Inside Lane

My Kid


Every day, since that most wonderful one of Thor’s arrival, has been Mother’s Day for me.

I don’t know how I lucked into this kid, who is as easy to like as he is to love.  He is smart, he is funny, he is compassionate, and he is always up for hugs.  He’s too big to burrow into me like he did as a toddler, but he’s found workarounds.  Every day I tell him how much I love him, and every day I am rewarded with the same.  I take none of it for granted.

If I’m doing my job right, eventually this magical unicorn child will leave the nest, and he’ll go make a new life separate from me.  But, if I’m raising the person I think I am, I’ll have the benefit of his friendship.

He has made me a better person in a hundred ways.

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This was one of the candid photos from the LTYM show, last month.  I love that little face looking out over his grandmother’s shoulder, tucked right into my side.

We just spent the past hour wadded up on the sofa, watching Top Gear together, he and I.  Now and then, he would reach over and grab my head, wrench it back toward him and hug me as hard as he could.  He said, “I just can’t be close enough to you!  I love you too much!”

You know, I’m still surprised that he loves me back with such enthusiasm.  I know how much I love him, but since he’s been old enough to express fondness, I’ve been surprised at how much he loves me.  I was happy just to be The Food Source, and be appreciated for making sure his belly was full, and his hiney was dry.  What a delight to be appreciated as a person, and loved as an individual.

Inside Lane

In Which I Use the Word “Asshole” Repeatedly


I’ve been getting my panties in a wad over a variety of news articles in the past few days.  I finally decided on one to rant over in my blog.  I have chosen to be openly angry about the shooting at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas.  I am angry at two sets of people:  People who bully and bait, and people who take the bait and try to turn tables on bullies with weapons.

You know, the world would be a better place if we could all live by the rule: Don’t be an asshole.  Just don’t be an asshole.  How hard is that?  Isn’t that what Hammurabi’s Code, the Ten Commandments, and every other set of moral guidelines boil down to?

But since people are having such a difficult time, I’m going to make a little list here to help.

Ways to Not be an Asshole

  • Don’t make fun of people
  • Don’t make other people’s suffering your entertainment
  • Don’t try to humiliate people for fun and/or sport
  • If you know someone has a sore spot, don’t poke on it
  • If someone pokes on your sore spot, don’t shoot at them
  • If someone makes fun of you, don’t try to kill them
  • If you are angry or sad about something, don’t try to kill the people around you to make yourself feel better–or humiliate, embarrass, shame, or otherwise make people feel worse, to make yourself feel better
  • Don’t start physical altercations
  • Don’t threaten to kill, maim, rape, or otherwise hurt people
  • Don’t get mad because someone else has something you want
  • Don’t get mad because someone else has something you thought should only belong to you (remember Junior High, when Gretchen bought the same sweater you had, and you lost your damned mind because ONLY YOU WERE SUPPOSED TO GET TO WEAR THE CUTE SWEATER?!  It’s the same thing with civil rights and religious liberties.  We can all walk into Target, and we can all buy the same sweater, and sometimes it’s going to look better on Gretchen. Grow up.)
  • Mind your own business
  • Don’t take your loaded weapons into Chipotle and terrify people just because you can
  • Don’t use “it’s a free country” to validate your actions like you are a freaking seven-year-old telling someone they aren’t the boss of you
  • Don’t behave like the world is your personal Jerry Springer show
  • If you are in a position of authority, don’t mistreat and/or kill people because you can
  • If you are in a position of financial power, don’t Marie Antoinette people
  • Don’t bully people
  • Don’t kill the people who have bullied you
  • Don’t talk on your cell phone in public restrooms
  • Don’t be rude to strangers
  • Don’t yell at customer service people/bank tellers/waiters/teachers/anyone just because you need to get something off your chest
  • Don’t abuse people or animals

Feel free to print that up, fold it, and keep it in your pocket.  If you find yourself wondering, “Am I behaving like an asshole?”  Pull out the list and consider if your actions either fall into, or adjacent to any of those categories.  Proceed, or change course as needed.

I would address Pamela Gellar, that you don’t change religious fanaticism through provoking fanatics to do what their holy books and/or leaders tell them to do, but you can’t talk sense into crazy, and she is clearly as crazy as a bedbug, and also an asshole.  You don’t save lives by provoking a war.  You don’t keep safety by inviting a threat.

Just act right, people!

(Here I add the caveat that we cannot ignore world problems, and we cannot ignore how masses of people are being abused and tormented.  We must shine a spotlight on humanitarian issues if we are ever going to solve them, but we solve nothing by stooping to schoolyard dirt kicking.)

