Archive for February, 2010

Southern Ladies…

…can get away with just about anything as long as they start with “Bless his/her heart…” or end with “…God love him/her.”

Really, it’s criminal.

BLESS HER HEART...

You know you’ve heard it.  And I think it’s spreading all over the country.  People can make fun of the South all they want, but secretly – I think you’d love to be able to just tell it like it is sometimes, and Steel Magnolias from Richmond to Dallas know the trick.

Just a few examples if you don’t mind:

Bless her heart…

…She can’t help being ugly, but she could have stayed home.

…Betsy’s a wonderful baker, but I’m afraid to eat anything from a kitchen that dirty!

And then there’s the “God love her” thing.  “Bless her heart” is reserved for minor to major insults.  “God love him/her” is for serious character asassination.

“God love her”…

…10 children, she couldn’t say no to an ugly midget.

…she’s a wonderful person, but with that sorry husband, she’s just too much work.

…if she hadn’t married money, she’d have no taste at all.

You’ve met them, seen them on TV and in the movies, and you may have even quoted one of them here or there.

You know who they are, the Julia Surgarbakers and Clairee Belchers of the world, the women you love to hate and want to be.

One of my favorite scenes from Steel Magnolias is when Clairee and Truvy are talking abou the new park dedication…

Clairee: I’ve just been to the dedication of the new children’s park.
Truvy: Yeah, how did that go?
Clairee: Janice Van Meter got hit with a baseball. It was fabulous.
Truvy: Was she hurt?
Clairee: I doubt it. She got hit in the head.

The only thing missin’ was a “God love her” or “Bless her heart”.

So, if somebody winds UP a sentence with “Bless your heart”, get ready, you’re about to be slammed.  And if they end it with “God bless you/her/him”, well, it wasn’t meant to hurt – more’n a little anyway.

…before that piece of junk in your attic – basement – garage – closet winds UP being worth something.

Take this for example…

PIECE O' CRAP

This 1980s era Nintendo system complete with games sold for $13,105 on e-bay.

Really, what did it cost brand new?  A couple a hundred bucks?

It amazes me what people collect, what they are willing to pay for something, and how much and how long they will look for “THE” item to complete the collection.

Now, UP is a collector, so I’m one of “those people”.   I’ve been buying and selling antique and collectible dishes and other decorative items for 30 years.  I’ve sold items to Movie Studios, Interior Decorators, and collectors.

I have a collection of three toed bowls.

FENTON LIME SHERBERT THREE TOED BOWL

I have a collection of books.

BOOKS!

I have a collection of antique family photographs.

YOU'RE WHO'S RELATIVE

I have seven sets of dishes, mostly Depression Glass, but a few sets of China to boot.

CORONATION PATTERN WATER GLASS

And, I have a collection of punch bowls.  Five of them to be exact!

 MY FAVORITE PUNCH BOWL

And my Christmas Punch Set -

MY RED PUNCH SET

Just what everyone needs.

I live in fear that the people from “Hoarders” will show UP and take over my house.

So, I kinda have a read on collecting and collectors.  One of my friends collects classic scale model cars.  One collect Mr. Peanut things, another collects computers.  He has one of every AT&T computer ever made.  Theyare useless, except to him, just as most collections are.

I’m always amazed at what people will collect.

And what they will pass UP on the way to collect “their thing”.

But, Nintendos?

Really, there is no taste left in America.

It started with Beanie Babies.  When I was selling 70 year old Depression Glass, an item with history, artistic value, and creativity, people would trot by my booth at the antique mall so fast, my hair would flutter.  They were all heading for the Beanie Babies. 

Rags, stuffed with beans, really.  And I’ll admit, the daughter, has a a bunch.  After 9-11, the antique business dropped off a tad.  And with today’s economy, it has to be a real rarity to command attention, much less a price. 

But, just as everything else in the world changes from time to time, it will come back.  It may be Nintendo today, or Vinyl Albums (again) tomorrow, but everything comes back. 

