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  • Vera Bradley Bag

    July 29, 2024
    Grace and Kindness

    Dear Emma and Gorgeous Girl,

    Before I begin, I must explain why I am not referring to you, Emma’s beautiful sister, by name.  I don’t know your name, baby, so please forgive me.  

    Girls, tucked into a special box that I have for you, is my purple Vera Bradley bag, all washed and folded.  I only recently retired it, and I’d like to tell you about it. The Language Arts teacher in me wants to tell you that it symbolizes incomparable strength, warrior spirit, and irreplicable grace (but not mine).

    By the time you can read this and fully understand it, I’m sure you will know about your mom’s surgeries.  You’ll have heard it from her, and, when it’s time, you can read about it on the blog that I wrote throughout her heroic journey.  It’s important that you know how much she went through, how courageous and valiant she has always been, and how her body both endured torture AND created miracles.

    Your mom had her own Vera Bradley bag that was all-too-often packed for her hospital stays.  What should have only been a bag for fun overnights with friends or with your dad turned into luggage for surgeries, blockages, and never knowing what was ahead.  From high school to college to P.A. school, that bag traveled to St. Barnabas, Morristown, and, most often, Mount Sinai.  

    Not too long after your mom’s first hospital stay, I got my own Vera Bradley bag.  Sadly, I needed my own hospital bag, so I thought, “Why not ‘sort of’ match Roo’s bag?”  Easy to carry and colorful and festive, those bags got way too much use.

    Girls, you are marvels in so many ways, including that your mom was able to carry you and bring you safely into the world.  She and your dad were able to create you through love, through hope, through faith (your mom’s middle name, which I had no idea would serve her so well), and through science.  Part of the wonder of this world is that there are methods and processes where a woman can experience pregnancy and experience her yearnings become reality.  May it remain that way, for the both of you, for your cousins, and for every woman who deserves her choice and her voice.

    So, sweet girls, what seems like just a two decades old, slightly faded, and somewhat worn-out duffle is really so much more.  It’s proof that when resilience, sturdiness, and hardiness meet fragility, magic happens.  

    I love you both so very much,

    Grandma

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  • The Lottery

    March 27, 2024
    A Mom Without Her Kids, Abandonment, Barbara Starsky, Broken Heart, Forgiveness, Grace and Kindness, Healing, marissasurgery.wordpress.com, Parental Alienation, Tragic Divorce

    The Powerball and the Mega Millions, as of last night, were collectively worth over 2 billion dollars. Chances of winning one of these jackpots were 1 in 300 million, but somebody did win. Somebody in New Jersey actually won, but people haven’t even checked their tickets yet and nobody even knows where the ticket was sold. Could it have been me?

    The odds of what happened to me, in terms of losing my kids, were greater than 1 in 300 million. People are convicted of murder, corruption, extortion, drug dealing, sex trafficking, embezzlement, robbery, and many other heinous crimes, yet their kids still talk to them. I didn’t do any of those things (though Jay probably told them I multitasked and did every one of them on a weekly basis), and I have been given a lifelong sentence of suffering and agony that mutilates and incapacitates my entire stamp.

    My mother abandoned me when all of the vicissitude began, so afraid of being jettisoned herself. But, one of the last things she said to me was, “Any other family … If it was any other family, this would never have happened.” Though seemingly ambiguous, I somewhat understood what she was saying. My sister threatened her, controlled her, scared her, and basically ordered my mother to have nothing to do with me. The once powerful and independent Barbara Starsky became a pathetic pawn on my sister’s toxic and monochromatic black chessboard.

    My mother had also twice mentioned, “Even a criminal would have been pardoned by now.” She knew how deeply I was hurting, and I don’t think she ever fully understood (who can?) why I was eliminated from the hearts of the kids I loved and still love so completely. She was a coward, and, whether her hand was forced or not, she did make a choice – Sophie’s Choice.

    After Zack left me so suddenly, my mom reached out to him. Always the softest of my 3, his behavior puzzled her the most. Aware that Jay’s attorney had told my attorney that my divorce wasn’t progressing because Zack still talked to me, and recognizing that Jay’s lawyer confidently and contemptuously added, “But it won’t be for too much longer,” my mother did, supposedly, reach out to Zack. And, after he did abruptly discard me and she did call him, her words to me were, “I swear to G-d, he has been brainwashed.” (I would sit for a polygraph to attest to the validity of this conversation and the words that still permeate and pierce my vandalized heart).

