CHAPTER 11: If ... Always a Teacher, Then Hardly ... Teachable
From "The Saga of One F**ked Mother"
“If...Always a Teacher, Then Hardly...Teachable” is Chapter 11 of Mother-Fucking: The Saga of One Fucked Mother. Dr. Blue’s novel is based on her own experience of the Post-Separation Crisis. It uniquely conveys how Family Court judges are Mother-Fucking women—a form of systemic violence directed at ex-wives—as protagonist Legion is methodically deprived of her children and money and reduced to One Fucked Mother.
In this chapter, Herry uses the silent treatment on Legion, which often lasts a month or more, to punish her for minor instances he perceives as stepping out of her role as Dr. Edinsmaier’s handmaid, his slave. This is one of the many forms of emotional abuse he uses to make Legion feel small and control her.
Herry also regularly degrades and dehumanizes Legion in front of the boys to damage their bond with, and estimation of, their mother. This abuse is used to indoctrinate the children, as well as to keep her in line. Just as Herry’s imperious father prepared him for a domineering role in his family, he is doing the same with his own boys. Hence, Herry is always the teacher and hardly teachable himself—he has no interest in, or use for, listening to Legion. She is, effectively, disappeared by him.
Herry escalates his crime of regularly exposing the boys to pornography by buying their oldest son a subscription to Playboy for his 11th birthday. He gaslights Legion by insisting it is a freedom of speech issue. It is bad enough she cannot stop Herry from showing their children smut, but when the kids start inviting their friends over to view it, Legion comes up with a clever solution…
This follows Chapter 10: in which Herry is shown to be an absent and cheating husband. His denigrating of Legion is at its height every August during her annual 10K run and two of the kids’ birthdays. While Legion implements a plan to take a year off from her career and enjoy being a full-time mom, Herry is secretly laying the foundation for leaving her—and taking the kids.
Chapters are stand-alone interesting so you can begin anywhere. A Cast of Characters follows to help readers beginning at any point. All published chapters are included in the Women’s Coalition News & Views Section: “The Saga of One F**ked Mother”—accessible on the top bar of our home page. Sequential chapters are published every Wednesday. Of course, subscribers will find each new chapter in their inboxes, so make sure to subscribe if you haven’t yet!
TEASERS:
This’s nothing more than ‘free’ speech—and doncha be messin’ with Herry’s freedom of speech and his gaaawd‐given and constitutional and, therefore, his entitled rights to teach his own Boys about their First Amendment.
I believed that, at the time, crimes were being committed. Actual, real crimes. Legal ones. Or, I mean illegal ones. Not just moral ones. And by the Boys’ father. Child endangerment. Supplying porn to minors. Molestation. Verbal, at the least—and who knows otherwise.
CHAPTER 11
If ... Always a Teacher, Then Hardly ... Teachable
“… as long as I’m not being made to feel … small.”
—Suzy, during her interview for first‐time work as a whore, film version of Cannery Row
Jesse’s and Zane’s birthdays came in mid and late August, each with their homemade devil’s food cake spread thick with mocha chocolate frosting and multicolored sugar sprinkles on top. Candles, too, of course. Blue ones. I made them, as always, and invited the neighbors immediately to the north of us, Faye and Tim, both times. Dr. Tim was a retired professor from Iowa State’s Psychology Department. They were a lovely couple in their early 70s who kept just as lovely flower beds which attracted hummingbirds and butterflies to their backyard adjoining ours. Faye had fresh bouquets adorning her kitchen, she told me, much of the summer and fall and brought the Boys and me bundles of sweetly scented showy goldenrods, sky blue asters and meadow blazing stars as gifts for their birthdays.
The six weeks since Kansas and those two older Boys’ zookeeping had whizzed by. Housekeeping here, though, was far from friendly. The fridge collapsed. The laundry was so far down in that also unfriendly basement that when I was ‘away’ down there performing it every day I really couldn’t count myself as being home with the Boys at all! Even though I believed them to be upstairs or out in the Forest. Or somewhere around. Herry was at work, of course. He didn’t know where they were either.
