Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Monthly Archives: May 2009

    • There’s Boyle-ing and Then There’s Boiling

      Posted at 12:21 am by kayewer, on May 31, 2009

      During the past week, a Philadelphia area woman apparently cooked up an elaborate scheme to get away from her financial problems:  one of them appears to be that she is suspected of being in possession of large sums of money which may not be legitimately hers.  She allegedly called 911 and told dispatchers she and her young daughter had been put in the trunk of her stolen vehicle by two black men.  The vehicle turned up in the middle of Philadelphia with a ticket on its windshield, and security cameras later caught her with her child at the airport; the mother borrowed a friend’s ID to get the plane ticket.  Ultimately both were picked up at Disney World and brought home.  The daughter was placed in the custody of her biological father, while the current spouse is stuck at home with their other children (including a new baby) and a lot of unanswered questions.

      Meanwhile, we have  Susan Boyle, the Rocky Balboa of our time, an aesthetically average underdog challenging all of Britain in their (original) version of “(Insert Country Name Here)’s Got Talent.”  In the weeks following her spectacular debut she has been unduly pressured to upgrade her look and not mind tons of overly-enthusiastic publicity seekers bothering her constantly:  recently she supposedly had a fit of bad temper, cussing and wondering if her quest was really worth the price.

      In both cases we have women who have  gotten themselves into unusual situations, and outside forces are playing dodgeball with their minds.  Whether their actions are criminal or just a quest for recognition, validation or a different life, we are fascinated by the process as the onlookers in these events.  Has anybody told Susan Boyle, “Don’t sing unless you want people to start expecting you to become famous,” or have the Philly mom’s friends said, “We won’t respect you unless you have a lot of money” and compelled her to live beyond her means?

      Why is is that we always destroy the things we cherish most?  When our bedrock documents mentioned such concepts as the pursuit of happiness, it didn’t mean we should construct roadblocks in such a way that one cannot achieve those goals.  It also didn’t mean that pursuing happiness involves money, fame or status.  However, we embrace these ideals and are dissapointed by the means to achieve these ends.

      With happiness comes much responsibility.  Whether you achieve it justly or unjustly, you are ultimately accountable for how you got there, and those around us share the burden of whatever roadblocks we place in the way of others while we pursue our own happiness.  We are all players in the pursuit game, and stories like these are good reasons to reflect on how our actions with others fuel the things that put us down.

      I wish Susan Boyle all the best as a person and a singer.  I hope the Philly mom gets everything straightened out.  Let’s look forward to seeing the right people step in and help them reach the goals best suited to them so they may find happiness.

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    • There But For the Remote Go I

      Posted at 11:53 pm by kayewer, on May 23, 2009

      ABC really depressed me last night.  I just wanted to catch up on some shows I had missed, and wound up in the middle of a mixed up collection of people on television who did not in any way lift my spirits.

      It started with Wife Swap, which always has featured two families who may not necessarily inspire the world but can at least help each other see the error of their ways when it comes to their daily lives.  One family was obsessed with activities and aesthetics, while the other was blended and more laid back.  I couldn’t identify with either of them.  I may not be the perfect human body, but I don’t let it all go to pot either.  The mother of the perfectionist family had skin that, in the words of the swap family’s husband, looked like saddle leather for all the tanning she did.  She used her experience with counseling to overburden her kids and keep them overprotected by making them ride in booster seats in the car simply because they hadn’t made the car safety watchdogs’ minimum weight requirement for not needing them anymore.  So the measurement of being “grown up” is also a weight as well as a state of being?  Or is safety based on adding an accessory to a vehicle instead of making the seat belts match the various requirements of their riders?

      Then came Supernanny, which featured a family in which the mother had lost her husband to terminal cancer two weeks prior to taping.  The neighborhood came out to support her in raising her infant son and young daughter.  It was depressing that cancer is still so rampant in our world.  It was depressing that so many neighborhoods are not like the one depicted in the story (many suburban areas’ residents don’t even know who lives next door).

      Finally came the segment on children with Tourette’s Syndrome going to a summer camp customized for them.  Watching so many afflicted yet resillient children caught up in the noises, gestures and other anomalies manifested by the disease was not helping me wind down prior to bedtime.  The one thing that made me feel better was that I didn’t mind that any of these people existed in the same world with me, but frequently in my life I have been accused of being an inconvenience just by existing, and I don’t have over-tanned skin, Tourette’s or a need for intervention.

      I kept the program on to see if anybody would explain the reasons behind the human condition.  ABC and the other networks never dig into that.  They should.

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    • Scroom!!!

      Posted at 12:11 am by kayewer, on May 17, 2009

      You won’t find the title of this post in a dictionary, but when life is handing you nothing but a stale room reeking of fresh intestinal gas, or when the human beings around you are acting more like neanderthals, when you’re ready to throw in the towel or let off a little steam, it’s the word for you.

      Take a moment and say it slowly.

      Has it gotten to you yet?  Yes?  Good!  No?  Well then, what must you do to install lightbulbs?

      Now that we’re clear, I’d like to encourage people to adapt this simple phrase and apply it liberally whenever necessary.  When other countries pick on us because we don’t do things the same way as they?  Scroom!  When you leave a voice message and don’t get a callback?  Scroom!  When your friends think your new pair of shoes are, like, so yesterday?  Scroom!

      Really, how much value do we put on the wrong things, like other people’s opinions?  If you’re doing the best with what you have and somebody else doesn’t like it, the heck with them.  You did your part, and it’s now their problem.

      Jot down “scroom” on a sticky note and keep it with you.  Stick it on your computer monitor, or print it on a shirt.  If you’re not doing anything illegal or immoral, and somebody else has a problem with it, don’t give in:  just think to yourself, “Scroom!”

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    • The Letdown of May

      Posted at 11:42 pm by kayewer, on May 9, 2009

      May is a bummer.  This May in particular has not started out well.  My last college class was the previous Monday, but I still had the burden of a final paper which I had to plough through this past week; on top of that, I had a half dozen new work projects, my two writer’s group projects, weekly and monthly reports (and one of them was somebody else’s) and I found out that I had to try to work in a request for time off to match my doctor’s shrinking schedule which is already booked through July.

      Many of the television series I either watch or tape decided not to save their season ending episodes for May sweeps, and ended them the week before.  The movies on cable are second-rate yawn inducing time wasters.  Now that I’ve sat through four of the past five Saturdays at the opera, and the season is ending tonight (fittingly, with the final ever performance of the current interpretation of  Gotterdammerung), entertainment has become a drag.

      Add the week of intense rain we’ve had, and May is coming in like a rhino and is likely to go out like a sloth.

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