    What will they tell my grandchildren? Will they say I’m dead (easily disproven, thank G-d). Will they say I’m crazy and that I’m away in some sort of facility (easily disproven, thank G-d). Will they say I’m in prison (I guess I am in some sort of proverbial prison).

    What won’t they tell my grandchildren? They probably won’t tell them that I’m a respected and beloved teacher. They probably won’t tell them that I am funny, kind, benevolent, charitable, concerned, and so deeply passionate and compassionate. They probably won’t tell them that, when they were growing up, my talons would automatically sharpen if anybody or anything ever hurt them. They probably won’t tell them that, when they were sick, I was always there, never letting them be alone and scared. They probably won’t tell them that I called them my heart, my soul, and my lungs. They probably won’t tell them that I loved them so much that I stayed in a marriage that didn’t make me happy. And, they probably won’t tell them that I loved them more than I loved myself. I still do.

    May we all win the lottery, whatever the lottery looks like to us. Whether it’s the Powerball, the Mega Millions, or our children and grandchildren’s presence in our lives, may that winning ticket be in our reach.

    Marla

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  • Danke Schoen

    January 8, 2024
    Forgiveness

    Dear Germany,

    You and I just officially met for the first time.  Sure, I have driven a BMW for the last 9 years, and sure, I was so madly in love with Rob Timmermann, the stunning Aryan from Little Neck, whom I met in college.  But, to me, you were a place of horror, a place where one man soullessly and successfully rallied the masses to annihilate an entire race of people – MY PEOPLE.  I pre-judged you, and now, after experiencing six days in your historic, structured, and compunctious capital city, I’d like to apologize.

    Everything I had read about Adolf Hitler was the truth, though I’m not sure I buy into the notion that the trajectory of his life would have played out differently had he been accepted into art school.  Somebody who derived such joy from brainwashing, torturing, and gaslighting would not have been tempered by Tempera, calmed by Crayola, or placated by pastels.  No, this man was nefarious, iniquitous, wicked, and depraved, yet nobody stopped him.  Germany, you, too, were pulverized by him, and the damage is far deeper than the bullet holes on the Victory Column.

    We were on a tour of the Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp, and the weather was cold.  My earmuffs and gloves aesthetically paired well with my leather jacket, but I found myself wishing I had brought my Michael Kors winter coat and my hat from Iceland.  The heaviness of what was to come and what we would see also added to the chill, I’m sure.

    Our dimpled tour guide from Dublin used a giant textured map to give us the lay of the land, and one was immediately disgusted by the pristine care that was taken of the SS. Their needs were paramount, their every desire fulfilled.  Spectators to bodies burning alive, they were cowards who were all too willing to carry out the psychotic demands of a madman.  The mental manipulation, such as promises of survival or extra food, with no intent to deliver on either, was oftentimes worse than the physical torture.  

    We learned that the prisoners wore very thin pajamas, with no warmth and protection from the elements.  There would be roll call every day, and the prisoners would freeze.  For giggles, sometimes the leader would decide to roll call all day long, leaving the prisoners to die in the cold or become gravely ill.  I guess the ones who just keeled over got off easy, as their torture ended more swiftly, and, I suppose, with more dignity. 

    Needless to say, my feelings of frostiness fled fast …

    Germany, you’re somewhat stoic and robotic, but you’re also respectful and apologetic.  I felt so safe within your borders, safer than I feel in my own country.  In your country, learning about the Holocaust is mandatory at a young age.  Here, the naysayers are becoming too prevalent, and I fear that it won’t be too long before all Holocaust literature is removed from most curriculum.  

    I reflect on New Year’s Eve and how police begged the public not to throw fireworks at them.  New Year’s Eve 2023 had brought chaos and havoc, and law enforcement did not want a repeat of the tumult.  We stayed local, near our hotel, as we were told to be careful.  Never ones to go to Times Square for the dropping of the ball, it made little sense that we would brave the enormous crowd at the Brandenburg Gate.  But, as midnight arrived and we stepped into the street, the fireworks were everywhere and the Roman candles presented too close for comfort.  Colorful and thunderous and tossed out of cars and off of rooftops, one understood that the lifting of this city’s stringent rules, even for a mere 24 hours, was liberating.  