And when he returned, Herry immediately hid his hide in the den busying himself on that all‐important unpacking and setting up of the radio and stereo system. Couldn’t miss a day of NPR, not that man. The refrigerator, desperately needed for three growing boys, I would have to take care of. Hauled it off to the particular appliance dealer in town whom Realtor Cornball had recommended. We didn’t see it back for six months. I am being most serious here when I say that, in December and January of that year and the very next, to keep perishables for those three hungry youngsters cold, I used the hoods of both stationwagons just outside through that russet portal to the garage. And we simply ate no ice cream. Nothing for frozen foods. Period. The refrigerator guy had come highly recommended by Cornball. You remember Cornball. From Alcoholics Anonymous. And, many years, stone‐cold...‘sober’. Like...Herry.
Another of Cornball’s AA recommendations had been the agent from whom Herry had purchased the initial insurance on his pad. Mr. Lorn came to the palatial front door one Saturday afternoon to deliver the newly compiled policy and seeing me for the first time and done up in turbaned towel and terry bathrobe just free from the shower fawned, “Why, Legion. Legion. Isn’t that Greek? Yes. Yes, I’m sure of it. Ya’ know, your husband Herry and I learned we have a lot in common and one of those things is the fact that we both spent a year at Creighton studying for the priesthood. ’Bout like that year that all little Catholic boys grow up to do, ya’ know. Aheh. Aheh. Aha, aha. Ha, ha, ha. And we were around a lot of things Latin and Greek there. So I’m pretty sure of it. Such a lovely name. I bet your parents named you that ’cause they knew you’d turn into a goddess! Wha’da’ya’ think about that?”
What I thought about that was that I had better call up several other insurance agents and compare policies and premiums. I did, too. Spent a couple of months researching this project that I had never planned to. All because Lorn’s lore was such the crock. Profiteering schmoozer fuck and I wasn’t buying any of it.
Turn into a goddess?! Huh? Like I wasn’t already one when I was born? What a mother‐fucking shitload of “I bet I’ve gotcha snowed, haven’t I?!” Agent Lorn must’ve been thinking to himself.
In the next two months’ time, in and amongst a few dozen other daily duties and activities, I found an even more thorough policy for $200 less premium per year. Gotcha yourself, Mr. Loser Lorn. I took this information then to Herry one afternoon when he returned from the laboratory. I was very excited at my savings prowess, another Midwestern thing I was thinking.
I should have worked out my words beforehand very carefully. Scripted them down on paper and practiced my lines. Even by this time when conversing with Herry about nearly anything, I truly should have known to do that lesson first. Believe you me, after this property insurance premium thing, I learned. And never forgot to again.
It’s somewhere near the first of the movie starring Debra Winger, the film that was based on John Steinbeck’s Cannery Row and made about 1982. Where the job applicant for the next available prostituting position, when asked by the kindly red‐haired Fauna, the bordello madam, did she, the applicant, think she could do this type of work beings how it was she’d never been a hooker before, that Suzy answers something to the effect of, “O, yeah. I can do this. I’ve done a whole lot of things on my roadmap to getting here so far. And I can do this, too, if I have to in order to survive. Just so long as nobody makes me, ah, well…as long as I’m not being made to feel…small.”
Dr. Herod Edinsmaier was so incensed that I’d saved us $200 a year—or, more accurately, that I had had the unmitigated gall to think that we should trim our budget’s specific line item by switching policies—that, with this particular episode, he didn’t speak to me for only three weeks. Often it was longer. Sometimes two months or more. A typical scene saw all five of us at suppertime around the small, brown rectangular table we had owned for that same decade of moves now dwarfed in the forestside kitchen’s sea of sable carpet and smack dab in the middle of the pineapples. The whole ones plastered in neat, linear rows as wallpaper edging encircling the dining room intrados.
