“Pepe Le Pew Won’t Be Appearing In Warner Bros’ ‘Space Jam’ Sequel.”
I stopped and I read it again. And again.
Seriously?
Seems it was decided well before this cancel culture generation jumped on their latest bandwagon as far back as July 2019 when the black and white kitty who was the object of his affections for years filed a restraining order against him.
WHAT!??!!
Are they even serious???????
Speaking from my childhood and looking back on Looney Tunes as an adult, I remember how I could not wait to watch Saturday morning cartoons. I would lie across the floor in our wood paneled den after a quick breakfast of Lucky Charms (only ate the charms!) and a game of paper football with my brother to watch it with much delight!
The antics of all of the characters bring back so many wonderful memories to me! Pepe le Pew reminded me of the little boy in second grade who used to chase all of us girls around the playground for a kiss. Innocence.
Now we have scripts where Pepe is being hit with a restraining order?
Innocence lost.
Am I the only one who sees the issue here?
You start with something that is meant to be entertainment, but someone finds a way to make it something dark or dirty. How does someone wake up in the morning and try to change the world’s perspective on a cartoon character? Was it meant to be that way? Certainly not, but I am sure 007 will be next on the hit list as seduction is now being played up as supporting rape culture.
I am sure someone will now come back at me and say I am playing down a serious subject. Not at all. I am more concerned we are censoring a skunk while lyrics and shows that depict rape and crimes seem to be acceptable. Even more so, I look at it the way children are taught hate. You place children of all sizes, backgrounds and colors on a playground and they do not know divide until an adult tells them it is “wrong”. A child does not react nor attacks based upon another until told.
Seriously?
Is everything in our lives going to be replaced with the way “they” (whoever they is…) want us to view things? We played spin the bottle as kids and now it is viewed as forced touching? We played “Ding Dong Ditch” and it is now viewed as harassment? What’s next?
I seriously do not get it.
I am sure “they” are going to come back and explain it to me. Tell me why I am wrong and why I need to see it their way. Tell me I am blinded by my own generation’s sight. Tell me I am hurting others by not asking for all of the things that stood for entertainment in my childhood be taken away.
“They” can tell me just about anything, but it will not cancel my view or my childhood.
Now, don’t get me wrong, I miss my Granny Baylor, my Momma’s mother, but I do not have the memories or the smiles imbedded in my soul of her the way I do of Granny Kinne. Maybe it is the redheaded Irish tie that binds us or the love of the written word, but I see so much of her here in my everyday life.
Mary Ann Connelly Kinne was a spitfire little Irish lady, only 4 foot 11 inches tall, but every inch, every area of her amplified a life of love and a life of giving. She was born in 1899 in Roxbury, Massachusetts after her father, Michael and her mother, Bridget, left Galway, Ireland to come to the United States. The States proved to be a lonely place for Bridget. She left May (as she was called) & her brother, Bill, with Michael. She took their brothers, Michael & John, back to Ireland.
I cannot imagine a mother leaving her children
I cannot imagine the effects it had on all involved.
I can only think it made Granny the strong woman she became later in life.
She met my Grandfather in Miami in 1925, married him there and moved to Springfield, Massachusetts where my father was born in 1927. She had a very close life with my Grandfather and Daddy. She diligently documented their lives in multiple scrapbooks and photographs. She stood by her husband as he drove as an Indy relief driver, worked as the Southeastern parts manager for Rolls Royce during the great depression and as he lost everything due to his alcoholism . His drinking affected their lives in many ways including never being able to lay down roots long enough to be settled. They spent their lives in Atlanta, Georgia, Columbia, South Carolina and multiple small towns in South Carolina until he found his sobriety. They found their way to Charleston in 1940 where they both became involved with AA. She spent her days volunteering at Stark General Hospital where she would script articles and send them to the families of the wounded soldiers. These were the things I read about in the Post and Courier and were handed down to me through Momma and Daddy, not the things I remembered.
Those were all of their memories.
Mine affected me so much more.
