5-10-06
Good Morning My Love –
Miss you today. Miss the way you made me feel less alone, because someone would always love me.
I think in a real way Freddie never left the Fernald School. And not just because he worked so hard to make things better there. The Fernald experience kept him from ever being comfortable in the “mainstream” world. He could only function well on the fringes, anhd in many ways the carny world was like the Fernald world: very closed society, greatly unknown to the larger world; filled with its own customs, even its own language; peopled with folks from the margins. The carny world is functional whereas the Fernald world was dysfunctional, but both provided a small separate universe, where Freddie could fit in.
Had a candid talk with Jeff, my physical therapist, to confirm what I thought his opinions are about my condition and prognosis. He feels I won’t improve, because the exercises that might improve my back aggravate the hip and vice versa. He thinks I should walk shorter distances and less often, and increase my stationary bike use, and find a pool I can swim in. He does think I can tough it out until I’m 66 or 67 and have the hip replacements. Passed this along to C.S., who held out a glimmer of hope that I might be able to get it done while still working at ECS. But there’s at least a four-week recovery period….I’ll tell you, if I’d had it done April 1, I could be finishing up rehab now with minimal inconvenience to ECS — that’s how slow it’s been there!
Lisa went on a date! Guy in his 40s, twice divorced. I didn’t like his picture (she sent his file link to me — this date was part of aqn on-line dating service she’s joined) because his eyes and mouth showed nothing at all. She said it went OK, no big sparks, but a nice time.
Just got the word that I’ve lost Mr. Binda, my Thursday client. Besides the danger of his wandering, he’s been incontinent lately (which we don’t deal with), and the help in his facility is giving him a hard time about it, and the family will pull him from the institution if necessary, but meanwhile have had to hire an agency that will clean him up.
So I’ve got to stop with the frogs. I’m better than I’ve been, but I have to cut it out. I’ve got all the frogs I’ll ever need, and then some, so there are just one or two things I’d like (another Chinese mask), and otherwise I’d only use ebay for gifts. That’s my intention, anyway. It’s just so tempting to search!!….
Been thinking about the logistics of hip replacement surgery. Will have to find out how it’d work. Couldn’t do them both at once — how would I get around? Drive? Feed myself? Would I have to be in a rehab place? Need more info. Will start by asking Dr. G. when I have my checkup.
5-11-06
Good Afternoon My Darling –
Was at Walgreen’s and heard on the Muzak “Sometimes When We Touch,” always one of your favorites (though not mine — too sappy and melodramatic). Struck by the line “I want to hold you till the fear in my subsides.” You had great fear in you and I’d love to think I helped it subside. Did I, baby?
Lousy sleep during the night. But was able to make up for it by sleeping till 11. Have been fairly virtuous — dusted and vacced and exercised. Got the Globe — a good write-up on Freddie. Will include a copy tomorrow, sent copies to John and Lisa. Haven’t gone over my draft. Nor have I walked — too damp, and the PT guy had made me nervous about walking. Still need to wash the rug — have to get Woolite, since it’s a wool rug.
Jimmy invited me to plant in the tiny bit of ground by my entrance. Think I’ll get a couple of geraniums. Geraniums! Sweet –
OK, gotta ‘fess up. On Monday, while walking in JP while Patrick was working on the car, I walked into another street sign. Wasn’t wearing a hat. It was a pretty bad one, and I knew I’d bleed a lot — scalp wound. I put pressure on the area and, remembering a CVS nearby, went there and got some band-aids with neosporin on the pads, put on three of them, paid for it, and went about my business. I’ve left ‘em on ever since. Though there was some seeping Tues. afternoon, it’s since stopped and I haven’t felt the warmth or throb of an infection, just the itch of cuts scabbing over. Will shower tomorrow and see how it’s doing.
See, baby? I still need you. Protect me from my own klutziness!
By the way, either no one at work noticed three wrinkly band-aids on the top of my head, or were too polite to ask. I think the former.
