Sunday, June 14, 2009

Right before all hell breaks loose

A sky filled with storm clouds always makes a wonderful photograph. This one is no exception. The other night, when a storm was pounding first Parker County and then Johnson County, the associated cloudiness here was quite breathtaking. Less than five minutes later, all hell broke loose. The storm began to collapse south of here and sent "outflow" away from the center of the storm. In case you were wondering, "outflow" means God-awful wind. I thought the house was going to come apart. The trees were bent over, the house was shaking, the porch furniture was airborne. Yeah, just another lovely evening in Texas.

The best Kitty ever!


I've had a few cats in my time. Ramona lived to be 15. I got her when I was 20, she died when I was 35. Her sister, Other Cat, lived to be 20. I was 40 when she died. Kitty was a year old when I got her and now I've had her for 13 years so she's 14, but she's still holding her own. Cat-like behavior is the name of the game with Kitty. Racing around, running, jumping, high-tailing it up and down the stairs. She's a very busy girl. If she lives 6 more years, I'll be 60. (Yeah, I'm 54. Deal with it. I have.) At that rate, I'll only have one cat left in me before it's check out time in the Hotel 'O Diane. One more cat. This makes me face mortality in a way that only Crazy Cat Ladies could understand.

A lovely addition to any suburban neighborhood


Well. Five earthquakes in Cleburne in a week. This in an area that has shown no seismic activity in its 130 years of existence. Meanwhile the gas drilling companies are breaking up the substructure of the bedrock beneath the good citizens of Johnson County's feet, using high pressure water to fracture it to extract natural gas. And everyone assumes this will have absolutely no impact whatsoever to their lives above ground, except for those nice royalty checks? Yeah, this baby doesn't look dangerous to me at all. I'd love to have one plopped down in my neighborhood. NOT!

Fathers and other trifles


In today's Dallas Morning News, there was an op-ed piece concerning the decline of two parent households in America. Nearly 40% of today's babies are born to single women. Forty percent! And 77% of them are born to women over 20 years of age, so this is not an issue of teenage pregnancy. The author laments the trivialization of fatherhood and blames the feminist movement for the decimation of the American family. While the feminist movement has contributed to the independence of woman as wage earners, that simplistic argument deserves further exploration.

The author, Cathy Young, is a columnist for The Boston Globe. In her column she states today's single mothers are a throw-back to the old-fashioned, decidedly non-feminist idea that family life and child-rearing are a female domain. In fact, until the Industrial Revolution tore fathers away from the traditional, mostly agrarian households, fathers were the primary overseers of the well-being of their children. They were highly engaged in providing for their children's education and upbringing. The Cult of True Womanhood, which came into being during the Industrial Revolution, was a concentrated effort to shift control of households and children over to women, to free up the men needed for a growing industrial workforce. When children became the primary focus of mothers, to the exclusion of fathers, men began the long descent into obsolescence in their own families.

Active and engaged fathers are still necessary to the well-being of children. A functional two parent household will always be more beneficial to a child than one in which a harried single parent, regardless of gender, is trying to do everything.