A good friendship cut short by juvenile diabetes

Recently I dreamed about my good friend Jean.  That’s the only way I get to visit with her now.  She died a few years ago.  As a young adult, she had been diagnosed with juvenile diabetes, having to inject herself in the abdomen every morning.  One time I naively watched, only then realizing the severity of her condition.  Diabetes is deadly serious, the seventh leading cause of death in the U.S. with more than 250,000 deaths annually.  By the time Jean was 60, she had experienced every single one of the health battles brought on by this disease.

She didn’t deserve it.  She was tall and slender, naturally tan with shining green cat eyes and a wide smile, outgoing with lots of friends, a member of local film societies and astronomy clubs.  Her most distinctive feature was her raspy voice, the sexy tone of a long-time smoker.  Jean was happiest when smoking a cigarette.  I never warned her about smoking, how doctors say it makes diabetes even worse.  I figured she knew all about diabetes and the risks.  Smoking seemed her greatest pleasure in life, and I was not about to hound her, because I cherished our friendship.

Jean was a few years older than me.  We met at a party.  She and I had similar interests and enjoyed each other’s company.  We started a girls’ night of sorts: exploring new restaurants, seeing movies and shows, or just visiting over the phone.  We liked foreign films and art flicks and Baby Boomer rock.  She was very professional, a paralegal who took her work and appearance seriously.  I was just learning how to create a career in journalism and later education.  She would review my resume, part of her duties while seeking employees for law firms, and over a cigarette advise me wisely.

She became someone I could tell my troubles to such as dating, getting along with co-workers and dealing with assorted bosses.  She was like an older sister.  We went through a bout of unemployment.  That’s probably when we spent the most time together, just visiting, cooking meals for each other, and going to the dollar cinema to pretend we were part of the working masses.  Jean was a feminist, one of those who graduated in the early 1970s.  She was of an era I admired, and she was better versed than I on subjects like women’s rights.  She could sniff out sexism when I still gave men the benefit of the doubt.

Things my best friend taught me:

Tip restaurant servers at least 20 percent, more for excellent service; wear hats to get attention from men; always use table clothes and real linen napkins; buy flowers and split them into bouquets throughout the house; when driving, try to get off the highways as soon as possible because it’s safer.

After yet another unemployment streak as a paralegal, Jean had to move from Texas to Florida and was finally doing well for awhile.  She lived within walking distance of the beach, something she missed while living in north Texas.  She grew up in Delaware and talked about clambakes and fish boils right on the beach.  She loved lighthouses, too, so one Christmas I bought her a picture calendar of assorted ones, each similar yet unique, just like us.  Jean bought a nice three-bedroom Florida home complete with a lanai, a patio and swimming pool area enclosed in a sheer netting to keep bugs out.  A couple times a year, we’d call each other.  While listening to her adventures and then advice to improve my life mostly at work, I was soothed by the background sound of rolling waves from the nearby coast.

One summer I flew out for a visit.  She took me to her astronomy club late at night in the Florida Everglades.  There was no light, but the sky was filled with millions of stars.  Her colleagues used high-powered telescopes and showed me different planets.  In the near distance was the sound of a creature I’d never heard.  I described the mooing as a satanic cow.  The Floridians laughed, telling me it was an alligator or crocodile.  Both live in the swamps where we stood.

To have juvenile diabetes, Jean lived pretty well, taking insulin regularly, and had a great big appetite.  She could eat anything and not gain a pound.  She kept hard candies in her car just in case of an insulin spike.  If we were at a late-night bar, she always ordered an Irish coffee “without the whiskey.”  She was cautious with alcohol, telling me about a time when she was younger and had been drinking with friends and took a cab home.  The driver detected she was drunk and walked her to her house then forced his way in and attacked her.  Nothing happened as she screamed until he left.  She took the incident as a wake-up call to improve and never leave herself vulnerable like that again.

She reduced smoking to a few cigarettes a day but not entirely quitting cold turkey.  She was able to live a seemingly healthy life with diabetes during her 30s and 40s.  But after she turned 50, the disease declared an all-out war.  Jean was unemployed again during a Florida recession when diabetes was affecting her eyesight.  As the years passed, with each phone call I realized diabetes was taking a toll on her health.  She had to undergo eye surgery and doctor visits that involved a needle in the eyes, all due to diabetes.  The procedures were not successfully restoring her vision.  And at some point, she knew she would never be employed again.  Because her situation was dire, I advised her to sell the house and move in with her mother in Delaware.  A year later, that is what she had to do.

So I started calling her every now and then in Delaware.  Again, Jean’s prognosis was not good.  Soon she was undergoing dialysis due to kidney failure and was placed on a list for a kidney and heart transplant.  She lost her sight and though she was living in her childhood home, one day she walked into something she didn’t see on the floor, and the fall broke her hip.  She had to be moved into a convalescent center.  I’m sure that was the lowest moment of her life.  I realized I needed to plan a trip to see her.

