19th & 20th June, 2008

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New concerts announced!
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July autograph signing event.
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Photo by Dan Chapman ©2001 Stanyan Entertainment Group

A Thought for Today

If you are having second thoughts about that E-mail you just finished writing, don’t send it. 

 

TO BEGIN WITH

My buddy Ann has opinions and isn’t afraid to express them and she doesn’t suffer fools or foolishness. It must have something to do with living in Bakersfield. For those unfamiliar with beautiful, bodacious Bakersfield let me put it this way; on any given summer day the temperature in this (en)counter culture corner of California is only one or two degrees cooler than the states rusty old electric chair when it was running at full blast.

Yep, the temperature of Big B. has everything to do with the temperament of Kern County’s Bakersfieldians. None are half-baked or aldente. Does Ms. Ann of B-Town sound like someone else you might be acquainted with? Exactly. And, that’s why I appreciate her so much.

For instance, long before it hit the press, Ann was the first to inform me of her county clerk’s official reaction to the new California law permitting same sex marriages. Remember, we’re talking about The County Clerk (and in this case Auditor and Controller) one Ann Barnett, elected to carry out and enforce local and California laws. Well, Ms. Barnett has decided to close the office that performs ALL weddings. No we can’t make this stuff up.

Now let me get this, if you will pardon the expression, straight. No weddings, not even he/she vows? The omnipotent clerk intends to end each and every vow exchange provided by the city of Bakersfield. Never mind your fiancé Judy or Johnny, you’ll have to leave town now even if you want to marry your second cousin thrice removed.

That’s the bad news. The good news is that out of over fifty California counties Bigot Barnett of B’field (has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it) uncivil disobedience has inspired only one other county clerk to become a fellow traveler, er, lawbreaker.

California, like every other state in the union, has plenty of fiscal problems these days and newspapers statewide have been reporting how much hard cash the new law will help bring municipalities. Caterers, flower shops, jewelers, limo services, restaurant dining rooms and even tuxedo rental services are all reporting an upswing in business. Seems there’s a waiting list for folks who want to become bride and bride or groom and groom.

Admittedly these new cash cows (bulls and/or heifers) probably wouldn’t be enriching the county clerks office all that much but Joe’s Bakery down the street always has room in the oven for the components of one more wedding cake and the kah-ching it brings to his cash register makes a lovely sound. Ms. Barnett acknowledged to a Los Angeles Times reporter that she is being represented by the Alliance Defense Fund, “a Christian law firm that is spearheading the fight against gay marriage.” She also claims to be a Christian. “It affects everything. It affects who I am,” she said. And, she added, “I’m just a county clerk out there trying to do my job.” Fair/fare enough. But some unuttered something also (also out there) begs the question; since when do county clerks need outside legal representation?

Apparently in Kern County there is Christian behavior and then there is Christian behavior that needs outside legal aid. Last week Kern County Supervisor Ken Mayben put it more poetically than I can: “I think it sucks,” he said. No report on what her nibs thought of his choice of language.

Supervisor Mayben continued, "The fact is this is a service
that has been provided for a long time and to take away the rights of any citizen because of your personal beliefs when you're a public official is wrong."

My own feelings on same sex marriage? Why shouldn’t Gays have the privilege of being as miserable as Straights?
That’s a pretty good laugh line but think a little about this: We live in difficult times, nations, tribes, people in general are more at odds with each other than we have ever been. If two people, whatever their sexual persuasion find love and friendship with each other and desire to legally cement that relationship –– with all that the word marriage entails –– they ought to be encouraged not opposed.

What possible threat to so called traditional marriage can the commitment of same sex couples have in the scheme of real every day problems we all share and seek to overcome? Life is short, happiness fleeting, gas is on its way to five bucks a gallon; take real joy where you find it. And if you are fortunate enough to come upon a like mind and heart that loves you, fight for that love and cherish it. Those who condemn other people’s values out of hand are very often unsure of their own.

If you do not like those who think differently than you do and don’t want the bother of considering their viewpoint, avoid them. It would be a much nicer world if we stayed out of each other’s bedrooms –– unless, of course, we’re invited in.

In an article published in The New York Times on June 10th the writer Tara-Parker Pope put it in a different perspective. Read on.

WORTH READING

GAY UNIONS SHED LIGHT ON GENDER IN MARRIAGE
By TARA PARKER-POPE

Published: New York Times, June 10, 2008

For insights into healthy marriages, social scientists are looking in an unexpected place.

A growing body of evidence shows that same-sex couples have a great deal to teach everyone else about marriage and relationships. Most studies show surprisingly few differences between committed gay couples and committed straight couples, but the differences that do emerge have shed light on the kinds of conflicts that can endanger heterosexual relationships.

The findings offer hope that some of the most vexing problems are not necessarily entrenched in deep-rooted biological differences between men and women. And that, in turn, offers hope that the problems can be solved.

Next week, California will begin issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples, reigniting the national debate over gay marriage. But relationship researchers say it also presents an opportunity to study the effects of marriage on the quality of all relationships.

“When I look at what’s happening in California, I think there’s a lot to be learned to explore how human beings relate to one another,” said Sondra E. Solomon, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Vermont. “How people care for each other, how they share responsibility, power and authority — those are the key issues in relationships.”

