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That TV Family Feeling

It was a bedtime story of my own making, better than counting sheep, an adolescent dream that magically transported me from the cramped Brooklyn apartment I called home to a southern California beach, right to the doorstep of the Nelson family.

That would be Ozzie and Harriet, David and Ricky, all-American TV at its best, even if a bit wholesome in retrospect. It was a reflection of a time (late Fifties/early Sixties). It was, in a way, the precursor to reality TV, the real Nelson family scripting itself into the TV Nelson family, even using exterior shots of their actual house for the show (the interior was an onset facsimile).  Who could have known that decades later would bring us into the living room of another Ozzy and his family, no hidden dysfunction here, everything off-the-cuff in the WYSIWYG, wacky world of the Osbournes?

Even if there was nothing terribly adventurous about “The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet,” I was hooked on it, partly for the escape from family as I knew it to family that seemed too good to be fabricated, but mostly for that heartthrob, Ricky, who had a way of curling his lip that would make me melt. Never mind the searing eyes.  David, the big brother, smart and grounded, would be my big brother, too.

Now David is dead, the last of the Nelsons to go. The day Ricky was killed in a plane crash – December 31, 1985 – I had long since stopped following his career, but all it took was hearing the first notes of “Lonesome Town” or “Travelin’ Man,” “Dream Lover” or “Poor Little Fool” to remind me that memory has a way of pocketing itself, a slice of comfort pulled from a voice, a song. Once a fan, always a fan.  I was weeks into a pregnancy at the time of his death, a new family in the making, no mistaking it for a scripted one that could not possibly live up to anyone’s sense of the ideal. No matter; before long my daughter would have her own favorite TV shows (and rock stars) giving rise to her own fantasies and dreams with, perhaps, the added irony of her career taking her behind-the-scenes on some of TV’s top reality shows.

In the wake of Ricky’s death came the airing of some dirty family laundry, Kris (ex-wife of Ricky, sister of Mark Harmon) threatened to sue over his life insurance and tried to take control of his estate away from David. Needless to say, the big brother won.  It was the big brother, too, who had said, in a 1971 Esquire interview, quoted in the New York Times, “It’s an awfully big load to carry, to be everyone’s fantasy family.”  To which I would add some down-home wisdom, his brother’s, words from a song written in response to ill-behaved fans wanting the old Ricky, not the new Rick: You can’t please everyone/so you’ve got to please yourself. Ironic that “Garden Party” would become a hit, and, to my thinking, a song that speaks to something gone with a catchy anthem phrase ushering in a New Age.

Visit Deborah’s website here . . .

Yesterday

Oprah and Sir Paul McCartney, Bill T. Jones and Jerry Herman, Merle Haggard. Sitting in a box at the Kennedy Center’s Opera House, this year’s honorees for a lifetime of artistic achievement.

I admit it – it’s a cheap thrill, the annual broadcasting of artists being honored and their celebrity/artist friends paying tribute, sometimes with wit, always with admiration.  And the timing is deliberate, the last week of the year, everything (except post-Christmas holiday sales) at a standstill, nothing but reruns and round-the-clock showings of It’s a Wonderful Life, days away from one year ending and another beginning.  It’s too easy to be cynical, call it politicking by another name, a subjective process at best. In theory, though, the Kennedy Center Honors are not a competition on the order of the Oscars and Tonys, Emmys and National Book Awards.  There is no short list and ‘best of’.’  Yes, an argument can always be made for talented and hard-working artists so under the radar there are not enough members on a nomination/selection committee to muster interest. And, yes, there are staged moments and predictable punch lines, Chris Rock looking up at the honorees, one in particular, “the most powerful person in the world,” he says with that winning smile, “and sitting right next to her, Barack Obama.”  But at the heart of it all, it’s one night when we all learn something about the artists we know and admire as well as the ones we know less about. We get to acknowledge – as collectively as possible – the ways in which art enriches our lives.