A Yankee-Rebel friendship

I flew up to Delaware, met Jean’s mom, noticing the matching light green eyes of the two women.  Jean, smiling merrily, had to use a walker to get around.  I don’t think she could see me.  We had made all kinds of plans, like spending the night at my hotel (where she needed to know where she could smoke since it wasn’t permitted in the rooms) and taking the Amtrak the next day to Philadelphia.  I was leery this plan, that reinvigorated her so much, may fall through.  Sure enough, she called late night to cancel, explaining she was going to the hospital  about her leg.  A side effect of dialysis, Jean had gained water weight in her calves, and one kinda erupted with fluid and needed medical attention.  I toured Philly alone.

The next day Jean was able to take me to Amish Country in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.  I did not realize I would be driving.  She arranged for a rental car, and we three women drove out there, Jean sitting in the back sipping on a soda as her elderly mother guided me from the front passenger side.  Whenever we stopped for a break, Jean mysteriously left.  Her mother knew what she was doing.  She’d spot Jean sitting outside having a smoke and scold her daughter harshly.  I played it down, trying to persuade her mother to consider the big picture, though never saying aloud, “Jean’s dying.  Let her enjoy her life.”

On our final day together, Jean wanted me to drive her around her hometown, a historic locale settled off the Delaware River in the 18th century.  She had me drive her to row houses in what seemed a rough area.  She asked what I thought about her moving into one, to have her own place again.  She was determined she’d get to work again once her health improved.  Despite declining health, Jean never lost her vitality and spirit to work for a living.  She was able to get both Medicare and Medicaid, thanks to lawyers who knew how to fight the system on her behalf.  Jean was blind, on dialysis and a transplant list.  Why would our government give someone like that a hard time?  Jean went to dialysis three times a week—and the ordeal took the entire day, leaving her exhausted and needing to recuperate the following day.

During our visit, I gave Jean a unique piece of jewelry I had bought for myself.  It was a replica charm bracelet from the British royal family featuring a half dozen or more gold crosses, each with a different faux jewel: ruby, diamond, emerald, sapphire.  On the back of each cross were engraved Biblical passages.  Jean loved it and wore it to all her dialysis treatments as a conversation piece.  I wanted it to make her feel beautiful and loved.  When it was time for me to leave, Jean was chatting about nothing important while looking away from my direction.  I hugged her and choked back tears to say, “You’ve been a really good friend, Jean, my best friend in life.”  Jean, in her raspy voice, smiled and replied sheepishly, “Ahhhh!  You’re my buddy!  We had all sorts of fun together.”  Her mother stood by, quietly witnessing two friends saying goodbye forever.

Months later I called.  This time Jean told me one of her legs had been amputated.  Trying to keep the conversation upbeat, I asked about her artificial limb, how’s she doing learning to walk again.  I didn’t mean for that to be our last conversation.  But calling her time and again was so heartbreaking.  I waited a year later … then called one night around Christmas.  Her mother did not remember me and sounded suspicious when I asked to speak to Jean.  I recounted my trip to Delaware and how Jean had been my friend in Texas for a long time.  Her mother finally told me Jean had passed away a few months ago.  Tears welled for a brief moment.  I was surprised but not really.  Jean, her mother explained, had been in the hospital with pneumonia and with all the other complications, her body gave out.  She died on her birthday.  Jean told me she thought people who died on their birth dates were special, that that was something so unique it must have some kind of cosmic connection.

Always practical when it came to legal matters, Jean assured me her final arrangements had been made including who to notify and that I was at the top of the list.  But I was not called, and to this day I wonder about that.  I quickly looked up her obituary online, finding it scant in details about her wonderful life and vivacious spirit, even brave battle with diabetes.  Instead of flowers, mourners were requested to donate to her mother’s church.  Jean was not religious.  The only perfect thing about her brief obit was the picture, a close up of her with an ocean in the background.  She’s clasping a glass of red wine while a big smile captures her joie de vivre.

Oh, if Jean were alive today!  What she would say about our latest president.  We would never stop laughing.  Shared politics was perhaps our strongest bond.  She once told me I was one of the very few liberals she had met in Texas.  Perhaps she felt out of place.  But she made the most of living in the Lone Star State, even hanging out with Texas legend Kinky Friedman, a highlight of her life.  Jean and I shared cultural, political and even spiritual views.  No wonder we enjoyed talking to each other.  In fact, Jean would be so proud of me creating a blog called The Texas Tart.  I imagine she reads every one wherever she is now.  In the dream, I told her I was going to write one about her (silently realizing I’d have to address her struggle with diabetes).  She beamed excitedly and told me, “That’s a great idea!”