Around 8:00 and all of the Boys were finally gathered in, collected from various points, a soccer practice for Mirzah’s peewee team of Kate Mitchell six‐ and seven‐year ‐olds, a session Zane was hosting out back in the Forest with the undivided attention of the purely white‐haired and gnarly former biology teacher‐neighbor, Mr. Tromp, over the intricacies of the late summer habitation of woodchucks. Jesse had the shortest distance from which to come to supper. The den that housed the selfish, space hog of a paternal stereo also sheltered the old beater, Haines piano; and, of his own accord, Jesse was benched there plinking out something by ear that he’d heard somewhere. That Suzuki ear of his.
Herry, all smiles and raring to talk, talk, teach, talk to his sons over dinner, took up his spot at the table’s head. Amidst the chatter that included accolades for Jesse’s musical genius, the eldest son was suddenly addressed, “Tell your mother, Zane, that I have a seminar in Iowa City all day tomorrow so as soon as she tells you where she’s hidden the checkbook, I’m gonna go get gas. Mirzah, I can’t coach soccer practice the day after tomorrow again after all. I’ll have to catch up at the lab when I get back, ya’ know. You got through practice today okay though, right? Zane, where’s that subscription form you wanted me to help you with? There was a special on it, is that right? Twelve issues of Playboy for what was it now? Bring it to me, will ya’, when we finish here. Let’s get that mailed off while the special’s still on. Otherwise, I’m afraid it’ll get lost and we’ll lose out.”
Supper over. In my direction, dead silence through a complete family sit – down dinner once more. I cleared the table and started on the dishes. Z went off to the den with Herry, Jesse and Mirzah to show them all the Playboy order form.
I was silent, too, though. For years, about that, I was silent. About pornography. About Herry’s jokes and hate speech of the usually‐not‐thought‐of‐in‐that‐way variety: of lawfully ‘free’ though truly criminal speech. About Herry’s exhibitionism and voyeurism and the southwest windows to the Forest and other bedroom windows in other towns in which we had lived. Including the Boys’ bedroom windows.
I know a lot of women are. Silent. They fear masterful reprisal from assaultive words or involve‐the‐kids, then divide‐and‐conquer icebox shunning like I routinely experienced or beatings, even death. But I was educated, for christ’s sake, and a very, very hard worker to boot. Thirty‐eight sessions of college, either quarters or semesters or just one credit during six weeks in the summer or something. And all of it, absolutely all of it, I had worked and paid for by myself‐except for that $125 worth which AmTaham and Mehitable had spotted me to go toward that fall quarter’s tuition when I was 18 and first at Iowa State back in 1966. I knew better. For the love of gaaaawd, I knew better!
Was I ever paying for it now. The first ones of its twelve issues, indeed, began arriving in their blackened, sealed plastic wrappers with only a simple white mailing label affixed and the addressee in regular black font, “To: Mr. Zane Truemaier,” then the rest of the US mailing address. My son, the new 11‐year‐old, had been bestowed by his daddy, around his latest August birthday, with a subscription for a year’s worth at least of Playboy magazines. I believed that, at the time, crimes were being committed. Actual, real crimes. Legal ones. Or, I mean illegal ones. Not just moral ones. And by the Boys’ father. Child endangerment. Supplying porn to minors. Molestation. Verbal, at the least —and who knows otherwise.
O, well. My babies’ lives. But. Hey. Forget about it.
Freedom of thought. “You’re a freethinker yourself, Legion. So forget about it. This’s nothing more than ‘free’ speech—and doncha be messin’ with Herry’s freedom of speech and his gaaaawd‐given and constitutional and, therefore, his entitled rights to teach his own Boys about their First Amendment. Including their ‘free’ speech property rights. Doncha dare! How dare ya’, You Stupid Ass Heifer!”
