Sunday, June 16, 2013

Nova Scotia parents upset that school has done away with celebrating Father and Mother's day in deference to changing family dynamics.

Father's Day card made by my daughter when she was little.
Courtesy of Global News:  

As any parent knows, sometimes trying to do right by everyone in a delicate situation can lead to further complications. 

Astral Drive Elementary school, in Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia has landed in such a predicament. 

To keep pace with the changing composition of its’ families, the school decided to forego Mother’s Day and Father’s Day activities, in favour of “Family Day”. 

But, many families in Cole Harbour don’t like the new policy. 

More than 400 people have signed a petition, demanding the school re-instate Mother’s and Father’s Day activities (which usually consist of school-children making crafts and cards to bring home). 

One of the petition leaders, Heather Bruce, is a single mother, who says the change is disheartening. 

“My son, this year was the first year in six years I didn’t receive a card from him because there’s no-one else telling him that that it’s Mother’s Day. Those things are important to teach our kids. To honour, respect their parents and they get that from school, sometimes.” 

Her 11-year-old son, Ben, says he agrees. 

“I’ve been doing it since I can remember. I’ve done it all the years in school, so, it’s really important to me,” said the grade five student, as his mother watched encouragingly in their living room. 

The catalyst for the change was a female student, whose parents are lesbians.

Okay now on the surface this may seem like a clear indication of how gay marriage, or families with only single gender parents, are somehow negatively impacting traditional families. But I would contend that in fact this is a good thing, and that the change should have happened years ago. But not because of anything to do with gay couples, but rather due to the changes in traditional families that have been evolving for decades. 

When I was a boy of only five my parents got divorced. This was in the early sixties and I was convinced that I was the only child that this horrible thing had ever happened to.

In those days there were all kinds of opportunities in school for salt to be rubbed into my gaping emotional wound. There were projects that dads helped their children complete for the science fair. Family nights where the kids proudly showed off BOTH of their parents. Christmas plays where the audience was packed with proud mothers and fathers. And of course Father's Day when we were expected, nay forced, to produce a glorious piece of artwork dedicated to our wonderful fathers.

A wonderful piece of artwork that in my life had nowhere to go, dedicated to a man whose face I could barely remember.

Sure a few times I gave it to my mom, only to watch her eyes mist over and to receive one of those heartbreaking hugs that really comfort neither of you.

Most often I threw it away, and once in a truly awkward moment I gave it to a male teacher, who took it with eyes that looked just as watery as those of my mother's.

One day, in the third grade, and rebelled. I got up and threw the art supplies onto the floor. And in a flood of uncorked emotion I began to throw a rather impressive fit.

In those days there was no patience with such behavior, nor any interest in discovering the source of my uncharacteristic anger. So I was dragged down the hallway, kicking and screaming, to the Principal's office. And there I received my first and only beating at the hands of a public school employee.

I learned my lesson. I put the cork back in the bottle and kept my emotions contained like a good little robot.

When we wrote papers about our fathers I made him into a hero, knowing all the while that it was a lie. When we dutifully made our Father's Day cards I even put glitter on mine, knowing it was destined for the school trashcan the minute we left the classroom. And when we had parents night I just "forgot" to mention it to my mother because I knew she was be too exhausted from working two jobs to support us to attend anyhow.

I only wish that in those days SOMEBODY would have recognized the pain I was going through, and of course so many others, on days when we had to pretend that we were living the lives depicted on "Leave it to Beaver," or "Father Knows Best," or hell even "The Brady Bunch."

And that pain had nothing to do with gay parenting, it just had to do with the fact that some of us did not fit so neatly into the boxes that society always seems so determined to cram us into. And that was over forty years ago, imagine how many more children just like myself there have been in the decades since then.

By the way that card up at the top of this post was made by my daughter when she was only four. She made it at home, it was totally her idea, and she required no public school teacher to guide her.

Because you know we can really always make cards for our loved ones, whether they be single mothers, gay couples, single fathers, or even grandparents raising us in place of our absentee parents, any time we want. We don't need to do it under the judgmental eyes of a bunch of elementary school children either, but if we DID make them there, wouldn't it be nice if the activity were presented in such a way that it did not make anybody feel odd or left out?

