Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Marriage Questions

Once again I heard that marriage is work. Actually yesterday one friend said it's a pain in the ass, and it's compromise, compromise, compromise. So is marriage one big negotiation or what? So if you are happily married, what is it about being married that makes you happy? Why would you rather be married than single?

Honestly, I'm glad I am not doing the work of cooking dinner every single night or doing loads and loads of laundry. But why would that be my job? Or maybe those would be my jobs and the husband would have other jobs such as taking out the garbage and getting the oil changed in the cars. I have to take out my own garbage now and take my car in for oil changes.




Also,

is wanting children a valid reason for getting married? Or is that just marrying someone or just using them for their reproductive functions?


Sunday, May 26, 2013

Stopping By

I did something unheard of in this modern age. I stopped by someone's house unannounced! My friends had a death in the family, so I stopped by with cookies (packaged nicely by the bakery) and a sympathy card. And they were happy to see me, and I was invited in. And we chatted face to face in the living room. Yes, a real conversation took place without the planning and assistance of an electronic device. I figured if they weren't home or didn't feel like answering the door, I'd leave the items on the porch. Real conversations that take place in the same room are quite pleasant.

I'm the kind of person at work who usually walks over to someone's desk two aisles over than sending an email. I like in-person conversations because it's easier to build relationships that way.


Friday, May 24, 2013

Nebulizer

Just a few hours ago, I was in the ER (alone) for an asthma attack. All I needed was the five minute breathing treatment with a nebulizer, but things are never simple in the ER. So the x-ray tech wouldn't give me my chest x-ray unless my pregnancy test was negative. I didn't even have the energy to argue against the test or x-ray. Finally, when the guy in light blue scrubs completed the test, he yelled across the entire ER department, "It's negative!"

Can you imagine if you were me, and he yelled, "It's positive!" across the room? Imagine getting such life changing news in such a fashion?! I didn't even care he yelled. I just wanted quality time with a nebulizer and the ability to go home and sleep in my own bed.

Thank you, God, that I wasn't scared this time being in the ER by myself. Sometimes I get really scared. It helped to just look at the crucifix hanging on the wall.


Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Hey, Calah at Barefoot and Pregnant!

I agree with Calah has to say at http://www.patheos.com/blogs/barefootandpregnant/2013/05/actually-i-dont-hate-christians-virgins-god-or-hamsters.html and at http://www.patheos.com/blogs/barefootandpregnant/2013/05/sloppy-seconds-sex-ed.html

Hey, Calah, if you are reading this, it's a pain in the a** to leave a comment on your blog. But if I felt like going through the trouble, I would give you a compliment.

After working in various offices for many years, I realized people do not read anything carefully. They either lack the capability or are too lazy to carefully read memos, emails, articles, blog posts, booklets, directions, brochures, contracts, manuals, instructions, the bulletin board, the chalk board, the white board, report cards, invoices, statements, EOBs, or anything else. It drives me nuts that when people who make hoards of money with corner offices can't read or write properly.

Calah, you are right: the problem with your post is not your post, it is the audience. 

Calah, it was a treat the first time I heard you on the radio. Unfortunately, I was unable to catch you this second time.


Monday, May 20, 2013

Online Dating Makes Me Want to Scream at God

Last week I read a profile of a certain man and indicated my interest by clicking a certain button. Today that same "man" replied that "he" was interested also, but now "he" is a "she." Can I just scream at God now?? Anyway, I reported the fake man/woman to the site because to misrepresent oneself as a different sex is wrong, and then I moved the profile to the not a match for me section. Besides I find myself attracted to men, not women. I am what you would call a heterosexual. I know, I am rather old fashioned that way.

Really, I just want to scream at God that why can't I meet someone the normal way like at the office??? At a friend's party? At church?? At Bible study??? But why scream at God? He's heard it all before from me.

And being single is not a vocation if no one wants you. Is that like a default position?

Feeling down.



Sunday, May 19, 2013

The Holy Spirit is Important or I was Afraid of what the Choir would Sing

Today during Mass was the emphasis that it's the church's birthday because it's Pentecost Sunday. I was so afraid the choir would start singing "Happy Birthday." It did not. But if the choir did, I would have walked out. I hope we as church never go down that frivolity route during Mass. After Mass and over lunch, my dad said he also thought a happy birthday song was going to bust out during Mass. Oh yeah, the Holy Spirit did get a mention.