“Legion!!!” O o o o, I recognized that yell: I was being called off the dogs once again, I was. Same as the only times when Herry condescended to disgustingly utter my first name. “Legion! A lot of nice people read Playboy!” snapped my attorney, that alleged officer of the court and supposed upholder of Family Law itself, some three years later. Come to find out, even ‘nice’ Mr. Jinx did—Mr. Jinx, also a father himself of minor children. According to a mutual acquaintance who had herself witnessed stacks of the exact same pornography genre in Lawyer Jazzy Jinx’s residential study when visiting there on a foray of hers once for some reason unrelated to my custody case.
I continued to keep shut up about it. Until one weekday afternoon very shortly after the first issues had come, Jesse and three little friends, over after school just especially to play, burst inside making a beeline back to the Boys’ bedroom. Midway through the olive shag of the vast wingspread that was our living room, I intercepted just Jesse and asked him to join me in the miniature bathroom off of the kitchen. Behind closed doors. And right now! When he exited after the suddenly called, one‐on‐one conference, the three friends in the foyer, still waiting and tapping and snickering and anticipating, and Jesse turned right around and headed with the soccer ball back outside. “Ya’ know, Jesse, I don’t know what Jonnie and BJ and Eddie’s moms and dads’d think about them looking at those pictures and stuff. So. Aaah. We can’t be doing that. Ya’ know, lettin’ ’em. ’Cuz they might not like it or somethin’. And then they couldn’t come over here anymore, ya’ know.” I had broke silence. Big whoop. Big, big…literally…mother‐fucking whoop. That was it. That was all I ever said. About the crimes done my children. Then.
* * * *
Supper was often so late. It was still summer, though waning; and folks, for generations of Midwesterners, had eaten the evening meal a lot later as a matter of course than they did in the wintertime. Mirzah had gotten through soccer practice okay all right. No thanks to Herry. When the first organizational meeting for the various age levels of play was convened, there was Herry, mouth open and hand up, volunteering to coach the six‐ and seven‐year‐olds, all of these particular boys and girls also attending Kate Mitchell Elementary School, the Boys’ new school!
Such a beauty it was, too. Fairly newly constructed with a fantastic playground that included a colorful, 50‐state USA map wildly painted, state by state, into the south concrete, it was an alternative school, the only such one of eight elementary schools in Ames. There were levels of academia to the school, too, just as there were levels of ability within the City’s Parks and Rec soccer teams, this particular team of littlest kids that included Mirzah being hosted on the Kate Mitchell playing fields for its practice sessions.
The kindergarten level of Kate Mitchell was distinct with its own separate playground even; but after that, academic progress was fairly individualized. “Units” the children were put into. Open classrooms, too, they were described as, I believe. Unit A, Unit B and Unit C. A had first, second and maybe even a few third grade little ones in it as I recall. And Unit B had third and fourth graders mostly while Unit Cers were the upper classes of elementary students. Altogether, then, kids through to about the age of 12 years. Very bright, very cheery, wide corridors, big classrooms and big personal spaces inside of them. A pretentious media center‐and‐library combination. Finest of all, lots and lots of non‐Caucasian faces every day and some of them at every level with accents from very far off lands. I quickly came to like Kate Mitchell School and so did Zane, Jesse and Mirzah.
Only problem was its location. Kate Mitchell was situated at the very far edge of the city’s most southern housing subdivision in a neighborhood not ritzy nor splendiferous enough for Herod when he, with the ‘aid’ of AA’s Cornball, had gone house‐hunting six weeks earlier. Herod Edinsmaier desired a splashier area, one much more in sync with where Mehitable and doctors would be found living, hence, the picture window to the Forest which we now owned. Still, with open enrollment within the school district, all one had to do was truck in the kids to whatever school in which the parents wanted them. Provided things didn’t get overweighted in certain schools and, therefore, underenrolled in others.
