Tag Archives: smart women

The Springboard

On social media saw a fellow commentator extol the occurrence of three of her nieces graduating high school. In their respective photographs, the whole trio looked just the way one should upon crossing from juvenile life into adulthood. If there were trepidations, and, yes, these should be expected, they were masked by appearances of deep breath/one foot in front of the other self-possession.

Despite silly arbitrary conditions we now place on 18-year-olds – unable to legally drink alcohol, can’t gamble or buy lottery tickets, and, depending on the state, smoking is prohibited either until 19, 20, or 21 – at the universal age of majority we make them eligible to vote, fully liable for contracts they sign, permit them to enter marriages in every state, as well as let them commit to the armed services minus parental consent.

Wonderful. Only in America can those who we recognize as “adults” be legally prohibited from drinking toasts to themselves at their own weddings or after signing possibly life-altering contracts or hoisting celebratory libations after returning from deployments into harm’s way.

It was better when my Boomer cohort turned 18. While our parents recognized us as their “babies,” they also realized at 18 we had become full-fledged responsible adults.

My transition was blunt. Throughout my life, my father had called me “boy.” Once I turned 18, he stopped.

In Boomers’ cases at least, our elders must’ve looked back onto their own dives into the pool. For many of them their progress meant navigating through the Depression then World War II.

No generation of Americans has endured any similar passage since. And if our successors are lucky, none will.

It’s not hard to imagine how after our parents had prepared Boomers for entries into less arduous adulthoods, they shared easy thoughts aligned with “batter up!” and “swing hard!”

Doubtlessly all of our parents expected us to be “sluggers.”

Several weeks ago, I read a silly newspaper article. Well, it was silly to me.

Some mother out on the Coast was found guilty of hosting beer bashes for her teen children and their friends. Reading this, I judged her a responsible parent. She remained vigilant as her children and their guests imbibed. Also, there may’ve been, okay, there were, some sexual shenanigans involved. Of course there were. Randy teens acting on inhibitions which have been obliterated by hops and barley is a natural result of this rite of passage.

Don’t object. Look in the mirror. Now remember.

Ours now a society which has scrambled its priorities. The hostess naturally received a draconian maximum sentence.

Sympathizing with the parent, I hoped reason, rationality, and leniency would chop her sentence to time served and a maybe a few weekends of collecting can off roadsides – at most.

Now at an age where fellow 60-somethings are starting to die off with age related maladies rather than through stupid-shit behavior, I examined parts of my own early past. Thankfully my parents and my friends’ parents raised us to enter adulthood with solid foundations. It’s impossible to imagine any of them raising us into young adults who extended our adolescence and juvenile years into our mid-20s.

Or later. As is done today.

Each of the aforementioned three high school graduates struck similar poses. Effortlessly standing straight, every woman’s chin was slightly uptilted. Clear eyes focused above and past the photographer. Must also commend them for looking resplendent in mortar boards and gowns.

Frankly while I admired them, I also didn’t have to imagine the figures they presented would also intimidate good portions of their male cohorts. How did this happen? What has society been teaching boys these last several decades?

During my adolescence and juvenile years, the women’s movement reshaped male perceptions of “the fairer sex.” It’s a miracle I didn’t succumb to schizophrenia. Father, the master of our house, was a patriarchal sort who stressed primogeniture even though he had no idea what the word meant. My sister is older and smarter than me. Yet until she started accumulating degrees, accolades, and titles her status in his eyes sat beneath mine.

Outside our home, girls were increasingly less fettered. They were encouraged by women who’d rebelled. Their own early advances had been hindered by hidebound males and timid women agreeing to restrictive orthodoxy. Progressive women did what could be done to turn that on its head.

Reflecting on our formative years, we boys then weren’t indoctrinated by “natural superiority over girls.” Rather, we were taught the girls among us weren’t going to be servile but our competitors. Maybe even rivals during adulthood.

Wonder what the more Neanderthal fathers thought of that.

Of course, it diminished resistance and eased acceptance seeing the girls around us as just as capable, if not often altogether better. Seeing that in guys juiced competitive spirits. Viewing it girls revved it up further. And maybe after some initial uncertainty, because there was always going to be some residual impulse “not to shake the fragile egos of rough tough boys,” the girls picked up the pace. That made us all strive harder, boys and girls. That distributed strength throughout.