Inside Lane

Marvelous


You know, I could spend twenty minutes on the one thing I didn’t like about The Avengers: Age of Ultron, but who cares?  It was fantastic!  I loved it.  I loved it from happy, smiley Thor, right down to sad, [spoiler spoiler].  James Spader’s voice was brilliant.  Joss Whedon’s voice coming out of everyone was brilliant.  The only thing I would change surprised me, given how boring Thor is as a character, and how much I love Black Widow and Hulk.  See, I would have cut all the BW/BB romcomdrama, and put in more Lightning God.

What I love best about the Marvel Universe is that I can go into the theater and sit down, turn off my adult brain and just enjoy myself like the six-year-old I was seeing Star Wars the first time.  I can connect with my son over moments we enjoy, laugh, cheer, and cringe along with him, and we can walk out and spend the next few months quoting lines to each other, laughing, cheering, and cringing down the road on our way to school.  And I love how wide open and delighted my son is while watching.

I’d say you can’t buy that kind of togetherness, but apparently I can.

Now, about loving The Hulk.  I had two major, major crushes as a child:  Mr. Spock and Bruce Banner.  Both of them were brilliant and emotionally unavailable, a “type” I carried over into all my romantic attachments.  Someone tried to compare Benedict Cumberbatch’s Sherlock Holmes to Spock, and I balked.  Certainly, Cumberbatch’s Sherlock is brilliant and emotionally unavailable, but he is also mean-spirited and a bit of a sadist.  Mr. Spock is not at all mean-spirited.  Neither is Bruce Banner, nor is The Hulk.  The Hulk just likes to smash, that’s all.

I was talking to a friend about literary and movie character crushes, and we were laughing about how she is a Mr. Darcy girl, and I am a Mr. Rochester girl, and never the twain shall meet.  We started playing F/M/K with some of our favorites.  Here is a short list of mine:

F/Heathcliff, M/Rochester, K/Darcy  (I know, but I really hate Darcy. More for you!)

F/Hamlet and Paris, M/Horatio and Mercutio, K/Laertes and Romeo

F/Han Solo, M/Obi Wan Kenobi, K/Luke Skywalker

F/Thor, M/Bruce Banner, K/Clint Barton

F/Sherlock, M/Lestrade, K/Holmes (Again with the I Know!  Again with the More for You!)

F/Loki (because satsifaction isn’t in his nature), M/Magneto, K/Joker

F/Henry VIII, M/Henry V, K/Henry III  (The King Henry Version–and yes, I know, syphilis.)

Finally

F/Superman, M/Aquaman (have you SEEN those pictures with Jason Momoa?), K/Batman

Inside Lane

Who Tells You?


When I was very, very small, I can remember reaching up to pet my granny’s velvety jowl and tell her, lovingly, how much she reminded me of my favorite animal: the bulldog.  I meant it as a compliment.  I loved my granny’s face.  It was beautiful and soft, and the skin fell into gentle draping folds at the jawline.  Granny was tall and lovely, redhaired and lightly tanned, and to me she was one of the prettiest women in the world.

My bulldog comparison hurt her feelings, and it was a long time before I could understand why.  I thought bulldog and boxer faces were the best kind.

Fortunately, I still do.  Now that middle-age is eroding my jawline into the genetics of that side of the family, I am coming more and more to look like Granny and my old dog, Ella.  Ella had the nicest face!

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But now, I get why she was upset by my comparison.  I also get why she was so upset as her vision started to go, and she couldn’t see to put on her makeup any longer.  I am about to head into the need for bifocals, and it was never more apparent than in the past few days, when I was applying false eyelashes, and realizing I couldn’t really see what I was doing anymore.

Youth and beauty are fleeting.  Hopefully I’ve built up some personality to get me through old age and whatever happens to my face when I get there.

There have been a lot of new photos posted of me recently, and while I am very adept at posing to make the most of what I have, candids are rarely kind to me.  It’s always a growth experience for me to look at candid photos of myself.  I breathe through the worst of them and tell myself, “If that’s what you really look like, at least you have everything you are supposed to have, it all works, and it is all in relatively the right order.”  Then I get on with it.

But I’ve come to that point where I have to admit that it’s only going to be downhill from here.  No matter how much weight I ever lose, no matter how nicely my hair is styled, no matter what I wear, I am quickly coming up on “attractive for her age,” rather than simply “attractive.”  It’s the circle of life, and it’s fine.  It’s just getting used to it, you know?