Kate Mitchell had a reputation; and that rep was, well, overall, something on the order of…bleeding‐heart, leftist, hippie parents sent their kids there. So it, in Iowa as in just about Anywhere Else USA, had plenty of enrollment room. “Certainly! We’d be delighted to have your Boys here!” portly Merry Stuart, the part‐time Kate Mitchell, part‐time Ames High School principal, about 60, and whom I would gladly serve for months to come, exclaimed with both of her gesturing arms. It was a done deal then! And I was just delighted, too!
Fall soccer, as administered then out of the City, was already holding practice down on Kate Mitchell ground before academic semester classes actually commenced. Nets chock‐full of black and white balls and two stacks of bright orange cones perpetually heaped, for an autumnal playing season’s worth of time anyhow, took up temporary residence in the back of Herry’s Crown.
Herry coached, too. Dr. Edinsmaier managed two full back‐to‐back beginning sessions, the very first one on Tuesday where he greeted all his little charges with time to spare really. Extra time to check out their, well, let’s just say that the mothers were so pleased and relieved to be dropping off their littlest athletes to the deftness, adroitness and so capable hands of a doctor! Then followed the Thursday one. Some new team members who’d missed out on that very first session joined up and some more mothers for Coach Edinsmaier to assure then. Both at 5:15 pm that first week not concluding until 6:45 pm. So suppers had to come late and that was okay.
Then something happened. Something out of Herry’s control, of course. And he couldn’t seem to make it anymore again. There was the seminar down at the University of Iowa midweek the second week of soccer practice so I was glad ‘to help out’ and sub for him on that Tuesday evening but had not known, when he’d called me around 4:30, why he couldn’t make it, so could I? Until suppertime, of course, when it was plainly heard by all with the directive from the household’s head to his eldest, to tell me—me, just across that small table and the man’s spouse—that their father had needed to work late in preparation for leaving for Iowa City the next day. Apparently the boss also wanted him freed up to be able to take emergency call or something. Just for a few months till they were all more sure about the branch development Dr. Edinsmaier said. “But I can’t be expected ‘to be there’ anymore. I know it’s sudden. But it’s out of my hands. Just nothing I can do about it now. You aren’t working. Why not?” My first name again that ubiquitous ‘You’ one.
Herod the Sloth neglected to mention to my Boys and to me that he had just squandered three hours of that earlier workday. In the same manner as how he had daily been doing when he was a resident at the time of every one of Dr. Shark’s four performance reviews of Dr. Herod Edinsmaier in the two years that we lived in Hershey and had needed nighttime babysitters so that I could practice my part‐time 12 to 10 pm, regularly scheduled small animal shifts. Herry, but not a single one of any of the other pathology residents, wasn’t home evenings—any evenings; and Dr. Shark’s reviews stated that, among many other of his job functions, Dr. Slacker Edinsmaier’s use of work time stunk. Dr. Shark, I’m sure, was referring to Herry’s doctoring time in the field of medicine, not out in the field of soccer practice or playing the field which Stark wouldn’t have been privy to, of course. Almost always a procrastinator except maybe during that term of OB-GYN training in medical school with the vagina models, Dr. Edinsmaier could really rag a girl’s ear off. And, at the end of their ‘mutual break’ over doughnuts and java Herry’d purchased for her in the hospital’s coffee shop, she would most likely return to her keyboard thinking that she had just been granted the prestigious privilege of getting to know so much more about one of the wisest, wittiest, sweetest, most learned and trustworthy men in her sphere of teachers. That voice of his, ya’ know.
* * * *
Dr. Legion True finished out coaching Mirzah’s soccer season. Not exactly the doctor who’d started it. But still, this same finishing thing for me again. Except it was officially only ever known that I ‘was just helping out’ my husband, Dr. Edinsmaier. Dr. Edinsmaier was the six‐ and seven‐year‐olds’ team coach, not Dr. True. That’s the way the roster stayed for all of the subsequent weeks’ worth of practices and games—the weeks that turned into months. Encouraged every once in awhile at suppertime by things Herry might let slip about his getting out to the field next time, that’s also how Mirzah continued every practice to recount to his little buddies—how it was going to have to be his mama substituting again this afternoon after all. Mirzah’s soccer mom never forgot, never forgot even one time, to remove the equipment from the Crown and put it into the shitbox Dodge at 7:00 am, let alone, to replace the balls and cones back into the real teacher’s Toyota after practice just in case that, straight there to the playing fields from the laboratory, Dr. Herod Edinsmaier, soccer coach, could make it sometime.