Most years I watch, sometimes I don’t. Something about this year’s ceremony struck a chord. It wasn’t just Jennifer Hudson, joined by the Tennessee State University Choir, in a heartstring-tugging rendition of “I’m Here,” from The Color Purple; or Mavis Staples singing “Let It Be” with James Taylor; or Steven Tyler rocking the house with a medley from Abbey Road.  It was the recognition of art as a measure of passing time, McCartney with Lennon, and without him; Oprah, inimitable, one incarnation spiraling into the next; the brilliant Bill T. Jones, thankfully, still here to bring us Spring Awakening and Fela;  Jerry Herman, a reminder of Broadway at its best, tradition (Hello, Dolly) and innovation (La Cage Aux Folles) in one versatile individual; Merle Haggard, a very American legend. I say the word, ‘yesterday,’ a song pops into my head.  I catch a few lines from “Okie from Muskogee” or listen to the Grateful Dead cover of “Mama Tried,” I marvel at the transcendent power of music, hicks and hippies bringing their own to spin to the very same notes.

Even more poignant, perhaps: among the very first honorees, in 1978, was Marian Anderson, performing all over Europe but denied from performing at Constitution Hall because of her race. It took the intervention of Eleanor Roosevelt to make possible Anderson’s now famous 1939 Easter Sunday concert at the Lincoln Memorial, exquisitely brought to life in a novel by Richard Powers, The Time of Our Singing.

And just for fun:  Russian-born pianist Vladimir Horowitz was offered the honor but his conditions for acceptance made the center rescind: he would have to be the only honoree, and the ceremony would have to be at 4 p.m. on Sunday.

Photo is property of the author

Visit Deborah’s website here .

Password(s)

I get a call the other day, automated, VISA randomly checking up on possibly suspicious credit card activity. I call back, a little leery, phishing expeditions rampant these days.  After pressing one touchtone key after another, I finally get a live voice, a sweet woman who tells me she can’t get into my account without my password.  Whichever one I came up with was the wrong one. Not to worry, she said. She’ll have someone call me. A security thing.

A few minutes pass. No call. Of course now I’m worried, at the same a little glad I forgot my password.  I go online, Google the number I called, mildly reassured that it really is from VISA.  To ratchet up the reassurance I call the customer support number on my credit card. Yes, the representative tells me, it was a legitimate call.  He asks me for my password. Again it escapes me, not being one I use regularly, and it’s nowhere in that secret place where I write down passwords.  I tell him this is no silly senior moment, and maybe it’s a sign I should reset my password anyway. Not a problem, he says. He has the power to override the password, but only if we hang up and he calls me back at the phone number I give him. I’m starting to feel a little like a bit player in a spy movie. The only thing missing is the telephone booth.

My head is spinning now, all those passwords concocted from very precise instructions: four-to-eight characters, all lower case, for one site; must be eight-to-forty characters long, only alphanumerical characters, dashes and underscores allowed, for another site; birth dates not advised. Then the password hints: first car, first pet, favorite movie, mother’s maiden name.  Now the conundrum: the very same consistency that makes for easy-to-remember passwords is the stuff of hackers’ dreams. Am I lazy if I decide on a password I’ve used elsewhere? Maybe. Or am I just counting on odds? So many people to pick on in cyberspace, why bother with me?

I’m still waiting for my callback, time-traveling now, Allen Ludden on the TV screen, how quaint it all seems, two celebrity-contestant teams trying to outsmart each other with clues, a linguistic, charades-type endeavor, guess the password.  Whoever concocted the game was clearly ahead of his or her time.

The representative is back now, the questioned charge a very small one. I suppose I should be thankful for this random checking up; but before sending out an alert you would think someone might have noticed that there are two names on this credit card account, and this is hardly the first time a charge issued from the city where my daughter lives.  So be it.

Now it’s time to get to the matter at hand, changing my password. The one I have in mind is an unusual one (even a hacker would be hard put to crack the code) so I spell it out, which brings a peal of laughter from the representative. “That’s the password I thought I forgot – right?” He’s very amused, not a hint of condescension, and in total collusion when I suggest this is a password no one will ever guess, a little too good to give up.

Visit Deborah’s website here .

Photo courtesy of Christine Boyka Kluge.

The Thought that Counts

My husband surprised me with an iPad for our anniversary . . .

I got him an éclair.

I admit it, I was overwhelmed.  Some years bring flowers, or a trinket, though dinner out, martini included, is all I really ask for.  Not that I don’t appreciate Irises artfully placed on my desk or the beautiful silver-and-pearl necklace I get to wear as a reminder that maybe I’m not taken for granted after all. A card? That’s my bailiwick. Some years it’s the card from one of my boxed collections, blank inside, me waxing a little poetic. More often it’s that silly pleasure I derive from pulling cards from a rack, the perfect one popping up like it was designed and written just for us.  No cheesy gag-me-with-a-spoon humor, no flowery gag-me-with-a-spoon sentiment.

