Month: October 2007

  • Is the idea of marriage too outdated for the 21st century?

    Just like rolling your eyes, leaving the lid off the toothpaste, and putting the toilet paper on the spool backward (or not at all). 
       

    I just answered this Featured Question, you can answer it too!

    I have given some thought to this question and since I WAS asked, I'm going to tell you more of what I think. 

    I think that the law surrounding marriage as a practical matter needs to be strengthened.  I believe that property rights between all couples should be equally protected, not just the few with pre-nup agreements.  And btw, I don't believe that a pre-nup guarantees a fair division of property in the case of a divorce. 

    I think that property rights within a marriage should be strengthened so that one partner cannot obligate the other with debt.  If they both agree to the debt, then let it be joint debt, but it's still entirely possible for one person to have credit cards, buy houses, open businesses, and engage in all manner of financial behavior without the other partner's knowledge or agreement.  And then if (as so often happens) debt, disaster, and the IRS come calling - both partners are equally obligated to pay. 

    I think that many people will choose to marry and not only intend to make it last a lifetime but will in fact be together for the rest of their lives.  However, I would like it to be at least considered that marriage is a renewable license.  Say every 7 years.  You must reapply and there should be more to the process than merely paying a license fee.  There needs to be a full disclosure of assets, a demonstration of provision for children, and either a completed certificate from a marriage counselor or dispensation from the same showing that both partners have met basic skill levels necessary to continue to drive the relationship into the future. 

    I think we need to revisit the idea of the "no-fault" divorce.  Most laws today assume that when a couple divorces they just had insurmountable problems as a couple and that neither party is more or less to blame.  There is no testimony allowed in the courtroom about broken promises, nights spent alone, financial mismanagement, abusive behavior, or a host of other issues which no reasonable person would be expected to tolerate in any other relationship.  When a marriage ends, the legal assumption that both were equally to blame for the failure often serves to heap blame on a partner who refused to tolerate bad behavior as though that intolerance of intolerable circumstances were a character flaw on her (or his) part. 

    Several months ago I saw an article about "the most costly Hollywood divorces" and it listed a number of settlements where the famous partner "paid" millions of dollars to the less famous partner as though the money were his or hers alone and the receiving partner were somehow gaining through the transaction.  In every single example the "paying" partner was left with assets that were 4, 5, or 6 times the amount "paid" to the partner being divorced.

    The point of that author was that these payers should have had a better pre-nup to protect themselves from an unfair division of assets.  The way I saw it, the receiving partner was one day a person with a comfortable home and access to 50% of the assets of the marriage and the day after might or might not have a home and now  had access to 20% of the assets if they were lucky.  Seems to me like it was a lot more expensive for that partner than the one doing the "paying".

    And of course, in this article as it often is in real life, it was wives and children who got the lesser amount while the husband/father retained 70-90% of the wealth.  Call me a cynical greedy grasping bitch (as was one of the wives quoted in that article) but I'd like to see laws that do a little better job of settling property division so that wives and children aren't struggling to eat while the husband/father's standard of living goes up exponentially at their expense. 

    Because that same inequity of division occurrs at every level of society, and the women of middle class backgrounds aren't getting millions, or even hundreds of thousands of dollars when their marriage ends.  Divorce is one of the chief causes of poverty for women and children in this country, and that's a problem. 

    The laws, rules, attitudes, opinions, and perspectives I see on marriage are vestiges of another time, place and culture.  What we have today doesn't work for a great many people and our courts collude to punish women and children when a marriage ends regardless of circumstances that lead to the end of the marriage. 

    In order for marriage to continue as a respectable institution, we need to make some changes in the laws regarding marriage.  (And you'll note please that the problems I've outlined today have nothing to do with the debate about whether non-traditional family arrangements should be included in the definition of  marriage.  That's a blog for another day, and I have an opinion about that too.)


    • The ABCs of Me.

      MaryT63 tapped my shoulder and asked me to do this one ...

      A- Attached or single: Single

      B- Best Friend:  I have two best friends.  Mary and Kevin 
      In fact, I had a hard time maning only two.  Honestly, one
      of the best reasons in the world for never being married again
      is so I won't have to choose bridesmaids... I'd have dozens and
      we'd have the BEST party the night before. 
      (Kevin would have to shave his legs ...)


      C- Cake or Pie:  Pie.

      D- Day of choice: Saturdays

      E- Essential Item: Cellphone.

      F- Favorite Color: Purples and Golds

      G- Gummi Bears or Worms:  Bears

      H- Hometown: Born in Malvern, Arkansas - now make my
      home in Albuquerque, NM and I love it here.


      I- Indulgence(s): Books, the occasional glass of wine, New Mexican
      food,  feeding my boys, (yes, I consider it an indulgence to myself
      and they tolerate it well), bubble baths!and I'm leaning toward
      getting a professional to give me a pedicure.