I am quickly approaching this (which has strong language, if that sort of thing bothers you):

If I am very, very lucky, maybe one day I’ll have a grandbaby who likes to pat my jowls, and who thinks I am as pretty as a bulldog.

Inside Lane

Baltimore


Back in 1998, I was arrested on the side of a highway for an outstanding warrant having to do with an expired registration.  I had gotten the original ticket five years prior, had taken care of the registration, and forgotten about the ticket.  One Friday night, I came home from work to a letter informing me of the warrant.  I put it in my purse, fully intending to take care of the situation on Monday.  The very next day, I cruised through a yellow light, trying to turn onto the highway to get to an appointment with some friends, when a siren burped out a warning.

I was already on the entrance ramp to the highway, so I had to pull over into the emergency lane, where I prepared to comply with the police officer.

Normally, I tell this story for laughs.  There is humor in the horror of it.  But instead of telling it to you as entertainment, I’d like to paint you a different picture.

I was not a kid who made trouble.  I worked as a volunteer in a court program geared toward troubled youth, taught Sunday School, and did my best to follow the law.  When I did get pulled over for speeding, or having an expired tag, I complied.  I was raised to be polite to police officers, and to believe that they were there to help me.  I said thank you for doing your job as I took tickets, and I apologized for inconveniencing them with my 10-miles-over-the-limit recklessness.

That day, I was prepared to do the same thing.

I was in an unfamiliar city, bordering three other small towns, and I wasn’t sure exactly where I was.  I’d already gotten lost that morning trying to find the hair salon someone had recommended to me, and this was in the days before GPS could talk you through every mixmaster and beyond.  So, when the officer pulled me over, I didn’t know which police department he represented.

He was a young guy.  I wouldn’t have made him older than 25, and would have put him closer to 21.  The excitement with which he informed me of my impending arrest was frightening.  I need to repeat that.  The officer was clearly excited that he was going to get to arrest me, and he was so obviously excited about it, it alarmed me.

I had my warrant letter with me, and I tried to show him the postmark on the envelope, and explain that I’d only just gotten the notice, but he told me I needed to stop talking, and I needed to get out of my car with my hands on my head.  When I tried to explain again, he put his hand on his pistol and repeated his request for me to stop talking, and get out of the car with my hands on my head.

I don’t know about you, but when someone has a gun in my general proximity, I am nervous.

Not wanting to be a problem, I complied.  I got out of my car with my hands on my head and let him frisk me.  He turned me around over the back drivers side of my trunk, kicked my feet apart, and bent me onto the hot metal, and he frisked me again.  By that time, I was crying because I was embarrassed, I was afraid, and I honestly couldn’t comprehend what was happening.

He pulled my arms behind my back and handcuffed me, then pushed me into the backseat of his cruiser, banging my forehead against the doorframe as he did.  Then, he went back to my car and searched it, while I worked to find a way to get myself into an upright position.  I’d fallen over in the seat as he slammed the door shut.

If you’ve never been handcuffed, it’s very awkward.  I had no idea just how awkward, until I tried to sit in the backseat of a car with my hands bound behind me.  It’s nearly impossible to balance.  It is also impossible to wipe your nose, which is a problem if you are in the middle of a snot slinging, ugly cry.

The officer came back to the cruiser with my purse, which he put in the front seat, then started off.  I didn’t have a seatbelt on, so I fell forward, face first into the grate between the front and back seats of the car.  When he slammed on brakes, I fell backwards, bounced off the seat, and went into the floorboard.  I spent the next quarter mile trying to get myself back into the seat, while the officer berated me for not having taken care of my ticket sooner, and insisted I quit crying.

I kept asking him where he was taking me, and he wouldn’t tell me.  He wouldn’t tell me which city I was in, or which city he represented, and would only say that he was taking me to jail.  He kept raising his voice at me to stop crying, and demanded I stop asking him questions.  I couldn’t tell where we were going because I was wrapped up in keeping my face off the grate, and trying not to bang my head into the side window again, as I had done when he took a sharp corner.

No one knew where I was.  I had no way to reach my friends.  I didn’t know where I was going.

When we reached the police station, a female officer took over for my strip search.  Yes.  I was strip searched over a warrant for an expired tag.  This included the officer lifting my breasts to make sure I wasn’t carrying whatever under either one of those, but I guess some humanity kicked in when it came time for my undercarriage because she let me keep my panties on, and just felt over those, with a finger between my butt cheeks that left a wedgie I couldn’t pick because of how I was forced to stand.

