Saturday, December 15, 2012
Reflections
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Calling Home
[Mike sent this to me and asked me to post. It's a soldier's story (his), from Afghanistan.]
Yes! I can finally call home…
There is nothing more frustrating than not being able to call home when I can afford the time. Phones and Internet access, for those who don’t know, get turned off in a way that is unpredictable. It always seems to be at the time I either have the time to call or am in dire need of hearing my wife’s voice, or, oftentimes, a combination of the two. The brief moment I can call is what gets me through the day sometimes, and it is crushing when a perfectly fine phone and computer are just sitting there and I can’t use them.
I work hard throughout the day, the night, and the wee-morning hours. It never stops. There’s never a lack of problems, whether my own or somebody else’s, and the problems never stop coming. There’s no procrastinating…problems have to be addressed and solved regardless of the time of day or day of week. This is a nine-month-long workweek and it is a workweek where you get the joy of working all shifts. And when all I want is to hear my wife’s voice and the voices’ of my children, is it too much to ask for the damn phone or Internet to work?
Of course, I would prefer to rest my head on my wife’s shoulder as she sleeps, like I ordinarily do before I depart for the day. At 515 in the morning, the house is silent. I can hear her breathing and feel the gentle rise and lowering of her shoulder as she takes in and expels air. In those few seconds, I feel secure and absolutely sure that everything is right in the world. I can’t do that now and I have to rely on those too brief phone calls to be reassured that, despite all the craziness of life and all the frustrations I am faced with throughout the day, all will be right in the world.
Thankfully, the outages can’t last forever. They turn the phones and the Internet back on and I will make the time to call and hear her voice. I can hear about the craziness of her day and the funny things my kids said or the trouble they got into. I will finally get that sense that everything is right in the world again.
Life is filled with little doses of reality that seem to strike you at the most unexpected moments. Like when the phone and the Internet come back on. They are turned on because somebody back home completed another ‘successful’ notification of a family member that their loved one will never call home again, they’ll never IM over Facebook, they’ll never see them again on Skype.
As I dial the phone I am struck with an overwhelming feeling of guilt. I will get to talk with my family tonight and even hear from my kids about the crazy things each of them are doing. But some family somewhere, some kids maybe, will never get to do that again. I wonder what their Thanksgiving will be like. What will they find in their lives that they can be thankful for?
I can’t be home on Thanksgiving with my family. I accept that. It is a sacrifice I knew I might have to make ever since I left home as an 18-year-old for a career in the military. But in all likelihood I will be able to call or maybe Skype or, at the very least, send a nice note that my wife can read when they sit down to eat. But what about that other family who’ll have an empty seat at the table for Thanksgiving that will never be filled again?
I am calling home. I will hear my wife’s voice and in a moment I will get that sense that all is right in the world. But below the surface, and imperceptible in my voice, will be that oppressing feeling of guilt that all might be right in my world even though someone else’s world has been shattered.
Monday, October 29, 2012
Dubious Gifts
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
The Danger of Quiet Moments
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
My Irish Heritage
Monday, March 26, 2012
Words to Live By
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Even Barbie Gets the Blues
How times have changed. When I was a kid, Barbie had it all. She was multi-faceted and versatile in her career, capable of being launched into space, thanks to her astronaut training, yet also at home running her own boutique (and she was financially diversified, thanks to her franchise opportunity with McDonald’s). She was outdoorsy – an avid horsewoman with her own RV – and sporty, with frequent visits to the spa or gym she owned. She spent her time between her luxe apartment in the city and her dream home, complete with pool, in the country. She preferred to drive the pink Corvette but she also had the silver ’Vette for when she wanted to be taken more seriously. For her city adventures, there was her moped. She even had a dirtbike and a Jeep for her country excursions. And, for the days when she wanted to be part of the jetset, she could either pilot her own plane or moonlight as a flight attendant to see how the other half lived. Ken was always around, but she wasn’t tied down. She had other admirers and divided her time accordingly. She was a modern woman, and I loved her and lived vicariously through her.
