Embarrassment: One Tough Opponent

I am pulling into the supermarket parking lot dreading the impending shopping experience and wishing it was over now so I can move on to my next stop, the library. There I will be surrounded by some of my closest friends – books.

I park, climb out of the car, look at the crumbled shopping list in my hand, and cringe. I don’t know if I’m going to be brave enough to so this. Do what, you ask? Buy food and dry goods at one time. And what might be the problem with this? I used a food stamps which means I need to pay for my dry goods with my bank card and my food with another card. To me, this means I’ll hold up the line and everyone on planet earth will know I am on food stamps and I will be made fun of and want to melt into a state of invisibility and maybe I should just buy my food here and drive to another market and buy my dry goods there. I’ve been splitting my shopping exactly like this up to know yet, while terribly embarrassed, I sense I am ready to take a real run at the embarrassment challenge.

I shop at a Hannaford market that is rarely crowded and today, thank God, is no exception. There’s no run on dried kidney beans or free custard, nothing like that. Just a sprinkling of shoppers, me and, of course, the cashiers, who suddenly look ominous.

As I move through the aisles I load my cart with food items along with the dried goods: razor blades, sponges, toilet paper, toothpaste and so forth. Soon I have everything I need on the food and dried good fronts and I know the moment of truth has arrived. But, I am not ready. I keep pushing the cart through the aisles pretending I am shopping. And it is now I find my courage source. It comes from all the people I know living with brain injuries and other disabilities across the state and beyond. I think of the challenges they face on a daily basis, knowing this shopping challenge is one of them, and soon I am at the cashier checking out. When I tell the cashier I have to put the dried goods on one card and food on another, he says, “No problem,” and in that moment I realize I’m going to make it. In fact, I have made it.

With the bags packed in the car I pull out of the parking lot and head to the library. Having learned long ago that one is wise to reward oneself for a challenge faced, I reached into one bag  and extract a cinnamon roll.

As I chow down with a huge grin on my face I suddenly realize I didn’t give damn anymore which card the cinnamon roll was on and given the speed with which the cinnamon roll is disappearing from planet earth, I doubt it cares either.

Veterans Denied Emotional Safety

There is a good reason confidentiality is a keystone of psychotherapy. The patient must know he or she is free to express the all of their experience if they stand a chance of getting free from that part of their experience which, in too many cases,  shackles their ability to feel comfortable in their own skin. The treatment arena must be a safe place. It seems the U.S. Military fails to make it so.

The  New York Times  this week said the military asks veterans seeking psychiatric care to sign a waiver acknowledging that under certain circumstances the content of their therapy sessions would not be kept confidential. If returning veterans deserve anything it is the ability to be and feel safe and secure in their own country, and that includes their medical treatment, physical and emotional. Given the requested waiver it should surprise no one that some veterans are refusing to sign the waiver and, as a result, are not getting the emotional support they deserve.

It is hideously unconscionable to think when our young men and women come back from war, struggling with PTSD, addiction and array of other torments, they continue to get wounded, by us.

Goodbye Mr. Monk

I knew I would cry. The final episode of the USA network’s detective series Monk aired last Friday and I couldn’t get myself to watch it until today. It was like a good book I never wanted to end.

I knew when I sat down to watch the two-part episode I taped that I would cry and I was right. Based on the quality of the show, the acting, writing and directing, I also knew the last show would not disappoint and I was right. It seems it was the most watched series finale in basic cable history with a viewing audience of 9.4 million. And, the gift that life gives Adrian Monk in the last episode is a reminder to all of us that life is worth living, even when we think it’s not.

I can only give you glimpses of why the show has meant so much to me. I was deeply moved by the depth of his love for his late wife Trudy. The back story to the series includes her murder. The show was remarkable in its ability to find ways to let us see and, most importantly, feel how deeply he loved Trudy and how deeply she loved him. I liked the show too because here is a man battling with enough phobias to fill a stadium yet he still finds a way to take part in life. I like too that Monk was a sensitive man who really allowed himself to feel his life, even though some his feelings gave him such a hard time of it.

There is another thing I loved about the series. It really is about the characters.  So many shows and movies today are all about action and special effects and the conduits for the aforementioned are the characters who might as well be digital people, plugged in to ride the robot or fire the space weapon or some such nonsense. Monk was about people. I’m going to miss the Captain, Randy, Sharona, Natalie,  Ambrose and, most of all, Monk.

And, if you’ll permit me a bit of nearly inexcusable self-indulgence, I take pride in a fact that has no meaning to anyone but me. The even-more-than-brilliant actor who plays Monk, Tony Shalhoub and I, are exactly seven days apart in age. Does that have any real meaning? No, probably not. But I like that it’s true anyway.

If this missive is ever read by someone who took part in making Monk a reality, the actors, producers, writers, those who worked on the set and all others,  thank you from the bottom of my heart. Thank you for creating a show that brought so much to my life and the lives of so many millions of others. If you are not feeling good about yourselves, you’re not paying attention.

Goodbye, Mr. Monk. I’m going to miss you.

Deadbeats, Dishonesty, and (wait for it) Advocacy & The Guardian Horntoads

Many years ago my friend Michael and made the tongue-in-check decision to form an organization called The Guardian Horntoads. Michael came up with this wonderful name, a play on the very serious and admirable group, The Guardian Angels.

Anyway, the Guardian Horntoads was formed around my not so tongue-in-cheek instinct to advocate, defend, expose, and take on the bully. Over the years this instinct has taken me down several paths; the fight for the Brady Bill, winning a law suit against the New York State Crime Victims Compensation Board, exposing a state contract employee’s bogus credentials and much more.

I am now involved with a group of people forming the Kahrmann Advocacy Center.

While my advocacy efforts are primarily in the professional, political and social arenas, I have no problem ratcheting up the advocacy machine when someone I love and care about is enduring a willful effort comprised of  dishonesty and, well, bullshit, to deny them the money and support they are legally entitled to.

It’s hard to take cries of poverty seriously when one half of those crying poverty is the productivity coach for a top Massachusetts realty firm in which she has millions of dollars worth of property listed (the top price in the eight internet pages of  listings this writer recently reviewed being a $1.95 million residential property in Groton) and the other half  is a teacher who doesn’t work in the summer.

This, you can be sure, is a situation I am watching and will continue to watch closely. It is my sincere hope that those now crying poverty will come to their senses and do the right thing. If not, I will move forward with ratcheting up the advocacy machine.

Snow Quiet Morning

I am in a snow quiet morning

A soft gentle embrace

From nature herself

Allowing me breathing

In early hour peace

*

I am in a snow quiet morning

Padding about my home

Smiling warm safe coffee

In hand fully knowing

Life is my living

*

I am in a snow quiet morning

With all I those gone

Still here smiling their love

For me lifting me up saying

Remember to live