In certain eyes, the women’s movement could’ve been seen as not only elevating women but further sharpening men. In the years since, though, this societal benefit has been sourly twisted. It’s now been labeled a threat. To men. If the alarm is hysterical enough, it’s an existential challenge to up-and-coming Anglo males.

Who told them they’d never need to excel? Who told them they’d be able to coast through life?

Until entering middle age, I never recognized the expanding disparity between the sexes. That women were advancing farther and faster than men. After all, who surveys college campuses and determines why there are fewer males than coeds?

For straight, brainy, ambitious men this would be a terrific ratio, no?

Instead, these alerts mainly arise loudest in workplaces. Although that said, there have been upticks of this in graduate programs. Mostly medical schools. Never in any of the heavy thinking divisions like philosophy. Let us wonder why.

In fields prone to contention, women increasingly leapfrog men until they’re bodyblocked by those same frustrated men. Similar to minorities who’ve vaulted over Anglos. Formerly dismissed out of hand, new unaccustomed faces have by dint worked harder just to be twice as good in order to be regarded as “equal” by the mainstream. These candidates are likely to have swerved through minefields unimagined and therefore never encountered by Anglo males.

Yet when selections for advancement are made, these rightly based on having been earned because in real life companies and academe are disinclined to promoting anyone who could damage bottom lines or the institution’s reputation, sore losers’ retorts are “a woman/minority stole my job!” Never is the “thief” accurately portrayed as the superior pick. That truth would crumble the accusation.

In this era, it’s always a “DEI” choice. Diversity, Equity, Inclusion. DEI, the bugaboo of the lazy, those raised to believe themselves entitled; the salve of oxy stupefied less dynamic Americans. Now more so than ever thanks to the scab, his criminal administration and MAGAs who all nurture white fright.

If the above “victims” ever had to endure the same impediments of those they unfairly blame for earning their spots, they’d really have cause to whine about unfairness. Or maybe not. As that bunch proves daily, it’s weak on introspection.

Back in the 1980s upon the ascendence of Ronald Reagan, plenty of Republican campaign ads (print, radio, TV) used the trope of a white man denied promotion because the goose had been awarded to an undeserving [minority to be scapegoated here]. Having known plenty of non-Anglos who hustled and scuffed like fiends to attain toeholds in occupations habitually bestowed upon Anglos, watching those ads filled me with indignation.

Who would be gullible enough to believe them!?

Okay. Maybe not gullible, though certainly ready and willing to swallow them. Because the truth getting stuck in throats would be far more painful. Therefore, better self-deception that avoids culpability than struggling with acceptance of one’s inadequacies.

So, I gazed at the three recent high school graduates a fellow social media correspondent had posted. The three women projected confidence, which I admired. Their radiance reminded me of my Class of ’77.

Few of us graduating then knew what we’d ultimately do or where we’d venture. Certainly, none of us knew where we’d wind up. And alas, a few got snatched only several steps onto the path.

Who today can envision going no farther in life than 18 or 19? And then only remembered by others at ages no older than those?

What most distinguishes present and past high school graduates is the latter stood ready to spring with assuredness. Some even did so with aplomb. We knew we’d advance.

To graduate high school now means entering a fraught adulthood. The reassurance that buoyed us in ‘77 doesn’t exist for this year’s class. Not that the Class of 2026 is doomed, but only a relative few may ever go far.

That’ll be bad for whatever America will become.

© Copyright 2026 by Slow Boat Media LLC

Las Sirenas

    
    Marie Anne Erize Tisseau and Marina Ginestà had a connection. Each now would’ve been tagged an insurgent. Or militant. No. Probably terrorist. Language has undergone so much massaging why call a spade a spade when it can be labeled an entrenching tool? Though the conflicts enveloping both and devouring one were dissimilar, they eventually shared the same depth in their respective causes.  

    Separated by eras, the Atlantic Ocean and clashes, similar impulses must’ve pushed them. Each believed she could be part of a beneficial movement. And each understood the prices victory required might’ve demanded their lives.

    Today that height of commitment solely belongs in the province of religious extremists. What cause will encourage modern men and women to sacrifice their lives if necessary for an idea?

    An idea, not duty. A!–more–>

    Do absolute good and evil (the intellectual versions, not spiritual) even exist today? Unquestioningly so in Ginestà’s time. Many years later when Tisseau strode among us, the old polarities were well on the way to becoming our present-day every shade of gray murk.    