So imagine my shock and disappointment recently as I walked through WalMart’s Barbie aisle with my daughters and discovered a package with some kitchen/dining room furniture for Barbie’s house. In this package were a table and two chairs, and on the table were two plates of food. One chair at the table was empty and in the other was a cardboard Barbie with a speech bubble saying, “Oh no! Ken is late!”
At first, I laughed. I found it hilarious that even beautiful, blonde, buxom Barbie gets dinner ruined because Ken is late, likely AGAIN. I even momentarily applauded Mattel for providing a real-life image of commitment and adulthood. Clearly, the makers of Barbie are not of the Disney variety, where every wannabe princess lands her dreamy prince; and off they waltz (literally) into the sunset, immaculately clad, complete with familial blessings (and often with a sassy, talking pet), in a false image of marital bliss. Though my sisterhood with Barbie was likely never stronger than at that moment (that Ken is a JERK!!), seeing the two plates on the table and only one occupied chair, I quickly became horrified. While I typically embrace reality and disdain the Disney-fied fantasy, I quickly realized – seeing lonely Barbie – that there are definite perks to fantasy, and that reality comes all too soon and, often, it really does bite.
I’ve been thinking a lot about Stood-Up Barbie in the weeks since I saw her. Granted, she was a cardboard insert in the furniture box, and I know Mattel would certainly never actually make a Stood Up Barbie. But a lot of Barbies have been made over the years and Barbie, originally marketed in 1959 as a "teenage fashion model,” has delved into many “adult” careers, Hollywood personas, etc. She’s been an architect, a professional roller skater (frankly, who doesn’t aspire for a career like this??), she’s been Marilyn Monroe and Grace Kelly, she’s been a Viking princess, a beach bum, a bride, a doctor. The list goes on and on, to cover 52 years of creations.
In 2009, they developed (really!) a Totally Tattoos Barbie, although Mattel realized fairly quickly the errors of their ways and pulled Ink’d Barbie. In 1997, they even developed Oreo Barbie, which apparently was a marketing blitz with Nabisco, resulting in a Barbie with whom you’d want to share a cookie. But Oreo Barbie was made in both Caucasian and African-American versions, before Mattel realized a black “Oreo” Barbie might suffer a backlash. There have Barbie faux-pas over the years, yet it's most interesting what Barbie HASN'T been. She’s been a sister, a cousin and a niece, but never a mom. Taking a page from Disney, perhaps Mattel decided this was too much reality and not enough fantasy.
I can see the packaging now…Barbie, with bags under her eyes and unstyled hair, is wearing stained clothes that don’t fit her quite right. She comes with a baby that actually spits up and a kindergarten-aged kid. The speech bubble from the little kid says, “Something stinks in here. It’s either the garbage or your breath!” (actual quote from Grace a few weeks ago) Indeed, this would not be a glamorous Barbie. Parents would likely be horrified at this Barbie, and even the short-sighted creators of Oreo Barbie haven’t been this stupid. Another Barbie never developed: Military Spouse Barbie. She would likely come with kids (strike one!) and pets and a framed family photo showing GI Ken, with additional optional accessories including a moving van, several boxes and a detachable, hideaway hip flask (strike two!). No one has ever seen this particular Ken, since he is always working late or deployed. It is likely we’ll see Amish Barbie (her only accessories: a bonnet and a clothesline) before Mattel dares venture into these frightful territories.
Ironically (or maybe not), the Barbie we know today was based on a German comic strip character named Lilli, out to improve her lot in life by marrying well. Comic-strip-Lilli eventually became a doll marketed to adults in post-war Germany. Mattel founder Ruth Handler found Lilli on a trip to Switzerland and brought three dolls back to the U.S. After de-floozy-ing Lilli and transforming her into a “teenage fashion model,” Barbie was born. A billion dolls and 52 years later, Barbie – at her kitchen table, waiting for Ken – seems to have more in common with the likely problems of Lilli ("Men!"), and less in common with the problems of a teenage-fashion-model ("Which is more flattering - stripes or a geometric pattern?"). Ugh. Poor Barbie. Give me the Disney-princess-fairy-tale any day.