I was pretty enthusiastic about it all actually. I even took the three extra night trainings to become a certified safe Iowa youth soccer coach. Well now, that isn’t what it’s called. I’m not certified any longer, and I can’t remember the exact title with which we parent trainees were all knighted, but there is a national association issuing wallet cards with our names and current year on it, and we had to pass both practical and written questions of knowledge and understanding about the game and, most especially, about keeping little kids safe and free from injury. This certification, to be valid, had to be refreshed and updated every so often if we intended to continue coaching. Or, subbing at coaching. I was honored to do it.
The mothers, it turned out, had been ordinary. Ordinary women. Not a looker nor a chesty one in the bunch, and none of them stood around visiting together those ten last minutes waiting for the end of soccer practice in anything but sweat pants or twills or blue jean shorts themselves. Nothing enticing enough, I began to think. Most certainly not special enough for Herry to want to commit, early on, to investing an entire season’s worth of his time there; that was for sure.
There was one, though, BJ’s mama. Now I thought she was pretty and svelte and very athletic herself, a brunette. Mona biked in an annual triathlon competition in a nearby community sharing its three components with two other women, one a capitol city sportscaster even, who performed the other two parts of the event. Mona and I became friendly, jogged together down the Forest asphalt paths many mid mornings after our children started school, drank orange herbal tea together after for a few minutes and swapped book title suggestions. BJ was welcome anytime at our urban woods property way across town, nearly 25 minutes in rush hour traffic at 5:15 pm where he was invited along with Jesse, as well as Mirzah, his teammate, and Mirzah’s oldest brother, Zane, to continue their explorations of things Herry, mouth open and always talking, talking, talking,…was teaching. Always a teacher, that Herry.
* * * * *
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Dr. Legion True: One Fucked Mother
Dr. Herod (Herry) Edinsmaier: ex/“Sperm Source” [“re: I am snide” backwards]
Zane Truemaier: Legion’s son
Jesse Truemaier: Legion’s son
Mirzah Truemaier: Legion’s son
AmTaham True: Legion’s father [Mahatma backwards]
Mehitable True: Legion’s mother [Me hit-able—i.e. she was abusive]
Ardys and Endys: Legion’s sisters [names backwards]
Sterling: Legion’s brother [mother’s planned name of next son (who never came)]
Juggern Aut Misein Edinsmaier: Legion’s father-in-law [juggernaut; aut = 0; misein = “to hate (misogyny)”]
Detanimod Edinsmaier: Legion’s mother-in-law [dominated backwards]
Fannie Issicran McLive: fawning enabler of ex [narcissis(t) and Mc(Evil) backwards]
Legion’s Friends: Yanira, Grace, Stormy, Lynda, László, Jane, Kincaid, Joseph, Sheryl
Jim Cornball: Herry’s friend from AA and realtor
Loser Lorn: Insurance agent referred by Cornball
Judge Harley Butcher: Family Court judge
Judge Sol Wacotler Seizor: Family Court judge
Judge Barry Crowrook: Appellate Court judge
Judge Pansy Shawshank: Appellate Court judge
Jazzy Jinx: Legion’s Family Court lawyer who sold her out
Author: Dr. Blue, aka Ofherod, BSN, DVM, PhD = Commander Edinsmaier's Handmaid (Commander reiamsnidE's Handmaid)
Consider a gift subscription for a mother who is a victim of the Post-Separation Crisis:
Or support the Coalition’s work through a one-time or recurring contribution:
All contributions, small and large, are greatly appreciated!