Last year was a big one, twenty five.  We decided to celebrate, city-style, an afternoon at MOMA, dinner following. With another biggie three weeks later (my 60th birthday), my daughter gets it into her head that we should do something special when she comes home Christmas week, maybe go away for a few days. We decided on the Bahamas, iffy weather in December but an airfare too enticing to pass up, even if it meant getting up and out by four a.m. on Christmas morning, which used to be a quiet day for travel. Not so much anymore. Maybe this was a sign, some higher power telling us we should have stayed home, gone to a movie. The signs kept coming.  My daughter wasn’t feeling so great. My husband was bored (a book on the beach is not his style) and feeling ripped off everywhere we went. We did discover (and feed) stray Potcakes, the name Bahamians give to mixed breed dogs. We took busses to get around, a little local flavor.  We dined overlooking the ocean. Nonetheless, my husband swears he’ll never go to another island.  It’s my job to remind him – and I have the pictures to prove it – that there were some very funny moments, and besides we were all together, on vacation. Put it in the family memory bank. Everything is perspective.

So when he leads me into his office the morning of our anniversary this year, points to a big box, tells me to read before opening, I’m in a daze, omg, I didn’t get a card (yet), or the éclair, a favorite treat of his from our favorite French bakery.  I play the guessing game. What does he think I want/need?  This is not a box with a flat-screen TV inside. I open the top, lots of packing material, another box inside. A white one, with an Apple logo.  He even managed, with phone tech-support from our daughter, to download the cover of my short story collection and place it on the shelf of that spiffy iBook library. Now that’s love.

There’s one thing he doesn’t quite ‘get’ though. You give me a toy, I’m gonna play. So when he reminds me I said I’d be downstairs to watch a movie with him in twenty minutes, but I don’t show up for an hour and a half, I’ll grant him the right to be a little testy.

And if he persists in calling me ‘iMom’ when I’m at my laptop or on my iPhone or reading something on my iPad, I’ll remind him of his DVR stockpile, “Law and Order” reruns, and how he shouts at the television during football games. Then I’ll sit next to him, new toy in hand, show the video my daughter composed, just for us.

Visit Deborah’s website here . . .

Photo is property of author.

(Un)American Activities

A good friend of mine tells me she makes a point of going out for Indian food on Thanksgiving. It isn’t that she doesn’t like turkey (what’s there not to like?) or that Martha Stewart didn’t invite her; it’s all the fuss, the gathering, the food overload, with the underlying assumption that there’s something un-American about not partaking in the ordained celebration.

Let’s cut to the chase here: the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock on December 11, 1620. It was a tough winter, but the 1621 harvest was something to be thankful for, so they celebrated for three days, harvest-style, with the natives who had helped them tough it out. Maybe it was venison (not turkey), and more likely it was boiled pumpkin (not pumpkin pie), that they feasted on. But another ‘thanksgiving’ was years in coming, June 1676, to be exact.  Fast forward to October 1777, harvest the convenient backdrop to politics, ‘thanksgiving’ a celebration of victory over the British at Saratoga.  Twelve years later, when our first (famous) president, decided maybe it was time to proclaim a National Day of Thanksgiving, not all the colonies  agreed (duh!) with him. So let’s give it up for Sarah Josepha Hale, who made a mission out of turning Thanksgiving into a national holiday. Hale, the first American woman to publish a novel, was a magazine editor, also the poet who gave us the nursery rhyme “Mary’s Lamb.”  Her dream became reality when that other famous president born in February proclaimed, in 1863, that the nation would celebrate a national day of Thanksgiving on the last Thursday of November.

The plot thickens:  in 1939 FDR (oh those iconic presidents!) moved Thanksgiving to the next-to-last Thursday in November, pressured by retailers lobbying for a longer Christmas shopping season.  That didn’t work out so well; a number of states refused to comply, so, until 1941, when Congress set the date in stone, there were two Thanksgivings, a week apart.