I like the Holy Spirit and think I need to hear more about the Holy Spirit and less about birthdays.



Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Whining About the Wrong Thing


I was listening to a podcast at work in which writer Carolyn Jones was being interviewed about her abortion and the Texas sonogram law. I resisted the urge to crawl under my desk, cover my ears, and sing, "la, la, la." In retrospective, I could've just turned off my iPod. I came home and found the article she wrote about it. I am trying to find compassion. I am trying. I'm not succeeding. Of course hearing about how your baby is going to be aborted is horrific because it is horrific. Yes, I've heard to hear icky details about possible side effects myself about difficult matters and medicine. No one likes it, but it's part of being an adult and making decisions about health, finances, etc.

Hey, grown-ups and Ms. Carolyn Jones and Husband, when you are going to realize that life is difficult and unfair?! Sometimes horrible things happen like learning that your unborn baby is not developing properly. Now, of course if Ms. Jones's mother had aborted her, she would not have grown up, gotten pregnant, and faced the ordeal of getting a sonogram.

I'm trying, I'm trying. Hearing your baby has major health problems has got to be one miserable moment. Whoa! I mean someone would have to pour me a margarita. Well, that would harm the baby. I'm trying to understand, Ms. Jones, but whining about a sonogram seems like you're whining about the wrong thing.

Is it because your husband suggested the abortion?





‘We Have No Choice’: One Woman’s Ordeal with Texas’ New Sonogram Law

The painful decision to terminate a pregnancy is now—thanks to Texas' harsh new law—just the beginning of the torment.