5-12-06
Good Morning My Love –
“Frederick L. Boyce, at 65; helped expose abuses at Fernald state school”
“By Bryan Marquard, Globe staff
“Frederick L. Boyce was not a moron.
“That was abundantly clear to anyone who met him as an adult. But not until four days before he died did the state of Massachusetts officially declare he was not mentally retarded — 57 years after the Commonwealth clinically diagnosed him as a ‘moron’ and sent him to the Walter E. Fernald State School in Waltham.
“Beginning when he was 8, Mr. Boyce spent a dozen years at the facility, infamous for mistreating residents and subjecting them to radiation experiments.
“‘Fernald was just a nightmare,’ Mr. Boyce said in a 1994 television interview. ’We were always praying and hoping that someone would come there and expose the place.’
“Mr. Boyce, who helped pull back a curtain that had shrouded an era of faulty diagnoses and unethical treatment of children, died of colon cancer Saturday at Colonial Rehabilitation Center in Weymouth. He was 65.
“When he wasn’t on the road for his job as a carnival barker, Mr. Boyce lived in a house he’d bought in Norwell more than 35 years ago. It was the only real home he ever had.
“‘For all that he lost, he created a life that was incredibly rich, and the wealth in it had nothing to do with money or status or any of the things that people usually use to measure success,’ said Michael D’Antonio, who wrote a book about Fernald. ‘It had everything to do with his integrity and his heart. The guy was pretty amazing.’
“‘Given what he went through in his life, to be able to remain positive, affirming, and create more positive change will be a great legacy that he leaves to all of us,’ said Gerald J. Morrissey Jr., commissioner of the state Department of Retardation.
“D’Antonion’s 2004 book, The State Boys’ Rebellion, chronicles what happened at Fernald, the nation’s first state home for people deemed ‘feebleminded.’ The story is told in part through the life and memories of Mr. Boyce.
“His father committed suicide before he was born in 1941. His alcoholic mother left her two sons alone in a Boston apartment when Mr. Boyce was 8 months old, and the state placed the children in foster care. Mr. Boyce moved in and out of several foster homes before he was given intelligence exams that set him on the road to Fernald. Barely schooled and easily frightened, he fared poorly on tests that years later would be discredited.
“Mr. Boyce’s case record upon his admission to Fernald in 1949 listed his final diagnosis as ‘Dull Normal’ and his clinical diagnosis as ‘Familial – Moron.’
“Hardly a school, Fernald provided a scant education. The residents — many of whom, like Mr. Boyce, were of normal intelligence — had to perform menial labor, such as picking beans. Some employees were bullies or insisted on sexual favors.
“During Mr. Boyce’s years at Fernald, researchers working with a grant from Quaker Oats Co., spiked the breakfasts of some residents with radiation as part of nutrition experiments. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Quaker Oats paid a settlement in the 1990s that worked out to $50,000 to $65,000 for each participant in a class-action lawsuit.
“In 1995, President Clinton formally apologized to dozens of former residents who had been subjected to the experiments.
“‘Paroled’ from Fernald in 1961, after he turned 20, Mr. Boyce became part of a world he had longed to enter. While in Fernald he learned that he had a brother; he later found out he was the second oldest of his mother’s 13 children. Mr. Boyce worked in menial jobs and eventually joined a travelling carnival.
“For a few years, he was married to Abra Figueroa, and the two kept a close relationship after they divorced.
“With siblings scattered in foster homes and adoptive homes, Mr. Boyce was zealously loyal to his friends and was caring and watchful over relatives he could find, such as his youngest sibling, De. of Beverly.
“‘Although we had a good relationship, it would only get so deep in the early days,’ she said. But in his final months and weeks, ‘we connected on a level that we had never connected on before. All walls were down. It was completely open and honest. At the end he was so affectionate and loving — I got to see the boy I had never seen before.’
“Figueroa, who asked Mr. Boyce to be the godfather of her five children after their divorce, said he ‘was and will forever be one of the most generous people I have ever met.’
