Unwanted- My Story and the Truth.
Category: Uncategorized
Unwanted- My Story and the Truth
Across the world itself many people become parents every second of the day. Their purpose is to have children raise them with pride and be proud of what they become as they grow older. Those are what I call normal parents; they want the best for their children and make sure it happens to the best of their abilities. Not all families and parents are this way. In my case, I didn’t have a normal mother, in any way, the things she would do and say, made my step-father repeat more than, once, some women just should not have children! It’s interesting, when you stop and look at normal families versus the family I grew up in, and see the startling differences there really were. Appearances of course, were always kept up in public or when people visited, but as the old song said, No One Knows, What Goes on Behind Closed Doors! If they did in the family I grew up in, it wouldn’t have been me who was institutionalized it would have been my mother. Sadly, I spent two years in an institution as a child, for reasons stated as my being emotionally disturbed. I was no such thing, I was in fact hyper-active with attention deficit disorder. But I also knew I was the most unwanted child when it came to my mother, I reminded her far too much of my father.
My earliest memory goes back to 1961, the year I first entered Elementary School. It was a September morning after Labor Day Weekend, when my mother woke me up to get ready for school. There was, at the time only two of us, my elder brother and I can clearly remember standing before her in our bedroom, and her dressing me as I fidgeted around and couldn’t hold still. Suddenly to me out of nowhere, I was grabbed, shaken hard, screamed at to hold still, and smacked hard across the face for not holding still. That is my first memory clear in my mind and the look of anger on my mother’s face, as she tied my tie. Then I was ushered off to school with my elder brother leading the way. The small blonde haired, tousled headed boy who was considered unwanted.
I was told the stories of how my first nine months of life were filled with seizures of some sort. My Aunts told me of it all, and how I was held by my mother with my head under running water, and a spoon on my tongue so I wouldn’t choke to death. Those ended for me by accident as I am told, I was sitting in my high chair and my elder brother came along and removed my tray, I tumbled out of the high chair and onto the floor head first. End of seizures and to this day no one can tell why, except for a black spot on the top of my brain in MRIs today. My step-father god bless his soul who took over for my real father when I was nine months old told me how he tied me to the metal radiator in our apartment as a little guy, to keep me from running out the door and falling down the stairs. My mother used to laugh at it and tell me he didn’t know what else to do with me. We were indeed a peculiar family in many ways. Our opinions of our parents even as we sit around and chat today, would be varied and sound crazy to most. My elder brother worshipped the ground my mother walked on and would do anything for her, I faced the truth and realized when I was young what a heartless, cold woman she really was to me.
So, from the youngest age, until my mother’s death in 1991, my memories of her and her ways differ so much from my siblings it is hard to believe. But then again, they were not the one she called a Bastard without a Conscience I was. They were not the one, who she kept telling were like their father a worthless, lazy greasy, penny pitching man. Nope I was. It’s funny how a divorced couple talks about one another after the divorce, to their immediate family and friends. The war never does stop, does it? At least that was the case, with my real parents, right up until my father’s death, Thanksgiving Day 1983 from cancer.
By then, I was full-grown and closing in on 30 years old I was 27 years old. Your younger days make you who you are when you are full-grown for sure. Life it seems is a complex, combination of experiences you live thru as you age that makes you who you are. Each experience has something to do with who we are as adults, and I think any Doctor would say the same. I know looking back, not feeling wanted or cared for, made, me who I am today, a man who can stand alone and not care what anyone says. Not easy to be that way, but I am not evil or bad, just, able to do what is necessary to survive and get by. We all tend to learn to do what one needs to, to survive by natural instinct and my case was the same as most.
Anyway by the time I entered kindergarten, I was looked upon as a troubled child with emotional problems by my parents and the school system. This didn’t make it easy for me at all for sure. The teachers were told to keep a close eye on me and I hated it. I would do things just to spite the teachers and my classmates in kindergarten. I would throw toys at other kids, fight with them, not take naps when told to and I would actually refuse to go to the toilet and do it in my pants. I was of course frowned upon and looked at by the other kids as a loser and a strange kid. By the time my kindergarten year ended, my parents were sent a letter by the school, requesting I repeat kindergarten. Of course my mother would not go for that and it didn’t happen, but it was a close call as I remember it. I did make it to First Grade on time, but, the problems I ran into started to build and would for the next few years. I was not a child who got along with anyone at the time, and I just wanted to be left alone. I have no idea of what, was wrong with me, nor did my parents, the school system or in the end the State Social Workers. I survived it I think through determination and stubbornness.
As the first three years of my schooling went on, so did my attitude grow worse about people in general and the school system? I couldn’t conform to the standards or ways expected to me, I would not buckle down as they say and worry about grades. I firmly believe that if it were not for the fact, that the school system in my home city, was under financial problems for those years, I wouldn’t have advanced at all in school. My advancement to second and then third grade was a matter of force by the school system I attended. The city could not afford teachers, and we were forced to have the same teacher for the first three years. That led to my being pulled along to second than third grade, due to financial matters. My report cards show I failed in all areas to conform or pass any tests and I was a social reject. I would fight with students, fight with teachers and even fight with the Principal and her Secretary. It wasn’t fun in school then and because of those battles in school, and at home during those years, the spring between third and fourth grade became trouble big time. My mother made a decision to call in the State of Connecticut to try to straighten me out, both in school and at home. My rebellion in school was only matched by my rebellion at home, when it came to my mother. I had found pictures of hers in a photo album in the living room closet. Among those pictures were photos of a man, I knew had to be my father, instinct and the obvious differences in skin tone and color told me the man I called Dad was not my real father. My mother caught onto my knowing this because I asked her about it all. The fights started with one question, was that my father in the pictures. And it would not end for two years, after I was institutionalize by the State of Connecticut.
1965, was the year my baby sister was born, and it was also the year I was sent away for two. After her birth that year a couple of things occurred, 1) she came home and my elder brother became the babysitter for his three younger siblings. My elder brother is and will always be a selfish, obnoxious, arrogant person who cared for himself and no one else. I remember the start of my problems by his involvement. He would tease me constantly. One day he stood at the screen door which had a window in it at the time and wouldn’t let me in the house. As I asked him to let me in, he laughed at me and wouldn’t unlock the door. As the argument grew so did my anger, and this went on for a long time.
Finally, after numerous attempts and requests by me to get in the house he just stood there behind the door and laughed at me saying no. I had, had enough of this, so I finally picked up a stone and tossed it through the glass at him. I didn’t realize he was holding our baby sister at the time and the glass shattered all over them. That was the beginning of the end for me. My parents were pissed when they came home and mom had no idea how to handle me. I was punished of course and told by mom that she had, had enough of me, and couldn’t handle me anymore. She then, told me she was calling in the State Of Connecticut and they would be coming by in a week. My problems were about to get deeper now.
