“Friends” is Chapter 5 of Mother-Fucking: The Saga of One Fucked Mother.
Dr. Blue’s novel, based on her own nightmare, creatively conveys to the reader how family courts are systematically and methodically “mother-fucking” women as she chronicles the sordid tale in captivating detail of protagonist Legion becoming “one fucked mother”.
Chapter 5 touches on something vital for so many victims of the Post-Separation Crisis: Friends. Friends are essential for helping a woman keep her head above water while she’s drowning in the sea of agony and insanity wreaked upon her by Family Court. The first thing Legion does when she is finally able to see and hug her kids again is to find a pay phone and make long-distance calls to each and every friend who has supported her in her ordeal. At the same time, she ponders how the person who should have been her best friend (or even just a good one) was anything but, and how he himself had no real friends.
This segues from Chapter 4’s flash-forward to the time Legion “risks it all” traveling cross-country in an attempt to find her precious boys and sneak a visit—after many years of not seeing or hearing from them. The judge had allowed her no contact despite no witnesses who could corroborate her ex’s false allegations against her—hence, the title: No Witnesses, But Hey, Still No Contact.
The first excerpt from The Saga includes the Prologue, Chapter 1: A Couple of Definitions, and Chapter 2: How, How in the World Did We Get Here from There?. Chapter 3: Holocausts and Chapter 4: No Witnesses, But Hey, Still No Contact followed.
Sequential chapters are published every Wednesday on Women’s Coalition News & Views and are archived in the section: “Saga of One F**ked Mother” conveniently accessible on the top bar of our home page.
Of course, WCN&V Subscribers will find each new chapter in their inboxes every Wednesday, so keep an eye out. If you haven’t subscribed yet, you may want to consider it.
TEASER
“O! M’god! You’re married to Dr. Edinsmaier?! Dr. Edinsmaier??!! Get outta’here, Woman! … No! Really?! O! M’gosh, you are soooo lucky!” Over the course of the 14-plus years that Herry and I were both in the medical and research professions together before and after marriage, my path crossed repeatedly with those of many, many women who would exclaim to me, upon learning that I was, indeed, his alleged ‘best friend’, how it was that he would bring them flowers and it wasn’t even Secretary’s Day and how it was that he’d provide doughnuts Friday after Friday and take them all out to lunch together or individually just spur of the moment-like, his treat …
… and how it must just follow, didn’t it, that he did all these same romantic, appreciative gestures for me, his wife and best friend, didn't he?
BOOK ONE: Chapter 5
Friends
“My friends are my estate.”
— Emily Dickinson, on wealth
This particular secret visit with Jesse concluded, I drove as fast but as cautiously as possible to a secluded payphone spot, entered the calling card codes and, in turn, dialed Grace, Stormy, Lynda, László, Jane and Kincaid and Joseph and Sheryl. These are my closest personal friends who know every sordid and intimate minute about this story and its anatomy.
Lynda, who has three adult daughters and one son my Zane’s age, and László, with a long, long-time partner, are unmarried. Grace and Stormy are both in wondrous, many years-long marriages with sons each, lives of regular and rousing family togetherness and space for individual pursuits and calm. Joseph and Sheryl are also ecstatically married to each other ten or fifteen years now after not-so-fine first unions each and have together raised Sheryl’s daughter to adulthood. Jane and Kincade are a divorced, devoted mother and her adult, devoted son.
I am truly blessed. Apparently lots of persons are not. It seems that having close, personal, emotionally intimate friends, especially of the same gender as oneself, is something not everyone has in common. In fact, it seems that not everyone has even one such person in their lives. They don’t get up every day and count, for that day nor for any other, someone of their same sex as being an individual to whom they can go with their slight-to-great problems or joys of that day.
Some folks have it this way because they want it this way. Some have it this way because they say they want it this way. Still others are without this necessity in their lives because they choose not to do the work that it takes to be a friend themselves.
Did I say necessity? O, quite. For me, anyhow, they are. On a good day, friends are a necessity, nourishment. On a bad day, year, decade, lifetime, friends are to my spirit what breath is to my carcass.
I don’t know how persons thrive without the knowledge that when they need their core uplifted by the sound or touch of another trustworthy human being and the unconditional validation there is in that accepting voice or that leveling grasp, there isn’t one such individual around for them.
In 12½ years of marriage to Herry Edinsmaier and in my knowing him since our chance encounter at a discothèque just off the University campus, more like a saloon it was … come to think of it, where I’d been celebrating my receipt that very day, 06 March 1974, of the letter of acceptance into veterinary medical school and he was drinking off rejection after his date for that evening had stood him up—26 years now it has been, I have never known this man, Edinsmaier, to have had even one such person in his life. If ever pressed about this, Herry would make it vividly clear that to have this ‘necessity’—really close personal men friends—was a weakness in a guy. It was the same thing as being needy, dependent, incapable of self-sufficiency and, therefore, quite a negative thing.
What he did have in his life were many, many persons he said were friends. What they were were women. His activities, schooling and job as a physician in pathology laboratories all put him around many women; and they were almost always in positions of subordination to his status as that of a doctor. But, like a host of other people know, although Herry never wanted to acknowledge, this is exactly how men get themselves into a passel of trouble. By not seeking out other men to fulfill this absolute necessity of humankind and life.
Usually the worn-out, ages-old excuses proffered for this behavior of men is that women are ‘so understanding’, ‘so easy to talk to’, ‘can read my mind’. Hello here? Women can’t—and never could—read minds yet have continued to let these impossible expectations that they can prosper. Herry never wanted to reckon that if he had a problem, a gripe or a joy, he could have avoided a whole lot of shit if he’d’ve just taken it to me, his wife and supposed ‘best friend’. Well, best friend, at least, according to all the TV talk show psychologists anyhow. Or. If he had complained or reveled, instead, with a couple of cronies down at the corner café over a cup of java.