“Though unschooled as a child, Mr. Boyce’s thirst for the education was never slaked. He honed his language skills, hiring a tutor and reading extensively.
“‘He’d read things like Stephen Hawking,’ Figueroa said. ‘He loved to talk about the cosmos with anyone who would listen.’
“And he knew how to put his self-education to use when news broke about the radiation experiments.
“‘There’s some kind of moral authority that comes with having lived through something like that,’ D’Antonio said. ‘He didn’t abuse it or squander it, but he definitely used it. And I think it was a testament to his intelligence.’
“All his life Mr. Boyce wanted the state to apologize for misdiagnosing and confining him as a child. Nonetheless he forgave the workers at Fernald, including those who mistreated him.
“”He didn’t blame individuals, even the bad ones,’ Figueroa said. ‘He felt they were victims of ignorance and of impossible working conditions. He had a lot of forgiveness for everyone. He was never bitter. If he blamed anyone it was the generic ‘government.’
“Though the apology from the state never came, Morrissey visited days before Mr. Boyce died to say he planned to send a letter.
“‘As you know, many people were sent to facilities like Fernald and labeled with archaic and frankly insulting language common to that era, including terms such as ‘moron,’ ‘imbecile,’ or ‘idiot.’ Although appalling to us now, they were standard medical terminology of the day,’ said the commissioner’s May 2 letter. Under the current standards, ‘the department has determined that you are not a person with mental retardation,’ Morrissey wrote, adding that the letter would be placed in Mr. Boyce’s permanent record, ‘displayed as the first page of the file and in a prominent fashion. I hope that you find some comfort by the presence of this letter in your records.’
“De. read the letter to her brother when he rallied from a coma.”
As you see, a pretty good write-up. And De. gets more print than Abra, which will please her, though she’ll be reluctant to admit it. Today I’ll get a copy of State Boys’ Rebellion and mail it to John.
Still sleeping crappy, but the weekend’s coming.
Have decided to limit myself to certain ebay items, and see how that works. Artesania Rinconada frogs, inexpensie Zuni frog fetishes, the one Chinese mask, stuff for Lisa.
Got a copy of State Boys’ Rebellion at the bookstore, sent it, the article from May 8, and the obit write-up to John. He’s so excited about Mark’s father being part of Tin Pan Alley. Let’s see how he reacts to being blood-related to a real hero, the anti-Mark: someone who had nothing and made a fine life out of it that gave to people, as opposed to Mark, who had great gifts of brains and charm, and used them to screw as many people as possible.
Had expected to find the book prominently displayed at the bookstore: they have a section on the first floor for books of local interest, and tables featuring books they feel have current appeal. Instead, I found it on the 5th floor, buried in the science section. The clerk and I agreed it was a travesty and he said he’d talk to his supervisor. Hope he does. The book needs to be pushed and lauded.
This is what I wrote to John, after telling him Freddie had died and what I’d sent him:
“Freddie was a remarkable man. Almost entirely self-taught and handicapped with AADD, he managed to fight the system which had oppressed him, and won — not only for himself, but for all the boys at the Fernald. And though he’d been brutalized there, he lived his life without bitterness or the need for revenge, comporting himself always with humor and class, but never flagging in his effort to right the many wrongs he’d suffered and witnessed.
Donna would’ve had no relationship with her siblings if it hadn’t been for Freddie; he sought her out and introduced her to several sibs, most of whom she formed long-term relationships with. Freddie, who grew up believing he had no family, made his dysfunctional family work, to the benefit of many.
That was Freddie. I have a pretty high opinion of myself, but Freddie was a better man than I am. I can honestly say that, through his efforts, he left the world a better place than he found it. And to do it growing up as he did, enduring what he did, make his accomplishments all the more special. John, if his blood was in my veins, I’d be proud.
