Saturday, September 12, 2020

Non-public addendum to my previous post:

Non-public addendum to my previous post:

I have updates about Shaun's dad and the whole visiting situation.

I can't really remember what I said about Shaun's dad's health except that he has 10% heart function.  I think that is all I knew about the last time I posted (besides his leg pain).  What I have learned in the meantime is that he's been living with 10% heart function for some years.  I truly think that being in the hospital freaked him out into thinking he was dying.  Like, soon, I mean.

Shaun's dad (Father-in-Law, aka FIL) has been having leg pain for a couple of months now.  It sounds like sciatica to me from his description.  Obviously I am not a doctor, but I just wanted to give a point of reference for anyone who's reading.  It sounds like nerve pain that is coming from his lower back / hip and radiating all the way down his leg.  It's gotten pretty terrible and he's had an epidural which helped for a while, but not long and has since worn off.

Shaun noticed about a week and half ago when visiting his dad that he's got a large swelling above his hip on his left side.  My guesstimate is that it's 6 inches long by about 2 inches wide.  He says it hurts (it's opposite the leg with pain).

Anyway, he finally got the scan that he was supposed to have done to see what was going on with his leg.  They didn't find anything affecting his leg and mentioned nothing about the lump growing on him.  What they did see was a tennis-ball sized spot on his lung (oddly, not on the same side with the abdominal swelling).

FIL says he's tired and doesn't want to go to Birmingham to another specialist.  He found one in Anniston (not any of the ones that were recommended by my friends, unfortunately).  They said they are going to treat this as if it's cancer until the biopsy comes back and shows otherwise (we will hopefully know something this coming week).  If it is cancer, it's close to the abdominal wall and may possibly be Stage 4 already.

Shaun's been calling daily and visiting at least twice a week.  I go if I can, but if I have a good reason not to I don't.  We are not fans of visiting anyone during a pandemic, but Shaun wants to go and he is an adult who can make his own decisions.  The only thing I can do is ask him to be safe and support him.  I have accepted this.  We are doing everything else to keep our risk of catching Covid low.  Hopefully, it will be enough.

Shaun was going to visit his dad today, but when he called FIL said that he was in too much pain and not good company so not to come.  That is a first.  I feel extremely horrible that he's home alone and in pain like this.  To me, dying is one thing - it's going to happen to all of us - but unnecessary suffering is something I have a hard time dealing with.  He does have pain meds, but they are useless against the leg pain.  My heart is aching and I don't know what to do.

I'm supposed to be studying, but I feel like I won't be able to concentrate until I get some things out.

I'm supposed to be studying, but I feel like I won't be able to concentrate until I get some things out.

In general I am doing ok.  The Cymbalta seems to be helping.  My sleep is a little janky still, but I think that can still work itself out.  I'm more motivated and active than I have been in months, so overall any negative like waking up in the middle of the night is by far outweighed by the fact that I can do things, and that I want to.  Maybe now that I have a little bit of energy I need to make exercise a priority.  Maybe I need to burn some of it off.

As far as I can tell I'm doing ok in my math class.  It's been a long time (about 3 years now) since I've seen Calculus, which is what we use to solve Differential Equations, but I feel like it's coming back to me and I have been putting in the effort.  We have our first quiz on Tuesday, so I guess then I'll see exactly how ok (or not) I'm doing.  Calculus is so detailed and I love it so I'm actually really enjoying the class, but one little mistake can throw the whole thing off.  Needless to say, the anxiety is real.

Besides that I am feeling super disconnected from so many people.  Obviously, with us staying in for 6 months now that was bound to happen.  But it's really more than that.  It's more like an emotional disconnect and it is really getting to me.  I have a few friends who I know are busy, but I almost never hear from them unless it's a meme even when I've shared that I'm going through stuff.  A great many people have disappointed me with anti-mask / anti-BLM / pro-Trump / "I'm going out even though it's a pandemic" posts and to be honest that has made me reevaluate a lot of relationships.

I feel like so many people are just... stupid.  Or worse, ignorant.  And I feel resentful because the pandemic could have BEEN over, and if we bothered to care about justice and equality then we wouldn't be so divided.  I don't know.  But a lot of stuff is getting to me and is on my mind and I don't even know what to do with it because it's not like I can fix any of it myself.  It's extremely frustrating and that is pretty much all I can say about it.  I mean, it's not really, but it's all I'm going to post on a public forum.

Well, unfortunately for me this was not cathartic in the least, so uh, enjoy, or something.  If you're not feeling too ok I guess take solace in the fact that you are not alone.