I remember that hot July day, when we all were home early in the morning at 8 am, and a small black car, with a State of Connecticut seal on the side drove up. It was the first time I met the Social Worker, Miss Belote and the first meeting of her with our family. It took place in our living room with us all gathered and discussing why I behaved as I did. It was like being grilled by a bunch of strangers I didn’t really know or understand. Sadly these meetings continued, because so did my behavior, my anger was directed at two people, one mostly my elder brother and two my mother. As the meetings continued through July and into August no progress was being seen in my behavior or attitude by the Social Worker or my parents. By Mid- August of 1965, my parents told the State Social Worker they couldn’t handle me anymore and a decision was made to take me out of the home environment and to institutionalize me as an Emotionally Unstable Child, who needed help.
I remember the evening when my mother told me what was coming and how she told me. It was after supper and prior to bed, as she got us all ready. She told me she couldn’t handle me anymore and didn’t know what else to do, so she made arrangements for the State of Connecticut to take me away. As I stood there as a child listening to her, I knew I was in trouble, but never did understand what was happening until it was too late.
I was taken by mom out shopping for clothes and more and then, the night before I was to leave I was told Miss Belote the State Social Worker was coming to get me the next day. It was the evening before and knew what was coming, I never did understand why nor was I given any chance to ask.
The morning of the big event and arrival of The State Social Worker I was gotten up early, and bathed and dressed by mom and a suitcase was packed and put downstairs in the living room. I was dress in pink striped shorts and a white shirt pullover and new sneakers and socks. I was told she was coming for me and she was taking me away. As I awaited, I knew I was in trouble, I knew what was coming and I knew I didn’t want to go. I made a decision, and ran out the door and took off running. As I ran that day, my mother caught on and sent my elder brother and all of the neighborhood kids after me, the chase was on. That day, the chase lasted well over 10 hours before I was caught and returned back home by the Police Department. I escaped my pursuers thru the woods and kept right on running till I reached the next town that night. The woods were indeed my place of safety, but my hunger and being tired were my demise and ultimately the reason why I was caught. I was picked up on a lonely stretch of road over 5 miles away that night by the police who returned me home at about 9 pm. I was cleaned up and fed and then put to bed, the next day I would be picked up earlier and taken away to The Children Center in Hamden, Connecticut on Whalley Avenue that would become my home for the next two years
The Children Center is located on Whalley Avenue in Hamden, Connecticut, it sits across from a reservoir and next to Quinnipiac College. Its black front Gates are always open to the public and the driveway through the center of those gates wide enough for two cars. I remember seeing it for the first time that hot August Day, the front walls that hold the Gates up are brick and around the Center itself is a black wrought iron fence. On the right brick wall is a simple sign that says, Children’s Center. As you drive in to it they take you to the slight right and the main administration Building and process you for your arrival. Your Social Worker now owns you and walks you in to the Administration Building, processes your paperwork and then walks you back out to the State Car for the short ride up the center green to the barracks all the kids stay in. There are a few barracks throughout the compound of course for different aged children of different sexes. There is also a Gymnasium, a School, a Shop Building for shops like carpentry. There is also many trees and a tennis court that also doubles as a basketball court and an ice rink in winter for ice skating. The Children Center is manned by medical and psychiatrist, all barracks have Social Workers on duty to help control the children in shifts around the clock. The rooms are of different sizes and house anywhere from, 8 kids in a room down to 2 to a room. The kids are given allowances based only on what their parents provide. A chow hall is present to eat in also. Showers are wide open like at the YMCA and all use them who live in these barracks. The Children Center was where I was stuck for the next two years of my young life, I was nine years old, I would not get released till well after my eleventh birthday, which is in January, it was July 1967 when I heard I was going back home and August 1967 when I got there.
To explain my stay at The Children Center, you have to first look at my arrival date. I didn’t want to be there that is for sure, they set me up in a room with seven other boys near my age. I felt lost and alone and I was given a bunk bed, one dresser and told to make my bed. I basically lost it and threw a tantrum that was a good one apparently. That tantrum was my only way of trying to beat the odds and go home number one, but secondly it was a full-out, emotional burst of anger and sadness. I threw anything I could get my hands on and went berserk. The Social Worker on duty was a young man, a red-haired one, who came in and told me to stop. When I didn’t he finally said if I didn’t he would have to stop me. Of course I refused, and continued in a mad tantrum to do as I pleased. The next thing I knew I was pinned to the floor by this full-grown man as I yelled and screamed in anger. My rampage and screaming lasted a good 30 minutes, when finally he looked at me and asked me if I was through I was exhausted. He let me up, looked at me, told me to clean up the mess and when done get in bed, for I was done for my first day.
When your nine years old you learn quickly who is in charge of you, if they don’t hesitate to discipline and correct you and they stick to it. I learned in that first hour no tantrum or action on my part was going to change where I was or why I was there so I had better learn to live with it all. I did of course learning to do chores, going to school 5 days a week during school months and monthly meetings with Social Workers. Even learned to make my own bed, and do my own laundry while in the Center. I learned discipline and how to use self-control at all times, they stressed that on us there. But not all was the greatest in The Center there were bad times too and things I should have never happened to me too and others. My first year in the Center, my Step-father and Mother and siblings would come down to see me once a month on the weekends. The visits were only allowed if I behaved, so I must have done well then. Now, many would think a kid in such a place as The Center was placed on drugs of some sort, never happened in my case. I never needed drugs, some kids had Ritalin, some had anti- depressant and other drugs to take. I was never diagnosed with anything that required drugs of any form period. When I questioned the Social Worker on why I was in The Center, her response was simple; I was declared an emotionally disturbed child. As I told her, I told many since, I wasn’t emotionally disturbed, I was hyper active with attention deficit disorder. I was in a mad fight to survive and learn who I was. Plus I did have hyper-activity and attention deficit disorder, but it was the 1960s and no one understood that as of yet. I suffered for it of course but from age nine to 11 years old I out grew it and overcame on my own without medication.
What brought me to this position I found myself in , in 1965 was partly my own refusal to stop asking questions and my mother’s refusal to answer the questions I asked, plus the constant ribbing, poking, teasing and harassing my elder brother did to me. I had spent from five years old to nine years old in constant arguments with both of them. It started at five years old with my mother, because I combed through old photo albums of hers I found in a closet. Upon looking through them I found a photo of a man who looked almost just like me and asked who he was. That started the fight that would last from my fifth birthday to my eighteenth birthday, til I got on a Greyhound bus and went to meet the man myself. The other teasing harassing and poking done by my elder brother would not end until I finally told him, when I was forty years old I would not put up with his shit anymore. So you see, I ended up in the Children Center because I fought back and rebelled against what was being forced upon me. I knew my step-father wasn’t my real father and when I questioned my mother about it the battle began. So, because I wouldn’t stop asking her reactions got louder and more physical and I became more rebellious and we were both stubborn of course. So that said and understood will give you the idea of what kind of kid I was. My Step-father told me at five years old I learned to read music from him, by verbal teachings. I never played a song, but I could read music at the time. Many things I had going for me in my younger days, I lost because I never used them to better myself and I had a low attention span. That is the way it went see, I wasn’t emotionally unstable I was hyper-active, and had the attention span of a gnat so to say.
