Thursday, October 31, 2013

Happy Halloween

Bring forth the raisins and the nuts-
Tonight All-Hallows' Spectre struts
Along the moonlit way.
~John Kendrick Bangs

It has been quite a day in the City of Toronto.  The videotape showing our illustrious mayor smoking crack cocaine is now in the hands of the Toronto police.  Amazing, considering that Mr. Ford insisted that the tape did not exist and accused The Toronto Star of being on a witchhunt against him.  I've been awestruck for months that no matter what surfaces about the antics of our mayor, he is like teflon.  Nothing sticks.  I think his number is up this time.  His defenders, members of the Ford Nation, are already at it - talking about the good things he has done for the city.  I don't know what city they're living in.  Rob Ford is a neanderthal bully who has done nothing more for Toronto than embarass its citizens and sully its reputation.  It's time for the mayor to own up to his mistakes and time for those who voted for him to own up to theirs.  Listening to these nonsensical comments this afternoon, I was reminded of a diversity program I facilitated many years ago when one of the participants piped up about recognizing the good things Hitler did for Germany like ensuring the trains ran on time.  Seriously?  

I carved the Halloween pumpkin this afternoon with a cameo of a cat looking at a full moon.  It turned out pretty well but I think I might invest in some pumpkin carving tools next year.  The Halloween candy is packed in treat bags and sitting next to the front door.  A batch of chicken soup is simmering on the stove.  It's a pretty miserable day, gray and damp.  The rain is supposed to be heavy tonight so I don't imagine we will get a large number of trick-or-treaters.  I suspect there will be a lot of little chocolate bars calling me from the candy bowl in the night.

Happy Halloween!

Sunday, October 27, 2013

David

“Piglet sidled up to Pooh from behind. "Pooh?" he whispered.
"Yes, Piglet?"
"Nothing," said Piglet, taking Pooh's hand. "I just wanted to be sure of you.”
― A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh 

Twenty years ago today I met my friend David.  It was just my second day working at Bank of America as a newly minted Vice President of Human Resources.  David worked for a large law firm.  He acted as employment counsel for the bank.  I remember that first meeting well.  There was a whole host of outstanding legal issues pending including a case that would be going to mandatory mediation in just a couple of weeks.  David and I spent a lot of time together in the early days of my employment at the bank.  It didn't take us long to establish a working rhythm. By the end of that first mediation, we were already finishing each others' sentences.

Over the course of the years, David and I both changed employers several times.  With each change, we stayed together.  He became employment counsel at both the companies where I worked after I left the bank.  For many years we have both been self employed.  We work together all the time now.  It is a very rare day when we don't speak to one another.  We talk about everything, the clients we share and those we don't.  We are each others' sounding boards.  We have each others' backs.

In 2001, I was robbed while on a business trip in San Franscico.  I lost all my money, I.D. and my passport.  I struggled mightily with figuring out how to get home, getting little support from the travel agency which booked my trip or the bank which employed me.  I called David.  He told me not to worry, he would get me home even if it meant he had to fly to San Francisco, rent a car and drive me back.  Within an hour, the consulate in Los Angeles issued me transit papers and faxed them to the bank's offices.  I was home as scheduled the following day.  Somehow I knew when I made that call to him that I really didn't have to worry anymore.  I knew he would help me no matter what it took. 

We have been through a lot in these twenty years.  Our kids grew up.  David lost his sister, his father and his marriage.  He became a Kabbalist.  My mom developed Alzheimer's.  I dealt with cancer.  He had multiple surgeries and a serious health scare of his own.  We argue often.  We laugh often.  We share books and ideas often. 