    By coincidence, Tisseau and Ginestà each recently returned to awareness. A newspaper article conjured the long vanished Tisseau the next to last day of 2013. Column inches lent Ginestà an appreciation the first week of 2014. At 94, she recently reached the end of her life.

    Reportage by (Spain) El Pais’ Diego Manrique and Jacinto Antón drew these women from the fog. Or in Ginestà’s case revived her through light and shadow, while Tisseau may have been commemorated in song.

    Ginestà is clearly portrayed. Unless she alerts us from the beyond, Tisseau will stay a good twisty mystery. Mist veils her. She is elusive and maybe all that remains of her is allusive. Conjecture shrouds the tasks which led to her vanishing. Did she also serve as muse for an admirer who became even more ardent as his reticence increased across the decades?

    If Tisseau’s presence tricked one of those heartfelt love requiems from him, he’s not confessing. Neither are those behind her disappearance.

    Tisseau was an Argentine model, Ginestà politically acute and French. Both combated the leading repressive regimes of their times and places. The first woman joined intrigues opposed to her nation’s militarist regime; the second defended Spain against the reactionary Falange.

    The women’s respective causes failed. The rebel victory over the duly elected Republican government not only retarded Spain’s progress by decades, but also emboldened the Axis powers intending world plunder. That much talked about line had been trampled. Could there have been a starker example of put up or shut up than The Spanish Civil War? If the high-minded democracies couldn’t and wouldn’t aid one of their own, weren’t black shirts convinced they too could pick off other weak and disjointed republics?

    Munich didn’t green light the Second World War. Letting Spain become a live-fire laboratory for total war did.

    After withdrawing from Spain, Ginestà bracketed Mexican exile between escaping and returning to France. Postwar she eventually settled in Paris. Indeed, mamie had worn combat boots.

    Again, who can say, or who will ever confess, how Tisseau expired? Since 1976 her physical presence has been completely expunged. The 24-year-old was that figure who walks into the jungle and leaves no tracks behind. But rather than being digested by savannah, the Argentine urban jungle consumed her.

    Thanks to the world’s myriad ideological or religious discords, Westerners are familiar with the shadowy villains slinking among us looking to foment this cause or indoctrinate that creed by whatever method of imposition necessary. Their blood-drizzled objectives make no distinction between bystanders and the particular pillars they insist need razing. To ideologues, there are no innocents. People living as unobtrusively as possible merely bolster their contention. If you aren’t with them …

    Marie Tisseau became an Argentine dissatisfied with her nation’s narrow direction. Now she’s nearly a caricature of a limousine revolutionary. She was that bourgeois baby who agitated for bread and justice, but whose upbringing had delivered her material goods and comfort aplenty. Her concept of “without” was just that. Theory. Elevated roundtable chatter made romantic through the chaotic energy of youth, cigarette smoke, though ultimately condescendingly delivered regarding “the people.”  

    Fighter, militant, insurgent, “terrorist” even, Marina Ginestà is best seen as a recruiting pitch. More pointed than posters featuring Uncle Sam or Lord Kitchener, Ginestà’s pose atop a Barcelona roof in 1936 made an appeal stronger than ¡Sangre y Patria! The Catalan capital as her backdrop, the 17-year-old’s glance summoned without hectoring. Uncle Sam and Kitchener beseeched ambivalent patriots into serving. Ginestà’s easy on the eyes coaxing flatly stated “Boys, this is what you’re fighting for!”

   

Marina Ginestà, Barcelona, Spain, June 1936.

    One must wonder whether Ernest Hemingway ever glimpsed her portrait. With all occurring around him, had her image imprinted itself in Hemingway’s mind? Could Ginestà’s inviting steel have been the basis behind the fictional Maria in his For Whom the Bell Tolls?

    Here’s a backstory: the militiawoman’s come-hither defiance was a setup. Hers seems a contrivance Joseph Goebbels should’ve staged. Hans Gutman, a German pro-Republican photographer had his Edward Bernays’ moment. One he hoped advanced Republican sympathies. In Ginestà, Gutman found the requisite pretty girl. He and his subject climbed to the roof.

    Mediterranean sunlight emphasized Ginestà’s peasant loveliness. A mild breeze ruffled the short black crop atop her head. Barcelonan cityscape provided effective contrast. Yet the scene was incomplete. She lacked an accessory. Clever Gutman appropriated a nearby militiaman’s rifle and slung it over Ginestà’s shoulder. Perhaps the weapon enhanced her allure, and with it the Republican cause. Wouldn’t be the first time an armed woman has been regarded deferentially.
 