As my time went on in the Children’s Center, I learned many things some good and some bad so to say. I saw things I had never seen or experienced so far in my life. The Children Center is the place I first heard of sex, kissing, drugs, alcohol and more. It was filled with kids from all walks of life. It was also the place where I learned to play basketball which I suck at, learned to play tennis and ice skate and tried to kiss my first girl. Of all of the above, the only thing I got right was the ice skating.
The first year was spent accumulating myself to the Center it’s rules and ways, being put on schedules for meetings and appointments with my Social Worker, and school. Of course there were the fights with other kids and bullies and the good times of having fun too. We would get a bunch of us together and attempt to imitate singing groups of the 1960s. We were having fun and laughing as we did it and knowing we stunk. It was all kids pretending at the time. I learned to shoot pool, I learned to love reading and I explored the neighborhood around the Center also. I ended up at the lake next to the college catching a monster snapping turtle my first summer there. Another kid and I dragged it back to the Center and dumped it in the Swimming Pool. It died of course from the chemicals and we buried it next to the pool. The following summer we dug it up and studied the skeleton of the turtle. So yes, The Center wasn’t all bad. But it wasn’t all good either. You learned if you were in it, to adjust and adapt to the rules and behave in such a way as the teachers, counselors and Social Workers would leave you alone. It was a matter of pure survival.
1966 to 1967 was my second year in The Children’s Center in Hamden, Connecticut. By that time I had learned to work within the rules and get by without any problems. My Parents would come down to see me on the weekends usually bringing the younger siblings if they could and my elder brother hardly ever showed up. He was always playing some sport or another and didn’t want to bother it seemed.
One weekend, that summer, my parents showed up for their visit. As my mother talked to the counselors, for the barracks, my step-father and I took a walk outside, and, sat on the curb to the green.
As we sat there he asked me if I wanted to be adopted by him and have my name legally changed to his. I looked at him and asked him why he asked. He said he knew, mom had told him I found the photos. He explained to me that the one who plants the seed is not necessarily the one who makes it grow and feeds it properly. He then offered to adopt me and change my name to his. I told him I would think about it and let him know. The following visit from my parents, I told him no thank you and I wanted to keep the name I was born with. He said ok, but no matter what I was still his son and it didn’t matter what my last name was .I admired him for that and all he did for my elder brother and I all our lives. This was a man who married a woman with two boys, and took all of us in and raised us as his own, how else could I think. While he was great in this way, he was also bad in his physical punishment of all of us kids. The beatings we received over the years, before my time in the Children Center and afterwards, would scar all of the boys in the family. Do I blame him for it all, no, I blame both of them, for mom pushed him to do it and he did it to shut her up. It was a matter of who really was in charge and why.
Meetings with the Social Worker were scheduled during my two years in The Center on a monthly basis. I would not attend them all, I would skip them and disappear and that didn’t go over too well with the Center. In the end I surrendered in the spring of 1966, and attended a few with the Social Worker. One day in March of 1966 I was told to report to the Social Workers office she wanted to see me. I walked over from the school that day and into the administrative building and climbed the stairs to the second floor and reported in to the secretary there and waited.
Shortly afterwards as I was waiting I saw my Social Worker go by the office with a young couple in tow heading to her office. I didn’t think much about this of course, but you get feelings of things to happen or coming. As I sat there waiting kind thought something is up, she doesn’t call me in off schedule like this for nothing. I was about to find out what was going on after waiting about 30 minutes.
My Social Worker came down the hall and got me soon and took me to her office. Sitting inside was this young couple, she introduced us and told me they were looking to adopt a son. We chatted a bit and then they left with a look of hope on their faces. As they did I as an eleven year old to be, put it all together, they wanted to adopt me. Then the lights came on in my mind and I knew then that the State or my mother or both thought it would be best if I was adopted by a new family and never sent home. This caused an emotional welling in me that caused my response to all of it. As the Social Worker walked the couple out she left me in her office alone to think it over. During those moments and minutes I found a dictaphone machine and the mic for it and turned it on. I spoke clearly and loudly in the machine and said, I do not want a new family, nor do I need a new family, I want to go home to my own family period. When I finished, I shut off the machine and put down the mic and walked out the door of the office and down the back steps and back to the barracks. That recording ultimately, sent me back home to my real family that August, after it was found and played by the Social Worker. Never a word was ever said to me about it, by the Social Worker or anyone at The Center, I wouldn’t know it was heard until years later when told by my mother. Many things occurred to me in my two years in The Children Center, I fractured both wrists in the summer and ended up in casts that lasted through the first summer I was in. I attempted to kiss my first girl there and failed of course I was too young, girls in the Center taught me tennis and ice skating also. So The Center was not all bad, just a place to be when no one wanted me.
By early August of 1967 it was decided I would be returned home instead of sent to a foster home or adopted by another family. Again I stress the point, the reason was the Social Worker had found and listened to my recording on her machine. That cry in the night as I call it, ultimately made the State of Connecticut send me back to my real family. By the time I returned, that August, the house had new furniture, new carpets, and I was made to take my shoes off to even get in the house. The atmosphere had changed; I noticed subtle changes in the family. My mother was never close to me and that continued to be, I was never close to my elder brother either. The changes were in the way the family interacted and how they accepted me back. As strange as it may sound something was different for sure and it all seemed to work out for us all. I returned to school again in my old school after being gone for two years with only two years to go. Seventh Grade became an easy process for me as did eighth grade the following year. The constant beatings we would receive from my step-father at night seemed to have stopped also, I think either he stopped listening to mom and blew off her bitching or his sisters told him to stop beating us kids. Either way, it stopped for a while and things started to go ok. That though would change, by 1969 when the fifth and final child was born to them. They now had five mouths to feed so to say and dress and care for, it was July 1969. A Decade was ending and another getting ready to begin and by 1970’s summer a move was in store for the family. Late in October 1969 my mother and step-father determined we couldn’t live in a small apartment anymore. They decided to buy a home, in a small neighboring town. To do so though they had to find a way to get a down payment on it, they did, they took it from my elder brother’s saving account!.
By the time I graduated Elementary School in June of 1969, many new decisions were being made by my parents and by me. That summer I decided I wanted to attend a Technical High School instead of a regular one. I applied to the best one in the area in late June of 1969 and my step-father took me down for the entrance exam one day. As he drove me down in his big old Cadillac, all yellow with it’s green roof, he asked me if I was going to pass the test. I looked at him and said, Sure. He said ok and said we shall see.. As I walked into the school that morning at 8 am. I knew I would pass the test, but no one else thought I would. After two hours I finished the entrance exam and called my step-father to pick me up. As I left all the other kids were still working on the test, I had finished first. As I handed in the test and left the tutors, pointed at me and said that was fast, I smiled and just walked out.