I think that is all that Astral Drive Elementary school is trying to do. And in my opinion, that's a VERY good thing.

Update: Oops I almost forgot to show you the inside of that card.

That's my baby!

53 comments:

  1. Anonymous6:37 AM

    I don't get what the school's issue is. For the kids with two dad's they just make two cards/crafts this week and kids with two moms make two cards/crafts at school in May. Why did they have to stop doing everything?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous6:39 AM

    Hey Gryph, I grew up in a non-divorced home with a mom and dad and feel the same way. My dad was a stay at home dad due to disability. Real fun when we talked about dad as hero BEFORE the ADA - same for school conferences. Let me tell you what fun career day was.

    As for the mom and kid complaining, hes eleven. No one told him it was mother's day? You're old enough to read a calendar,son. And surely you aren't immune to TV/radio 24/7.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous7:06 AM

    I'll never forget the day I picked my crying daughter up from kindergarten. The teacher had talked about families in class that day, only she was careful to talk about 'real families' i.e. mom, dad and kids. I was a single parent. "Aren't we a real family, Mom?" she asked. My sadness for her turned to rage at the teacher.

    Yep, I went all "mama grizzly" on the school and the teacher. The next day, the principal went into the class room to talk about how 'feelings and love' make families.

    Turns out, in my daughter's class, only ONE-THIRD of the students lived in the teacher's definition of a 'real family'. Most were raised by single parents with a significant number being raised by grandparents and aunties.

    My daughter was born in 1978.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know this one! For years my son worried that we weren't a "real family" since it was just the two of us. Never mind that when we compared notes with others we seemed just as happy (if not happier), just a well off financially, and just as evolved as everybody else. Somehow he picked up the idea that we weren't "real." I've been noodling around with a book idea about all the myriad forms families can take.

      Delete
  4. WakeUpAmerica7:11 AM

    The problem is allergies. America has too many people allergic to change. I still remember the pain of knowing that I was the only one who wouldn't be able to attend the father/daughter dinner when I was in elementary school. It only emphasized the big empty hole in my life and dropped some acid into the wound. There is no reason to punish children for the choices of their parents, which is what this petition seeks to do. Instead of seeing Family Day as an opportunity to include ALL little children, the petitioners are only seeking to bully the non-traditional families. BTW, I would assume that one-parent families are the traditional now. Sanctimonious assholes.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous7:19 AM

    i hear you gryphen. i had similar issues with a mother that passed that was replaced with a woman that never really rose to the level of mother.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Smiling7:25 AM

    I'd like to chime in as a (retired) teacher. A policy is okay, I guess, but teachers can figure this out and are often sensitive to the situation. Most teachers know well if there are students in the class who do not have a (good) relationship with a parent. Occasionally, I avoided Mother's Day and Father's Day activities altogether but usually I instigated a project that was generic and just put it out there, that if you are looking for a Father's Day token, we'll have these finished and available for you on time for that day. And then there's having a Jehovah's Witness student in the class who may not do Halloween or Christmas or birthday crafts! They didn't chose their faith; it's the parental requirement. So rather than having that child constantly doing a parallel activity and that student feeling he had to act nonchalant around the peers, I minimized specific holiday activities when it came to arts and language components of the curriculum. I will say that I was glad, after three years when I didn't have a JW student. Yeah, we're reading scary Halloween poetry in class!

    I will say I acquired this insight later in my career and I'm probably responsible for awkward feelings amongst some of my kids, a few decades ago. So it's really good to talk about it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:42 AM

      I work in a school where the 'traditional' family of married, biological parents and children living together is the exception, not the norm. I teach sign language, and holidays of all sorts are prime subjects for vocabulary lessons.

      Because of our school schedule I usually miss Father's Day but we did have a lesson for Mother's Day. However, I was always very careful to emphasize that those caretaker roles could be filled by anyone in the family - mother, grandmother, sister, aunt, babysitter, etc. All of the kids had someone in their life they could thank for taking care of them.

      Occasionally, one of them would ask if they could give their project to their father or grandfather, to which I replied, "Of course!"

      It's not always necessary to completely eliminate family-oriented holidays and activities if you do them with an open mind and some sensitivity.

      Delete
  7. Happy Father's Day, Gryph. Thanks for sharing the beautiful card and your story with us.