    I’ll take fireworks over firearms any day.  I’ll take my gummy bears without CBD and without dyes any day.  I’ll take a country that understands that we must study and learn even the most sensitive history, assuring that we don’t repeat it.  I’ll take a country that takes responsibility, shows remorse, and says, “I’m sorry.”  

    Danke Schoen,

    A Loyal Fan

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  • Israel, Hamas, and Gaslighting

    October 9, 2023
    A Mom Without Her Kids, Abandonment, Broken Heart, Forgiveness, Healing, Parental Alienation, PTSD, Shana Tova

    I am a Jewish woman. Traditionally, culturally, and spiritually, I identify as an Ashkenazi Jew. Though I no longer practice due to an ex-husband who used religion to control my children and me, one doesn’t need my Ancestry and Me chart to figure out that I am a Jew. My voice is the precise combination of The Nanny and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (or, as I call myself, The Marvelous Mrs. Nasal). And, my dark curls, my curvy booty, and my overwhelming sense of fear and guilt just further seal the “I am a Jew” deal.

    I don’t believe that any formal religious involvement and familiarity entitles a person to be unkind or manipulative towards others. Spending time in a pew, on a bimah, or gently beating oneself in the chest during the Viddui prayer on Yom Kippur does not make somebody a mensch. It is said that, “We beat our chests out of contrition and also as a kind of Jewish defibrillation—we are trying to awaken our better selves.” I don’t buy it, not when so many walk out of synagogue, like my ex-husband did last week, and plot their next attack.

    My divorce went on for so long, and, in reality, it still does. He took the children from me, my adult children, and he terrorized me in ways that were illegal, immoral, and inhumane. I wanted to leave when they were small, and, in a voice that could only be described as threatening and admonitory, he announced, “I’ll take those kids from you.” When I informed him that he wouldn’t find a judge in the world who would take the kids from me, he asseverated in the most sinister and chilling tone, “Oh, I’ll find one.” It scared the life out of me, and I stayed.

    “Those kids” was what he said. He didn’t say Marissa, Rebecca, or Zachary. He just said, “those kids,” because they were pawns to him. Yes, he loved them, and I will always give him fair dues that he was an involved and caring dad. Were his rules unreasonable and stifling, especially when it came to synagogue and the laws of kashrut? You can bet your gefilte fish they were. But, as I tell my students, two things can exist at the same time, and not everything is black and white.

    I didn’t receive my alimony for October. Normally, I receive the money via Zelle, and I do receive it. The bonus money that is due me in a check on June 1st is another story, and Jay has taken those games to a new low. Crumpling the envelope to an unrecognizable state, dating the check with last year’s date, or just plain not sending it have been part of his wheelhouse, but the alimony was, for the most part, reliable. I guess that became boring for him, so it was time to gaslight me again.

    I would think that, for a religious man, it would be more disparaged to play games at the start of the Jewish New Year. I guess Jay was feeling particularly untouched and impudent, so he hit the ground running. Shana Tova to me!

    I saw that the money had not been transferred, and I reached out to my lawyer. He assured me that he would handle it first thing on Monday morning. It was around 11 a.m. when I received a text from Jay, informing me that he had received a notice from his bank (which is the same as my bank). The notice said the payment could not be completed, that I had unenrolled from Zelle. Nothing could be more ridiculous or untrue, and calls to my bank and a successful Zelle payment sent to me by a dear friend proved that Gaslight 307 had left the launchpad and was heading straight towards me.

    It’s important to note that Jay sent the notices from his bank to my lawyer. The notices said nothing about the payments not being completed successfully. The notices said, “We’ve canceled your payment to Marla. We’ve canceled your Chase QuickPay® with Zelle® payment to Marla sent on October 1, 2023.” Why? What more does he want? He has EVERYTHING, everything I’ve ever wanted. He has Marissa, Rebecca, and Zachary, and he has their kids and their hearts. He gets to feel soft little fingers and smell Dreft and baby powder. I get to feel the all-too-familiar torture and smell the rat who has been gaslighting me for decades.