I called home that day and asked for Dad to come pick me up, I was 13 about to become 14 in six months that summer. Dad picked me up in his big old Cadillac and on the ride home he asked how I did. I told him I passed the test, he laughed and said sure you did. Never once did he really believe I did of course. That early August the letter came in the mailbox from the school, as I opened it my step-father watched. I read the letter and just smiled and set it down on the counter in our kitchen. Dad picked it up and read it and then called mom, he was happy and his voice was loud, He did it!.
Next the big move in August. I remember dad telling us we were moving and how he introduced us to our next home. It was an early August day, shortly after I got my admittance letter to school. Dad piled the 3 eldest of his kids in his station wagon he now had and drove us to the house located on a hill in a small town called Naugatuck. As I looked at it that summer I knew, work was what we were in store for, for sure. A big, old, dutch, colonial home, it was over grown with weeds and the front yard was a bank. The house was solid of course in structure, but under the weeds in the front was a sign, it was a condemned house they had bought. And guess how we were gonna fix it, three boys and one man is how!. Dad had his plans and it didn’t matter if we boys wanted to do anything else, we had our jobs to do period and that was rebuild with him. Dad and I started the fixing as soon as he was ready that August, we started in the kitchen which was a mess. The walls were old plaster and there were buckling from the slats behind them. To start Dad, measured up the kitchen walls all around the room 5 feet high, above that mark the walls were fine, below damaged and had to go. I was given a chisel and a hammer and shown how to knock the plaster down and cut the line straight. When done we had slats still in the walls and had marked off where all the studs were. We panaled up to the good wall from the floor. Dad then said to wait and we ran out that week and got floor tiles for the flooring and laid it down the next week. Now once the flooring was in more repairs had to be finished.
Our next mission was to fix the plumbing and sink in the kitchen so it didn’t leak on either end, water supply or drains. Dad and I spent a day alone making sure it would never leak again, we removed most of the old copper water supply lines and replaced them with PVC plastic and the drain lines too. We put in a new faucet too.
Dad then determined what to do with the walls we had torn apart. Instead of sheet rocking them brand new, he came up with wall paneling, a dark walnut. We paneled the lower feet of the walls all the way around. Then Dad determined how to close the gap so it would never be seen again, clam shell molding was brought in plain wood of course, three inches wide and measure by dad to fit snuggly all the way around the room. And as Dad worked on the kitchen lighting and checked other things out I was given the job of sanding, staining and shellacked the molding. When he was ready we leveled the molding one piece at a time and I held it in place as he nailed away Dad only owned power saws as needed he never had any other power tools, so he hand nailed it all with a hammer and finishing nails. To this day now in 2011, that kitchen in that old house is still the same and never will be changed. In 1990 when Dad was dying which is another part of this story, later, he went over from cramps from his cancer and was holding the kitchen light in his hand as he did. He yanked it from the ceiling, I know cause mom asked me to put it back, I did.
The fall and winter of 1970 and into the spring of 1971, I spent with Dad, my two brothers and that old house, rebuilding, finishing and making it livable for us all. I never had much time to do much else it seemed to me. I still remember the spring of 1971 clearly, Dad had bought an old 1954 Ford F-100 Pick-up truck, he drove it home one day. The following Saturday it was registered and ready to roll and he let me know about it. He woke me at 8 am on Saturday and made me get dressed and eat, then he dragged me out of the house and into the truck. The next thing I knew we were three towns from home, loading his pick-up truck with field stones. We loaded enough stones that spring to bring home and build the front stone wall up five feet higher and the wall is 75 feet long. We did it though and I mixed the cement as he built the wall side by side with him, and if I complained or moaned or groaned, he would look at me and say stop crying, or I will smack ya with the shovel. That was my first year in Naugatuck, Connecticut our new home.
The Old Dutch Colonial house changed in a years’ time from a condemned property to a nice home, we paneled and paneled walls, dining room living room, laid a slate floor in the front foyer, sanded the stairs ways up three floors and landings too. Even carpeted the Living-room in gold shag rug for looks. Then headed to the second floor where we painted and redid three bedrooms and a bathroom. We redid a bedroom for my sister that year also, we paneled the walls in white paneling then Dad made me paint it all pink for her, we put pink shag rug in and Dad bought his only daughter a new bedroom set, all white with canopy and gold inlays in it. The Princess now had her kingdom. We built a room for the youngest son too, paneled it in walnut, added corner bookshelves, built-in and carpeted it in green and orange carpet squares. I know green and orange right yuck, but it is what he wanted my brother. By the time we had finished off the second floor bedrooms Dad was tired a bit, he took a break for a few weeks. Then it was basement time.
The basement we cleaned out and then we laid forms in the dirt floor that dad made and he opened the cellar exterior doors. I mixed the cement and he poured bucket after bucket after bucket. First one half of that floor then, the other half the following weekend. When done the floor had raised two inches up and was solid as hell. Then Dad got an idea, it was time to stucco the damn stone basement walls. What fun that turned out to be, chicken wired walls and stuccoing cement in. It worked though, for the basement became the laundry and work room. We even ended up building Dad a long work bench that summer with a peg board for holding tools and hooks. Turned out well yes indeed, Dad was happy enough by then with the house he finally quit repairing it for a while. Even as I did all of this with Dad, from yard clearing to wall building, to house repairs, I was never really wanted, my mother and I fought every day we were together. It was never peace and quiet and getting along. That wasn’t the way of my family it seems, everything was a fight or struggle.
Since I felt so unwanted and used I would try to disappear and get away now as much as possible. My elder brother escaped thru sports and then marriage and he never did much anyway at home, he was the wanted one and I the unwanted one. When the third son of the family came about, well, he was god’s gift to his dad till he turned on him and wiped Dad out. The girl was a precious addition and she got her own room, never beaten upon and taken care of by dad, although mom treated her bad.
The baby boy, got spoiled at a young age and then got hit by a car and injured mentally. He was never the same after that, he is normal but his personality changed and he became more of a me, me person then a we person. Our family never was the best family around and if anyone knew it I did, for I was the unwanted one. I was made to babysit, clean, do laundries, feed the younger three and work with dad on projects around the house the rest well, you get the idea. I was like the unwanted sister in Cinderella, used abused and not appreciated until after I left. It was then all the work around the house stopped and it remained that way until I returned after 16 years of service and nothing changed the third floor never, got completed, it remained where I left it when I left for the service. Funny how that all happened, Dad had no one left to do the work for him or help him, so it remained filled with wood.
I was so unwanted my mother gave me away for two years, my step-father beat upon me, my older brother beat upon me and my younger brother who tried to kill his younger siblings tried to beat upon me. I became the target, in the family when young and because of that I overcame as I got older and became a soldier, a sailor and a father of two, myself, before my divorce. I fought and struggled my whole life with being accepted or wanted, from childhood to adulthood and now through two marriages, two kids and more. In the end I never felt wanted and will always feel unwanted because of my mother, my step-father, and my older brother. I don’t think it is something I will ever overcome. I never felt like I belonged or was a member of my own family. This is what it feels like when you’re the unwanted one.