I was given great gifts and have muddled through my life, sometimes doing well, sometimes not. Freddie was given nothing; in fact, anything he had was taken from him. Yet Freddie made his life matter. I was lucky to have known him. Wish you’d known him too.
5-13-06
Good Afternoon Beloved –
Rain rain rain. 2 inches so far, four inches plus due by the time it stops, somewhere in 2008. After Janet I’d intended to do ebay stuff, but that’s in the center of Peabody, which floods easily, so I decided to pass. Good thing: the news said that the creek which flows under Peabody center has overrun its banks.
I think Janet has a bit of a thing for me. She likes to be hugged, and has asked me to apply salve to a pulled muscle on her left hip. Today a boob got briefly exposed. I don’t think she’s looking for sex. I just think she likes masculine attention if it’s not too challenging and the male isn’t too ugly.
Had a visitor last night. The young guy who plows the street and works occasionally with Jimmy decided to stop by. Stayed an hour. I think he was curious to size me up. Am I gay? A drinker? A doper? No to the first, no giveaways for the other two. Won’t let him know I do grass. He also could’ve been there as a cat’s paw for Jimmy. Again, if he was, he didn’t get much. He did spend much of the time badmouthing Jimmy. That he’s crazy, vindictive, yells all the time, impossible to work with, bad to his children. One daughter, this kid (forget his name) told me, is mentally challenged, and lives out of her car. Other kids — Jimmy’s got 7 or 8, I think — stay away.
(This kid is a typical townie: dumb, substance abuser, uncouth and skilled at what he does. Wouldn’t invite him to a cocktail party, but as a general handiman he’s a useful guy to know. Like Bobby, only not as nice.)
I’m taking this About-Jimmy poop with a grain of salt. Believe it, but think it’s exggerated. I’m already alert to Jimmy’s oddities and think I know how to stay on his good side. Jimmy doesn’t like to be contradicted or have his peace disturbed. I won’t do either. Hope that suffices.
Finally showered, and can’t even find where the cuts were. No scabs at all. Do have a sore lump, guess antisceptic bandaids have their limits. Don’t think I was concussed — but that lump sure is tender.
5-14-06
Good Afternoon My Darling Donna –
As the rain pours down — 4 inches plus in 2 plus days with no letup till at least Tuesday — I looked out my door and found the little stairwell that is my entrance was up the the doorsill in water. The drain was clogged, I bailed a bit, got Jimmy up, who clearned the drain and now my personal waiding pool is in the harbor somewhere. Jimmy says he’s never seen it this bad. It was wise of me not to try Peabody yesterday. Its creek is now flooding everything, a chronic problem there. You’d think they’d deepen the channel or something, but no: they’ve polluted the stream so much for so long that the toxins are deep in the streambed. It’s a toxic waste site, really, and the cleanup will be very long and very expensive.
Will pay Linda a quick visit soon. Some leftover grass for her.
Back from Linda’s. Driving wasn’t too bad, you just had to be patient and careful. Since I’m home, I guess I was. She’s OK. The same. But her hair’s turning white and when it does she’ll look 80, what with her baggy facial skin. A little weight’s not a bad thing….
The rain is worse than I thought. Since it began 48 hours ago, we’ve had 7 inches at the airport, 8 inches in Melrose. Melrose has sewers backing up all over town. Peabody center is unter 5 inches of water. Mass. and N.H. have both declared (and are!) states of emergency. Streams and rivers overflowing, dams in trouble. Some places expect 12 inches by mid-Tuesday.
We’ve gotten two months’ worth of precip in two days.
Just got a call from Sindy. The house is flooded again! So the clean-ups are all to do over. She’s talking about coming down the week after next. Sure, sure. (Tom also wrote. Talking about visiting June/July. Sure, sure.). I wonder if she’s got a fungal infection: a sinus problem that began when she was working on the mold and hasn’t been touched by strong antibiotics. As usual she talked of all the zillion or so conflicts in her life; as usual I acted like I knew what and who she was talking about. And she threw in a smattering of “Praise the Lord!”s. Grimace. Maybe I’ll set Sindy up with June Harvey, then slip out the back door.