It’s the little things.

She wouldn’t tell me which city I was in either, and no one was forthcoming about the next steps.  I kept saying to myself that if I was polite and compliant, they would be decent to me.  If I showed that I wasn’t going to be a problem, they would treat me like a person.

I was wrong.

By the time I was in a jumpsuit, shower shoes, and in a cell, I’d been there for over an hour.  I asked if I could get a cup of water, and the officer told me I could get water out of the back of the toilet in the cell.

I won’t get into all the details because by that time, I had realized that there were no authority figures there who were interested in helping me, or in even being decent to me.  I used the pay phone in the cell to call my mother, hysterical by that point, who in turn had to call around and find out which jail I was in because the officers still wouldn’t even tell me which city I was in.

It took another six hours before my mother could get me out, and I could regale you with a whole other set of horrors, but I won’t.

I tell you this story because I was a white, middle class, blonde girl, who worked for a church, who was polite, super compliant, and a non-violent offender with no record, and that’s how white, small town, yokel police officers treated me.  And because I have been afraid of cops ever since.  And because I haven’t trusted a cop since then.  If that’s how they would treat a small, compliant, terrified girl with a traffic warrant, how would they treat someone they saw as a threat?

I never thought much about police brutality before then.  I figured if a police officer used force, it was because it was a last resort.  It never occurred to me that it might just be a cop’s preferred way of doing things.

Now, when I see the reports of violence, the civil rights violations, the outright murder of private citizens at the hands of police officers, I can’t help but wonder how different my experience would have been as a black male.  How much worse would it have been?  How much more degrading, how much more painful, how much more abusive?  How much more terrifying?

If a young black man’s face had been slammed into the grate between the seats, would the officer have said it was the man trying to headbutt his way through it?  Would that have been excuse enough to use force?  If a young black man had argued in confusion, like I had, when first told to get out of the car, with how much more aggression would the cop have responded?  And that young man would just be expected to eat it.  Eat that shit and not say a word–you don’t say a word, or it gets worse.

I think about that with every shooting, and I feel sick.

I feel sick for the mothers who are trying to find their children, calling around police stations.  I feel sick for the parents who are trying to get their children out of bad situations, but are being given a run-around because it is a Saturday after 5pm.

I feel sick for the helplessness and the terror–because make no mistake, those emotions are real, and they are horrifying.

I think about what I would do in my mother’s place, and I admire how she held her temper until she had me safely in her car because if my child called me like I had called her, I don’t know how well I would manage that.

And I think about what I would do in the place of the mothers whose children have been murdered by police officers, and told they deserved to die, and told to be quiet and eat that shit, and go sit down because cops are always right.  Because I’m afraid I would go set the city on fire.

Baltimore is on my mind.  Baltimore is on my heart.

I posted this on Facebook earlier:

You can’t tell people to sit down and be quiet, when you shoot them sitting quietly the same way you shoot them rioting. I believe in peaceful protest, but revolution doesn’t happen, and change doesn’t come just because someone signs a declaration. And if your children, your fathers, your brothers, sisters, mothers and friends were the ones being abused, don’t tell me you would be satisfied telling them to just lie still and let the boot settle on their necks. I don’t condone violence, but I do understand it.

If Freddie Gray were my son, oh, sweet Jesus.  What they did to that man.  They severed that man’s spinal cord.  You think Batman has vigilante issues?  The helplessness and horror I would feel as a mother?  I would lose my mind.  But we expect his family, his friends, his community to sit down and eat that shit because why?

I’ve been abused by the police, with bruises on my forehead to prove it.  I know it happens even if you do exactly as you are told.  I also know there are good cops out there.  Just like I know not every man following me down a dark alley is a rapist.  But one bad experience opens a whole new world of fear, and once you’ve looked into that abyss, you can’t unknow the truth that is out there.

I say again, I don’t condone violence, but I do understand it.

I quote an article from The Atlantic here, by Ta-Nehisi Coates:

When nonviolence is preached as an attempt to evade the repercussions of political brutality, it betrays itself. When nonviolence begins halfway through the war with the aggressor calling time out, it exposes itself as a ruse. When nonviolence is preached by the representatives of the state, while the state doles out heaps of violence to its citizens, it reveals itself to be a con. And none of this can mean that rioting or violence is “correct” or “wise,” any more than a forest fire can be “correct” or “wise.” Wisdom isn’t the point tonight. Disrespect is. In this case, disrespect for the hollow law and failed order that so regularly disrespects the rioters themselves.

Read that article.  It’s important.