FROG HOSPITAL --
May 18, 2017 -- By Fred Owens
with news
from Chicago, Boston and South Texas
High School, Loyola Academy, Wilmette, Illinois, 1964
That horrible feeling when you wake up in the middle of the night and realize you will NEVER get over high school.
So don't try. ....don't try to get over high
school, don't try to get over anything ....some memories fade, some memories
don't ..... What surprised me about the high school dream I had the other night
was the details I remembered, the faces and the names of classmates..... Where
is all that data stored?
It was not the usual nightmare. It was a pleasant and friendly dream. We were the smartest kids in the school, in double A, some twenty of us and now I'm realizing that some of these fellows were just a bit more mature and sensible than me...... It wasn't them, it was the jocks who got voted to class office. They were the real jerks..... But Mike Plunkett, Jack Liess and Phil Rettig, the guys who put out the school newspaper and yearbook.... They had no animus toward me .... They could have been friends if I had only stopped sulking and lashing out.
It was not the usual nightmare. It was a pleasant and friendly dream. We were the smartest kids in the school, in double A, some twenty of us and now I'm realizing that some of these fellows were just a bit more mature and sensible than me...... It wasn't them, it was the jocks who got voted to class office. They were the real jerks..... But Mike Plunkett, Jack Liess and Phil Rettig, the guys who put out the school newspaper and yearbook.... They had no animus toward me .... They could have been friends if I had only stopped sulking and lashing out.
Why forget? Why
remember anything? Why assume you have control over what you remember and what
you forget.
Meryl Streep said
it well in this
commencement address. "Real Life is actually a lot like high
school." So you don't get over it, because you're living it now.
After the dream I contacted Mike Plunkett. He was glad to hear
from me.
Marty Federman Passes....His
Obituary Here
I sent him my Frog Hospital newsletter every
week for the past 18 years. He rarely read it and he told me so, but I said
Marty it just makes me feel better to keep your name on my email list. So I
have kept this connection to him all this time because it was good to have him
in my life even in this small way.
Marty
Federman was the director of Hillel at Northeastern University in Boston when I
first met him in 1992. In later years he took several positions of leadership
in Jewish spirituality and politics. He had a warm and loving home in
Brookline, right outside of Boston.
The Woman Who Burned Her Own House
Down
People seem to find new ways to screw up their
lives. A few years ago, on a day much like any other, Charlotte Anderson, age
39, was mad at her husband. The Andersons lived on a few acres under some post
oak trees in a quiet neighborhood near La Vernia. He left for work about 8 a.m.
At about 9 a.m., Charlotte took a five-gallon
can of gasoline, poured it all over their 1,800 square foot house, lit it on
fire, and then stepped outside and called the sheriff on her cell phone to
report what she had done. Meanwhile, the neighbors saw the smoke and called the
La Vernia Volunteer Fire Department. I heard all this on the police scanner at
work. Three fire departments came, but it was too late – the house was
completely consumed.
The deputy came out and arrested Charlotte.
She was charged with Arson. Her bail was set at $10,000. Investigator Rich
Nichols interviewed her and I talked to him afterwards. He said that there had
been marital difficulties, then he told me some more stuff off the record.
I never heard of anybody setting their own
house on fire, have you? I got curious. Maybe her husband had done something to
make her mad? I drove out that way, about 15 miles from Floresville, and pulled
up slowly to the house, which was marked off with police tape. I just took a
slow look around at the ashes. Then I noticed a man across the street shoveling
gravel for his driveway, and I went over to say hello.
I asked him if he knew the Andersons. He
seemed kind of nervous and wary, so I tried to put him at ease, but still I was
a stranger asking questions – I had given him my card and said I was a reporter
for the local paper, but I noticed he only told me his first name. Anyway, he
said he had only moved to La Vernia two weeks ago from Des Moines, Iowa – and
he looked like he wished he could just go back to Iowa and live around some
normal people.
I decided to drop
my investigation. It seemed more like a matter of private misery than public
concern.
A True Story.
"The Woman Who Burned Her Own House Down"
is a true story. This happened in La Vernia, a small town in South Texas. At
that time I was a reporter for the Wilson County News which covered that
territory. I like this story because it is both funny and sad. And odd, and
personal.
We laughed about
it at the office, but then we stopped laughing. What a disaster for these
people. Obviously the woman had mental health issues. And the poor husband. Did
he deserve to lose his home? Maybe he did. We didn't know. We did know that the
insurance would not cover a case of self-inflicted arson. So they were left
with nothing but ashes.
We do know that
after several days had passed, Charlotte Anderson was still in jail. Her
husband apparently did not care to bail her out. Nor her family, nor her
friends, if she had any.
But still, we
worked at a newspaper that did not care to broadcast the pain and suffering of
local people. She burned her house down, she went to jail, and on top of that
she got her name in the paper for doing just that.
It was a public
humiliation and an embarrassment to her family -- having her name in the
newspaper, in print, in black and white, for all the world to see. The staff at
the Wilson County News was always mindful of that. We only printed what
was necessary and factual, and not to amuse the readers, but only to inform
them.
Yes, it is a true story and Charlotte Johnson is her real name and it is a crime to set a building on fire even if it's your own home and you're mad at your husband.
Yes, it is a true story and Charlotte Johnson is her real name and it is a crime to set a building on fire even if it's your own home and you're mad at your husband.
And it's a little
funny too. Maybe the husband deserved it. Don't mess with Charlotte.
Spring
Subscription Drive. A $25 or $50
subscription to Frog Hospital comes with the promise that I will try my best. I
have been writing this journal since1998. I have written some hundreds of
issues of this journal, and some of it has been very good indeed and I would
like to continue writing this, and I would like you to send me a check for $25
or $50 or punch the PayPal button.
You can find
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Hospital.Or make out a check to Fred Owens and mail it to:
Fred
Owens 1105 Veronica Springs RD Santa Barbara, CA 93105
thank you
very
much,
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