    Nothing so martially clear for Tisseau. She and her Montoneros, the leftist assemblage opposing the right-wing junta then ruling Argentina, engaged in asymmetrical shadow warfare. No great battles. No stirring proclamations. No sterling literature. No bombastic sloganeering or music. Given the conflict’s nature, also little valor. Nothing romantic about it at all.

    Unlike the Spanish insurrection, Argentina’s aptly named Dirty War lacked fixed lines and readily admirable leading personages. It was an ideological struggle that dissolved into state sanctioned torture and murder. In reflection, the Argentine government assumed the worst vestiges of what we widely recognize as an organized criminal structure. Due process for a lost number of political captives ran along that dictated by Alice’s Queen of Hearts: “Punishment first, then the trial!”

    Is anyone still alive who can attest what deeds Tisseau performed on behalf ogf the Montoneros? Was she a go-between? Active in a cadre? Or just a peripheral traveler whose prominent profile fit into Argentine domestic intelligence’s crosshairs?    

    Unlike Ginestà’s unwavering fealty to Spanish Republicanism, Tisseau drifted into the Montonero movement. Casually politicized at best, she’d led an idealized youthquake life. Lovely, languorous, and fearless, the cover girl gadded-about throughout early 1970’s Europe.

 


Marie Anne Erize Tisseau, unknown.

    Glamorous, say, an Uschi Obermaier who didn’t reach the next shore, Tisseau exemplified that era’s free-spirited vibe. On occasions – oh, the usual no cash ones – she dipped into larceny. But exquisite larceny! No grubby bank heists for her. More than a flighty personality behind a pretty face, the mannequin nurtured an interest in anthropology. A concentration the least-likeliest thief turned into lucre by smuggling art.

    Doubtlessly the sort of daring-do which further aroused an already besotted tunesmith. Verses, well known ones in specific circles, resound about a thoroughly captivating woman. Do these refer to Tisseau?

    Throughout decades the lyricist has preferred obscuring his muse’s identity. Doesn’t lovelorn cloaking attract our curiosity all the more? On the surface his reticence may appear selfish. Is his one of those manufactured mysteries meant to keep embers alive, the artist’s name in speculation? Or does the songwriter’s silence derive from an instance of a draw so powerful, a loss so raw, that revelation would wrench soul debilitating pain?

    There are some nuggets our human hearts never wish to yield.  

   

The Paper Madeleine


    Sometimes simplicity is the best provocation.

    This season means card exchange. Or should mean it. Email and the erosion of cursive script are turning paper Christmas cards into museum pieces.

    Old-fashioned and time consuming as more and more of us regard them, Christmas cards are always welcome at this address. Their reception indicates a thought and care an e-card blast will never convey. Continue reading The Paper Madeleine

Staged?

 

    The girl who hands over my New York Times is always astounded at its heft. Even on Saturdays. I laugh at her lack of reference. Stacked against almost every other newspaper in America, yes, the Times is plump. But as subscribers of a certain age remember, today’s editions are miserly compared against the fat decks of a decade ago.

    Especially those Sunday sandbags.

    My newsgirl doesn’t read newspapers. At least not intentionally. She’s of that breezily-informed generation which receives its mostly unedited information through bits and bytes. It shows. Their general lack of awareness, the blithe knowledge deficiency, augurs ill for them.

    Fortunately, this group’s esteeming the ephemeral above all immunizes them against everyday worries as well as prospective maladies. Think of it as bliss without the Schedule 1 drugs.

    Even when my age group lived carefree someone older always cautioned “beware!” If recalled correctly, while we proclaimed disregarding those admonishments they nevertheless seeped in to steer us through responsible adulthood.

    My, how mentoring has changed. Etiquette, too. Continue reading Staged?

Social Intercourse


    Unemployment gave me a lot of time to waste. Since being shelved, I’ve been able to sate a few extreme curiosities. Online dating has been one of the most perplexing.

    Private by nature, the exposure such sites demand have asked more from me than I’m accustomed to relinquishing. Thankfully “Rex Merritt” has been honest.

    In real life, that is life where actual humans maintain face-to-face exchanges, it’s easier to tailor questions and gauge responses. Doesn’t web anonymity license deception and puffery? Continue reading Social Intercourse