This historical context gives a reassuring, even if odd, spin on what I love most and least about Thanksgiving (i.e., a day commemorating a national mood of thanks that jump-starts a season of obsessive, market-driven giving). And here’s the irony, for me. My childhood memories of family feasts do not include Thanksgiving.  Maybe my mother just couldn’t fathom handling and roasting something that weighed as much as an infant (besides which, she didn’t especially like turkey). Or maybe Thanksgiving followed too closely on the heels of the Jewish New Year and, even for someone not orthodox in her observance or belief, there was something inescapably goyish (i.e., Puritan) about turkey day.   In fact, the first Thanksgiving I recall celebrating with my family was after my cousins and I had all left the fold and we took things into our own hands.  Let’s give our mothers a break – maybe even a treat – said the cousin who did all the organizing in bringing us together for a proper Thanksgiving.  We drank very fine red wine, we smoked pot (a ‘modern family’ way before it became a hit show). The cousin responsible for roasting the big bird is a chef extraordinaire, and, even under the influence of weed, he could not screw up.

Thanksgiving would thereafter become a celebration of friends who were like family, pulled together by my dear friend Cynthia until we began alternating the year I moved into a house recently renovated and crying out for a crowd. Traditions evolve, even if the sentiment behind them stays the same. The year Cynthia died it was Thanksgiving (almost) as usual chez moi. The rest, as the saying goes, is history. Visit Deborah Batterman’s website/blog here.


Discomfort Food


On visits home, my daughter likes me to cook some old favorites.  Meatballs and spaghetti. Mac ‘n’ cheese (not the prepackaged variety).  Pancakes from scratch, with fresh blueberries.   Sometimes the occasional special meal for a working girl on a budget is much appreciated. This time it was lamb chops. So my husband picked up a rack, and we grilled.  My daughter is a grown woman, and yet the realization that those tasty lollipops rubbed in oil and balsamic vinegar, sugar and rosemary came from a baby lamb caused her no shortage of distress. Not that it kept her from eating. During her junior year in college she spent a semester in New Zealand, a vegetarian at the time. I visited her, The Lord of the Rings landscape still vivid in my mind. Also all those lambs dotting the countryside, baa-baa cuteness to her, a culinary treat I would be a fool to deny myself.

According to a recent article I came across in the New York Times, two premium chicken producers are switching to a more humane way to kill chickens before marketing them.  The headline alone was worth the read: New Ways to Help Chickens Cross to the Other Side.  The more I read, the more I thought, how much do I really want to know? Which was exactly the point.  Chickens running around freely are more appealing than the cooped-up ones.  Grass-fed beef is better for cows and the environment, not to mention those higher-ups on the food chain who like their burgers free of e Coli or prion-causing TSEs like Mad Cow Disease. Eating is becoming risky business.  Even vegetarians have things to worry about. Glycerides? Glycerol from animal fats. Gelatin? Proteins from animal bones, cartilage, tendons, and skin. Pepsin? Enzymes gathered from the stomachs of pigs.

My mother could have cared less about all of this. And yet, a chicken (kosher only) with any discoloring on the skin or a single, unplucked feather was simply not acceptable. She liked her poultry cut into pieces; a whole chicken was just too much of a reminder that something had to be killed before spiced up and baked.  If she were alive today, and I tried to tell her about “slow induction anesthesia” (a.k.a. the ‘humane’ gassing chickens with carbon dioxide before killing them), she would conveniently miss the point (“They’d never do that to kosher chickens.”)  If I persisted in telling her where Temple Grandin weighed in on the issue – “Chickens  don’t like being hung upside-down. They get really stressed out by that.” (i.e., better to keep them in the dark before the slaughter) – she would probably snicker, remind me I was always picking at my food, and anyway, what kind of name is Temple Grandin?

Don’t misunderstand me. I prefer my food organic, unsprayed, unprocessed.  There is a difference between grass-fed and grain-fed beef, both in the cooking and the taste. The thought of any animal suffering does cause me distress and, yes, I’m thankful for those industry watchdogs on the case: modern times demand a certain acquiescence to the simple truth that a trip to the supermarket or the butcher or the farm stands that make local, seasonal produce available is the closest I’ll get to hunting and gathering. And I understand the need, on the part of food manufacturers to make their products palatable, linguistically and otherwise. But sometimes I find myself caught in that place where no amount of marketing spin is going to the change the reality that, stressed or not, the chicken had better be dead before I eat it.