Yet in the end, today after my parents have been gone over 20 years, and I have moved on, I still know I was the unwanted one, but I have outshined all my siblings and still encourage my baby sister who I love the most. My other brothers in turn, the oldest is down south and still to this day has no idea how to talk to people or to his family, especially me. The one who was born in back of me died at a young age in California due to drugs and aids. The baby boy the last lives on his own and trusts no one because it is what he was taught by his father. So in the end I am the only one with my sister who survived the mess of our family and turned out anywhere near normal, and we survive well. Sometimes, it hurts so bad to be the unwanted one and knowing how that went, other times I feel it was necessary for me to learn the survival skills that keep me going daily. Being unwanted teaches you to survive on your own and to reach for what you want and need and make ends meet. So, I shall always be known in my mind as the unwanted son. But why go on, for who wants to hear really from an unwanted one!
Memorial Day Weekend 2012
Memorial Day Weekend 2012
As I sit and watch TV and parades and people laughing, crying, playing, singing and staring I remember how i served my country in three different branches of service and gave my time and effort to protect what is here. Many today serve to get benefits from the military or schooling, I served to protect what I believed in and left behind, my family, my children, my home town and friends and loved ones. Nothing else was on my mind as I gave sixteen years of my life to my country. I also gave peace of mind up and suffer from PTSD, I suffer from six bad herniated discs in my spine, I have sleep apnea and blood pressure problems today. Yet my time in the services were the best for me, because i was young, strong and kept my country free.
As you travel to and fro this Memorial Weekend, to the beaches, picnics,movies or stores, or even out-of-town where you can see more. Stop and look closely somewhere you see, you may see a veteran who is like me. You may see a miss in the way they walk, it can be a problem with the way they talk, they may carry a cane or be in a wheelchair, or wear a Vets Cap, or a flag somewhere. If you do take your time to say thanks for they gave up their lives, their health and their time to keep you and America safe and Free, take my word for it for I am a Disabled Veteran you see!.
Enjoy your freedoms, your peace, your safety, enjoy your families, your laughter and friends, and remember somewhere out there is a Veteran giving it all, so all the happiness, pleasures, good times and friends, don’t end! Happy Memorial Weekend Folks ! Enjoy !
12 Things Presidential Candidates need to do!
12 Things Presidential Candidates need to do!
The dog days of summer are coming and the heat will rise outside and the campaign for the Presidency will too. There will be mud-slinging and more before it is over come November 2012. The summer will bring debates on policy,economics.and healthcare. It will bring speeches on war, the military and more, but will the two candidates face the real issues as the American People see them, or run from them?
The real issues for the 2012 Election will be the ones to watch for folks. Can either man come up with a good plan to save the Economy, jobs, HealthCare and Medicaid and Medicare as well as save Social Security? Can either one promise to save Veteran’s Benefits and take care of our veterans the way they should be cared for? Will either man be able to find a way to save the Postal Service that so many elderly and disabled depend on for medications and more? What will happen to America in the next four years whether it is under President Obama or Romney? Will America ever regain its credit rating, will America ever level the trade agreements and stop policing and fighting wars for others and take care of its own? These questions need to be put to the candidates and answered not bullshit questions so they can dodge the real issues.
You show me one of the two who will save Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid, stop policing other countries, and creat jobs and level the trade agreements maybe I will vote for them! You show me one candidate who is brave enough to admit they need to help the Postal Service, Trade, the economy and stop all wars and I may think about voting for them. You want the votes of middle america, lower america and the minorities then you need to address immigration, homeland security, and fixing the programs that help americans! Not run from them or avoid them, that isn’t the way to go!
As the temperatures rise across America, and the summer begins, we the American People must make a choice of which candidate to choose come November 2012 and I will only vote for the one I firmly believe can address the issues at stake as follows:
1) The Economy and improving it by creating jobs, giving tax breaks to companies that need them.
2) Who will address the trade markets and our trade agreements with China and others who now have the advantage over us and level it!
3) Who will stop borrowing from Social Security and save it for the future.
4) Who will preserve and protect Medicaid, Medicare, Healthcare and repair the Postal Service.
5) Who will keep us out of wars and bring out troops home for all time, and not get us involved again.
6) Who will save the benefits and plans of the New Deal and make America a better country to live in.
7) No new taxes period they aren’t needed, lets lower the pay/ salaries of Congress, both Houses, they don’t work they shouldn’t be paid!
8) Bring back manufacturing, bring back being creative, innovative and inventing and let’s make America a forerunner for all.
9) You want to be President again or anew, then you must face these issues, economy, jobs, manufacturing, trade agreements, refunding of social security, veteran’s benefits, healthcare,Medicaid, medicare and more. You can’t run and hide without addressing them each.
10) Face the biggest issue of all for America, create jobs, create manufacturing, create peace and keep healthcare. Don’t destroy it improve it. We need help for the middle class, lower class, not more tax breaks for the rich and upper class. Lets level the playing field and do it correctly.
11) There must be a way to make jobs for all, not just for some, to get the economy going give companies tax breaks in their home towns or cities across the nation. Lets do something for America and Americans instead of for the politicians and the rich.
12) Final thing, if you want to be President and lead, then stand the hell up and lead, don’t cower, don’t bend, don’t be a wuss. But don’t police other nations with our troops, bring them home, no more wars!
The Holy Land Murder by: William McCurrach A Story Today
The Holy Land Murder by: William McCurrach A Story Today
Chapter 1
Up on a hill in Waterbury, Connecticut sits a cross lit up by lights on a dark night, a symbol of the Church and Catholic religion. It is surrounded by a small park at its base and you have to walk up to it to get there, after a drive around the back to the entrance. They call that The Holy Land in Waterbury, Connecticut and most are awed by it and respect it well. But every now and then kids play pranks up there and graffiti will be found and need cleaning up, or an accident would happen there and be taken care of, but a Murder on The Holy Ground, well that had never happened, till now.
The rains had fallen for a week and the ground was soaking wet, and the roads gleamed from the wetness. In a police car headed to The Holy Land and the cross park is Detective Mandelon, his boss called him up and sent him, to investigate a murder at the cross. Found tied to the cross like Jesus Christ is a man, beaten and shot and bloodied! The scene is hard to take, the body hastily tied to the cross and beaten to a pulp two shots to the head. Whoever killed him meant to send a message!
Rick Mandelon has been on the force for many years now and in this area for decades and never has anyone even tried no matter what to commit a murder in such a place. Waterbury, Connecticut, Mandelon, knows is not a murder capital of the state or this area, but for some reason this one has occurred here. Detective Rick Mandelon, is the best one on the force and his bosses know he can solve the case given time.