This concept is so easy for most secure men and women to fathom. That having only women, especially subordinate ones, as confidants and sounding boards, as ‘someone to talk to’ when you are a man, is not going to lead to therapeutic relief. In a true therapy sense, that is. In the sense of what the right thing to be doing with one’s self is. It is only going to get him into a great big mess. The Reverend Billy Graham understood this from Day One of his worldwide ministry and often, publicly, credited this understanding with his ability to avoid all the shit the other evangelists always seemed to be getting themselves into. But, hey, it’s his mess, aaahh, life. Herry’ll get out of it what he puts into it, not? Garbage in, garbage out.
This massive mistake is true for women as well, of course. Having only men friends when one is female is tantamount to begging for destruction. Except for one tiny little matter: women, when they do have friends, have women friends in their lives also and, more often than not, have more women friends than they do men friends. Plenty of women have no friends, I know; and plenty of women have men friends as do I. But when women recognize that the need for friends in general exists at all, it just so happens that they, more than the men I’ve known, seek out persons of the same gender with whom to be friends.
It’s that little, simple process of recognizing the need that’s the key. What it certainly isn’t is a weakness. Needing true friends is not a negative.
* * * *
“O! M’god! You’re married to Dr. Edinsmaier?! Dr. Edinsmaier??!! Get outta’here, Woman! … No! Really?! O! M’gosh, you are soooo lucky!” Over the course of the 14-plus years that Herry and I were both in the medical and research professions together before and after marriage, my path crossed repeatedly with those of many, many women who would exclaim to me, upon learning that I was, indeed, his alleged ‘best friend’, how it was that he would bring them flowers and it wasn’t even Secretary’s Day and how it was that he’d provide doughnuts Friday after Friday and take them all out to lunch together or individually just spur of the moment-like, his treat …
… and how it must just follow, didn’t it, that he did all these same romantic, appreciative gestures for me, his wife and best friend, didn't he? I would listen quietly, o-so quietly, and nod, never letting myself tell any of them, in all those 14 years when we worked so close in real physical proximity to each other day after day after day, that we had actually gone to lunch with each other exactly twice. I never told any of them that, although we’d had three young and mighty hungry sons in 12½ years of marriage, not one time, at 7:00 am, when Dr. Edinsmaier was preparing his body to smell o – so luscious for his all – day meetings with so many of them, did he ever take something out of the freezer to thaw for when the Boys’ supper would be coming up some 12 hours later and he and I would be returning home with them ravenous. And, as regards the initial gathering in of the trainloads of food for these same wondrous Boys of ours, I never told any of these women, in 12½ years of marriage to this so incredibly charming and romantic a man, that we had never, not once, with or without the Boys, gone shopping together for groceries for them and us, our beautiful, ‘liberated’ and deliciously perfect family.
I never said to any of them that this man quite willfully and literally refused to use my first name, Legion, to address me or even to speak to others about me. He would enter a room. It could be crowded, lots of people milling about or there could be only me in it; and I would simply have to know that when he spoke, it quite probably meant that he ‘may’ be intending his statements for me to respond to … If he stayed in the room long enough to say something at all. These women did not know that a favorite and well-honed shunning practice of his, in addition to his not using my first name except to ostentatiously yell it as if he were calling off the dogs when I’d been disciplining any one of the Boys, was to exit a room or space immediately upon my entering it or to hastily and abruptly, in reverberating silence, back up and out of a place that I already occupied.
And, most especially, I very carefully never told these fawning and adoring women that this supposedly greatest and foreverest, most belovéd and trustworthy best friend of mine, whose voice was the touch of velvet and the color of chocolate syrup, whose voice could smooth out and plump up a corsage bloom shriveled for a century, had never, not once, in 14½ years of his knowing me before he left us, used it––that rose-petal voice of his––to tell me … me, the strong, warm, wonderful, brainy and so wildly working womb for and half the gene pool of his children, those three most brilliant and beautiful kids in all the history of the entire World, “I love you.” Not even one time.
Zero is the number of times these most amazing children’s most amazing mother ever heard from their father that I, Legion, was loved by him.
LIST OF CHARACTERS
Dr. Legion True: One Fucked Mother
Dr. Herod (Herry) Edinsmaier: ex/“Sperm Source” [“re: I am snide” backwards]
Zane: eldest son
Jesse: middle son
Mirzah: youngest son
AmTaham True: Legion’s father [Mahatma backwards]
Mehitable True: Legion’s mother [Me hit-able—i.e. she was abusive]
Yanira: Quaker friend
Fannie Issicran McLive: ex’s new wife
Judge Barry Crowrook: Appellate Court judge
Judge Pansy Shawshank: Appellate Court judge
Judge Harley Butcher: Family Court judge
Friends: Grace, Stormy, Lynda, László, Jane, Kincaid, Joseph, and Sheryl
Author: Dr. Blue AKA Ofherod, BSN, DVM, PhD = Commander Edinsmaier's Handmaid (Commander reiamsnidE 's Handmaid)
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Tomorrow (Thursday) an E-book called "Everything" by Natalie Triumps is coming out that is destigned to educate readers about court-sponsored child trafficking. It is based on what really happens in the courts. It also goes into the issue of how women are often forced into domestic violence situations to protect their children. It's written as a YA action-adventure book to educate a wider audience and to also allow teens to see what their mothers have had to sacrifice to try to protect them. It will be available Thursday for 99 cents at Amazon but the publisher will be pulling the E-book after that and then publishing it in print at a later time. it really is a must-read for all protective mothers and it is dedicated to protective mothers