Leave it to Communist China to eradicate Muslim terrorism

Have you heard what China is doing to a minority Muslim population?  From the sound of it, they’re ‘nipping in the bud’ religious terrorist attacks, schemes, plans and thoughts.  The Communist government is attacking this murderous global problem by special indoctrination camps for certain undesirables, like Orwell’s 1984 and Hitler’s Nazi Germany.  The goal is to destroy the Muslim’s belief in not only Islam but any religion.  Of this goal, Communist China will no doubt be 100 percent effective.  What’s the other option for Muslims practicing their faith in China: death?

According to several recent news reports, a million members of a Muslim minority called the Uyghurs (pronounced ‘wee-gers’), who have traditionally lived near the Mongolian border, have been rounded up and forced to reside in camps.  There they will undergo forced assimilation which no doubt will include learning to appreciate the social equality and efficiency of communism while also destroying one’s intellectual, emotional and spiritual bond to religion such as belief in God or Allah.  Remaining Uyghurs not yet forced into camps must welcome Communist Party workers into their homes for inspections.  The Uyghur community maintains every family now has at least one member in the indoctrination camps.

The Uyghur minority is objecting to this mass humiliation as a violation of their human rights.  They claim they are not ethnically Chinese, and their land was not part of China until invasion and annexation in the mid 20th century.  Uyghurs have been discriminated against as workers unless they prove to be devout followers of Chinese communism and enthusiastic members of the Party.

Center of the world

Renowned for audaciously ruthless global business ventures, from mining Africa to building islands in the international waters of the South China Sea, China has patiently watched as the U.S. and other nations ineffectively deal with terrorism in their own countries.  Along with sporadic violence instigated by Al-Qaeda and ISIS, China diligently observed two decades of perpetual war in the Middle East which has left hundreds of millions dead and wounded.  For its role in leading the Middle East war on terrorism, the United States owes China more than $1 trillion.

China has had its share of Muslim terrorist attacks within its borders.  But when it comes to China, communism is going to defeat any other way of life.  Their brand of communism includes torture, mind control and death.  China’s Cultural War of the 1940s began by rounding up all teachers and the educated who were summarily slaughtered and culminated in forcing Buddhist monks and nuns to copulate in public.  China is not like the United States and Western Europe, both unwilling to violate human rights even in war.  China does not adhere to or believe in a human being’s inalienable rights of freedom, free speech, free press, or individual pursuits of happiness.  That is the way communism remains in China; it dominates any citizen’s thought to the contrary.  As for religion, God, spiritual beliefs: that will be crushed if detected in the human brain of a fellow countryman.

In the 1980s, China permitted Western influence and culture, even Christianity, but college students began protesting, wanting total freedom not just a taste.  Then in 1989 China’s military massacred an estimated 10,000 protesters in Tiananmen Square.  Life soon was restored to normalcy and faithful communism with a sustaining vengeance.  China’s communism is like a plague that destroys all mankind or like an alien invasion of humanity as quietly as “Invasion of the Body Snatchers.”  Creepy, how Communist China has yet to fall like Eastern Europe and the USSR.  Makes you wonder what they are holding onto.  The answer is supreme, glorious, indestructible power.

With a population of one billion, modern China is bustling with a generation far wealthier than Chairman Mao would have preferred.  After all, communism is supposed to be ‘all for one and one for all,’ meaning everyone receives the same earnings from a government stipend regardless of occupation.  Money, or the love of it, ultimately will change the hearts and minds of the Chinese.  Communism pretends to hate capitalism and free enterprise, but no one earns money better than China, mostly on the backs of a slave workforce.

So now China joins the rest of the world in dealing with global terrorism stemming from radicalized Muslim communities and individuals.  Throughout the 21st century, China has watched war-weary Americans and other international soldiers return to their homelands—presumably demoralized; with some blind, deaf, amputated, emasculated.  The beauty of Communist China is it will once and for all defeat the global enemy of terrorism in as much as it relates to religion.  A quick online look at the extremely fit and insurmountable Chinese soldiers, marching goose step in precision along their nation’s latest artillery and killing machines, one foresees extreme victory and rather soon.  Communist China is more than willing to pay the price to eradicate Muslim terrorism within a vast expansive territory.  Similar to the terrorists themselves, the Chinese method is simple: obliterate all human rights, especially religious beliefs and practices.  China has shown the world what it takes to install and maintain Godless communism: consummate brutality physically, psychologically and spiritually.