Visit Deborah Batterman’s personal site here.

Modern love

My husband does not own a cell phone. This is no Luddite, holier-than-thou holdout. He doesn’t need one, he insists, case closed.  He has a two-line phone for his business and only recently made a big technological leap, from an old-fashioned answering machine (the tape was beginning to crackle) to the state-of-the-art answering services provided by Verizon. Anyone wants to reach him when he’s out of the office doing errands, tough luck.  I forget something on the list of grocery items I gave him, too bad. He has nothing kind to say about drivers on their cell phones, except that they’re accidents waiting to happen.  The proof is in the telling, a woman who shot past him in her SUV, into the left-turn lane at an intersection, cell phone glued to her ear, a near-miss with an oncoming car. He bristles if a cell phone rings in a restaurant (I don’t like it myself). And yet . . .

My daughter and I switched to AT&T so she could get her first iPhone two years ago, now we both have them. I couldn’t help myself. It’s that encroaching technology thing. Or do I mean enticing? My first cell phone was basic, no frills, family plans making two phones (almost) more economical than a single-user plan, especially with my daughter going off to college;  next came the picture phone (like, why not, even if I almost never used it?).  Texting took me some time to get a handle on. Then there was the simple question – do I really want to be that available 24/7? – which turned itself into a twisted logic, Mad Men doing what they do best: you need a cell phone, I’m told. Just in case.

Need? My husband smirks. We did just fine, maybe even better, before cell phones, thank you very much. He thinks my daughter calls too much. Only when she needs me, I explain. (Let me say it again, need.) It makes him edgy, the beep of a text message while we’re watching a TV show or movie.  When do we let go?

All of which places me smack in the middle of a modern-day love triangle. I love my tech-wary husband, he’s the one I live with. I love my tech-savvy daughter, so far and still so near.

My husband believes that cell phones will be the downfall of civilization. He is convinced that dependency on cell phones is going to backfire one day, turn us into a nation of nervous wrecks. Watching him use mine, when we’re in the car together and a friend of his (or our daughter) really really really needs (ha!) to talk to him, is always good for a laugh. He speaks loudly into it, as if it’s more toy than phone.

My daughter e-mails me a list of must-have apps for my iPhone, among them At Bat Lite (for dad, she says).

My husband says he can just as easily check baseball stats on his computer, no need to have them on-the-go.

My daughter e-mails me a link re: ebook publishing, something she thinks I should consider. She consults with me via text messages re: her job search, her job frustrations, and calls me when the stresses of health insurance, car insurance, moving to a new apartment, and generally trying to make it on her own get a little overwhelming.  Also for some recipe and shopping advice.  Right now her most urgent need is a visit home, to see our ailing dog.

We’re too dependent on gadgets, says my husband. Forget the GPS. Look to the sun for direction.

Visit Deborah Batterman’s personal site here.

Just when you thought it was safe…

The opening sequence of Nicole Holofcener’s “Please Give” is a laugh-out-loud montage that rings poignantly true to any woman (and that’s most of us over fifty) who dutifully does the annual torturing of the breast otherwise known as a mammogram. To a backdrop of the Roches singing “No Shoes,” breasts in all sizes, all shapes are pinched and positioned for that no-smile (don’t even think of saying ‘cheese’), hold-your-breath picture. In a film that is as much about love and guilt and responsibility as it is about the way the smallest gesture can make a difference in someone’s life, poking some fun at a procedure that is anything but matter-of-fact imparts a touch of irony.  It is the job of the X-ray technician, in this case, Rebecca Hall, to get it right. She does the best she can.

Cut to a small waiting room in a large medical group, Anywhere USA. Three women are seated, no eye contact. One is reading a book, another filling out an intake form. The third, yours truly, is riffling through a magazine, trying to make sense of words I’m having trouble reading.  Down the narrow hallway there is laughter, the camaraderie of technicians on a break, which should reassure me of their humanity.  But there’s something about being in this room, with its cheerless furnishings and walls painted a color you forget the minute you’re out of there, that makes waiting itself an act of survival.  I should be better equipped to deal – with all those good breathing skills I practice and the 1 mg of Ativan that I save for times like this. And yet, anxiety, by its very nature, is rooted in something unknown; the waiting – first to get the procedure over with, then to get the results – only makes it worse.  If there’s any reassurance to be had, it’s in knowing I’m not alone in feeling the way I do.