Mine were walking with my Mother to the front of Ashley Hall Manor each Thursday where we would wait with smiles and laughter for Granny to step off the steps of the Charleston city bus. She came every week in her freshly pressed housedress, pocketbook in hand and spent the day with us. I remember the smells of the iron hitting the line dried sheets and how she sang songs and told little Irish quips. I remember going to Sunday School at the Baptist church and being reprimanded for asking about Jesus, Mary and Joseph and the 15 cops!
I remember every word to Freckles, a very distinct Irish song about a mischievous little boy:
Freckles was his name. He always used to get the blame. For every broken window pane, oh, how they told him they’d scold him. And when he’d tease the girls, when in school, he’d pull their curls. He wasn’t much of a scholar, but fight, oh, buddy! The other fellows nose was always bloody. People used to coax, young Freckles to not to play his jokes, but how he teased the village folks, it was a shame. But when the cat had kittens up in the hay, one was black and seven were grey. Everybody yelled FRECKLES! He always got the blame.
I remember her joke about Don’t make love by the garden gate. Love may be blind, but the neighbor’s ain’t.I remember how she would take us, along with the neighborhood kids, downtown to the Riviera Theatre to see the latest Disney film release by city bus, of course. Not just once, but whenever there was something new. She made my favorite dolls their clothes, carefully pressed each and every pillow case and crocheted beautiful doilies for my Momma’s tables.
Granny Kinne has been gone now for 33 years.
She spent the last eight years of her life in an Alzheimer’s hold.
She didn’t know me or my siblings.
She didn’t know her own son.
In her head, she was a young girl on the arm of a handsome race care driver sitting on the steps of an antebellum home.
She was a shell of the woman I knew.
Gone the city bus, the singing, the spry little Irish lady.
I don’t think I ever really grieved her loss until I was in my forties. Maybe because when she died we had already lost her years before, maybe it was my own selfishness of youth. It has taken my own years to begin to catch up with me to see how much of her resides in my soul.
I have an affinity for freshly ironed sheets.
I sing Freckles whenever I have a child on my lap and hope that song lives on with them and is passed along.
I will occasionally wear a hat that will have my sister shout out “love your Granny Kinne hat!” I know my sister knows I picked that hat purely out of love and memories.
I guess my black yoga pants are my Granny’s housedress. I always carry a pocketbook –never a purse. I hold close the lovely works she crocheted close to heart and in my home. Her Apostleship of Prayer tag which is pasted on felt resides in my camera bag. Her Saint Anne laminated card stays in my wallet reminding me that my Granny is in heaven watching over me daily.
I know she is smiling that I have become the Catholic she always prayed I would be.
I can still get a rise from her little Irish ways!
She gave me so much more than I ever realized.
I can only hope I leave the same impression on someone’s soul.
It is seems there is such a stigma attached to anything “Covid”.
If you wear a mask, you are losing your rights or you are doing your part. If you socially distance, you are being a victim of the hype or you are trying to help the spread. If you get tested…well…
“It’s all a conspiracy.”
“My friends got tired of waiting in line and left. Their results came back positive.”
“The numbers are going up because of the numbers of people who are testing.”
You name it and you will get an opinion.
Well, here is mine. I decided to get tested a few weeks ago. Not as much for myself, but for the health of an older family member who lives with me. I called and scheduled an appointment a week and a half out..
Appointment day rolled around and I drove into the next town with my husband where a policeman waited to give me entry based upon the number I was given during my appointment call. I had brought my husband along for the ride and we both looked around at what the scene was in a strange amazement.
It looked like a weird scene out of a bizarre science fiction movie. People outfitted in hazmat gear. A line of cars streaming around a little country church like we were in a funeral procession. It was odd.
They checked my info and we waited for the testing tent where you drove up with an orange cone placed in the front and behind your vehicle. (I still do not know exactly what that was for–again, very odd.)
The persons capturing your specimen then appeared at the driver’s side window. I double checked my info and then was given instructions on how the test would be performed. The lady suggested I grab my steering wheel with my left hand and then use the right to squeeze mu husband’s hand.
Ten seconds, she said.
Longest damn ten seconds I have ever experienced.
I squeezed the steering wheel, cut off my husband’s circulation and my feet came off the floorboard as she scraped up my nose somewhere near my brain.
No fun.
None.
She handed me a tissue and gave me the instructions on how to pull my results online.