    Have a great day.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Anonymous7:50 AM

    They are pissed off because a school won't "celebrate" a card company holiday? What a load of crap. Any alley cat or mongrel can be a father or mother (see Palin family), it isn't hard.
    Stick it in, squirt, instant dad or mom. It's nothing to celebrate.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Like basting a turkey--maybe we need to have a National Turkey-Basters' Day!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:24 AM

      LMAO!

      Delete
  9. Why don't teachers just have s teachable moment whenever any of these holidays or special days come up? They can tell the class how the day came about and then let the class decide how they want to handle it. Those who want to make cards for a parent or not, those who want to celebrate these events and those who do not, let the kids decide. I didn't want to say "The Lord's Prayer" every day at school but it was required. Some things should simply be explained and not a "required celebration". Our nation is too diverse to continue in the footsteps of outdated non-educational practices in school.

    ReplyDelete
  10. My husband hated Valentine’s Day. He grew quickly, was kind of awkward, and got few, if any valentines. I try to make it up to him, but I can see he still hates that day.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Anonymous8:25 AM

    Now here's some clever for ya!

    http://www.businessinsider.com/best-recreated-family-photos-2013-6

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous8:29 AM

    I am impressed.

    A four year old that can draw sperm that well has talent.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sperm? What the hell?

      I thought they were balloons. Well now the card feels kind of creepy.

      Thanks for ruining it!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous8:54 AM

      Forget about it, Gryphen.
      Somebody with a Sunday hangover thinks he/she was being witty.

      My son proudly gave me a Mother's Day card decorated with scorpions, a passion he developed for a few months in kindergarten. He cried when he presented it to me, because his teachers had told him that scorpions weren't the right thing to give to his mother.
      We had a big hug and I treasure that card more than any Hallmark creation with unicorns and rainbows.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous8:54 AM

      LOL ...I too thought sperm when I first saw the card. But hey, the little guys appear to be a diverse, and inclusive little gathering. Have a wonderful fathers day.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous9:36 AM

      Is that you Brisket? Can your misbehaving child even draw? Or are you too busy trying to buy someone that will even touch your skanky self to notice or not.

      Delete
    5. Those aren't sperm. Sperm would have eyes, presumably, so they could see that gigantic, gorgeous Egg. And besides, they'd be swimming sideways. I'm probably being too literal, aren't I? At any rate, these are clearly balloons.

      Delete
  13. Leland8:31 AM

    Never having had any children (I had a black-out temper, which does NOT mix with children!) I cannot say what it feels like to have someone hand me a card for father's day.

    I CAN say that people like Gryphen who dote on their children and do the best they can for them in the way of love and trust and teaching, are the lucky ones, even tough it takes a lot of work.

    I can even say that the children who had parents like Gryphen were the lucky ones.

    I was around 9 when my mother and father got a divorce. To make matters worse, no one even bothered to explain to me what was happening. One day I had a mother and the next I didn't. Compound that with having her replaced - rather quickly I had to think even at that age! - with another "mother" and it is easy to tell what was going to happen - and DID.

    I rebelled. I stopped studying any more than was needed to "get by". I was angry all the time. (It was the source of my temper.) I did everything short of that which would get me into serious trouble. Add to that little fiasco the fact that my step mother discovered my father didn't have the money she though he did, and she left him.

    Final fiasco? My father married again when I was 16 - to a woman only 24. (Every lesson about love and "waiting until" and so on went right out the window when I found out she was pregnant - before the wedding!

    So. Mother's day? Father's day? Treasure them if you can. And if you have something like Gryphen is showing us, tattoo them on your brain. Keep every memento and card you receive. They won't be children long.

    And Gryphen? Ya done good, man. Your daughter loves you now and she did then. You must have been a great dad!

    Happy father's day people. Treasure it if you can.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don't know you, Leland, but may I say that I think your decision to not have a child given the temper thing seems to me like the ultimate in good parenting. There are far too many people who make the easy, careless, selfish decision to become parents when, for various reasons, it's truly not in the best interest of the child. You are a childless parent. You clearly considered your circumstances and made the best decision for your child--to not have it. You deserve to be acknowledged for your good parenting--as parents we must know when to say "no." And you did. Good on you.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:56 AM

      "Like" times 1000 +.