Upon arrival on the scene, Rick runs dead on into the Sergeant in charge, He has cordoned off the whole area around the cross and the body. The Sergeant tells Rick, that when they were called one person called it in on a cell phone but didn’t identify themselves. When the police did arrive all we did as a team was block the area off and close the park. The rest Detective is up to you, but I think you may have trouble solving this one, not much evidence left to find. Rick says ok, I will take it from here, keep all cordoned out, and get the Medical Examiner up here, to collect the body, Rick orders pictures taken of the body and scene from all angles possible. He looks around writing down all he can find and finds the victim’s name and has an officer go notify the family. Rick continues to look around finding the victim’s wallet and car keys, but no car close by. Mandelon walks down the path out of the park, away from the cross and finds a sliver Honda Civic sitting there all locked up. He tries the key and opens the car, looking inside all around, all Mandelon finds is the registration, insurance papers, and a coat on the back seat, from the pocket he pulls a joint. So, our victim was a pothead he thinks, that is no biggie, many of them in Waterbury for sure. Looking back up to the crime scene, Mandelon walks back up and tells the photographer to send all the prints to his office immediately and because the ground is wet and the pavement is all there is here not much to see. Mandelon, decides not more I can do tonight, time to go write up my report, file it and start over tomorrow. Maybe a fresh mind will give me some ideas and I can sniff around more through whatever is found here. Rick Mandelon has been through this before, and knows time will help him solve the crime; it only takes time and some effort. But someone must solve how a man ended hung up on the Cross in Holy Land for all to see, without anyone seeing anything at all.
The drug trade in Waterbury grows each day and each section of the city has its bosses for each type out there. Mandelon decides to look into the pot sellers and dealers to find who would hang a man that way. According to word on the street, only one crazy dealer would dare to attempt such a thing and people are avoiding talking about Crazy Mac the pot dealer! Mac hides in the north end of Waterbury in the projects up there, they have been there since the 1950’s all brick and small but comfy for many. According to word on the street Crazy Mac lives in a two bedroom there in the brick building near the center, Mandelon gets the address and heads off to talk to Crazy Mac. Writing down the address Mandelon heads to 296 Knowlwood Circle, just a discussion no warrants. Putting on his fedora and loading his .38 Mandelon, jumps in the car and rides off, his badge displayed on his belt.
Chapter 2
Crazy Mac’s home an apartment in a project is all brick on the outside and has two entries. Driving up to the front Mandelon figures, it is just a few questions and no warrant so I will just knock and ask away if he lets me. Striding up to the door Rick opens his jacket and lets his badge show and clears the way for his .38 if needed. Reaching the door, Rick knocks hard and harder to see if anyone answers and stands to the side. No answer comes, but he can hear movement behind the door, but no one answers, Banging on the door harder with a fist, Mandelon almost cracks the window, yet no answer comes so he yells Police Open Up! Suddenly a shot rings out and the round comes flying thru the window just missing him. Stepping back Rick kicks the door with all his weight and the door slams open and he body rolls in. Coming up on his knees in the kitchen, he scans around with his .38 out in front. No more shots or sounds come. Looking up the back door is open his man is running, but it’s too late now, looking out the door he can see the form in shadow dart into the woods. Mandelon knows now he will never catch Crazy Mac tonight, so he stops and searches the apartment, bongs in the bedrooms up stairs, water pipes in the living room and in the basement pot plants growing under lights by the window which is open. Damn, Rick thinks if this guy did kill the guy on the cross, it had to be a failure to pay or a business deal gone bad. Whichever it is, Crazy Mac just made it all worse for himself and any dealers he may have out here. Detective Mandelon calls it in and puts out an APB for Crazy Mac, confiscating all the pot plants and equipment, and calling in a Patrol to watch the apartment and projects for the sight of Crazy Mac. Rick chews on his old stogie of a cigar now and puffs on it hard and thinks, this guy has to be crazy to shoot at a cop, now it will just get harder for him to hide. We should get this crazy bastard at least soon, with the APB and so many cops looking him now.
Rick heads back to his car and heads back to the station, checking in all the pot and equipment he found and filing his report of his actions and job on duty he did. As he turns to leave for the night, Rick is approached by his boss, the boss tells him, and I trust you will get this guy? Rick sneers back, and then whispers you, can bet your ass I will, he fired at me, I don’t take that lightly! Stomping along grumpy now, his jacket spread wide, and his cigar hanging from his lip, Rick says good night and goes home. Crazy Mac will have to wait till tomorrow Rick thinks in the meantime, I need a burger and fries and a beer, he stops at a neighborhood bar and eats and relaxes then heads on home for sleep. It becomes a restless night for Rick, he sleeps fitfully thinking of the shot that just went by his ear and how close it came. But, in the end he sleeps well and the alarm clock is set for 7am.
Stumbling from bed Rick, makes his coffee and rubs his unshaven face, bristling with ideas to get Crazy Mac and solve this crime. Shaving and staring into the mirror in his bathroom Rick realizes he is not getting any younger the lines on his face are permanent now. He shaves and brushes his teeth and climbs in his shower and gets washed.
After his shower he puts on his working suit and tie and his Fedora for the road, and adds his badge and gun and heads out the door with a cigar on his lip. Mandelon, thinks I need to find Crazy Mac before other drug dealers do, he could end up dead. In the car as he starts his engine, his cell phone rings, and it’s the Medical Examiner, telling Rick he has something for him and to stop by. Rick fires up his cruiser and off he heads to the M.E. Office, let’s see what we got.
The Medical Examiner’s Office and Morgue is quiet when Rick arrives in a backroom you can smell the smells of death and bleach. It stinks thinks Rick as he opens the door and walks in. There is the M.E. now, old bastard he is, but a nice guy when not working. Ok, Rick says what you got Doc for me on the Cross murder? The M.E. tells Rick, this man was shot twice in the head cleanly with a .22 caliber, and hung by both his neck and arms to that cross post mortem. He was dead a bit before hung up there; my guess is he was hung to send a message! What it is I wouldn’t know, as to drugs in his system or booze, no booze, but he was high on pot at the time. Found that in his blood stream, and it means he wasn’t dead long before being found probably.
Other than that Rick I can’t tell you much, this guy used to work out a lot and was healthy before being killed. Thank Doc, Rick says, now all I got to do is look for the .22 and the bastard that tied him up there. The Doc looks at Rick, well one more thing, the knots that tied him up there, well they are Navy knots, so whoever did this knows naval work or served. Interesting Rick thinks and thanks Doc as he leaves and thinks, Navy knots, a .22 caliber gun and a message sent out to others, I think definitely drug related and someone wants someone to know not to do whatever this poor dude did, again.
Mandelon thinks Crazy Mac had to go somewhere; he couldn’t stay in those woods too long, no food or water there. So where the hell did he go and get out of the woods at? Grabbing a map, he stares at where those woods lead to and the best possible places to come out. He sees if you go straight through the pine trees and hills here you come out in a small town called Waterville. Did Crazy Mac go there, good place to start Rick thinks and grabs a photo of Crazy Mac from the files and heads on out. This Crazy Mac I need him to see if he did kill this poor bastard, and I am not positive if he did or not, but he did shoot at me and run. Seems no help has come from the APB, no sign of him popping his head up yet. I guess I have to get to Waterville and ask around and see if he is hiding there.