People love to say, “Mama had one just like that!”  It becomes a must have.  Or, “My Grandma used to serve me cereal in that old Beatles Cereal bowl.”  And it’s a required item. 

So, hang on to it.  Store it away.  You just never know when someone will be looking for a Greatful Dead T-shirt or might “hafta have” a Magic Bullet!

Check The Weather Channel…

…to see if Hell has frozen over!

I actually agree with Jay-z!

Jay-Z doesn’t like the new version of “We Are The World”, and neither do I.

MR. BEYONCE!

As a matter of fact, Jay-Z said it shouldn’t have been remade.  Again, I concur.

The first version, no matter what anyone thinks of it was an iconic classic filled with great singing by great singers.  It was a novel idea at the time…Farm Aid aside…thank you Willie!

Mr. Beyonce told MTV News Saturday night at the 2 Kings Dinner in Dallas, “I know everybody is gonna take this wrong: ‘We Are the World,’ I love it, and I understand the point and think it’s great. But I think ‘We Are the World’ is like Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’ to me. I don’t ever wanna see it touched.”

Not only did he marry well, he’s very wise indeed. 

The Original, was great, included such greats as Dianna Ross, Dionne Warwick, Willie Nelson, Bob Dylan, Tina Turner, Kim Carnes, Huey Lewis, and my all time fave, stuck over in the corner next to LaToya, Bette Midler!

The new one has a rap section, and features a bunch of thugs and criminals including Justin Beiber and Barbra Streisand.

And you know, you can’t spell crap without rap!

The producers decided this time around to remove the only Biblical reference, you know, the one about “turning stones to bread”.

I don’t mean to be insensitive or unkind…wait for it…but how in the name of Lindsay Lohan did Wyclef Jean get a recording contract?  And wasn’t it nice of Lil Wayne to take time out of his dental appointments and court dates to pop in for a solo?

And the nerve of Celine Dion doing the Cindy Lauper part!  Really…take that whiny dog whistle of a voice back to Montreal!

Frankly, if it weren’t for Jennifer Hudson and Pink…it would be worthless.

What did Jay-Z want to do?

He says they should have made a new song.  Says the Jayster, “I think it’s time for us to make a new song.  I tried to do that with ‘Stranded,’ (the song he, Rihanna, Bono, and the Edge premiered at the “hope for Haiti Now” telethon.  He added “I didn’t try to make ‘We Are the World,’ but I tried to make our take on how we felt.”

Jay-Z’s right, the orignial was a classic, it should have been left to stand, and it’s not just because Jay-Z wasn’t there.

Take That You Big Bully…

Take it from someone who knows.  Bullies are a pain in the butt.

I was a small child, wore todler clothes to the first grade, and I weighed in at 37 pounds, I was six years old.

A walking target.

PUT ME DOWN!

Well, researchers have found that kids who get bullied and snubbed by peers are probably gonna’ have problems in other parts of their lives as well.

No kiddin?

Supposedly, there are at least three factors in a child’s behavior that can lead to social rejection.  (Social rejection, now isn’t that a pretty phrase for bullied?)

The causes are, according to researchers:

  1. Reading nonverbal cues.
  2. Understanding their social meaning
  3. Thinking of options to resolve social conflicts.

Those who are supposed to know say that 10 to 13 percent of children “experience some sort of social rejection”.   I’m not so sure where they got these numbers, but I’m guessin’ it’s a tad higher.  Everyone is rejected socially at one point or another.  But, not everyone is bullied.

They also tell us in this report that being bullied can result in mental health problems, can increase the polibility that a child will get poor grades, drop out of school, or develop substance abuse problems.   Clark McKown of the Rush Neurobehavioral Center in Chicago says, “It really is an under-addressed public health issue.”

Another ‘expert’ says what a kid learns on the playground could show up in later life.  He claims that when children interact without the guidance of an authority figure,  is when children experiment with the relationship styles they will have as adults.

Ok, who’s leaving their kids alone?  I’m sorry, I can’t even fake surprise on that one.