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Happy 3-Year Gotcha-versary to this amazing girl!

Happy 3-Year Gotcha-versary to this amazing girl! It's hard to believe it's already been 3 years since Kira joined our family. Time really does fly when life is good! ❤️❤️❤️

She had an eye exam today. Her eyes have improved so her glasses were too strong, causing her headaches. We ordered 3 pairs of glasses with her new prescription from Zenni today (for less than $50!), so she'll be able to see soon and have some backup glasses just in case. (Her bad kitty Leon broke her last pair.)

It was good to see her today. She's our goofy ray of sunshine and I wouldn't change a thing. We love you so much, Baby Kid! ❤️




I don't drink alcohol. The last part of this is exactly how I feel.

I don't drink alcohol. The last part of this is exactly how I feel.


Sunday, September 6, 2020

This is nothing like my life experience.

This is nothing like my life experience.

Prejudice is real.
Privilege is real.

Copied so it doesn't disappear:
I grew up in Reno, Nevada. 
In third grade a boy confidently tells me and my brother that his mom said black people cannot swim because our muscles are different than those of white people. 
In middle school, standing among a group of white classmates talking video games, I am the only black child. One classmate expresses surprise that my family has enough money to afford a PlayStation. 
In high school, I am the only black kid among a group of friends. When sharing drinks in my presence they frequently tell each other not to “niggerlip” the bottles. Even though I object, they continue to use the phrase. 
In high school, my brother is at a teen house party that gets broken up by police, a common occurrence. The kids at the party scatter, also a common occurrence. My brother, the only black child in attendance, is the only one on whom a police officer draws a firearm to get him to stop running away. He is 14. 
In high school, a group of my white friends frequently sneak on to the outdoor basketball courts at an athletic club to play. They can usually play for hours, including with club members. On the two occasions I attend, club members complain and we are ejected from the club within minutes. 
In high school, I am excited about black history month and am talking to a friend about black inventors. My friend snorts and says, “Black people have never invented anything.” 
In high school, as graduation approaches, many of my white friends tell me that I am lucky. They tell me that due to my skin color, I will get into any college I want. 
I remain in Reno for college. 
During college an employer keeps food for employees in the break room refrigerator. One morning I decided to have microwaveable chicken wings for breakfast. The employer tells me I might not want to eat that for breakfast with my skin color. The employer immediately apologizes. 
In college I am standing in a group of white friends on campus. A white acquaintance of one of my friends approaches to chat. The acquaintance tells a story about something that frustrated him and then reels off a series of expletives ending with the word, “nigger.” None of my friends corrects him. 
In college I visit an antique shop in Auburn, California with my girlfriend, who is white, and her parents. The shopkeeper follows me around the store whistling loudly as I browse, until we leave. 
I move to San Diego, California for law school. 
In law school, during a discussion in my criminal law class, a white classmate suggests that police officers should take a suspect’s race into account when determining whether there is reasonable suspicion to believe that an individual is committing a crime. 
The weekend of my law school graduation my family comes to San Diego. I go to the mall with my brother and sister and visit the Burberry store. Two different employees follow us around the store – never speaking to us – until we leave. 
After law school, I return to Reno. 
A co-worker jokingly calls me “King David” upon seeing me each day. I joke that I’m not treated like a king. The co-worker then begins to call me “Slave David” each time we encounter one another. When I ask the co-worker to stop because it is hurtful, I am told by my co-worker that this is a problem that I have in my head. 
I attend a pub crawl with friends. We end up at a party in a hotel suite in downtown Reno. I am greeted by a white man at the door who loudly expresses surprise that I am an “educated negro” upon hearing me speak. 
I walk a friend who is a white woman from a restaurant to her car because it is night time. As we stand by the car chatting, a police officer pulls up and shines a light on us, asking if everything is okay. Once my friend confirms, the officer drives away. I tell her that he was worried about her, she teasingly says, “Oh yeah, because you’re so scary.” Later, I tell another white friend I felt racially profiled by the officer. My friend shrugs and says, “I don’t know man, that’s a stretch.” 
A white friend tells me that white voters have become upset at black people because of black people’s liberal use of food welfare benefits. When I point out that more whites than blacks receive welfare benefits in the U.S., my friend expresses confusion at how that could be the case. 
I leave a downtown restaurant with my wife. As we walk along the river a homeless man appears to be having a schizophrenic episode, engaging auditory hallucinations. Upon seeing me, he becomes lucid and begins to shout the word “nigger” over and over. 