      Delete
    3. Leland11:21 AM

      Thank you BodieP. That means a lot - especially since I adore children.

      I spent as much time as I could with my nieces and nephews when they were quite young (birth to 13 or 14).

      And I feel I have been rewarded by them because now THEY spend time with ME and some have graduated high school! They come to me for advice or just conversation or a hug. (One of them came over the other day, walked in the house, reached up and gave me a really warm hug then turned around and walked out. I cried for almost half an hour.)

      Oh well. Maybe you're right. I DID do something right.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous11:26 AM

      BodieP -
      I see sooo many kids in my school whose parents should not have reproduced. Unfortunately, those are usually the ones who do it multiple times.

      Reproduction is easy - parenting is very hard and not everyone is prepared and willing to take on the challenge. Anyone who chooses NOT to become a parent because they know, for whatever reason, they shouldn't be one, should be congratulated for making a good decision for themselves and any potential children.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous12:53 PM

      Leland,
      IN every child's life they need another adult who is not their parent(and I don't mean bio parent either, 4 of mine are adopted) My children would have been lucky to have you as their unofficial Uncle Leland, just saying.


      Signed Little Rabbit

      Delete
    6. I think Little Rabbit's right, Leland. I've long said that every child needs to have someone who thinks he or she hung the moon--and that that person probably shouldn't be his or her parent. I spent a lot of time with my nephews when they were young, too, and like you, I treasure those memories. And sometimes I see or hear them do something and I know that not only do they treasure the memories, too, but that I have, to some degree, shaped them. You are an adult who is there for the younger generation, and that's huge. I'd say it's much more that just doing "something" right--you don't get that kind of relationship without earning it.

      Delete
    7. Anonymous5:38 PM

      Although I never had children myself (by circumstance, not by choice), I have always been very close to my niece and nephew. Next week, my nephew will be bringing his wife, 2 children and new puppy to spend the weekend with me.

      I may not be Mom, but I'm a pretty close second!

      Delete
  14. eclecticsandra8:53 AM

    That card is quite advanced for a four year old. All the spelling and letters correct! No wonder she is doing so well now.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:22 AM

      It's actually quite advanced in showing the balloons as more oval than round, since the "action marks" of air rising would have, in her mind, showed the balloons being pushed up as they rose in the air.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous9:35 AM

      Her artistic talent sure was evident at a very young age.

      Delete
  15. Anonymous9:04 AM

    Slightly o/t: speaking of mothers and fathers, when Mizz Palin boasted that she was "fertile," my first thought was of Nancy Pelosi, the mother of five children, all of her own. No backdoor secret adoptions. No need to lie about their achievements.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:17 AM

      Still waiting to hear what's so special or achieving about the Palin offspring. . .

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:24 AM

      For Palin to recognize her sexuality in being 'fertile' - should be ridiculed on Saturday Night Live. The woman is an idiot It's amazing what comes out of her mouth!

      Delete
    3. Anonymous11:29 AM

      Popping out a bunch of babies is the easy part. Producing educated, responsible, hard-working, compassionate, productive children is the goal to be striving for.

      In Palin's case, she's 0 for 5 so far. Trig may have the best chance of all of them since she spends so little time with him.

      Delete
  16. Anonymous9:17 AM

    What are we, a nanny state? I made sure my kids made cards for their daddy here at home. Are their parenting skills broken?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:18 PM

      It could be hurtful for a young child to be required to make crafts for a recently deceased parent. But the same activity might be therapeutic (and a teaching moment for the child's peers) if handled in the manner that an intuitive caring teacher (like the one who commented above) might choose.