A woman, just out of the X-ray room, takes a seat next to me. She breaks the ice, tells me about her daughter, high-risk but so far/so good, and her own health issues.  She has reason to be thankful for screening procedures, despite the anxiety they give rise to.  It’s hard to disagree, and yet, looking around the room, all of us in those gowns that hide nothing, really, I imagine every woman saying to herself, ‘please let me not be called back in for another X-ray.’ Even if it’s just for a clearer picture. Please let it not be me.

It’s a vicious cycle: anxiety over breast cancer sends us for mammograms, which in turn give rise to an anxiety that some say may outweigh the benefits. And yet the abstraction of statistical odds is no measure against the power of one, you know the story well, a woman alive today because of early detection. Now we have the latest study, hot off the press, do the math yourself:  state-of-the-art treatment, coupled with mammograms for women 50-69 years of age, reduced the death rate by 10 percent, in contrast to the 15-25 percent it was decades ago; for women over 70 who availed themselves of new treatment but no mammograms, the death rate fell by 8 percent.  What’s a sensible woman to do?

The technician calls me back into the X-ray room, uh-oh. She has learned not to show alarm, the truth being there may be no cause at all for it. And yet those heart-pounding minutes of waiting – again – for the radiologist’s reading (nothing suspicious, she will, thankfully, tell me) seem like a lifetime.

Visit Deborah Batterman’s personal site here.

The Great Divide

The phone rings, ten A.M., Sunday morning, not an alarming hour for a call except if it’s from the other coast, three hours earlier, my daughter in L.A.  The distress in her voice is much too high, the anxiety palpable. She could not sleep last night, she tells me, some intense pain in her chest keeping her awake.  Too many episodes of Grey’s Anatomy and House have infused her consciousness with the horribly scary, even if unrealistic, things that can happen to young people. I do my best to reassure her, the voice of reason. Mommy, 3,000 miles away.  I can’t fathom that my daughter, all of twenty-three, is having a heart attack, even if it’s the place her very frightened soul is taking her.  Without seeing her, without being able to comfort her with a touch of my hand, all I can do is give her some long-distance TLC (keep taking long deep breaths) and some very motherly advice: If the pain does not go away or worsens, I tell her, get a friend to take you to the emergency room; if it does ease up (which I assume it will), go to the doctor tomorrow.

As a parent, I pride myself on not being of the helicopter variety (okay, maybe I hover a little). During my daughter’s college years – lucky for me, right here in the Northeast – I was privy to only as much as she wanted me to be, school-wise and otherwise.  College, transition that it’s supposed to be, is packaged independence, safety net and all: you need me, I’m seconds away by phone, three hours by car. When she went off to New Zealand for her junior semester abroad, I ached at the sight of her wheeling her luggage away from me in the airport. This was a BIG step, the other side of the planet, and, mixed in with my tears was a certain pride that the young woman my husband and I raised had a sense of adventure that would only take her places she felt ready to explore.  The funniest (now classic) e-mail we received came with the subject line: Guess what I did this weekend! and a photo worth a million words, my daughter, goggles and all, minutes before a tandem sky-dive.

Yet somehow my heart could more easily handle the thought of her thrill-seeking free-fall from a plane than the heartburn/acid reflux/anxiety spiral that grips her, no warning signs, no easy fix. Other species may send their young off to fend for themselves earlier than humans do, but other species do not anguish over whether their offspring, near or far, are making good choices or worry that all those early years of solicitous parenting were not enough preparation for the sobering transition to life after college. If my daughter were nearby, within easy reach, I could cook nourishing meals, see the smile on her face when she hugs the dog, refrain from calling into question the blessing I gave her to follow her bliss.  Text messages across a great divide are just not the same though I’m thankful for the ease of communication. Once a day I need to hear her voice and she needs to hear mine. I’m better than Xanax, she tells me.

There’s a photo of my daughter that I keep on my bookshelf, an all-time favorite, kindergarten. She’s sitting at a table, oh-so-pretty in purple plaid, her cheek resting in her hand, a smile that speaks worlds about innocence and joy.  Sometimes it seems like a lifetime ago, other times just like yesterday.

Visit Deborah Batterman’s personal site here

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