
Doors…






The other day I sat on the side of my bathtub re-grouting the tile and I had plenty of time to daydream. As my mind wandered, I think I found the solution to overcrowded jails and repeat offenders.
Grouting is an exhausting, tedious process. While smearing a sponge full of grout into the numerous cracks in the tile, I began to regret that I had ever begun this foul task.
I hadn’t the faintest clue that the worst was yet to come. I let the grout dry for fifteen minutes as suggested and then took a dry cloth to wipe off the excess, just as the directions instructed me.
Ha! The excess grout did not wipe off and I had to scrape it off, inch by inch. I spent a total of eight hours getting the grout on and then off the tiles in my tiny bathroom.
To pass the time, and because I think too much, I tried to imagine anything else I would rather be doing than attacking this dried on gluey mess and my imagination went wild.
I’d rather be working at my last job; bar-tending on a Friday night, making the drinks for all the other food servers while trying to wait on the bar, hand washing all the bar glasses while taking care of ten crowded tables of my own.
I’d rather have small children puking on my bed, running to the bathroom trailing diarrhea or crying all night again. To be honest, the very thought of small children in my house gave me a panic attack, but all manner of other trying situations floated through and were accepted by my mind.
I’d rather be thumbing in the freezing rain on a dark deserted road. I’d rather be using my mother’s old wringer washing machine, the most dangerous household appliance ever sold.
I even thought I’d rather be in prison making license plates and that got me to thinking about how some prisoners have an easier life than many law-abiding citizens do.
As I mulled over my misery, I got a fantastic idea. Grouting could be used as a cruel, yet justifiable punishment that would act as a strong deterrent to criminals.
Put ceramic tiles in all the prisons; tile the walls, the floors and the showers. Tile the cells, tile the recreation area, even tile the outside courtyard, just tile everything! Put offenders to work grouting and cleaning up the mess and then have them do it again, until it is perfect.
(After eight hours of hard labor, my grout looked as if a toddler had been at work and my body felt like a bruised pretzel.)
Finally, have the prisoners grout every government building from the post office to the White House. Send the workers into the schools at night and when they’ve grouted all the public buildings, lend them to homeowners who need their tiles grouted. I believe you’ll soon have a long waiting list for this service.
When these men and women face one tiled wall after another, the words chain gang will take on a new terror.
In addition, don’t forget the eroded, moldy grout. The acres of tiles to be scraped and redone will continue forever because tile always needs new grout. I think the person who invented tile and grout had their own unending employment in mind.
As I looked at the mess I had made, I wanted to cry. It took me another hour to vacuum the dust and to scour the tub and the floor.
At last, I turned on the shower and I stood under the flow, letting the warm steam loosen the cramps in my neck, the hot water easing the pain in my back from falling off the ladder I had tried to balance inside the tub.
I couldn’t stop thinking about prisoners doing my grout. I’d definitely invite a chain gang into my bathroom to grout my tiles. Believe me, grouting is a job from hell. I’d even let the Ted Bundy into my bathroom–if I had a gun and he’d grout my tiles.
An added incentive to operate this program is that each prisoner could learn an honest trade, one that would pay extremely well on the outside.
The one disadvantage that I can see is that it would cost the prisons very little to implement and I’m afraid for that reason alone, the lawmakers and the politicians won’t even consider this solution unless we allow them a budget of forty million dollars to study the idea.
Let’s stop babying criminals and get them to work grouting. My solution is at least as reasonable as any remedy that the politicians have offered, and I’ll give it to my country for free.
Trust me; I don’t have a slush fund, and I promise you, I don’t own a document shredder. I don’t even inhale my Marlboro cigarettes. (Well, okay, so what if I do? Do you have proof?)
If the program fails to deter crime, we will have lost nothing. People in the United States will never have to grout their own tiles again. It’s time Americans received something in return for all the tax dollars poured into the prison programs. We want something tangible for our money. We could get something besides the unfulfilled promises of safety in our homes and on our streets.
How many times will we respond to the requests for more taxes to build bigger and bigger prisons and receive nothing in return?
I challenge the citizens of America to search their minds for similar ideas and to develop programs based on the jobs we hate to do.
For instance, we could force non-violent offenders to baby-sit all the terrible two’s presently in time out. (Well, I guess that job could go to the death row inmates.) Make them mow our lawns when it’s a hundred degrees in the shade. Make them pull the disgusting clogs from our drains. Make them dig and weed our flowerbeds. Make them clean our ovens.
Write to your state representatives. Write to your United States senators. Exclude members of the government already incarcerated or under investigation, as they may not be sympathetic to the new “work programs.”
Tell them you want tougher punishments enacted.
Include your wish to have your name placed on the “Grout List” so you can avoid the stampede of requests that are sure to come.
Americans unite and let’s do our part to wipe out crime! Give the offenders our dirty jobs, jobs we can’t even pay a housekeeper to perform.
It could very well be the answer to fighting crime and either way, we win.


My grandson, Cole, last summer.