Chapter 3
Waterville, Connecticut is a small little sleepy burg, next to Waterbury and in some ways nicer. To search it you start at the bars and work your way thru town and then back to the residential areas, especially when looking for a pot seller. So, Mandelon makes the necessary pit stop at the area’s favorite watering hole to show the photo around and ask if anyone has seen Crazy Mac. The bar tender a burly type with long black hair and beard tells Rick, Hey I taint seen that one around at all! So Rick starts asking customers as they come in, it’s a slow bar till about 8 pm when it picks up. The men and couples start pilling in then and so do the dancers in the bar. Rick hangs around some showing the photo to more people, a girl speaks up. Yeah I saw that guy he was here last night selling pot and hiding in the back, back there! He seem like he was scared of something and hiding, but still doing business, made a few bucks if I remember right. Yet, I don’t know where he went or what happened to him. Rick think Crazy may be here in Waterville, but where if he was here last night is there any other joints around here he asks. The girl says yeah, down the road about three blocks you’ll find Arties. He may be in there tonight selling. Rick says thanks for the info and heads on out the door and into his car. Could be Crazy Mac is dealing here too in Waterville, have to check Arties he thinks and drives on down that way.
Finding Arties with the little neon sign and small parking lot Rick pulls in, and parks and heads to the door. Out of the corner of his eye, Mandelon sees a couple hidden in the shadows in the back making out, he ignores it, Crazy wouldn’t be involved, damn dope head. And He goes in to Arties, The bar is up front and the stools, he scans the stools and bar, no Crazy Mac there. Grabbing a beer to fit in he heads to the back booths and sips his beer to see what is happening. Two couples are in the booths and Rick looks to see if Crazy is in one of them but no luck, so he shows the photo to the couples, the first couple aren’t going to say a word, the second the girl wants to say something he can see but the guy won’t let her. Rick waits till he goes to the men’s room and asks the girl again. She says Sure I saw him tonight he was here earlier! Where did he go Rick asks? He was out front with a girl making out just a bit ago she says, turning Rick runs out the door and looks again, he’s gone they left, damn just missed him! Shit, he’s long gone now I am sure, but Rick looks around just to make sure, finding nothing he heads for his car once more.
Getting into his car, Rick notices a note stuck under his windshield wiper, and gets out and grabs it and reads; Mandelon, I know you’re looking for me and following me, I am not guilty of murder, I didn’t kill anyone! If you want a meet with me, meet me at The Dancing Angels Club tomorrow night in Waterbury, I will spot you and we can talk, be alone or I will disappear, signed Crazy. So Crazy wants to talk to me Rick says, so he must be telling the truth but running scared, I will see him them. Mandelon gets in and starts the car and takes off for home, he’s done tonight, tomorrow Crazy will be in my city to talk, so no rush. Another day of searching for a killer and leads seems to have led nowhere just a chance at Crazy mac to talk is all. And I taint finding him tonight thinks Rick as he drives home, his old stogie lit and hanging from his lips as he stares and drives home, smoke building up in the car. Soon enough though Crazy will talk and I may get some answers, thinks Rick, I need to nail this killer soon or he may strike again!
Chapter 4
8Pm; The next day, Mandelon, takes a seat at the Dancing Angels dressed casually and not showing gun or badge. Waiting on Crazy Mac, he orders a rum and coke and lights up his cigar. The smoke wafts across the room as he drinks and watches for Crazy. Suddenly from behind Rick is tapped on the shoulder and Crazy is here. He takes a seat across from Mandelon and says ok let’s talk. Crazy tells him, look I deal pot yes but I did not kill anyone, that guy on the cross is not my work; someone is setting me up to take a fall. Rick says well tell me how that could be and who would set you up? Crazy tells Rick about a man on the West Side of town he’s a bastard and works out by the Park there. Rick says which park, Crazy tells him Hamilton Man, Hamilton Park he works out of the gazebo there/, he sells all drugs not just pot. They say the last guy who crossed him ended up behind a Cadillac dragged for 500 feet and then shot in the head. I don’t know if it’s true, but you should check him out. He goes by Dodge, but his real name I don’t know, but if you watch the gazebo, he will be there at night. Mandelon looks at crazy and says you ran why now when I wanted to talk to you? Crazy tells him I thought it was Dodge’s boys, he doesn’t like me because I sell pot man; he thinks I am cutting onto his shit. Rick tells him, Look Crazy, you stay low, I am going to get this Dodge character and find out what happened if I find out you had anything to do with this killing, well, you get the idea. Crazy shakes his head and stands and walks out slowly, Rick lets him go, if I can find him this fast, so can Dodge, so I better get to Dodge fast!.
Walking out the door Rick calls for a cordon around Hamilton Park and the gazebo to be watched closely, he tells him no one move sin just keep it surrounded I am on my way. Dodge might of hung the guy on the cross, and I bet if he did he isn’t above doing so again! Rick picks up speed in his car and gets to the park in no time flat it’s only a few miles. Jumping out of his car, he looks for the officer in charge, and finds old, Jimmy Crane the man running it all. Officer Crane is elderly but smart as a whip and has it all surrounded tight and in control. Crane tells Rick, he’s here man in the gazebo there and he isn’t going anywhere, he has customers coming in and out, for his shit. Ok Rick says, we need to close in slowly and only at my command we want him alive, he may be the Cross Killer we want. He coordinates the close in slowly and carefully, and tells the cops there, shoot for the legs if he runs but don’t kill him, I need him. They all understand and slowly the circle closes in in Dodge and his drugs and deals. The circle shrinks slowly but surely and no one cannot see them coming. When they get within 100 feet, Mandelon stops the troops and gets a bull horn. He calls Dodge out and tells him you have nowhere to run your completely surrounded this is Detective Mandelon come on out Dodge, now. Waiting for these guys to make a decision to try to run or give up is bitch thinks Rick, but given time I think Dodge wants to stay in one piece. Rick holds the troops and waits for a reply from Dodge and soon he gets one. Dodge yells out ok, ok, I am coming out and I am not armed, hands in the air Dodge walks out of the gazebo, kneels and puts his hands on his head. Cops rush in and take him down and cuff him, Mandelon has his man now. , The time has come for Dodge to answer questions, take him in and book him for selling drugs, Crane and lock him up till I get there. I will question this bastard and find out what happened. Once the catch is made of Dodge Rick lights up his cigar and heads to dinner, hungry after the chase. Rick orders his favorite, steak and baked potatoes and mixed veggies, and a wine. Rick eats well and is in a good mood because the murder isn’t fully solved but he believes Dodge is his man, now I have to prove it, Rick thinks. Tomorrow will tell, and Rick now full heads home to sleep, day is done.
Chapter 5
The interrogation of Dodge may take hours Rick Mandelon thinks as he brushes his teeth and combs his hair, finishing dressing with a tie and his jacket Rick is ready to face a new day at the station. Awaiting him is this man Dodge a drug dealer and culprit that could do almost anything, but he is now locked in a cage, and held till I get to him. Clipping his badge to his belt and his cell phone on the other side Rick, heads out the door to work. The ride is slow and leisurely, and a coffee is what he needs and get at Dunkin Doughnuts on the way. The station is right next door so Rick arrives about 8 am and is ready for the confrontation with Dodge.