    Jay will, as he should, be condemning the actions of Hamas. He will sit in synagogue on Saturday, and he will listen to the rabbi castigate the vile actions of this heinous Palestinian military movement. He will, justifiably, be horrified, angry, seething, wrathful, and every other appropriate emotion for these odious and monstrous measures. But, come November, will he repeat what he did with my alimony last week? Will he mastermind Gaslight 308, continuing his destruction of somebody whom he has already destroyed?

    And so, I plead to Israel to stay strong and to stay safe. Stay united, and understand that our Jewish world is fragile right now. Protect each other, love each other, don’t abandon and turn on each other, and stay true to who we profess to be. Chizku ve’imtzu!

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  • Letter to My Lawyer, 8 Years Later

    October 4, 2023
    Grace and Kindness

    John,

    You probably know more than most what Jay has done to me.  I am so broken and so damaged, and my heart is completely lacerated.  While I am blessed with a job that I love and friends who are my sisters and my lifelines, the truth is that my trauma, my PTSD, and my fear of abandonment are suffocating.  Remarkably, I still show up to life each day with energy, with empathy, and with a commitment to bringing joy and laughter to those around me.

    John, I learned about my first grandchild through a friend with a big mouth and an inappropriate sense of what to say and what not to say.  Knowledge of my second grandchild was presented to me in my mother’s obituary.  When Mount Sinai’s Collections Department called me in February about my unpaid balance from Marissa’s hospital visit last October, I subsequently learned about the birth of my third grandchild.  I don’t even know her name, and I only know it’s a she because the office manager at my ophthalmologist mentioned my “3 granddaughters.”  

    Unconditional love is wanting your children to be happy, even when you can’t be a participant in their happiness.  Unconditional love is when your heart stops when you learn that something might be wrong with a person, even when that person has shown such hateful and malicious behavior towards you.  My unconditional love for my children is what I would like my grandchildren to uncover one day, and, should that happen, may I still be spirited, lucid, and zestful.

    John, Jay has been terrorizing me for decades, and he continues to do so, even after the divorce.  He has more than once messed with and lied about the bonus check due me, and now, here we go again with the alimony payment.  I know I messed up his plans and hopes for me in that I am still very much alive and not institutionalized, but his attempts do completely deflate me.  His attempts take over my days, and, while others would not let these “whacks” determine their daily tenor, the scars are just so deep for me and I can’t help but tremble and perseverate.  I mean, I have my lawyer on retainer 8 years after my divorce was finalized.  That speaks volumes.

    John, I will be going to the bank on my break today at 11.  I will, once again, inquire as to what is going on.  I need that money.  I want that money.  I deserve that money.  And, we need to figure this out so that it NEVER happens again.  It’s just not fair to me, and I’m begging you for some resolution today.  

    Forever grateful,

    Marla

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  • Today’s Thoughts

    March 10, 2023
    Grace and Kindness

    The kids won the Advisory door contest, and they were just treated to a bagel breakfast.  Our door boasted the subject of Empathy, which is the E in our R.E.A.C.H. acronym that awarded us our School of Character recognition.  The Tinman from The Wizard of Oz sits proudly on our door, welcoming all to “share their heart.” 

    The cafeteria was bustling with the 6th grade door winners, the 7th grade door winners, and our 8th grade door winners.  One 7th grader was sitting by himself, so another teacher and I went to spend some time with him.  Though the student wasn’t interested in chatting with us, I think he did take comfort in the company.  The other teacher and I, however, yucked it up plenty.  

    Nancy is a retired teacher who came back to long-term sub.  A lifelong resident of Denville, her entire family basically lives on her street in the Cedar Lake community.  She has her parents, who are in their late 80s and still super active, her brother, one of her daughters, and her niece, all within walking distance.  Her other daughter lives in Savannah, and she is expecting her third child in as many years.

    Nancy is divorced, but she does have a new boyfriend.  She has about 6 years on me, and she, too, is very active.  An avid skier, she is fastidious in everything she does.  Though an acquired taste, she has all kids’ best interests at heart.

    I’m jealous of her family.  I’m jealous that everybody is right here.  I’m jealous that she has a family.  I’m jealous that she has her children and her grandchildren in her life.  (As I write this, I become hyper aware that everybody has their children and grandchildren in their lives).  My situation is one in a million, and, as everybody around me right now is watching their family expand, I have no family.  Yes, I am blessed with friends whom I call family, but they’re not family.  