I am my father’s daughter.
He taught me about reality, insanity and how to find crumbs of love beneath the rubble.
I listened to him for so many years, ranting and raving against society, the government and his bosses.
He was a mason.
He wouldn’t build fireplaces if the contractors didn’t build the houses to his standards and he always fought with his bosses until they would fire him or he would quit.
The excitement we all felt as he found each job and the despair we felt when he lost them was a roller coaster ride of emotions. Do we eat hamburgers versus do we eat saltines and peanut butter.
What he said when he was screaming and yelling was not always crazy. He was equally intelligent and creative, such a hard combination to juggle mentally. Very confusing.
When I first went to AA he was there during one of his rare fits of sobriety.
People would insist that I stay away from that man, crazy Bill, and I’d tell them, “I would, but he’s my dad and he’s sober today and I love him.”
He didn’t ever stay sober very long, but when he was sober, he was quiet and soft and gentle.
He taught me to love nature and to appreciate the free beauty in the world.
My daughters loved their grandpa, but they only saw him when he was sober so that was all they knew…
One winter when he was sober, I asked him if he wanted to come inside and live with us, but he chose to sleep outside in his truck because he said he felt safe there.
He would come in my little apartment to shave and shower and wipe away every trace that he had ever been inside.
Every week when he got paid, he would give me thirteen dollars. Ten for me and a dollar for each of the kids.
I still have the note he wrapped the money in the first week. He left it in my mailbox.
I treasure that note because I am my father’s daughter.
He taught me that material possessions meant nothing.
He taught me that by always leaving everything we had behind when we moved, but I learned it.
He taught me that by selling everything he bought my mother in the moneyed days of summer during the cold, bitter days of winter, to buy his beer, but I learned it.
He taught me that money was hard earned. He taught me that by making me beg for a nickel for the ice cream man, but I learned it.
He taught me that women were strong and that they could survive almost anything and get up and go to work the next day because they had to feed the family, pay the rent and put fuel in the furnace.
He taught me that by the way that he treated my mom, screaming at her and calling her a whore all night and I learned from her too.
I watched the way she survived, how she went to work every morning no matter how little sleep she had the night before, and yes, I learned.
My dad was a paranoid, schizophrenic, bipolar, seldom sober alcoholic, but much of what he said was the truth and he was before his time, so I guess he was also a prophet.
He was a prophet who filled prescriptions for Valium and Librium to stay sober. He was a prophet who could not handle the ugliest parts of humanity when he was sober, (including himself) so he drank to forget and would once more become ugly and cruel and then he would get sober again, hating himself so much that he would drink just to forget again.
He taught my brother the craft of brick laying and then he tortured my brother for being his equal.
Yet, when Dad went crazy and tried to kill his mother and father, it was my brother who got him from jail and into a VA hospital, all the while accepting verbal abuse and being disowned for bringing him where he could get help instead of jail time.
One of my best memories of my dad is when at fourteen I asked for a stereo and had it the next day.
One of my brother’s worst memories is when Dad took away his hunting rifle and sold it to buy my stereo. I never even knew until my brother and I were talking after Mom’s funeral.
My dad was a good man and he was a bad man.
He was my father and I hated him and I loved him.
Forty years ago, when he was living on the streets, my sister and I got him a little apartment in our building.
He lived as if he were staying at a campground. Instead of the stove, he used a little propane cooker and instead of the bed we gave him, he slept on the floor in a sleeping bag. He wouldn’t accept any meals we tried to share and he only ate food out of cans to be sure he wasn’t being poisoned.
He walked the streets during the day, wearing sandals and a long white shirt, telling people that he was Jesus. He believed that…
The last time I saw him was in 1983. He was living in a shed on his friend’s farm. His friend had died and the son didn’t want him there anymore. Dad didn’t care.
As I walked up to the shed, he looked out the window.
His first words were, “Has your mother remarried?”
Second thoughts, “What happened to your hair? That’s not your real hair color.”
He wouldn’t come out to talk to me. I asked him to come out several times. He refused and he talked through the screen.
He told me that I had no right to have remarried after my divorce. He would not acknowledge my husband.
I asked him if he’d like to meet my son, his five-year-old grandson, who stood right beside me and he said, “No.”
He told me to never come back or to try to see him again. He said it would be better that way.
He didn’t have much else to say and as he wished, I have never seen him again.
My brother swears that he saw him slip into my mom’s funeral in 2009.
My mother was his one true love, his obsession, his everything; although he nearly destroyed her before she left him after forty-years of hell.
One granddaughter searches for him to this day. I do too. I don’t know why.
We have not found a death certificate, so we believe that he’s still alive. He would be ninety-one.
We were told that he was possibly still living in the VA hospital, but we were also told that he insisted that he had no family, so they couldn’t tell us if he was there.
Many things in life can be overcome, changed, fixed.
I have been sober since I was twenty-three, yet one unchangeable reality stands out to me.
I am my father’s daughter.


Letting me down gently…

Wishing You a Fairy Good Day

Pink Dreams

Yesterday, as I looked at my butterfly covered sun-dress, I realized…



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