It all stems from the fact that the number one need of any person is to be liked by other people.  Well duh!

We all want to be liked, but we’re not all gonna’ like everybody. 

After a boat load of studies, and a truck load of money, they claim to have found a few things.

  1. Kids don’t see clues.
  2. Kids don’t understand clues.
  3. Kids don’t know how to react to clues.

They even have a book now that they are recommending.  “It’s So Much Work to Be Your Friend: Helping the Child with Learning Disabilities Find Social Success” (Touchstone, 2006).  I’m sure it’s just an awesome read!  And they claim it works for kids who don’t have disabilites as well. 

These experts have a “process”, and it’s all geared to the bullied, not the bully.

To teach social skills, Lavoie advises a five-step approach in his book.  He claims the process works for children with or without learning disabilities and is best conducted immediately after a transgression has been made.  (Transgression being made by the bullied!!!!)

1) Ask the child what happened and listen without judgment.

2) Ask the child to identify their mistake. (Often children only know that someone got upset, but don’t understand their own role in the outcome.)

3) Help the child identify the cue they missed or mistake they made, by asking something like: “How would you feel if Emma was hogging the tire swing?” Instead of lecturing with the word “should,” offer options the child “could” have taken in the moment, such as: “You could have asked Emma to join you or told her you would give her the swing after your turn.”

4) Create an imaginary but similar scenario where the child can make the right choice. For example, you could say, “If you were playing with a shovel in the sand box and Aiden wanted to use it, what would you do?”

5) Lastly, give the child “social homework” by asking him to practice this new skill, saying: “Now that you know the importance of sharing, I want to hear about something you share tomorrow.”

I for one, think this is a bunch of crap. 

The only thing they got right is listen to the child without judgement.  Now, there’s a parenting tip I can live with.

As to asking the child to identify their mistake: being smaller, stranger, or just different isn’t a mistake.  Ask the bully why he’s a jerk.

I don’t think the kid missed anything other than the opportunity to get the heck out of there before “Felon of the Future” jumped him.  And maybe Emma’s just a big, mean, hateful, future skank!  And maybe he’s just a little wuss!

I think kids have enough imaginary scenarios as it is.  Are mommy and daddy gonna stay together;  am I gonna’ get to the bus without gettin’ my ass kicked?; is the sadistic gym teacher gonna’ make me stand out front in dodge ball?  (OK, I’m not over a few things.)

Social homework? You can’t get most kids to do the homework from school.   Teach the kid to fight, tell him to kick the bully’s ass or die tryin’!

Other kids not liking a child is not the end of the world. Surprising as it is, there are people out there who don’t like me!   But it has nothing to do with bullying.   The kid may have gotten a swirlie because the bigger boys didn’t like him, or as I said before, he may just be a big wuss.  But that doesn’t make it his fault.  The bigger boys are at fault here. 

Apparently that “do unto others” crap was lost in translation.

Maybe I was a little dweeb and pantywaist, but that sure as heck didn’t make it right for El Kabong (a girl in the 3rd grade) to kick my ass everyday on the playground.  Thank God that tramp moved that summer!

And maybe Courtney has blue hair, wears fishnet stockings, and anarchy gloves, but I don’t remember a law being passed saying we should fail her, rail at her, or flog her.

Bullies are bullies.  Bullies need to be stopped. 

BAD BUMPER STICKER, BAD!

Just because the kid next to you in class is weird or just because you can, doesn’t mean you should take his lunch money. 

Sadly, there are bullies in all walks of life.  Middle School, High School, College and the workplace are all just extensions of Elementary School.  Generally, once a bully, always a bully.  And conversely, one would think once bullied, always bullied. 

Ah, not so.

There’s a way out.

So, to everyone of you who’s been beat UP, stuffed in a locker, dragged into the girls room, had toothpaste put in your hair at camp while sleeping, or had someone take your dessert at lunch, I say this:

Shut UP, Stand UP, get mad as hell and don’t take it anymore.