The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
Thursday, July 12, 2007
I Stand Here Ironing (Rebel Girl)
.I stand here ironing and my five year old son walks by and points to the iron and asks, "What is that?" – which is what he asked a year ago when I ironed the clothes for his grandmother's funeral, which is probably the last time the iron has been used. We are wearing, I note, many of the same items we wore then. I use the kitchen table, covered with a terrycloth towel, as my ironing board.
.I stand here ironing and my husband is one floor below making the final changes to the eulogy he will deliver today. He has become, in recent years, the officiant at family functions, an odd development considering years of estrangement in the family, not so odd considering his humor and eloquence, the slow recognition and appreciation of him that I have seen grow through the years.
.I stand here ironing and wish that I had arranged to pick up the clothes of my father-in-law and press them too. We will pick him up on our way to the services as we did a couple months ago on our way to the wedding of the now-dead aunt's grandson. I was pleased then that I remembered to bring a lint brush in order to touch up my father-in-law's clothes. Today I will forget the lint brush and I will note the wrinkled white shirt he has chosen to wear with a sense of shame. We will see many of the same people today that we saw at the wedding and I expect many of them, the men especially, will be wearing what they wore then. My father-in-law recently marked the anniversary of his wife's death. It's been slightly over a year since he became what his brother now is, a widower.
.I stand here ironing and feel the heat build outside even though it is still morning. It will be a hot day with the rest of the week growing even hotter. At my mother-in-law's funeral last June, the now dead aunt's youngest grandson fainted in the heat. The Spanish speaking gravediggers waited a respectful distance away while her sister and mother said good-byes in German. This time there will be no hole in the ground, no interrupted roots fringing the edges. The aunt opted for cremation, eschewed religion and chose Ike and Tina Turner's version of "Proud Mary" for us to ponder. I predict there will be ribs and turkey, fish and variety of cold salads heavily dressed in mayo. The bar will be well-stocked. There will be vodka and whiskey and tequila. Beer in the cooler. People of a certain age will smoke one cigarette after another, drink more than they should. I will remember that the dead aunt had a laugh not unlike my mother's, roughened by years of smoke and drink, of shouting to be heard above one noise or another, the children, the husband, the car, the world at large. They both ironed standing up, in living rooms and kitchens, pressing the wrinkles out, making the fabric crisp until next time.
*
.Summer has been like that scene (written the first week of July), leavened with subplots of dental woes and trout. Rebel Girl thanks Chunk especially and Mona Lisa Quesadilla for their kind attention to this blog. She plans to file irregular dispatches from up north when she can. She hits the road tomorrow morning before dawn.
A "blood cloth" in his brain (Roy)
They’re immigrants. Mom's got a pronounced accent. My dad lost his thirty or forty years ago.
Mom and pop have got a special way with words.
These days, I occasionally report my conversations with my parents to my friend Kris. My conversations with mom and pop, as I recount them, are, she says, “priceless.” I have a duty, she insists, to “record history.”
OK, then.
Now, I don’t want to just make fun of my folks. They’re very generous, very warm, very talented. Everybody says so, and what everybody says is true.
But I value good writing and clear thinking. I value using words carefully and precisely. And that means that conversing with my folks can be—well, challenging.
* * *
The family is going through a difficult time. My sister, Fanny, an artist living in the Bay Area, is scheduled for surgery later this month to remove precancerous cells.
Yesterday, I dropped by my folks’ place—to continue my photographic preservation project—and, at one point, I had the following conversation with mom and dad.
Mom: Fanny called today, and they gave her a stress test. Something about a treadmill. And she did real well!At that point, I threw in the towel. I just sat back. Soon, I went back to scanning slides.
Chunk: That's great!
Dad: Well, they don't have all the results yet.
Mom: They do, but the doctor can't interpret them.
Chunk: He can't interpret them? How come?
Mom: Well, it's got to be interpreted by the specialist.
Chunk: OK, so has "it" been interpreted by the specialist?
Mom: I don't know. But Fanny says the guy said that he can't say anything, but he said it looked good to him.
Chunk: Wait a minute. —What guy? The guy who ran the test?
Mom: I don't know. I guess so. Maybe.
Dad: These tests involve a pulmonary.....
Chunk: —Which tests? All the parts of the stress test?
Dad: When I had my stress test [my dad had a heart “episode” about two years ago], it involved...
Chunk: OK, that's fine, but I want to know about Fanny's stress test first. So she's had the test, right? And her doctor isn't gonna interpret the results, cuz a specialist is gonna do that, only he hasn't done that yet, and so the guy or gal who ran the treadmill test, who isn't the specialist, said—informally—that the “results” looked good to him. Is that it?
