Saturday, May 02, 2026

Coat Hangars & Knitting Needles - James Friedel

 "I'm Madder Than Hell"

James Friedl’s Story is the fourth story in Motherless, a film showing the negative consequences of "coercive reproductive health policies." Anyone watching the film should be reminded why we can't return to the pre-Roe v. Wade days despite many legislators, usually men, trying. 

A photo taken of James Friedl about the time his mother, Ruth Irene, died of an abortion, shows a skinny little boy wearing a sailor hat and almost dwarfed by a toy sail boat.

He was told his mother died from food poisoning. The shock of losing her made him “unlovable,” he said.

He hid. He hid in closets, hiding from the pain. When he wasn’t hiding he followed his father everywhere, never even letting the man go to the bathroom alone.

Only as an adult, as a Marine waiting to be shipped out from San Diego, did James learn the truth from his Aunt Alice. She happened to be in the city at the same time and she told him what really occurred.

After James’s sister had been born, his mother was told she shouldn’t have any more children. This was in Denver in 1929, but she found herself pregnant. She kept the secret from her husband and instead turned to Alice, a pharmacist married to a doctor. It is not clear whether Alice and Ruth were sisters or sisters-in-law but there’s a photo of the two women arm-in-arm.

Alice told Ruth that an abortion by her husband was out of the question. He could lose his license. Their whole community in Idaho would be hurt if they lost their only doctor.

James isn’t sure whether Alice provided the ergot that killed his mother on 21 August 1929. Ergot is a fungus that can be used for migraines and for bringing on uterine contractions. Ruth overdosed.

Decades later James said, “Mad? Damned right I am mad, and I am madder than hell. Why do we have to go through this? Look what I lost…Totally unnecessary. Same as if they shot her on the street.” 

***

About the Film*: Motherless was produced and directed by three women:

  • Barbara Attie, an Emmy-nominated filmmaker
  • Janet Goldwater, a Philadelphia-based producer and director focused on amplifying women's voices and
  • Diane Pontius who also produced I still Love You about her father's dementia.

The film won four awards

  •       Cine Golden Eagle, 1993
  •       Silver Apple, National Educational Film and Video Festival, 1993
  •       Honors, International Health and Medical Film Festival, 1994            
  •        Religious Coalition for Reproductive Rights, Sarah W. Boote Founders Award, 1994

*From Coat Hangers and Knitting Needles

Friday, May 01, 2026

You Don't Know You're a Slave

This is directed more to salaried people then hourly although it doesn't mean that abuse doesn't exist at all employee levels. 

Meryl Streep is once again appearing in the movie Prada. When I saw the original movie years ago I found her character at best disgusting. The person I was with admired her and didn't like the "weak boyfriend" whom I admired.

The boy friend was a decent human being. Streep's character wasn't. The friend who admired the Streep character is doing the work once assigned to several people without reward. At least, unlike earlier slaves, she isn't whipped.

It was only a movie, but how many working situations duplicate the story line?

Another friend is now doing the work of four employees that were with her company when she started and have since left with no salary adjustment for herself after she took on their responsibilities.

They, like many other salaried employees today, are modern slaves of the 21st century. They might be able to change jobs unlike formal slaves but conditions can be the same from company to company.

Employers are stealing from their employees

Both friends are being abused by their bosses, not sexually or physically, but these companies are stealing from their employees' time and lives. It is time and lives that people sell to employers in return for salaries and benefits.

When a job, under normal conditions can't be completed within the required hours over and over again without recompense, a robbery of time and life have been taken place.

People are told that to give their all to the company is the way to get ahead. No matter the sacrifices an employee makes, the higher ups would not hesitate a mini second if their bonus is in jeopardy to let employees go. Especially in large corporations. No matter how profitable the company might be, the benefits are not filtered down to most employees anywhere proportionate to the effort the employee puts in. The only thing that counts is the stock price to top managers and their bonuses.

There are times when extra work for a special project makes sense for the good of the corporation. It does not mean that the extra hours should be the norm day after day, week after week, month after month, etc. Those making the effort should be rewarded proportionally to their effort. How many are?

Note: Disney 's CEO makes $45 million, but is letting 1000 serfs er ...employees go. 

What about those with professional careers?