I discover that one of my clients does not want me to represent him as his Public Defender because he does not want a black attorney. I am given the option to withdraw as counsel. I do not. 
Last year, I am at a barbecue chatting with a white acquaintance who asks if I have ever experienced racism. When I say it is a nearly daily occurrence, the acquaintance retorts, without missing a beat, “Bullshit.” 
Two months ago. I am driving to lunch with the black teen I mentor. At a red light a white woman crosses the street. As I begin to drive, she turns around and screams at us, “F**k you f****ing nigger!” 
Before any of these instances, my family of origin moved to Reno, Nevada from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1984. 
My mother recently told me that when I was a very young child my parents hired a company to remove a tree from our front lawn. Two white men showed up and removed the tree. One of them carved a swastika into the stump. My father had to  confront him and ask him to remove it. 
Before that, my now 93 -year-old grandfather served in the Army National Guard and was stationed in the U.S. south. Despite being active duty, he was not allowed to eat in restaurants due to “whites only” signage. He had to wait for fellow Guardsmen to bring him food outside. 
Not long before that, my family were slaves, owned by Americans of English and Irish descent, which is why – despite being primarily of African descent – I have an English last name. 
This is my experience of being black in America. To be black in America is to be told over and over that you are not good enough, that you do not belong, that you are genetically unfit, that your physical presence is undesirable, and that everything about you – right down to your lips – is wrong. It is absolutely true that everyone experiences hardships in life, but the psychological weight of being told both explicitly and implicitly, on a daily basis, that your very existence is objectionable can at times feel unbearable. 
And despite this experience, I still love my country, my state, and my city. Despite my experience, I would not choose to be anything other than a black American. The history of black people in this country is one of struggle and triumph. Our people were brought to this country as slaves and against all odds, in the face of seemingly insurmountable obstacles, have made our mark. Through slavery, poll taxes, literacy tests, redlining, and black codes we have persevered. Through the unspeakable horrors of mass lynchings; the Tuskegee syphilis experiments; and the massacres at Tulsa and Rosewood, we have persevered. 
Bass Reeves, Dovey Johnson Roundtree, Sarah Boone, Oscar Micheaux, Shirley Chisholm, Dorie Miller, Susie King Taylor, Georgia Gilmore, Octavius Catto, Jack Johnson, Garrett Morgan, James W.C. Pennington. These are just a handful of extraordinary and oft forgotten black Americans who helped to mold and preserve the American Dream. These individuals and their accomplishments should not be regarded as “black history,” but rather as American history. 
I am an American of privilege, which makes me an African American of great privilege. I am an attorney. I live in a safe neighborhood. My children do not worry about their next meal. I can afford child care. My family can afford personal vehicles. If my children become sick, I can take them to the doctor. If I am this privileged, and these have been my experiences, primarily in my own hometown, often with friends and acquaintances who are fond of me, and of whom I remain fond even now; just imagine what daily life must be like for a black person in this country who does not enjoy my level of privilege. 
The protests in the streets of America are certainly about the killing of George Floyd, but not just about George Floyd. They are about countless black men, women, and children for whom the punishment did not fit the crime – if indeed there was a crime at all. We live in a country where, in order to recall what life under Jim Crow felt like, many white Americans must pick up a history book. Meanwhile, many black Americans need only pick up a telephone, and call their parents. 
When we as people of color share our experiences, we are not doing so to score political points, “play the race card,” get sympathy, assign blame, or to make you feel bad about yourself. We are asking you for help. We are asking you to join us in the ongoing fight against racism in our country, because we cannot do it alone. It will take Americans of every stripe to eradicate racism from American society. 
I am now asking for your help. Please seek truth and knowledge. When sharing information, please check your sources and make sure that they are reliable. Try to place what is happening today into a historical context. Read about systemic racism and anti-racism. When your friends of color tell you that racism is real and affecting their lives, believe them and then, if you can, do something about it. 
My children are likely to attend the same middle school and high school that I did. It is my great hope for them that those around them have the knowledge, compassion, and guidance to know better than to daily deluge them with words that make them doubt their intelligence, their beauty, and their worth as human beings based only on the color of their skin; and instead judge them by the content of their character. 
It is for all of the above reasons, and so many more that we proudly say #blacklivesmatter

Linked because I'm not a thief:
By David Gamble, Jr.

Go ahead and comment, white people...

Go ahead and comment, white people, if you're ok with being treated like black people are treated here. I'll wait.