Dad: Well, my test wasn't a treadmill; it was...
Chunk: Um, OK, but right now I'm trying to find out about Fanny's test.
Dad: You don’t want to know about my test?
Chunk: Well, I do. But, first, I want to know how things went with Fanny's test. She's facing surgery, and I want to know why they tested her, and what the test shows.
Mom: Yeah. She did well! Did I tell you, she's making dresses now?
Chunk: —Dresses? Who...
Mom: —Well, Fanny is who. Who did you think we were talking about?
Dad: They’ve got this pulmonary....
Mom: —We're not talking about that. The dresses will be big enough for her, apparently.
Chunk: Big enough for Fanny?
Mom: No, for Susan [my sister-in-law]! She needs maternity dresses!
Dad: These tests, they’re not perfect. My friend Alex passed it with flying colors and then he got a blood cloth.
Chunk: [I pause. Why correct them? Has it ever helped? I simply repeat the phrase:] A blood cloth.
Mom: Yeah, a blood cloth. He died, but she's beautiful. You wanna meet her?
* * *
JUST NOW, my dad dropped by. I opened my front door. He handed me something wrapped in foil. "A veggie burger," he said.
"Oh, great. Thanks!"
DAD: "Have you got the ketchup?"
CHUNK: "The ketchup? What ketchup?"
DAD: "Don't you have the ketchup?"
CHUNK: "Well, I've got ketchup."
DAD: "OK, then. Enjoy!" He walks back to his truck, drives away. He's as happy as a lark.
Dunce Cap Nation
Occasionally, I ask my students if they know who their Congressperson is. At such times, typically, one student will raise his or her hand. I'll turn to him or her. I'll say,
"Great! So, who is your Congressperson?"
"Feinstein, I think."
● ● ●
This morning's Inside Higher Ed reports that
A majority of the public believes that political bias by professors is a serious problem and doubts that tenure promotes quality...More than 58 percent of those polled believe that political bias is a somewhat serious or very serious problem.
There are sharp divisions by party lines (73.3 percent of Republicans view the problem as very serious, while only 6.7 percent of Democrats do), gender (46.8 percent of men view the problem as very serious, compared to 32.1 percent of women) religion (57.9 percent of those who are born again view the problem as very serious, while only 17.6 percent of Jews do), and those who shop at Wal-Mart (56.7 percent of those who shop there weekly believe the problem is very serious, while only 17.6 percent of those who never do think that).
…On the tenure question, divisions were less clear by demographic groups and were more consistent across groups, although Republicans appear to be more dubious of tenure than are Democrats.
…The Zogby poll is not the first to suggest ambivalence of Americans about what goes on in the classroom and about tenure. Last year, a poll commissioned by the American Association of University Professors found such ambivalence, although one of the lead researchers on that poll had several criticisms of the Zogby effort.
Neil Gross, an assistant professor of sociology at Harvard University who worked on the AAUP poll, noted that in its questions on tenure, it started by asking people if they understood tenure, and that only 55 percent had even heard of it. … Given ... that many people haven’t heard of tenure, Gross said he was skeptical of poll results that did not include a definition. (A Zogby spokesman confirmed that no definition was given.)
The AAUP survey ended up with results that were quite similar to Zogby’s on the percentage of the public believing classroom bias is a serious problem. … But Gross said that there was a key difference in that the AAUP asked the public how it viewed a range of potential problems on campus. The public is far more worried about college costs and binge drinking by students than by political bias, the AAUP survey found.
...[Said Gross,] "...[The Zogby pollsters] have simply asked about whether something is a problem, and there is a strong tendency in polls that if you ask people if something is a problem, they say yes,” he said. “The real issue is how big an issue it is compared to other problems.”…. (My emphases throughout.)
Yes, it is important to determine what Americans think cuz this country is a democracy, sort of, and so people's views have a certain importance. Evidently, re higher ed, college costs and binge drinking are on Americans' minds, followed by prof "bias" in the classroom, etc.
But Americans tend to have beliefs that are, well, truth-challenged. According to a recent Newsweek poll (Dunce Cap Nation),
Even today, more than four years into the war in Iraq, as many as four in 10 Americans (41 percent) still believe Saddam Hussein’s regime was directly involved in financing, planning or carrying out the terrorist attacks on 9/11, even though no evidence has surfaced to support a connection. A majority of Americans were similarly unable to pick Saudi Arabia in a multiple-choice question about the country where most of the 9/11 hijackers were born. Just 43 percent got it right—and a full 20 percent thought most came from Iraq.
Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"
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