What about the doctors (especially residents), lawyers, teachers,  nurses, journalists, etc. who give their employer so many hours in addition to what their contract requires. For many, they love the work and the knowledge they gain. They have studied long and hard to be good at what they do. 

No problem if the pay matches the hours. A doctor won't stop in the middle of an operation because his hours are up. The same with a lawyer preparing a case, or a teacher a lesson plan.

Their lives generally are even more deserving of awards especially teachers and nurses. Some are poorly paid.

Sold a bill of goods

A friend did a study of women's magazines during WWII. Many of the articles were about how wonderful it was for women to work. Yes, their labor was needed for the war effort, but the moment the war was over the articles were about the joys for women staying home. The population was being manipulated to fulfill the perceived financial needs of society. In this case it was at the expense of the women who wanted to work, but the women who wanted to be wives and mothers were happy. 

Qualified women in professional jobs couldn't get jobs no matter their qualifications. Now they can often at lower pay. One of my bosses said he preferred to hire women. They work harder for less money. 

At another company women were hired at lower levels with the same credentials as men. When a male boss left, a woman would be promoted sometimes at half the pay. Since it was a raise for her she took it and worked harder. 

Note: hourly workers have another set of problems.

What is scary is how many people give up so much for what those paychecks can buy.

HAPPY INTERNATIONAL WORKERS DAY!



Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Liar, liar, pants on fire


My husband is looking for my friend Eulalie.


What a surprise. Eulalie turns into his daughter from the States.

What to give my husband for his 75th birthday? The only thing he still wants is an antique crossbow and I've looked for one for four years with no luck.

I'll explain: we live in Southern France and Switzerland. His daughter and family live in the Southwest U.S. Because of our politics and what has happened to friends and colleagues entering the U.S., he doesn't dare enter the U.S. under Trump. Between an active job, two kids, a house and husband, she has little time to travel.

Still it was worth a try. I offered to give her an airline ticket to Europe as his birthday present. She loved the idea and found very cheap tickets of herself and her husband. Rather than stay in my Nest, the studio I had bought for my retirement before reconnecting with my husband, she booked into a hotel. The owners are our friends. They were in on the secret.

His family decided to fly into Barcelona and train up to Perpignan. No matter their destination, I still needed to get him to pick them up.

"Eulalie, remember her? She was here before, she loved Cassoulet in Carcassonne. Well, we need to pick her up in Perpignan, she's coming back." Meanwhile Gigi was repairing the skylight in the Nest and we wanted it done before Eulalie came. The Nest had to be cleaned before Eulalie came. Oh did I lie, although I did want the skylight fixed.

My husband asked, "Do you think my daughter would get a UNT T-shirt and ship it to my daughter when she come next month? UNT is where his grandson goes and his granddaughter will go next fall. I assured him that she probably would. His worry that his daughter would know my daughter's Boston address was put to rest.

My clever daughter-in-law didn't dare email me but she had a friend email me saying that Eulalie's internet was down but gave me arrival time and place.

We made the Perpignan train station on the day of arrival ahead of the train and stood outside arrivals. My husband wasn't sure he would recognize Eulalie about whom I had been saying I was looking forward to seeing. More lies fell from my lips.

His daughter was the first one off the train.

"That looks like my daughter," he said. And seconds later the two of them were hugging. It was a week of talks, walks, hugs, meals, sightseeing, a week long birthday present. 

I just wish that I had her put a bow in her hair.

It's okay to lie for a birthday surprise.

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Memories up in smoke

Maybe as my husband and I walked around Walden Pond, we stepped on the same stones as Henry David Thoreau walked on -- maybe not -- even if we were at the site of his cabin.

We were on our memory tour showing each other places we grew up.

It was a perfect autumn day: unreal blue sky, the smell of fallen leaves crunching under our feet, but still many leaves on the trees on each side of the path. Chipmunks monitored our progress.

I couldn't show my husband my schools, all except the Highland School (now the town library) where I went to fifth grade. The rest had all been torn down. Even my childhood home had been replaced with a modern house. The barn and my playhouse, that was once my grandfather's cabin for storing his gardening tools was gone. What was left was the Robert Frost-type stone wall that bordered the pine grove although I didn't count the pines.

The golf club where I was forced to take lessons was as I remembered it. A good thing, too, because the next year the clubhouse burned down.

