Saturday, June 27, 2015

Bruce and Grandma C

"Goodwin Procter is an equal opportunity employer. We hire, train, and promote without regard to race, color, gender, gender identity or expression, age, religion, national origin, citizenship status, disability, medical condition, genetic information, marital status, sexual orientation, military or veteran status or other legally protected status."

Grandma C grew up in the world of novenas, daily mass and regular graveside prayers for the dead.  Devotion not much different from that of her roots in Portugal and Italy, though she grew up in Boston and attended Girls' Latin School in Roxbury.  For her conservative parents high school with young WASP and African-American women was preferable to proximity to young men of any race or creed.

Grandma C was also devoted to work and became a crackerjack legal secretary at a wealthy Boston law firm.  Her sons and daughters attended Harvard, Yale and Boston College.  Born a generation later, Grandma might have been a lawyer at the firm instead of a secretary.  That didn't matter to her.  She was content with her faith and rituals, taking care of her children and family, and preparing for the festival of Christmas.  Puritan New England defined itself through work and material success.  Latin New England expressed itself with food and art.  Christmas in the Chicarello household was a two-day feast, including hand made ravioli, lobsters, spaghetti with lobster sauce and cannoli.  The artist was exhausted by the end of the feast, but what a show.

Her sons might have called him unpleasant names, but Bruce was Grandma's work buddy.  This didn't soften the blow when Bruce arrived one morning dressed as Caitlyn.  Grandma passed out when she learned this was a permanent arrangement and that she was going to have to share the ladies room with Caitlyn.  The law firm advised Grandma that they would provide her with professional counselling to help deal with her problems concerning Caitlyn and the ladies room.  They never made the logic quite clear on why Grandma, and not Caitlyn, was the one who had to deal with the problem of sharing a rest room with anatomically correct men.





 

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Tugboat Annie and the Condom Factory



There really was a Tugboat Annie and more than one.  Ours was a friend of my father's Long Beach neighbor, Alice Murtha.  Annie was a big, rough cigar smoking woman who was a tugboat captain in New York harbor. 

One afternoon, while visiting Alice, my young father let out that he was looking for a job.  The mistake was doing this in the presence of Annie.  Maybe he wanted to work on Annie's tugboat.  Ever helpful Annie said she knew a man who'd give young Jim a job.  She gave him a name, an address, the Acme Rubber Co., and a note of introduction.

Innocently, young Jim showed up at Acme for a job interview.  The owner was very polite and said he'd love to hire my father... I can tell you're a very nice young man ... but are you really sure you want to work here?   This is what we make.  The owner pulled a condom out of his desk drawer.  Not long removed from Regis Catholic High School and being an alter boy, my father turned red with embarrassment.  He couldn't speak.  The man said, I understand, son.   Annie was having some cruel fun with you.  I'm sorry.

Friday, June 12, 2015

The Witch Child of Kansas City

Social media is the curse of the 21st century.  You're instantly introduced to all sorts of people you don't want to hear from.   As a rule I decline all attempts to "Friend" me on Facebook.  Not only have I never met most of these people, but too many of them are inclined to share their predictable and unwelcome political views.  I already get hate mail from AWAR (the Arizona White Aryan Resistance) for my opinions published in the Arizona Republic.  With enemies like that who needs "friends."

I reluctantly began accepting some requests for friendship after my sweet cousin Siobhan suggested I join Facebook to share family pictures.  Ok, I like pictures of cute babies, weddings, flowers and puppy dogs. 

I joined up and before long I had a legion of long-lost cousins inviting me to share with them.  Who wants to be rude to long-lost cousins, their wives, families, puppy dogs and cute babies. 

Silly me.  Before long the barrage of political messages started.  The university affiliated were the worst.  Who knew I belonged to a family of outraged progressives.  I made the mistake of responding to some of the messages, which earned me all sorts of pleasantries from the nasty friends of my long-lost cousins and the cousins' foul-mouthed, rude children.   I have my own children to deal with.  Who needs to hear from someone else's snippy kids.  At least mine aren't foul-mouthed.

I have a lot less friends now and hopefully more pictures of puppy dogs.


Thursday, June 11, 2015

The Spanish Prisoner: You Dirty Diseased Whore

For years my wife made me miserable and guilty whenever I left a waitress a generous tip.  Not just for years.  For my entire married life.  Have you no sympathy for the working class, the Hoi Poloi, Dear, says I.  None whatsoever.  Not one iota, came back the retort.   She stalked our restaurant bills like an angry tigress  after I filled in the tip and signed my name.  NOBODY TIPS THE NURSES!

Okay, I got it, Dear.

She knew the mass in Latin better than any alter boy, and was pissed off that she couldn't be one.  She was the smartest, hardest working girl in every class.  When her brother got an assignment to write an essay for the City of Boston Columbus Day contest, she wrote it for him and won the contest.  He got the credit and sat next to Senator Kennedy at the awards lunch.  She got to watch.

Since idle hands are the devil's workshop, in her spare time between being the smartest student and reciting the mass in Latin every Sunday, she went to work at 16 as a candy striper in the nursing home a few blocks from her house.  From one thankless task to another.

In the early 70s the Veterans Administration started farming out the old demented veterans.   A bunch of them went to my wife's nursing home.  The sweet devout candy striper who wrote uplifting Columbus Day essays was about have her education take a new path.

The demented veterans were pretty much completely out of control.  The candy stripers were prey.  A nursing home staffed with 16-year-old candy stripers was the Serengeti.  Hungry hyenas versus baby gazelles.   The nursing home's young gazelles learned fast to stay out of the grab and grope of the hyenas.  But being out of reach wasn't protection against being hit by a bed pan and its contents when the hyenas were in a foul mood.  Or being called a "dirty diseased whore" for some obscure reason possibly having to do with magazines or cigarettes.