    The days become more difficult, but they’re at least filled with the melodious tones of middle school children finding their way in the world.  They’re asking questions on the collected achievements of the human race, especially my Gifted and Talented kids, and they’re hanging on my every word.  They’re laughing at my jokes, absorbing my energy, and, unbeknownst to them, helping me draw breath.  

    The nights are unbearable, especially when I’m alone.  If I’m not on the phone or texting with Bob, nobody calls or texts.  I know that if I send an SOS, people would come, but I don’t like to bother anybody.  Instead, I’ll do my schoolwork, watch General Hospital, pop a xanax, and somehow sleep until the alarm goes off.  

    I wake up and wonder how I got here, how my entire family abandoned me, how I’ll go on.  At 57, my thoughts sometimes leave me puzzled and confused about what will happen to me when I get older.  Who will be here to take care of me if I can’t take care of myself?  

    I want to tell my story, from the sick baby that I was to the rejected adult I now am.  I want to share my rape, my abortions, the nicknames that still taunt me, my PTSD, my divorce details.  I want to share the gaslighting, but I don’t.  I don’t because I don’t want my kids to be hurt, and I don’t because I need and love my job.  The perks of teaching are countless, but there are some downsides, one of which is being so vulnerable to exposure.  

    And so, I’ll sit here smiling, somehow trying to believe, as Anne Frank said, that “people are really good at heart.”  I’ll put positive energy out into the universe, and I’ll wait patiently for answers.  Bob says life is a marathon and not a sprint, so I’ll stay the course and pray there is a grandchild waiting for me at the finish line.

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  • Boat Activity

    March 9, 2023
    Forgiveness, Healing

    The kids, looking nautical and adorable in the captain hats I bought them, are doing an activity where they are fighting to be the last person on a boat.  I’ve allowed them to choose their own controversial characters this year, and we have quite the range.  From Genghis Khan to Mike Tyson, Marjorie Taylor Greene to Dolly Parton, Benedict Arnold to YouTube entrepreneur Dhar Mann, we have 20 very different personalities with quite varied resumes.  

    These are my ExPO (Gifted and Talented) 8th graders, and they are worldly.  Probably the last class I’ll have that hasn’t fully been pandemic and technology paralyzed, they are arguing forcefully yet graciously.  At this very moment, Joan of Arc is calling out Marjorie Taylor Greene on her racism, to which Marjorie Taylor Greene replied, “You didn’t let black people in your army.”  Mike Tyson came to Joan of Arc’s defense by saying, “There weren’t very many black people in France then.”  (Prediction: The Mike Tyson in ExPO 8 will one day be a very successful politician, lawyer, and businessman).

    Dolly Parton just attacked Pele for having many affairs and countless offspring.  Genghis Khan replied, “What does that have to do with him remaining on the boat?”  Will Smith chimed in with, “Of course, you would say that.  You fathered so many kids that 16 million men alive today are directly descended from you.” (They’ve done their research).  Unhappy with this comment by Will Smith about his children and his number of marriages and concubines, Genghis Khan retorted, “You’re really going to opine (fabulous word, right?) about another man’s wives?  You can’t even control the one you have, but she sure controls you and gets to stray from your marriage.” (Tough crowd).

    Pele just asked an impactful, funny, but realistic question, and the kids are still laughing. He dryly and matter-of-factly asked, “Who here has had an affair?”  Marjorie Taylor Greene, Genghis Khan, Pele, and Mike Tyson raised their hands immediately and proudly, with a “no shame in my game” attitude.  You know what?  Genghis Khan was right in his question about why Pele’s affair held any significance in terms of his remaining on the boat.  The only person who should have been impacted by his affair was his wife, and that should have remained between the two of them.  And, what people need to understand is that affairs are not always one-dimensional or one-sided.  People need to open their minds and their hearts and recognize that one incident does not define a person. Lifelong persecution, without investigating the facts, is destructive, unjustified, and inhumane.