Planned Parenthood: damned if they do, damned if they don’t

There was a time in America when citizens supported the idea of ‘planned parenthood,’ that individuals can and should determine when and if they have children.  The golden era was during the women’s rights movement of the 1960s and ’70s.  Marching beside the nation’s women all along was Planned Parenthood.  The national organization, formed in 1917, drew controversy upon inception back in the olden days when its main goal was advocating for contraception and providing contraceptives.  But mention Planned Parenthood today and the first thing that comes to mind is America’s most divisive issue: abortion.  And for the umpteenth time, Congressmen are attempting to cut all federal funding of Planned Parenthood, the lone organization that has undoubtedly been the life-saving grace for many a girl and woman, more so for the poor among us.

Because it’s already against the law, Planned Parenthood—the most financially scrutinized not-for-profit in the nation—cannot use federal tax funds for abortion services.  However, The Catholic News reported this year that government funding is the largest source of revenue for Planned Parenthood: $500,000 million annually for an organization that performs more than 300,000 abortions a year.  Another online fact sheet claimed Planned Parenthood’s government funding, including Medicaid and other federal health department reimbursements, makes up 94 percent of its total revenue.  The Washington Post Fact Checker looked into the revenue and services conflict but used figures provided by Planned Parenthood posted on its website: three percent on abortion services, 42 percent on sexually transmitted disease prevention and treatment, 34 percent on contraceptive services, nine percent on cancer screenings, and 11 percent on women’s healthcare.  Each year Planned Parenthood reportedly serves three million people, mostly women and girls but also male adolescents and men.

Planned Parenthood’s total revenue is $1.164 billion, meaning less than half comes from the government, each state also obligated to provide a funding match for Department of Health services like Medicaid.  The organization divided its 2017 revenue figures and sources as:

$543.7 million in revenue, 37 percent from government health services reimbursements and grants;

$267.5 million, 36 percent private contributions;

$318.1 million, 22 percent non-government health services revenue;

$34.3 million, five percent other revenue.

Picture if you will

Many people cannot forget those pictures from inside the womb of fetal development, first shown in the 1960s: wondrous images of tiny bodies, feet, limbs, heads and facial features in mere weeks in human development.  Why, it looked just like a fully formed newborn baby.  When the happy couple discovers they are expecting, the baby is fully formed in their minds and hearts.  That makes miscarriage all the more heartbreaking as well as pregnancy termination for whatever the reason.

Another development that would change the public’s collective mind about abortion was miraculous medical advancements with premies: premature babies born as early as five months, not fully ready for life outside the womb but arriving just the same.  Imagine holding a 16-ounce bottle of water then realizing that was the size of a premature baby who managed to survive and grow outside the womb and today is healthy and normal.  In light of those developments, millions of people who may have once supported abortion started to change their minds, seeing the procedure as unnecessary, immoral, selfish and cruel especially when so many couples are waiting to adopt.

Still Planned Parenthood is not going away and remains strong in its mission, “striving to create the healthiest generation ever.”  The website features a quote from president Cecile Richards: “We are here today to thank generations of organizations, troublemakers, and hell raisers who formed secret sisterhoods, who opened Planned Parenthood health centers in their communities, and demanded the right to control their own bodies.”  That was the issue that led to legalized abortion in the 1970s: females demanding control over their bodies and their lives.  And, too, control over their time, which is very important yet left out of the national feud.  When abortion was legalized, ensuring a safe medical procedure, it was supported by tens of millions of women who knew others had undergone a back-alley abortion or used other means like a wire hanger and were permanently injured, infected or died.  They didn’t want any of that, those gruesome extreme measures that confused young girls will take to end an unwanted pregnancy, to ever happen again—not in this country, not in modern times.

Last year The Kaiser Poll, a conservative organization, reported that 75 percent of Americans still support federal funds to Planned Parenthood while 22 percent support cutting all federal funds to the organization.  The poll also revealed that one in three women and one in four people have visited Planned Parenthood for health services.  Aren’t health services, 97 percent of what Planned Parenthood provides, to ensure a healthy population worth our tax dollars?

In recent decades, terrorism tactics along with screaming protesters outside the doors of Planned Parenthood clinics culminated in closing many facilities and cutting the number of doctors willing to perform abortions, still a legal medical procedure.  How many doctors were murdered because they worked for Planned Parenthood or in their private practice performed pregnancy terminations?  During the 1990s as the abortion issue escalated along with physician harassment and murder, President Bill Clinton maintained his policy would be to ensure abortion was ‘safe, legal and rare.’

But … 300,000 abortions a year isn’t a rare occurrence.  It makes so many Americans very angry to think abortions occur every day; despite the many reasons physical, financial or other; however complex and personal.  As long as federal tax funds are used to provide abortion services, citizens feel they can vehemently object, claiming religious and moral grounds and a violation of the soul, theirs and the unborn as they believe it.  The idea of abortion being a private matter, a personal issue and individual belief, that is nobody’s business but the human female young or old will not be tolerated—not in this country, not in this century.