Rick has an officer place Dodge cuffed to a car in Interrogation Room one and makes him wait some before he goes in. Making Dodge sweat a bit, may help break him. Looking at this guy through a one way glass, Rick see’s he may be jonesing for a fix, or just sweating from nerves, not sure, I will make him wait till I finish my coffee at least. Sitting back down and sipping on the hot coffee, Mandelon still can’t figure why this guy went to such extremes, to make a statement about not messing with him and his deals. Soon Rick thinks he will tell me, or I will let him rot in jail.
Entering the room now, his coat off and his fedora tipped back, Mandelon slides into a chair across the table from Dodge and looks him in the eye. Ok, Dodge what the hell happened here and why did you kill the guy on the cross, let’s have it man. Dodge won’t admit a thing at first; it is a slow conversation of Dodge and his relationship with Crazy Mac and how he hates him at first. Rick slams a hand on the table, and looks at him again, who the hell is the guy on the cross Dodge and why did you hang him there. Dodge’s eyes move quickly side to side and his head rocks side to side too but he won’t talk yet. Rick decides ok, let him sit here a while longer and we shall see. He gets up and goes for a second coffee leaving Dodge alone again for a while. Let’s see how long before he talks and breaks down, he doesn’t look so tough, thinks Rick besides he may need a fix soon from the looks of his sweats. I will give him a little more time to feel it more, and then question him harder.
After a couple of hours, it is time to question Dodge again and when Rick walks in Dodge is nearly crazy and jumping out of his skin, his body is sweating and he is begging for help. Rick offers him some help and says let’s make a deal Dodge, you tell me who was on the cross and why you put him there and I will get you medical attention and help! No answers no help dodge I can let you sit here 48 hours if I have to, wake up man!
Finally Dodge says ok, ok I will talk, but I want a Doctor now. Talk now Dodge or no Doctor not without your statement, get to talking the faster you do, the faster you get help.
Slowly the story comes out, Dodge was pissed at Crazy Mac who was dealing the pot around Waterbury, and Crazy had a buddy Bobby Grant. Bobby told Crazy he was going to open up his own area of dealing and it got back to me. I sent a message to this Bobby character and told him to back off nicely first Dodge says, but he was persistent and wouldn’t quit moving in to my area. I warned him through Crazy Mac and he told Crazy to tell me to fuck off. I got pissed and sent a couple of my guys to get this dude. Well, he fought and beat them back with his own boys so I had enough. I set him up in Holy Land that night.
I set a meet with Bobby and waited for him from about 11pm till almost midnight when he showed. When he did I had my boys and he had his, the difference his abandoned him as the conversation went on. I told him to back the fuck off and leave my business area alone, he told me to fuck myself and he was doing what he wanted.
In the end I got pissed and told him stop now, or die, he refused and pushed me. I pulled my .22 and put two bullets in his head and everyone ran off. So I grabbed some rope from my car and hung the bastard on the cross as a warning to all, not to step in my way again. Yeah I shot the creepy little bastard and hung him on the cross for all in Waterbury to see. And that’s what the fuck happened now get me a Doc! Wait one Rick says, where is the .22 and proof you’re telling the truth? Dodge gives up the gun at his place and tells Rick where he got the rope, receipts and all are at his place. The search comes up with all Dodge said and more drugs too.
Rick hands Dodge a pen and paper and says write it out man, I am going to get you a Doctor, to help you! Dodge sits and writes as, Rick calls for a Doctor and gets him help. The case is ended now, but, Rick has Crazy picked up too, little bastard shot at me and books him on attempted murder, the case has ended now. Rick plops in his chair and rests a hot coffee in hand and peaceful once more! His feet up on his desk, coffee in hand Rick sits back yacking and awaiting his next case!
Time to Make Decisions is Here!
Time to Make Decisions is Here!
Welcome to a world filled with more pain and suffering then ever before, just not all of it is war!
Yes across the globe we call Earth and home, people are suffering from wars, but more are suffering from slavery, forced prostitution,homelessness and illness than ever before, in recent history. Sad isn’t it when people as a species creates cures, money and homes, yet people still suffer, or we already know things are not right and we don’t work to right them?
I love this world and the country I live in America, but then I look across it today and see the same sufferings and pain world-wide happening here in greater numbers than ever before in my 56-year-old life. People without jobs begging for pennies and breaks, asking to work for food, homeless people sleeping in card board boxes on the streets and the ill and injured not cared for because they can’t afford health care. Sad isn’t it folks, but if you think America is sad in these ways, the rest of the world suffers far worse. They don’t have the good samaritans we do, or the capabilities we do, do they?
I tire of seeing pain, my mind wanders back in time and i wonder what happened to the America I grew up in. The one where a stock market soared and people made money, and parents had jobs to feed and home and clothe the children they had. What happened to those days? What went wrong for the countrys economy and it’s job markets and Congress and Government? Back in the 1960s when I was a child a neighbor would come out and help a child hurt or in pain, or help find one lost. Now they all ignore the pain and suffering of others and run the other way, why? Is America heartless and uncaring, are we scared of helping one another, is our social networks in person being changed so badly we don’t talk to neighbors anymore? What the hell happened to the America of the 50s, 60s and 70s even?
Well looking back I can tell you some changes occurred through media markets and on television and radio. Even the foul language barrier of television history has dropped, so vulgarity is now on television for all to see and hear. Americans are we extremest? Do we go from no, no, no, to yes, yes, yes that easy? Why? Standards need resetting in American culture, american entertainment and in american lives!. Across this country people run from one another due to skin color,race, beliefs and more why? Is this not America the land of the free and home of the brave anymore? Do we not still have freedom of speech, freedom of action and reaction and equality? If not we need all of it to stay a great nation and the best country on the planet. We can not rest on past laurels or past accomplishments either, we must forge together as a perfect union and country to maintain and survive in the world. A Divided country, divided over race, religion, ethics, morals or status will destroy our country and way of life, we need to be united and on the same path. Anything less will be useless, worthless and ineffective, to us as a country, as a nation and as human beings!
The time is coming soon and fast, when Americans must make critical choices in which way our country should go next. Elections come by once more in November 2012, and decisions that will affect out culture, our country, our lives and health care and more are due to be made, lets not make the wrong ones folks! Vote to become energy efficient and less oil needy, vote to save the Postal Service, Vote for Extended Health Care, Medicaid, Medicare and Veteran’s Benefits. Vote to have Trade Agreements changed so we export more than we import once more!. Vote to Create jobs in the country we love and put all who want to work back to work. Lets force the politicians in Washington, DC. to work together, or get them out of office for good. Teach them to be bi-partisan or send them home. You can’t have a President and Commander-in-Chief of one party and majority of another party in Congress and not get blockades and stalemates and more. So what ever we do, women and gentlemen, we need to unite a President with a Congress of his own party and get this country off its ass again and moving forward! The time for the right decisions is now, not later!