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  • Goodbye, England’s Rose

    February 11, 2023
    A Mom Without Her Kids, Abandonment, Broken Heart, Forgiveness, Healing, marissasurgery.wordpress.com, Parental Alienation, PTSD

    The kids are writing a letter today to somebody they’ve lost.  After I played Elton John’s, Goodbye, England’s Rose for them, I prompted them to write about somebody no longer in their lives.  Assuring them that this didn’t need to be a full-blown tearjerker about every stage of Grandma’s cancer debilitation, we talked about all the forms of goodbye.  Perhaps a best friend moved away, a teacher retired, or even a sibling left for college.  Goodbyes are hard in any form.

    As I was watching Elton John’s video and subsequently explaining their assignment, I started crying.  Usually more stoic than that, I couldn’t help the flow of tears when I explained that sometimes we lose somebody even when we are both very much alive.  Hoping that I didn’t wake a dormant curiosity in them about why I don’t ever mention my kids or grandkids, I guaranteed them that they would feel so oxymoronically cleansed yet vulnerable when they were finished.

    How could I share with them that all of my kids left me, one at a time, with nary a goodbye?  How could I share with them that my mother died, and nobody told me?  How could I share with them that this energetic burst of happiness who greets and teaches them every day is irreparably broken and emotionally gnarled?

    It’s important to note that I try to write with the kids whenever they write, as I need for them to know the intrinsic and therapeutic reward of putting our thoughts to paper, regardless of our age or position.  When I began this yesterday, I had no idea that the day would turn into another emotional day of relentless turbulence.

    I received a phone call from a woman named Maria Fletcher at Mount Sinai.  As you all know, Mount Sinai is where Marissa endured 8 surgeries and where we spent over 10 weeks of our lives.  She told me that she was from the Financial Department and that she would be sending my overdue account to Collections.  I informed her that I was never a patient there, but that my daughter had been for many years.  She then told me that Marissa was there in 2022, that there was an unpaid balance, and that I was the guarantor.  

    My body’s all-too-familiar pose of shaking like a leaf took effect, and I just struck a deal with God.  I told him that, if he would let Marissa be okay, I would pay the bill.  My panic paralyzed me, but I decided to reach out to my two besties to ask them if they knew anything.  They both know that, if there is ever anything I need to know in terms of the kids, I need to hear it from them.  Neither one knew anything, but, before too long, one of them learned that Marissa had a C-section in January and the visit to Mount Sinai was probably just for a minor complication.  It broke her heart to have to tell me that.

    From the fear that something was wrong with Marissa, to the relief that there wasn’t, to the sadness that enveloped every cell in this body upon learning that there is another grandchild I won’t see, I am running out of glue to even temporarily fill these chasms in my heart.  Grateful that my daughter was able to give birth a second time after all she has been through, I marvel at how miraculous life can be.  I also know so well how cruel and inhumane life (and people) can be.

    The bottom line is this.  My daughter had an ostomy bag for a year of her life.  What that poor child endured, nobody should ever experience.  Caring for the stoma was no easy feat, and I was the one who took care of it with her.  Of course I was, as I was her mom.  I helped her clean it, care for it, deal with all of the yuck that came out of it, and, when her bag exploded, I was the one who always went running.  I was the one who told her she’d make it through.  I was the one who promised her that she’d be a mom one day.  

    As for my ex-husband, he gets to enjoy grandchildren.  For me, well, I got the literal shit and I get the figurative shit, too.  All of the pain and none of the pleasure for me.  It hurts, it stings, it burns, it lacerates, it bleeds, it mutilates, and it crushes.  I’m not okay.

    For those of you who want to help me, please don’t tell me I’m a warrior and you admire my strength.  Please,, please,, please don’t tell me again that if it was you, you would have killed yourself.  Please don’t tell me that I don’t deserve this persecution.  I know I don’t deserve it.  There is no humanity here, only a level of brutality that is taking my last trickle of energy.  Just tell me you’re here, that you love me, and that you’re not leaving.

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  • The Real Eulogy

    September 29, 2022
    A Mom Without Her Kids, Abandonment, Barbara Starsky, Broken Heart, Parental Alienation, PTSD, Tragic Divorce

    Friends,

    I guess this is my mother’s eulogy, at least for today, at least for now:

    As an English teacher, I can’t help but see the 5 Ws and the 1 H swirling around my mind.  Permit me to delve into my mourning:

    Whom am I mourning? – Am I mourning my mother, and which one?  Am I mourning the one I had, the one I wanted to have, the one I so often enjoyed, or the one who abandoned me?  Or, am I really mourning my new granddaughters who I don’t know, or my kids?