And I waited…
I pulled the site up, solely out of curiosity 5 days later.
To my surprise, the results were in:
Human RNA was not detected on initial and repeat analysis. This is likely due to insufficient acquisition of RNA during collection. Reliable results could not be obtained. Recommend recollection.
WHAT? Inconclusive.
Less than an hour later I received a call from someone with the state of Georgia explaining that about 20 percent of what was taken in my county during that day came back as inconclusive. She explained that “not sure if was operator or lab error, but we got a bunch of them back like this. You will have to test again.”
Two days later the county called to explain that my results were inconclusive.
Really? I told them what the state said.
Crickets.
So, they scraped the lower quadrant of my brain and they knew nothing.
I knew I was over it and there was no way I was having this done a second time. I would not go back through that, no, uh uh, nada, not happening…
A month has gone by now and as I type to close this out I wonder how many more people had the same experience? I wonder if they felt the same way I had and walked away with the “I’ll take my chances” attitude? I wonder, quite honestly, what is the real truth?
Truth.
Now, there is a subject I would like to hear more about…
I read an interesting article the other day about what to look for when searching for the best career: “Think back to a time when you were at your best, at your happiest…what were you doing at the time?”
For me, I have been blessed with teams and companies where we ALL grew–working for three privately held companies. Three jobs that never felt like work. Three jobs where my growth potential was tied to care. Three jobs were I worked my tail off. Three jobs where my imagination and drive allowed me to grow people and sales. Three companies that were led by dreamers and doers.
I was happy.
It took a collaborative approach. No one was right. No one was wrong. We all were “allowed” to be ourselves, but knowing you took full responsibility for that self–good or bad.
You were accountable.
It sounds like such a far away world today.
I have a former team member I wrote a letter of recommendation for last week. She said it best. She said she was always supported to be the top dog even when she was the runt of the litter. Even when she did not know all she needed to know, she was celebrated as being damn good at her job. She didn’t know it all, but she had the drive and personality to light up a city block. She certainly was not doing nothing and getting a participation trophy.
She was learning.
She worked hard at being what she was being transported into being and she grew. She is now one of the top reps in the professional beauty industry.
Why?
Because she could be herself. The good, the bad…we cultivated her skills, but we never chained her spirit.
I remember when I went from sales into management. I was a great salesperson. I loved my customers. I never wanted to go into management. I was not given a choice due to a buy out. I was not a good manager in the beginning.
Why?
Because I managed people like they were me. My skill set, my drive…we were headed down a bad path. It took someone telling me that “I didn’t get it, call me back when you do”. (He promptly hung up on me.)
Another two months of mediocrity and stress went by until I really “got” it. I had nine women working for me, one with about nine personalities of her own and I wanted them to be me. It was an easier path, I thought.
I was wrong.
“Me” was okay, but it did not elevate them to where they needed to be. I needed to address their own strengths and virtues. Once I did, they shined above every team in the country. No one had free reign. We had rules. We had boundaries.
We had talent and passion beyond measure.
What we had most was mutual respect.
My current company has just been purchased. Do I know where I will land? Of course, not. I have been through buy outs in the past. What I can tell you is that both changed the culture of the original company. What was unique, became ordinary. What was a once creative space became a small box with large walls. Both became like everyone else’s companies: run of the mill.
This time, maybe not. Maybe the change will be an opportunity for true growth, after all, isn’t change in itself an opportunity? Who knows? I may even change in the process.
Still, I applaud the companies that recognize individuality. It seems all, but lost, in the world today. You are expected to think like the mainstream. You are all, but punished, for having your own ideals. You are managed by a script.
We need people and companies that maintain the uniqueness of the people who make the whole. My best memories of success were never with just a solo picture of myself.
And, we wonder why people have to think back to a time of happiness.
(This was written seven years ago. Momma would have turned 95 today. I made her recipe on Sunday to share with friends. You should, too! You will not be disappointed…)
Momma would have been 88 today. Even more, she would have been a young 88. She would have been immersed in us kids and would have jumped at the chance to go shopping with us girls, to spend time with her grandkids and would have still loved being in her kitchen cooking with so much love.