The stereotype for same-sex relationships is that they do not last. But that may be due, in large part, to the lack of legal and social recognition given to same-sex couples. Studies of dissolution rates vary widely.

After Vermont legalized same-sex civil unions in 2000, researchers surveyed nearly 1,000 couples, including same-sex couples and their heterosexual married siblings. The focus was on how the relationships were affected by common causes of marital strife like housework, sex and money.

Notably, same-sex relationships, whether between men or women, were far more egalitarian than heterosexual ones. In heterosexual couples, women did far more of the housework; men were more likely to have the financial responsibility; and men were more likely to initiate sex, while women were more likely to refuse it or to start a conversation about problems in the relationship. With same-sex couples, of course, none of these dichotomies were possible, and the partners tended to share the burdens far more equally.

While the gay and lesbian couples had about the same rate of conflict as the heterosexual ones, they appeared to have more relationship satisfaction, suggesting that the inequality of opposite-sex relationships can take a toll.

“Heterosexual married women live with a lot of anger about having to do the tasks not only in the house but in the relationship,” said Esther D. Rothblum, a professor of women’s studies at San Diego State University. “That’s very different than what same-sex couples and heterosexual men live with.”

Other studies show that what couples argue about is far less important than how they argue. The egalitarian nature of same-sex relationships appears to spill over into how those couples resolve conflict.

One well-known study used mathematical modeling to decipher the interactions between committed gay couples. The results, published in two 2003 articles in The Journal of Homosexuality, showed that when same-sex couples argued, they tended to fight more fairly than heterosexual couples, making fewer verbal attacks and more of an effort to defuse the confrontation.

Controlling and hostile emotional tactics, like belligerence and domineering, were less common among gay couples.

Same-sex couples were also less likely to develop an elevated heartbeat and adrenaline surges during arguments. And straight couples were more likely to stay physically agitated after a conflict.

“When they got into these really negative interactions, gay and lesbian couples were able to do things like use humor and affection that enabled them to step back from the ledge and continue to talk about the problem instead of just exploding,” said Robert W. Levenson, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley.

The findings suggest that heterosexual couples need to work harder to seek perspective. The ability to see the other person’s point of view appears to be more automatic in same-sex couples, but research shows that heterosexuals who can relate to their partner’s concerns and who are skilled at defusing arguments also have stronger relationships.

One of the most common stereotypes in heterosexual marriages is the “demand-withdraw” interaction, in which the woman tends to be unhappy and to make demands for change, while the man reacts by withdrawing from the conflict. But some surprising new research shows that same-sex couples also exhibit the pattern, contradicting the notion that the behavior is rooted in gender, according to an abstract presented at the 2006 meeting of the Association for Psychological Science by Sarah R. Holley, a psychology researcher at Berkeley.

Dr. Levenson says this is good news for all couples.

“Like everybody else, I thought this was male behavior and female behavior, but it’s not,” he said. “That means there is a lot more hope that you can do something about it.”

-© copyright The New York Times, 2008

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notable birthdays

THURSDAY 19 June

Paula Abdul o Pier Angeli o Donald Bell o Pat Buttram o Charles Coburn o Confucius o Alan Cranston o Lester Flatt o Martin Gabel o Lou Gehrig o Louis Jourdan o Pauline Kael o Guy Lombardo o Nancy Marchand o Mildred Natwick o Pascal o Marisa Pavan o Larry Phillips o Gena Rowlands o Salmon Rushdie o Kathleen Turner o Mayor Jimmy Walker o Dame May Whitty o W. A. (William Addison) Wiggins o Ann Wilson o Duchess of Windsor

FRIDAY 20 June

Danny Aiello o Chet Atkins o Errol Flynn o John Goodman o Lillian Hellman o Nicole Kidman o Cyndi Lauper o Audie Murphy o Anne Murray o Gail Patrick o Rossana Podesta o Andrew Praschak o Lionel Ritchie o Pancho Segura o Tina Sinatra o Bob Villa o Andre Watts o Brian Wilson

Rod's random thoughts If you cannot command your thoughts, you will never control your actions.

In choosing a path, always choose the most challenging. The easy road is crowded, and boring in the bargain.

All of us are out there in the same mud puddle, rowing or oarless. The important thing to remember is to not throw mud at one another.

CREED

It doesn't matter
who you love
or how you love
but that you love.

For in the end
the act of loving anyone
is the act of loving God

The good in men
is all the god there is
and loving is contribution
to that good
and that only God.

-from Hand in Hand,1977 & An Outstretched Hand, 1980 © Copyright by Rod McKuen & Stanyan Music Group. © Renewed

 
    ALMOST THE LAST WORD

BJ advises:

“Handle every stressful situation like a dog. If you can't eat it or hump it, piss on it and walk away.”

Unless, of course, you love and live in Barnett’s Bakersfield. Still that town gave us Buck Owens and Ann Berzinsky. Two Yippy, Ti Yi Aye’s out of three ain’t bad.

AND FINALLY

The first summer weekend is on the way and with it comes more questions and answers on Ask Rod. Hope you’ll join me for this week’s edition. Sleep warm.

RM Dos Vidas, June 18, 2008 4:20AM PDST

 
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