    What am I mourning? – Am I mourning my mother’s passing?  Am I mourning the end of a chance to reconcile?  Am I mourning that I don’t have parents? Am I mourning the fact that this once beautiful and brilliant lady is now underground and gone?

    Where am I mourning? – I’m mourning here, in New Jersey, in a townhome I rent and where I live alone.  I’m not in Atlanta, where my mother is buried, 850 miles away from where my father, her husband of 45 years, is buried?  I’m not with my sister, to her delight as she cements and brandishes her victory trophy.  I’m not with my kids or my grandkids.  I’m not with my “traditional” family.

    When am I mourning? – I’ve been mourning for years already. I’m struggling to pinpoint the exact moment my mourning began.  I think I know it, and I think you all know it, and it is probably the day she came up to supposedly save my ship.  She tossed me overboard, and I’ll leave it at that.

    Why am I mourning? – I’m mourning because it’s the right thing to do.  I’m mourning because I need to heal and start my life again.  I’m mourning because I lost my mom, and, while she might not have been perfect (to say the least), she was still my mom. 

    How am I mourning? – Well, remember that townhome I just told you about, and remember the lack of a “traditional family” I just mentioned?  I’m mourning in that townhome with my “untraditional” family.  I’m mourning with my closest friends, the ones who were there from the beginning, the ones who stayed, the ones who knew, the ones who watched this play out, and the ones who learned later on about everything, with gaping mouths, open minds, and kind hearts.  

    My mother told me that the best day of her life was when I turned 18; it was then that my sister wouldn’t be my legal guardian if something happened to my dad or to her.  She said the relief was overwhelming.  I’m pretty sure she was saying that, left in my sister’s charge, I would be tortured.  David, my lifelong friend and the son of my mother’s best childhood friend, thinks it means that my mother always favored my sister and that my mother didn’t want her burdened with me.  I told him that it was during a tender moment between us, so I was pretty sure I was correct about what she meant.

    This picture is from the third to last time I saw my mom, taken in October of 2015.  Zack had left me only 5 months before, and my mother and I were in enough contact that I went down to Florida for a long weekend.  The casino was, of course, on the agenda, and, after my mother took quite the hit at the Seminole Casino in Coconut Creek, she wanted to go to Chico’s in Boca’s Towne Center.  I had to laugh when she argued with the sales girl over a credit of six dollars, especially after she had just lost over 200 times that at the casino.  But, that’s what gave my mother her pizzazz and her charm.

    Well, I think I might have still had social media then (shocker, since, all together now, “I don’t have social media,” said Marla 35 million times).  I posted this photo, and lots of people liked it for various reasons.  Yes, it’s a lovely photo, but I think people were happy to see us together. But, a day or so after I left what I had hoped was a weekend of healing, my mother called me to reprimand me for posting this (untagged) picture.  Her direct quote was, “The problem is that Lisa’s friends see the picture and tell her about it, and she gets so mad at me and doesn’t talk to me.”  I stayed quiet, because the Dalai Lama says that “Silence is sometimes the best answer.”  I was, yet again, crushed, but remember, my precise mourning for her had started two years before then.  And, who knows, maybe it started even earlier than that?

    A week or so later, my mother called me and asked me what color accessories I had in my kitchen.  Hmmm, I wonder what color I told her?  She had never been to my place in Florham Park, even though she had been to New Jersey often to celebrate milestones in my kids’ lives (even Marissa’s wedding).  She said that she was offered a free gift from the casino of a Creuset teapot, and she was going to have them send it to me.  

    I love this teapot; besides being gorgeous, it’s a reminder of my mother.  I love this picture.

    This other picture was from the day after Marissa’s college graduation.  We were at the Ritz Carlton in D.C., celebrating my mother’s 75th birthday.  She was in her happy place when she was with her grandchildren.  How could she not be, and, in spite of her flaws, she was an involved and caring grandmother who just adored her “millions,” as she called them.  