      I speak from experience as a father whose son lost his mom when he was 6 yrs old and in the first grade. My wife had passed away only about a month or so before his class was working on a Mother's Day card, and he wanted to make one for his Mom, too. A couple of boys, as kids are wont to do, began teasing him because he didn't have a mom. As his young, first-year teacher began to intervene, she asked my son to step into another area of the room to see if he wanted to talk about it. He told her it was okay and that he already told them that he had a mom and would always have a mom that he loved, whether she was alive or not. His teacher related this to me, after sending an e-mail to me asking that I call her that same evening. Its difficult to describe the range of emotions that I went through, but I didn't make it out to be a big deal with him, and he was proud to show me the card he'd made for Mommy. It was okay.
      We live in a large city with huge city and county school distracts overlapping one another because of the unorthodox way they build and operate new schools, so there is open movement between the school systems from year to year. I was surprised a couple of weeks ago when a thirty-something woman came up to me and said how proud she was about my son graduating with top honors and earning a full scholarship to a great school, as had been announced for the top 2% of high school class. It was his 1st grade teacher, who had 3 other students graduating that evening in his class. Interestingly, all three were in the top 2% as well, and they had had many classes throughout high school together, after going to different middle schools. I thanked her for attending and for caring, and she told me that she was also going to a different high school's graduation the next evening where she had a couple of former students graduating, and that one was the valedictorian of her class. I told my son later that I had run into her and asked if he had talked to her. There were over 5000 in the auditorium at his graduation, so I wasn't surprised that he hadn't. But he told me that he's talked to her and seen her at different awards assemblies over the years, and that he had other teachers throughout his other 11 years say that she had told them about him and his other first-grade peers that he or she should expect only the best from "her" students. Good use of expectation theory, I guess. But, in my opinion, she's already a great teacher who "gets it" and cares about preparing her students, and makes an impression on them.

      I just finished having lunch with my son. His treat! He goes off to college in about six weeks, and I miss him already. We've talked a lot over the years, and it's made me proud to see how he's gained confidence and independence by learning when to ask for help and when to take charge of an issue on his own. He's taught me a lot as well, and I've told him that despite his youth, he has a scope of perception that many persons I've known haven't gained yet, even as adults with their own children.

      Happy Father's Day to the other Dads and a Wonderful Day to Everyone Else who's contributed to helping yours or someone else's children's education or personal growth in any way. I've tried to do my best and all I could do to be there and help my son, but I'd be a fool to try to take all the credit for who he is and what he's accomplished. Guess what? He wants to become a teacher. Of course, I'm biased, but I think he's going to be a great one, because he "gets it", too.

      Delete
  17. Anonymous9:21 AM

    Happy Father's Day, Gryphen.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous9:34 AM

    An 11 yr old kid that probably watches 8 hrs of TV a day didn't know it was going to be Mother's Day? I find that very hard to believe unless the child has a very serious case of retardation. And if that is the case then his Mom should have more worries than a card.


    BTW
    Happy Fathers Day Gryphen

    ReplyDelete
  19. Anonymous9:44 AM

    Happy Father's Day, Gryphen! Which makes it Happy Daughter's Day to your daughter as well!

    ReplyDelete
  20. Excellent post here. As a "forever" single mom with a son, my son and I have found ourselves in an awkward position on Father's day. His dad isn't evil--just absent. Very, very absent. A few years ago our local DQ was giving away free ice cream cones dads on Father's Day. Nothing would do but that my son took me there and held them up for a free ice cream cone, explaining to the server that I was his mom AND his dad. It was painful, and touching, and very sad. He's reached the conclusion that, while he might be able to be friends with his father (they do see each other once every year or so) he can't consider him his "Dad." "You're my mom and my dad," he says. And I try. But there are gaps. Luckily we live in a town with caring, supportive coaches and friends who help with some of the "guy" things--but there are gaps. I'm not a "girly" mom--I grew up operating heavy equipment, working on a ranch. I tell vulgar jokes. Sometimes I swear, and burp. I do my best. But there are gaps, not because of gender, but because my son has had to live his whole life knowing that someone he wished very much to have a relationship with didn't care to have a relationship with him. Sometimes those gaps become a gaping black hole, and sometimes they almost disappear. But they are there--and if we can help a bit by calling a made-up holiday "Family Day" rather than "Mother's Day" or "Father's Day," good plan, I say.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:32 AM

      Your son is a lucky boy. And, speaking as a person who, sadly, has no children, you are lucky to have such a wonderful son as well.

      Happy Father's Day AND Happy Mother's Day to you!