A few weeks ago, I took David into emergency at Mt. Sinai when we feared he was having a heart attack.  Perhaps it is the events of that day that give the best snapshot of our relationship.  I drove downtown to pick him up because he didn't want to take an ambulance.  He got into my car and commented about how ugly he thinks my sunglasses are.  We got into the emergency department and insisted that I stay with him while they did the preliminary tests for his intake.  Just before the staff moved him into the depths of the emergency department with me in tow, I stopped and asked him, "Who am I?".  "Now is the time you're having an identity crisis?", he replied.  I explained that I was not having an identity crisis but that we needed to agree who we would say I was in the event I had to make some decisions on his behalf once we were behind those doors and as a friend I have no standing.  It took us a few moments.  We couldn't pretend we are a couple - neither of us thought we could pull that off.  I suggested we say we are siblings.  It worried David a bit because lying is outside the boundaries of his Kabbalist life but I soon convinced him we were not lying.  After all, I have sisters that I am related to by blood and sisters I have chosen.  They are not any less my sisters because we are not bound by blood.  So in that moment, after nearly twenty years we defined our relationship.  I am his sister.  He is my brother.  We shook on it and walked through the doors.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Thanksgiving

"Gratitude is the inward feeling of kindness received. Thankfulness is the natural impulse to express that feeling.  Thanksgiving is the following of that impulse."  - Henry Van Dyke

It is a glorious morning.  The air is crisp, the sun shining, the ravine a breathtaking palette of green, gold and orange.  Thanksgiving morning.  A two-coffee morning for lounging over the newspaper and maybe even an old movie.  Later there will be turkey, cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie.  Lots of family, lots of chaos.  But not this morning.  This morning there is just quiet splendor.

To say I'm grateful for the life I have doesn't begin to cover it.  My life has a richness that cannot be quantified.  There are riches that can be counted, to be sure but how does one count the love, the hope, the beauty?  I can no more count them than I can count the leaves on the trees in the autumn ravine.  God is great.  I am blessed.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Grateful for Our Social Contract

"In our social contract, we have provisions that see to it that you take care of people who need some help." - Arlen Specter

I've been following the shutdown of the American government with great interest these past few days.  Of course I get to do that with the distant eye of the spectator.  My access to government services wasn't cut off yesterday when the shutdown occurred.  I won't be missing a mortgage payment because my employer sent me home while the very congress which determined my services were non-essential, continued to get paid because somehow they believe theirs are.  As a Canadian, the debate over universal health care is a bit mystifying to me.  I live in a country where we do believe access to healthcare is a right, a part of the social contract like education, safe food and clean water.  Looking after one another is the way our country developed.  Our very survival amidst the harsh climate of Canada necessitated it.

Today has been a long day.  My house was a hive of activity this morning with my cleaning lady, the contractor who is renovating Jacob's bathroom, the security system repair guy and one of my clients all arriving within the same hour.  When my client exited around 10:30, I thought the chaos was done but I checked my messages to find an urgent request to get in touch with my friend David.  It's been a tough week for David.  He hasn't been feeling very well and was awaiting the results of a CAT scan to tell him whether or not he had lung cancer.  In truth, I've been pretty freaked out too.  I immediately called him and he told me that he was experiencing crushing chest pain and severe shortness of breath.  He had a number of client commitments today and didn't want to let anyone down.  What did I think he should do?  Okay, it seemed pretty easy to me. Of course I told him to call 911.  If he was having a heart attack, his clients wouldn't be better off with him dead at the end of the day.  After several minutes of negotiation, I got him to agree that I would pick him up and take him to emergency - not ideal in my mind but the best I could get him to agree to. So off I went.

The emergency room staff at Mt. Sinai were fantastic.  They saw to him in very short order.  They ran a series of tests, called up the results of the CAT scan and provided us with results.  No lung cancer, no heart attack.  Just a virus that had settled into his lungs.  They gave him a puffer and asked us to wait a few hours during which they would keep him for observation and repeat some of the heart tests for good measure.  They put us in a small quiet room in emerg and gave the okay for me to get us both some lunch.  So for four hours, we stayed, David in what he said was a very comfy bed and me next to him on a chair.  We pulled out our respective computers, discussed the statement of claim we've been working on for a mutual client and debated the language of a non-solicitation clause in another client's contract.  All in all, the afternoon was productive.  They ran the tests again and an hour later David was released.

As we walked out of Mt. Sinai this afternoon, we talked about feeling grateful for such an incredibly luck day.  No cancer.  No heart attack.  No hospital bill.