d dreamed of being a teacher since I began school. School was the only safe place for me. My teachers were generally kind, but usually they ignored me because I was behind academically. I thought, hoped, that someday I could provide a safe haven for kids like me.

            There was no money for me to go to a four-year college. I kept plugging along, taking classes at the community college, working at Tot Time, refereeing soccer games and searching construction sites for money.

            After years of watching students cut my hair, I had a general sense of what to do. My husband gave me a set of hair cutting tools for Christmas. I began cutting everyone’s hair, saving quite a bit of money.

            The boys were easy as they wanted very short hair. My husband didn’t care what his looked like, but I was shaky every time because he couldn’t look odd going to work. My daughter was different.

            She only wanted her bangs trimmed. I’d hold the scissors even, in one hand. With the other I’d press her hair to her forehead. I’d cut slowly and carefully, but every time, her bands would slope to one side. It was a such a disaster that she’d cry.

            I understood how she felt.

            In a way, my dad was right about a woman’s hair. People paid attention to how a woman looked. Men, not so much.

            When I entered high school, I was tired of my long hair. I wanted it cut to shoulder-length. He didn’t say I couldn’t, so my mom took me to a salon and had it done.

            My dad came home from work, took one look, then berated me for hours. Days. Calling me every foul name he could think of. My dictionary got a lot of use because I was unfamiliar with the words. All were hurtful and incorrect. That’s not what I was.

            The one positive was that I understood how important it is to have a popular style, a proper cut. It was one thing for me to get a free or cheap cut, but my kids deserved better.

            Fortunately, thanks to my sister-in-law, I was now working toward an elementary teaching credential and had been hired as an assistant in a Kindergarten. I made a whopping $5,000 a year!

            With the additional resources, I quit scouring construction sites, but I still working soccer games. We still scrimped wherever we could, eating a lot of chicken and hamburger. One area where I quit cutting costs was with hair.

            After too many disastrous cuts, I began taking all the kids to one of those low-cost salons. They were happier and my stress-level went down. Because I was working in a formal educational setting, I had to quit going to the beauty school. I needed consistency.

            My take-away is that your hair style is important. It has to satisfy you outwardly, which translates to inner happiness. A poor cut is upsetting in so many ways, but the most troubling is that it is with you until the next cut.

            I hate to admit it, but there was some truth to my dad’s opinion. How you look on the outside matters. It’s what people notice the first time they meet you, and if it’s a negative reaction, that’s how they continue to see you. For years.

            As a parent I did what I could to provide for my family. There was food on the table, they had clean clothes and shoes that fit. They attended good schools and participated in various activities. I took them to parks for play and exploration, worked with them on academics so they’d do better in school, and made sure they could swim.

            Having their hair cut by professionals was one of the best decisions I ever made. It made them feel good about themselves, which made me feel good about myself. In the end, everyone was happy.

            You can’t put a price on that.