      J- January or July: July, because that's usually when Mary and
      I meet in Iowa for some wild writing times.


      K- Kids:  two boys without whom I'd write a whole lot less

      L: Life is Incomplete Without:  a warm hand to hold, a friend
      to share with


      M- Marriage Date:  December 31, 1988 (Divorced April 26, 2004)

      N- Number of  Bio-Siblings: 3 (2 sisters and 1 brother)

      O- Oranges or Apples: Right now I'm more into pears.

      P- Phobias or Fears:  not so much

      Q-Quote:  "Holy Hannah!"

      R- Reason To Smile:  I'm home, safe, and comfy - with cold feet.

      S- Season:  hmmmm, October 18 ... Autumn

      T-  Thursday Evening: A reading at a bookstore on the West side
      of town featuring the woman who beat out me and 700+ others for
      the Room of Her Own grant. 


      U- Unknown Fact About Me:  If I tell you it won't be unknown, I'd
      have to kill you so it could be unknown again, and then I'd lose a
      potential bridesmaid.


      V- Vegetarian or Oppressor of Animal:   I love animals - next to
      the mashed potatoes


      W- Worst Habit:  procrastination (from my point of view) - texting
      my friends on my cell phone (from my boss' point of view) - working
      for my boss instead of playing (from my friends' point of view)


      X- X-Rays or Ultrasounds:  not recently

      Y- Your Favorite Food:  Today it's Green Chili and Chicken Tortilla
      soup ... (see the part about the cold feet)


      Z- Zodiac: Gemini on the Cancer cusp, Taurus moon, Virgo rising.
  • Home Again ...

    I just rolled in from Colorado Springs.  Tucker said, "MOM!! I missed you SO much, and I'm hungry.  What's for dinner?"

    o_0

    Cat?

    The fund-raising event was successful, people donated a little over $63,000.  My boss told me that I upstaged him, and I'm fired, but I'm pretty sure he was kidding.  Pretty sure.

    I had a couple ideas for poems as I was driving. 

    It's good to be home.

  • Dealing with Cattitude

    The cats have definitely relaxed.  They are no longer concerned about their continued place in the household, and their security has prompted some interesting moments.

    The red you see on the carpet isn't blood.  They dealt harshly with a red pom pom from a new toy and those are the sad remains. 

  • Quiet Saturday

    The Balloon Fiesta is winding down.  I have to make a trip to Colorado the first part of this coming week.  So today is family time.  We're doing laundry, and a bit of cleaning.  We'll go over to Michaels for the boys to participate in the Kids' Club craft time this morning.  (Usually it's just Tucker, but Michael saw this week's project online and its one that he wants to do as well.

    After that, we'll do family stuff at home, a bit more cleaning and bags packing.  And we'll probably play a game or two.  We had a great time playing Scene It Family Edition when Mary was here, we've been talking about that.  And about SET, the game we discovered at the Moon Rabbit toy store in Santa Fe (wonderful little shop).  We went out to Borders last night.  They didn't have the book I was looking to get for myself, but we wound up with some new books for the kids.  In fact, we came home and I read aloud the first chapter of A Wrinkle in Time

    The Hawgs are gonna be televised this afternoon in their match-up with Auburn.  (Whoooo Pig Soooooooie!)

    The boys are gonna stay with Tina while I'm out of town.  I"m hoping they will behave themselves.  Oh, yes, I am hoping that rather fiercely.  I'd be okay with going for a few days without a "story". 

    Happy Weekending Everybody

  • I've figured it out ...

    Since I'm sleeping all by myself in this king sized bed, if I sleep for one week on the left side and the next week on the right (instead of in the middle all the time) I can skip washing the sheets every other week instead of having to do them every Saturday.  I'll save the earth!  I'll save money!!  I'll ...

    This is making me want a nap.

  • Oh to roll in a bed of catnip and sigh ...

    Joy rides the wind like a shout, like a jolt of unexpected smile,
    the song you know so well, you sing along the first time it's played
    the way you say "like" instead of "love" when you first discover boys.
    Happiness sells itself in the market, and there's no shame in pursuing it
    or the family that grew in your heart and surrounded your shoulders
    with a quilt in a pattern that someone's grandmother knew by touch.
    Kisses taste like tears running across the wood grain of your desk
    saying leave the work, leave the busyness, leave the reasons behind
    and lie with your baby to read a story of pumpkins, pigs, and purple mommy love.
    Freedom dances when you're fighting, when you're tired, when you're sore
    and beckons you to a window where the light comes in on your soul
    where the most you know of God is the press of a hand choosing to hold yours.

    10.8.07

    And one that I read in the book I gave myself just for the joy of a new book of poetry.  I don't know why I'm so attracted to the ones with titles that sound like they are a little naughty, but I love the poets who play the game of making naughty nice ...