      Delete
    2. Thank you! I feel incredibly lucky to have him (I didn't become a parent until I was in my mid-thirties, so by the time it happened I was able to really recognize what a remarkable gift a child is). Children change your life--if you're ready for that, it's wonderful and amazing. If you're not, it's hard times for everybody. In my case, I was ready--and I got an easy child--he's been a joy since the day he was born, and he's now going on 17. This whole thread has me thinking--maybe what we need is not "mother's day" and "father's day," but a way of acknowledging our emotional "parents," the people who give us love and support, who feed our souls. And that may, or may not, be a parent.

      Delete
  21. Anonymous10:21 AM

    9:48 I so agree with your statement about having "Family Day" instead of the current celebration. So many, to include me, stopped celebrating Father's Day for many reasons.

    How to we initiate a change? And IM - especially loved your blog this morning. Happy Great Parenting Day to you!

    ReplyDelete
  22. lostinmn10:36 AM

    Perhaps if Hallmark hadn't hijacked Valentines, Mothers, Fathers and every other damn holiday we might actually find ourselves enjoying them

    ReplyDelete
  23. Anonymous10:43 AM

    I grew up in a "Christian" household where we were in church every Sunday but all hell broke loose the rest of the week. Abusive, sarcastic, unemotional.

    I haven't been the best parent, due to permanent scars left, but I've tried and DO know that just because it's a two-parent household does not guarantee nirvana.

    I applaud ALL single parents and, Gryph, the love you daily exhibit for your daughter is a thing of beauty!

    Happy Father's Day!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Leland11:31 AM

      10:43? At least you recognize your root problem. And I will bet from reading your comment that you try extremely hard to MAKE it Nirvana.

      It isn't easy and it takes everyone in the family unit, but THEY will grow up and recognize you tried.

      Isn't that what's important? Trying and having them know it?

      Way to go!

      Delete
    2. Anonymous11:35 AM

      Very often, a one-parent family is much more peaceful, nurturing and safe than a dysfunctional two-parent family.

      Sometimes we become our parents and sometimes we learn from their mistakes and don't repeat them in our own lives. Congratulations to you for making the better choice!

      Delete
    3. I agree, Leland--
      My own emotional history was a huge part of why I didn't parent until I was in my mid-thirties. And when it happened, I discovered, as "Anonymous" says, that sometimes a single-parent household is really the better solution. I also realized that I was faced with a choice--I could choose to repeat the parenting I had experienced, or I could choose another path--I could use my experience to tell me what hurt, and what I had wished I had experienced. I am a very different parent from anyone else in my family--in fact, I've lost most of my family relationships because I chose not to hit my kid. But it's been worth it. I think the central point I'm dancing around here is that none of us come to parenting--with or without children--without challenges and trepidation and circumstances. It's what we shape out of those challenges, trepidation, and circumstances that determines what our affect will be on the children in our lives. We have a responsibility to look at ourselves and our lives honestly, and then decide how--or if--we can shape our world into a place where a child can thrive.

      Delete
  24. Anonymous10:56 AM

    Agreed with above comments! Sounds like the kid is a little lazy and can't be bothered to show any gratitude if it is not an assignment.

    Teachers should also drop the "family tree" projects. One of my friends was quite startled (in junior high!) when she compared her parents' marriage date to her own birth date- and there are surely many more surprised and confused kids from those assignments!

    I so hope Sarah reads your post and comes on strong in favor of father's/mother's day activities. An "oops" moment waiting to happen...

    Wild Tortoise

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anita Winecooler6:08 PM

    I remember having a friend whose parent's divorced, and a "teacher" decided to do a lesson plan on "Broken homes and What's wrong with society today". We were in grade school, and this girl not only went through her own emotional journey, and the stages of grief over losing what could have been, but she blamed herself for her parent's decision. Then this "teacher" punched her in the neck by making her pain the subject of a cruel act of inexcusable inhumanity.
    We're talking about the 1970's. I can see more "broken" in homes where the parents decide to live a lie and stay married "For the children's sake" than any single or divorced parent.

    These "Hallmark" Card and FTD Flower "moments" are a heap of bullshit. I'll take a home made card and hand picked dandelion bouquet from my kids anyday. I cherish those the most.

    I may be selfish, but I like the idea of a day set aside for Fathers and Mothers. Being either has little to do with gender, but why not a "Family" day as well?

    ReplyDelete
  26. Anonymous9:17 PM

    Haven't we heard the name Heather Bruce before? Funny coinkydink.

    ReplyDelete

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