    I’m not going to rehash the past; you all know it and live it with me. And, none of it was how I wanted it.  I wanted her front and present in my life as well, but it wouldn’t and couldn’t be.  I reached out so much, probably more than I should have.  I read David the letter that I wrote to her when COVID-19 started.  It was such a gracious letter, offering her an olive branch and any pandemic help she might have needed. 

    David tells me that I am preaching to the already converted when I tell him these stories.  He knows the truth, and he knows that they have rewritten it.  In fact, he told me that they are now saying that I never reached out to my mother, even after I knew she was sick.  They wouldn’t allow me to.  And, we won’t even discuss the details of how I found out she was sick. They are spinning the story and have spun this story to unrecognizable and dizzying lengths.  And, having to find out about her death from David, two days after the fact, is unconscionable and beyond human decency.  All of this is.

    My mother would always say that I could always make her laugh, even when she had the most awful day.  Truth be told, I got my sense of humor from her, along with my face and my love of Scrabble and literature.  She was way smarter than I am, though. Again, truth be told, she was the smartest person I ever met.

    Rest in peace and poetry, Mommy.  I will miss you.   

    Yit-gadal v’yit-kadash sh’may raba b’alma dee-v’ra che-ru-tay, ve’yam-lich mal-chutay b’chai-yay-chon uv’yo-may-chon uv-cha-yay d’chol beit Yisrael, ba-agala u’vitze-man kariv, ve’imru amen. Y’hay sh’may raba me’varach le-alam ulehalmay alma-ya. Yit-barach v’yish-tabach, v’yit-pa-ar v’yitromam v’yit-nasay, v’yit-hadar v’yit-aleh v’yit-halal sh’may d’koo-d’shah, b’rich hoo. layla (ool-ayla)* meen kol beer-chata v’sherata, toosh-b’chata v’nay-ch’mata, da-a meran b’alma, ve’imru amen. Y’hay sh’lama raba meen sh’maya v’cha-yim aleynu v’al kol Yisrael, ve’imru amen. O’seh shalom beem-romav, hoo ya’ah-seh shalom aleynu v’al kol Yisrael, ve’imru amen.

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  • Princess Diana and Princess Marissa

    August 24, 2022
    A Mom Without Her Kids, Abandonment, Broken Heart, Forgiveness, Healing, marissasurgery.wordpress.com, Parental Alienation, Princess Diana, PTSD, Tragic Divorce, Ulcerative Colitis

    Next Wednesday will mark the 25th anniversary of Princess Diana’s death.  I can remember the moment that the world found out, as Marissa had the worst case of Chicken Pox and I was up all night with her.  She was seven and delicious with nary a complaint, and I held her extra tight when programming was interrupted to say that the world’s Princess had died.  The paparazzi had been chasing her, as they always did, to get pictures of her with her rebellious beau, Dodi Fayed.  She was 36, her boys were 12 and 15, and she could never outrun her demons.  Beautiful, beloved, and benevolent, she, like I, didn’t have much self-love.  And, to further compare, we were each married to somebody who used that deficiency to his advantage.

    That awful case of Chicken Pox would prove nothing compared to the health issues Marissa would eventually face.  This beautiful warrior endured 8 surgeries, 13 hospital stays, and 85 days and nights in the hospital from the Ulcerative Colitis that would eventually claim her colon.  She wore a bag for a year, including her junior year of college, and though there was exponential physical pain and emotional pain, my Princess, whose side I never left throughout the entire 8 year nightmare, graduated from college, went on to P.A. School, got married, and is now a successful Physician Assistant with a daughter of her own.  I only saw the college graduation and the first 6 months of P.A. School.

    I am attaching the link to the blog I wrote during Marissa’s hospital stays.  It was the perfect way for me to communicate with everybody how my girl was doing.  Marissa wrote it with me, often providing the medical details, and she so looked forward to hearing what everybody wrote.  After her third surgery, when her bag was removed and her j-pouch connected, she even asked me to take her picture pointing to the spot where the bag used to be.

    The link to the blog is http://www.marissasurgery.wordpress.com

    My first blog post was on July 1st of 2010, and my last was on February 4th of 2014.  Marissa left me for good on February 24th of 2014.  My ex-husband told the judge that I published the entire blog without Marissa’s permission and that I violated her privacy.

    I’m not sure much more needs to be said about my ex-husband …

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A Martini Toast

a mom who loses what matters most to protect herself

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