by  Published on 


Jed Obray Photography
Halfway through my pregnancy, I learned that my baby was ill. Profoundly so. My doctor gave us the news kindly, but still, my husband and I weren’t prepared. Just a few minutes earlier, we’d been smiling giddily at fellow expectant parents as we waited for the doctor to see us. In a sonography room smelling faintly of lemongrass, I’d just had gel rubbed on my stomach, just seen blots on the screen become tiny hands. For a brief, exultant moment, we’d seen our son—a brother for our 2-year-old girl.
Yet now my doctor was looking grim and, with chair pulled close, was speaking of alarming things. “I’m worried about your baby’s head shape,” she said. “I want you to see a specialist—now.”
My husband looked angry, and maybe I did too, but it was astonishment more than anger. Ours was a profound disbelief that something so bad might happen to people who think themselves charmed. We already had one healthy child and had expected good fortune to give us two.
Instead, before I’d even known I was pregnant, a molecular flaw had determined that our son’s brain, spine and legs wouldn’t develop correctly. If he were to make it to term—something our doctor couldn’t guarantee—he’d need a lifetime of medical care. From the moment he was born, my doctor told us, our son would suffer greatly.
So, softly, haltingly, my husband asked about termination. The doctor shot me a glance that said: Are you okay to hear this now? I nodded, clenched my fists and focused on the cowboy boots beneath her scrubs.
She started with an apology, saying that despite being responsible for both my baby’s care and my own, she couldn’t take us to the final stop. The hospital with which she’s affiliated is Catholic and doesn’t allow abortion. It felt like a physical blow to hear that word, abortion, in the context of our much-wanted child. Abortion is a topic that never seemed relevant to me; it was something we read about in the news or talked about politically; it always remained at a safe distance. Yet now its ugly fist was hammering on my chest.
My doctor went on to tell us that, just two weeks prior, a new Texas law had come into effect requiring that women wait an extra 24 hours before having the procedure. Moreover, Austin has only one clinic providing second-trimester terminations, and that clinic might have a long wait. “Time is not on your side,” my doctor emphasized gently. For this reason, she urged us to seek a specialist’s second opinion the moment we left her office. “They’re ready for you,” she said, before ushering us out the back door to shield us from the smiling patients in the waiting room.
The specialist confirmed what our doctor had feared and sketched a few diagrams to explain. He hastily drew cells growing askew, quick pen-strokes to show when and where life becomes blighted. How simple, I thought, to just undrawthose lines and restore my child to wholeness. But this businesslike man was no magician, and our bleak choices still lay ahead.
Next a genetic counselor explained our options and told us how abortions work. There was that word again, and how jarring and out-of-place it sounded. Weren’t we those practical types who got married in their 30s, bought a house, rescued a dog, then, with sensible timing, had one child followed by another? Weren’t we so predictable that friends forecast our milestones on Facebook? Suddenly something was wrong with our story, because something was wrong with our son. Something so wrong that any choice we made would unyoke us forever from our ordinary life.
Our options were grim. We learned that we could bring our baby into the world, then work hard to palliate his pain, or we could alleviate that pain by choosing to “interrupt” my pregnancy. The surgical procedure our counselor described was horrific, but then so seemed our son’s prospects in life. In those dark moments we had to make a choice, so we picked the one that seemed slightly less cruel. Before that moment, I’d never known how viscerally one might feel dread.
That afternoon, my husband and I drove through a spaghetti of highways, one of which led us to a nondescript building between a Wendy’s and a Brake Check. This was Planned Parenthood’s surgical center, part of the organization constantly in the news thanks to America’s polarizing cultural debates. On that very day, Planned Parenthood’s name was on the cover of newspapers because of a funding controversy with the Susan G. Komen Foundation. These clinics, and the controversial services they provide, are always under scrutiny. The security cameras, the double-doors and the restricted walkways assured us of that fact.
While my husband filled out the paperwork, I sat on a hard chair in the spartan reception area and observed my fellow patients. I was the oldest woman in the waiting room, as well as the only one who was visibly pregnant. The other patients either sat with their mothers or, enigmatically, alone. Together we solemnly marked time, waiting for our turn behind the doors.
Eventually we were called back, not to a consulting room, but to another holding area. There, the staff asked my husband to wait while a counselor spoke to me in private. My husband sat down. Posters above him warned women about signs of domestic abuse.
Meanwhile, I was enclosed with a cheerful-looking counselor who had colored hair and a piercing in her nose. Feeling like someone who’d stumbled into the wrong room, I told her between choked sobs how we’d arrived at her clinic on the highway.
“I am so sorry,” the young woman said with compassion, and nudged the tissues closer. Then, after a moment’s pause, she told me reluctantly about the new Texas sonogram law that had just come into effect. I’d already heard about it. The law passed last spring but had been suppressed by legal injunction until two weeks earlier.
My counselor said that the law required me to have another ultrasound that day, and that I was legally obligated to hear a doctor describe my baby. I’d then have to wait 24 hours before coming back for the procedure. She said that I could either see the sonogram or listen to the baby’s heartbeat, adding weakly that this choice was mine.
“I don’t want to have to do this at all,” I told her. “I’m doing this to prevent my baby’s suffering. I don’t want another sonogram when I’ve already had two today. I don’t want to hear a description of the life I’m about to end. Please,” I said, “I can’t take any more pain.” I confess that I don’t know why I said that. I knew it was fait accompli. The counselor could no more change the government requirement than I could. Yet here was a superfluous layer of torment piled upon an already horrific day, and I wanted this woman to know it.
“We have no choice but to comply with the law,” she said, adding that these requirements were not what Planned Parenthood would choose. Then, with a warmth that belied the materials in her hand, she took me through the rules. First, she told me about my rights regarding child support and adoption. Then she gave me information about the state inspection of the clinic. She offered me a pamphlet called A Woman’s Right to Know, saying that it described my baby’s development as well as how the abortion procedure works. She gave me a list of agencies that offer free sonograms, and which, by law, have no affiliation with abortion providers. Finally, after having me sign reams of paper, she led me to the doctor who’d perform the sonography, and later the termination.
The doctor and nurse were professional and kind, and it was clear that they understood our sorrow. They too apologized for what they had to do next. For the third time that day, I exposed my stomach to an ultrasound machine, and we saw images of our sick child forming in blurred outlines on the screen.
“I’m so sorry that I have to do this,” the doctor told us, “but if I don’t, I can lose my license.” Before he could even start to describe our baby, I began to sob until I could barely breathe. Somewhere, a nurse cranked up the volume on a radio, allowing the inane pronouncements of a DJ to dull the doctor’s voice. Still, despite the noise, I heard him. His unwelcome words echoed off sterile walls while I, trapped on a bed, my feet in stirrups, twisted away from his voice.
“Here I see a well-developed diaphragm and here I see four healthy chambers of the heart…”
I closed my eyes and waited for it to end, as one waits for the car to stop rolling at the end of a terrible accident.
When the description was finally over, the doctor held up a script and said he was legally obliged to read me information provided by the state. It was about the health dangers of having an abortion, the risks of infection or hemorrhage, the potential for infertility and my increased chance of getting breast cancer. I was reminded that medical benefits may be available for my maternity care and that the baby’s father was liable to provide support, whether he’d agreed to pay for the abortion or not.
Abortion. Abortion. Abortion. That ugly word, to pepper that ugly statement, to embody the futility of all we’d just endured. Futile because we’d already made our heart-breaking decision about our child, and no incursion into our private world could change it.
Finally, my doctor folded the paper and put it away: “When you come back in 24 hours, the legal side is over. Then we’ll care for you and give you the information you need in the way we think is right.”
A day later, we returned to the clinic for the surgery that had us saying goodbye to our son. On top of their medical duties, the nurses also held my hand and wiped my eyes and let me cry like a child in their arms.
Later, in reviewing the state-mandated paperwork I’d signed, I found a statement about women who may opt out of the new sonogram edict. It seemed that minors, victims of rape or incest, and cases in which the baby has an irreversible abnormality might be spared the extra anguish. I asked the Planned Parenthood staff about this and, after conferring privately, they thought that my child’s condition might have exempted me from the new sonogram rules. They apologized for their uncertainty, explaining that the law was so new they’d not had a chance to understand what it means in practice. “Could I have skipped the 24-hour wait, too?” I asked, wondering whether that extra day of distress might have been avoided. “No,” a staffer replied, “the mandatory wait applies to everyone.”
A few weeks later, I decided to clarify this for myself. I asked the Department of State Health Services, the agency responsible for implementing the sonogram law, who exactly is exempt. The department responded by email: “A woman would still be subject to the sonogram but would not be required to hear an explanation of the sonogram images if she certifies in writing that her fetus has an irreversible medical condition as identified by a reliable diagnostic procedure and documented in her medical file.” Based on this reply, it seems that the torturous description I’d borne was just a clerical mistake.
However, in looking through the paperwork I signed for Planned Parenthood, I noticed that the Department of State Health Services had issued technical guidelines four days after I’d been at the clinic. So for three weeks, abortion providers in Texas had been required to follow the sonogram law but had not been given any official instructions on how to implement it. Again, I asked the agency about this, and a spokesman replied as follows: “No specific guidance was issued during that time, but clinics were welcome to ask questions or seek guidance from their legal counsel if there were concerns.”
My experience, it seems, was a byproduct of complex laws being thrown into the tangled world of abortion politics. If I’d been there two weeks earlier or even a week later, I might have avoided the full brunt of this new law’s effect. But not so for those other young women I saw in Planned Parenthood’s waiting room. Unless they fall into one of those exemption categories—the conditions under which the state has deemed that some women’s reasons for having an abortion are morally acceptable—then they’ll have politicians muscling in on their private decisions. But what good is the view of someone who has never had to make your terrible choice? What good is a law that adds only pain and difficulty to perhaps the most painful and difficult decision a woman can make? Shouldn’t women have a right to protect themselves from strangers’ opinions on their most personal matters? Shouldn’t we have the right not to know?