5-15-06
Good Morning My Love –
Just a light rain this morning, with another heavy burst scheduled for tonight. We’re over 8 inches now on the North Shore. Jimmy and the next-door neighbor both had their pumps going, but my place remains dry. Parts of Rte. 1 closed in Saugus; problems on the roads everywhere. I thought I’d have an easy trip in because the Rte. 1 closures would keep the traffic north of me — and I would’ve if ‘d taken the bridge. But I headed for the tunnel, WBZ radio saying nothing about it, and found it backed up to the airport. Ended up going over the bridge anyway, which made me 15 minutes late.
I guess the streams have swelled, because Rte. 1, both ways between Rtes 60 and 128, is closed for “the foreseeable future.” Snuck home via 1A. In Manchester N.H. the Merrimack is the highest it’s been since 1936. Here, Jimmy’s still pumping (I’m home. It’s 7:25 p.m.). Should get another dose of rain tonight.
Physical all done. Nice to see Dr. G. again. He looks good, though not tanned. Has your butterfly girl on the windowsill by his desk. We chatted about music; I told him what I’d been doing and planning. We’re less than friends, though friends we could be, more than doctor-patient. We both loved you. We both miss you. It’s an extra bond he and I will always share.
As for the physical: weight 215. BP 136 over 80. EKG OK. Lung capacity 78; 80-100 is normal, and I’m an asthmatic, so it’s not bad. Prostate OK. No skin nasties. Not bad for a fat old man.
He no longer has the Venezuelan newlywed receptionist, who’s gone off to Texas. Instead, he has his Mrs., and a very nice elderly lady receptionist. The Mrs….has spoken!
Saddened me, the whole visit. You permeated his office, the whole damn hospital. He feels that since the MS had compromised your autonomic nervous system, the tumor was doing you more damage than it would do to me or him. Otherwise, you died because MS, diabetes, cancer and a few other things ganged up on you, the bastards.
5-16-06
I Love You, My Love!
You noticed, I know, but no one else would realize that all these terms of endearment I use at the beginning of each letter are yours! I almost never used those mushy terms when you were alive. Now you’re dead, I can’t think of anything else appropriate!
Though it was raining moderately to heavily as I drove in, the end of the rain is in sight, and the aftermath will be long and expensive. Streams everywhere have overrun their banks. Some dams breached. A sewage main in Haverhill burst, sending tons of raw sewage into their river. Sewage treatment plants overwhelmed. Amazingly, no deaths…yet. Cape Ann got over a foot, the coastal towns above and below the N.H. border, 14 inches. The cleanup, individually and collectively, will be long and expensive, and it’d better include mosquito control, because this storm is a mosquito’s dream come true: innumberable breeding places right at the breeding season. We’ll be knee-deep in the little bastards by June if they don’t spray.
Rte. 1 still closed btween Rtes. 69 and 128. Easy ride in today via bridge; the tunnel’s problem was an ill-timed lane closure no one bothered to mention yesterday.
Pending the acquisition of a bit more information, I’ve made decisions about hip replacement. First: do them one at I time. If I did both at once I’d be helpless for a while and would need someone to take care of me. Since that person doesn’t exist, I need to do it one at a time. This, however, is where I need more info. Assuming I have the more draconian procedure (which, in the case of the left his at least, is most likely) how long am I likely to be immobile, and how long before I can return to work? I’ve gotten the names of two surgeons and will call this week to set up an evaluative appointment, which should answer these questions.
Then the plan would be to have the left one done early next April. I should have enough sick/vacation time to cover the rehab, and it’s so slow at ECS during that time of year, I doubt they’d notice I was absent.
And if all that works out, do the same thing with the right hip in 2008.
Have run the scheme past C.S., who wants me to do it sooner, but that’s not feasible. We’ll be busier then, and I don’t want it done mid-summer or mid-winter.