As she always said, she would have been giving us girls a “run for your money” had she been born during our time. She was a classic, a true beauty, her own woman and the best Momma anyone could have asked for. We kids each received a piece of her personality and talents–my sister received her compassion, my brother–her will to always see the better, and myself–her baking expertise and love for the written word.
So, in honor of “Tukie” being 88 with Jesus and the apostles, here is her infamous Mighty Good Chocolate Cake recipe:
MIGHTY GOOD CHOCOLATE CAKE
1 cup butter
1/4 cup cocoa
1 cup water
2 cups of sugar
2 cups of all purpose flour
1/2 cup buttermilk
2 eggs (beaten)
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon vanilla
Put butter, water, cocoa in pan and cook until boiling. Pour over sugar and flour and mix thoroughly. Add buttermilk, eggs, soda, and vanilla. Mix well. Pour into greased 15 X 10″ pan. Bake at 400* degrees for 20 minutes. (depends on oven) WHILE CAKE IS BAKING PREPARE FROSTING: 1/2 cup butter or oleo 1/4 cup cocoa 6 tablespoons whole milk 1 lb. box confectioner sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup chopped pecan nuts Combine butter, cocoa, milk and cook until boiling. Remove from heat; ad powdered sugar, vanilla and nuts. Mix will. Spread on cake while the cake is still hot.
I miss you everyday. You are alive in my heart as well as in my dreams. I hope you are dancing with Daddy, laughing with Mackie and tossing a tennis ball with my Hannah.
I remember Momma saying how the years would fly by once I hit twenty five. She always demonstrated the passing of the years by blinking both eyes while saying “25…30…35…40…50…”
Like everything else Momma told me as a teenager, it went in one ear and out the other. She was right.
I blinked and the years have sped right by. It somehow seems so surreal. One day you are dancing at your favorite club on Market Street and the next day you are at your orthopedist asking how the hell you can’t place your arm to touch the center of your back any longer.
Then, I thought about my Momma.
I thought about her mother’s, my grandmother, story about the chinquapin patch:
There was a young girl and she spent her day walking through the chinquapin patch with her Grandmother. Her Grandmother told her to pick the most perfect one as they made their way through the patch. As she walked, she would pick up the spiny nuts and, one by one, she would put them down. One would be too small, another too prickly. One would be cracked, another not shiny enough. She had a hard time not finding one covered in its thorns. One by one, she picked one up just to find a flaw so she went to the next. Until she got to the end and she was empty handed.
Momma seemed to tell us this story at least once a year. She reminded us that we were too particular about things: clothes, apartments or houses, boys…The version she told my older sister went like this:
A young boy sat with his Grandmother and asked her how she married his Granddaddy. She said “Let’s go for a walk”. On the walk she said for him to pick put the best stick he could find along the way. Some were short. Some were long. Some were weak. Some were strong, but none were good enough. He would pick one up just to replace it with another. He ended up at the end of the trail with nothing but a twig. He sat and cried, holding the scrawny twig in his little hand. His Grandmother simply replied, “And that is how I married your Grandfather…”
Two stories. The same ending, both about not ending up with what you wanted.
Regret…
We walk through life, sometimes running. When we are younger, we think we are indestructible. Little things don’t seem to worry us because it is about the big picture and how we are going to look, feel and how it affects us. We think we have all of the time in the world.
We look at life shortsightedly. We never know if we will walk the path and get the prize or will we end up empty handed.
My Mother lived with regret. On her death bed, she spoke about all of the things she wished she had done, the places she longed to visit, the experiences she felt she had missed. It was very sad, really, but it was also a wake up call.
It led my sister to follow her dream of opening her own restaurant.
It has led me to writing again and planning my next steps in food and heart.
We all walk through our own patches in life. Some are moments of blind faith where you jump in with your soul and land on your feet. Some are periods of falling over and over again because you get stuck with a burr in your heart or head.
Those are the tough ones–the ones where you get in your own way.
In life, there are mistakes and there are lessons. The mistakes are the ones we do voer and over again, but they do not have to define us. The lessons teach us to look harder, to search deeper, to love harder.
I guess, you could say, I am still walking through the Chinquapin patch.