Sunday, May 12, 2013

A Date

   So I joined an online dating site, and for two weeks I had fun, lively, kind email and phone exchanges with a man. He wasn't my type, but there was so much in his words that captivated me. Then we met yesterday. After two hours into the date, I was ready to call it quits.
   I did not feel attracted to him at all. None whatsoever. I didn't want to kiss him, I didn't want to hold his hand, nothing.
  Yes, we met in a public place during the day with plenty of people around. Yes, at least three friends knew whom I was meeting, where, and what time. Yes, I reported in to them when I returned home. A woman can never be careful enough.
  He has since emailed me several times, and I wrote him back that I didn't feel an attraction.


Sunday, May 5, 2013

First Communion - Joyful

Today I went to a First Communion Mass for my friend's daughter at a different parish. The children were beautiful and innocent. The parents were proud and beaming, and we all dressed in our Sunday Best. I remember my friend being single, getting engaged, planning her bridal shower, being at her wedding, planning the baby shower, the first child's baptism, and now the First Communion.

How could you not love little boys in their little blue suits??? How could you not love little girls in their white dresses and veils????

The music was beautiful!

"Shout to the Lord" was a beautiful love song.

I cried several times during the Mass.

It wasn't even my kid making her First Communion. 

I also went to the celebratory brunch with the family and other friends at a local restaurant. Hugs and kisses and joy on this beautiful day with flowers, good food and music just made me very happy.