The ordeal of the Serengeti ended after a year for the candy stripers when the veterans were moved to a facility better able to handle or ignore them.  A new group was moved in from a mental hospital.

My wife had never met her father's mother, who had been severely disturbed for many years.   The grandmother was a very bright woman who had came to America from the north of Spain, married and had two children.  Her disease became severely dysfunctional when my wife's father was a little boy.  She began to see insects everywhere and stuffed rags into the spaces around the doors to seal the bugs out of her son's bedroom at night.  By the time my wife met her, the grandmother had been locked away in an institution for over thirty years.  She recognized her granddaughter right away, though, was quite lucid most of the time, and very talkative.  What do you talk about with your granddaughter when you've done nothing for thirty years except look at the walls and try to brush off invisible bugs.  The two of them managed to find some common ground, maybe they even prayed together in Latin or Spanish.    I'll have to ask my wife about that some time.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Privilege: A Man's World

The Deloitte Houston office had over 200 professionals thirty years ago.   Prosperous from the oil boom, its offices were richly appointed.  The partners' offices had Louis XVI furniture.  The main lobby floor was covered with a large antique Persian rug, a little frayed at one remote corner, but that was okay.  It was an antique. 

At Christmas in addition to a special bonus, every staff member was given a new personal leather briefcase embossed in gold leaf with his or her initials.  Deloitte took great pleasure in reminding all that they were the Auditors' Auditor.  The office's premier clients were the Hughes Tool Company and the U.S. subsidiary of ARAMCO, the Arabian American Oil Company.   Deloitte hired only the very top accounting graduates.  In Houston they mostly came from Rice, the University of Texas and Texas A&M.  They worked endless hours and after their first year on the job the ones who couldn't keep up, about half, were gone.

His or her initials.  Deloitte, along with the rest of the accounting profession, was transforming itself.  It was no longer a man's world.  There were plenty of smart female accounting graduates and about half of the junior accountants and many of the managers were women.  Still the young women complained that it was a man's world:  "As long as Gene Harris is head of Audit, there will never be a woman partner."  I had to bite my tongue.  For some reason I had insider information above my pay grade and knew who the two women were who were slated for promotion to partner that year.  One, Caroline V was Gene Harris's protégé.   Caroline was a gorgeous blonde who could get away with wearing a business suit and, for Texas, short hair.   The other, Sally M, was all Texas with long black big hair and wore big, light colored, flowery dresses.  Gorgeous, too.  Ladybird Johnson with softer edges.

Today, Cathy Engelbert is CEO of Deloitte LLP, the largest professional services firm in the US with over 70,000 professionals.  She is married and has two children.

Martin X was the only black professional in the Deloitte offices thirty years ago.  There were no Mexicans.  The closest the office came on that score was one of my colleagues in the consulting group having a Mexican-American wife.  Hiring him was considered very enlightened.   The head of consulting was from Cornell, not Texas. 

Martin had one and only one assignment.  He was the manager for the audit of the Aramco Services Company.   It was a nice assignment, but it was also pretty much the only client he could be given back in the day in Texas.  The Arabs who owned the oil company were more accepting of a black professional than most Texans.  This was a nice opening for Deloitte Houston.  They could be enlightened, hire Martin, and give him a nice assignment.  Nobody, but nobody in Houston was going to do or say anything about it, since nobody, but nobody wanted to risk upsetting the Arabs, who considered themselves the leaders of a diverse Muslim world.

I've often wondered what Martin thought about this.  Practically overnight Deloitte had addressed its gender diversity issues, while he remained the Lone Ranger.  He soldiered on pleasantly.  He had a beautiful wife and the pay was great.   He probably ended up teaching at an MBA program for a couple of thou a year. 

Today, Deloitte doesn't look much different from Houston in the 1980s.  While minority youth languish unemployed in America's inner cities, Deloitte takes the lead in outsourcing America's technology jobs to India.

Monday, June 1, 2015

The Dragon Meets the Tongans

My son's Phoenix high school sits close to the demilitarized zone where the affluent rub shoulders (but mostly try not to) with the middle class and the children of migrants from Latin America, Africa and other far away lands.   My son sometimes gets caught up in this and remonstrates about his dislike for the aloof demeanor of the "rich" kids.  I try to explain to him that rich is a matter of perspective and very few, if any, of his schoolmates' families are in the category of playing poker with Andy Carnegie and JP Morgan rich like his great-great grandfather was.

Senior year fun at my son's high school includes assemblies where seniors perform all sorts of silliness for the merriment of the entire student body.   Understand that among the students from far away lands are the Tongans.   Tongans are immense and very hearty Pacific Islanders.  Think of them as Irishmen on steroids, who love a senior year prank as much as anyone.   They're the stalwart linemen of the high school football team and played basketball with my son.

A senior my son knows from baseball was featured at one of the assemblies.  He was asked what kind of animal he'd like to be.  Response:  a TONGAN.  This brought down the house, but got him suspended from school for a day.  Didn't matter that his Tongan friends had put him up to it.

The enlightened among the white affluent students were appalled by the racist outburst.   My son was appalled by the white students who were offended.  "They don't have any Tongan friends.  They don't even talk to them.  If they did, they'd know it was the Tongans' idea in the first place."

Then my son went with the story about how his friend from Sudan showed him a video titled "How to get Africans to go back to Africa."  It showed a boat full of watermelon and fried chicken.   When my son chuckled, one of the white enlightened who was looking on denounced him as a racist.  His response: "Hey, it's the guy from Sudan who you aren't even friends with who's showing the video."

A high school life lesson on hypocrisy.