    The Orgasms of Organisms
    ~~ Dorianne Laux

    Above the lawn the wild beetles mate
    and mate, skew their tough wings
    and join.  They light in our hair,
    on our arms, fall twirling and twinning
    into our laps.  And below us, in the grass,
    the bugs are seeking each other out,
    antennae lifted and trembling, tiny legs
    scuttling, then the infinitesimal
    ah's of their meeting, the awkward joy
    of their turnings around. O end to end
    they meet again and swoon as only bugs can.
    This is why, sometimes, the grass feels electric
    under our feet, each blade quivering, and why
    the air comes undone over our heads
    and washes down around our ears like rain.
    but it has to be spring, and you have to be
    in love -- acutely, painfully, achingly in love --
    to hear the black-robed choir of their sighs.

    Isn't that a wonderful line?  they meet again and swoon as only bugs can ...

  • Can science and religion co-exist?

    The mere fact people seriously ask this question, can science and religion co-exist, presupposes that science and religion are competitors for the same property.  This strikes me as both ludicrous and sad.

    Science is the realm of study of phenomena which can be studied by experimentation.  Bodies, minds, objects, physical forces, the world we live in, the universe and its movement are all possible subjects for study. At issue here is whether sciece can ever provide ultimate answers.  All you have to do is open the "technology/medical/science" pages of the New York Times for even two days this week and you'll see all the evidence you need to show that science is by no means exact nor does it provide final answers.

    My sons are both affected by autism spectrum disorder.  Thirty years ago, it was 1 in 10,000 children who were afflicted.  Now its 1 in 150.  Only a few short years ago, science told us that autism was caused by poor parenting and "refrigerator moms".   But parents who love their children desperately still produce autistic babies and the rate of occurence is rising.  Science now tells us that the causes are unknown or unknowable.

    Science tells us that there is no co-relation between vaccine and autism, but some parents and doctors who treat autistic children on the basis of the observed negative effects of vaccination are seeing significant recoveries.   And this is just one example of  areas in which science doesn't offer the final answers even on specific topics, much less can it offer a clear final answer on ultimate reality. 

    Religion's realm is the relationship between Ultimate Reality and man which cannot be subject to experimentation.  I am most familiar with Jewish and Christian religious expression so I can readily quote that when asked, Jesus said (quoting the Torah) that the bottom line is "Love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, and body, and love your neighbor as yourself."

    I can't imagine that science will some day publish a study revealing that Ultimately, it's wrong to love.  And if it did, I wouldn't believe it to be a valid report.  And my saying that I wouldn't believe it leads to the other question that has to be answered.  What is the role of belief in sceince and religion? 

    People being people, they take the little that they know and form opinions about much broader subjects and then believe that their opinions are facts.  Science and religion can get along fine.  People who "believe in" science or "believe in" religion have issues.

       

    I just answered this Featured Question, you can answer it too!

  • weekend report

    Ths Hawgs won.  So did the Sooners.  But the Cubs got swept.  And I knew all this thanks to the miracle of technology by which I could receive important information via my cell phone.  And the kindness of a man on the street in Santa Fe. 

    The balloons are gorgeous.  They will continue to launch and compete and be the focus of a big old party for another week.

    It had been our plan to visit Old Town Albuquerque after the balloons rose on Saturday, but it was such a good plan that 100,000 other people had it as well.  o_0  So we went to Santa Fe instead and strolled along through art galleries, an AWESOME toy store where Mary and I were both unable to resist the lure of new games, touristy things, historical things, and a mid-afternoon snack of nachos at the Blue Corn Tortilla.

    Yesterday, we drove to the crest of Sandia Peak and paused often (Mary said it was every ten feet but we weren't that bad ...) to take photos.  Birds, trees, mountain vistas, desert  panoramas,  and all kinds of  beauty unfold before you with every curve of the road.

    We've eaten at some wonderful places: Los Cuates, Gardunos, Il Vicino, Quarters, The Owl Cafe where they roast and serve pinon coffee and cinnamon rolls so good that Mary says they are the real reaons she was willing to endure the 4 hour plane ride ...  Oh, and iHop at 5 am on our way to see the balloons.

    We've brainstormed book ideas, played so many games of Scrabble and Boggle that we don't bother to put the board away, and last night played Scene-It with the kids. The kids are out of school for Fall Break now so they and Aunt Mary will be getting up to even more fun today while I'm working.  She also brought tools and supplies for art lessons with Tucker so there's creativity in the air.

    Good Times.  I will continue to be scarce for a few more days.

    Mary posted some photos on her website:  http://web.mac.com/maryethomp2005/MaryElizabethThompson/BalloonFiesta.html

    Oh and my new profile pic is thanks to Mary, too. Isn't she cool?

  • Up Up and Away ...

    The Balloon Fiesta is off to a wonderful beginning.  Just a few photos ...