We went to Maynard where along with five others, I created the Digital Credit Union, now a billion dollar financial institution. The headquarters is no longer a credit union. Even the ATM is gone, but the speed bump that we named Mt. Hanahan after our custodian who put it in to slow traffic is still there.

Naturally Marty the receptionist was long gone, but who ever she was now, she let me use the ladies room, which looked identical to the zillion times I used it when I worked there earning me the name "Bitty Bladder."

We found the last of the corn on the cob of the season, a real treat. I'd missed New England corn on the cob living in Europe. 

I hope Rick enjoyed my childhood and early adulthood as much as I enjoyed where he took me for cider and donuts, spedies, the course he played and his childhood home, still standing with his mother welcoming us at the door with a "Bonjour."

As for my childhood memories, I may be one of the only people to remember the details like the dining room bay window with the plants and the "abortion" steep stair case to the second floor. After me, no one will remember. The memories will disappear like smoke.


Free Write - The Yellow Fiat

 


For this weeks's Free Write we were back at our favorite summertime Southern France café EXCEPT the weather felt more like autumn. The hot chocolate and Yorkshire tea were warming. Meanwhile our Swiss writer had little to say about the weather.

D-L's Free Write

"You don't want a FIAT," Jana's father said, "Fix It Again Tony."

They were walking around the used car lot. Then the yellow car caught Jana's eye. Most of the cars were three years old or less.

Many of her friend's parents had bought them cars, but nothing like this. There were stickers going back to 75 on it. The car was an antique. She imagined it standing out in the student parking lot, among all those dull white, black or gray ones.

The car salesman came up. "We guarantee it for 30 Kilometrs or 30 Kilometers an hour, which ever comes first."

"I want it for a lifetime," Jana said.

"How much to put it into top working order?" Jana's father asked.

"3000 Euros."

"Please Papa, please."

Jana's friends made fun of her car. They made fun when she put flowered contact paper on the dashboard. Yellow sunflowers. The car went to uni with her and on a cross European trip. 

She changed its oil and got tune ups regularly.

When her daughter, Cissy, was born, Jana's husband wanted her to get another car. She said, "No!!!!"

Her daughter Cissy took it to uni with her.

A man offered them 10,000 euros for it.

Jana and Cissy said, "No!!!! You don't sell a member of the family."

Julia's Free Write

Putt, putt, putt… and just like that she was transported back to the summer of 1968!

A group of four students bought a French 2CV (two horsepower) for a ridiculously low price and headed North for Copenhagen.

It wasn’t fast, but it was – as advertised – untippable.  Up the German Autobahn: the axel broke in Hamburg.

Despite a total lack of German, they were able to not only get it repaired overnight, but to find two elderly ladies who put them up for the night. Then it was off again and on to a place just outside of Copenhagen where the arrived at midnight.

Knowing they couldn’t get into the school that night, they slept in the car (one could take the front seats out: the boys sat in the back and the girls leaned against them – Imagine that today!)

A bright sun woke them. They packed and got ready to continue, but a total lack of people about had them looking at their watches: 3 a.m.!

That was the night that Robert Kennedy was assassinated.

Rick Adams is an aviation journalist and publisher of www.aviationvoices.com, a weekly newsletter reporting the airline industry  top stories . He is the author of The Robot in the Simulator. AI in Aviation Training.  

Visit D-L.'s website  https://dlnelsonwriter.com, She is the author of 15 fiction and three non fiction books. Her 300 Unsung Women, bios of women who battled gender limitations, can be purchased  at https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/300-unsung-women-d-l-nelson/1147305797?ean=9798990385504 

Visit Julia's blog. She has written and taken photos and loves syncing up with friends.  Her blog can be found: https://viewsfromeverywhere.blogspot.com/ 


Sunday, April 26, 2026

Coat Hangers and Knitting Needles - Gwen Campbell's Story

Another death, another illegal abortion from my book Coat Hangers and Knitting Needles that tells of abortion before it was legal. Now that it is illegal again in many places the horror is back for many women and their families. For me, the most horrible part is that most of the laws passed against abortion are made by men, some of whom have been known to take their girl friends for abortions. Women should be the ones to write the laws on women's health along with medical experts.

Gwen Campbell Elliott’s Story

Abortions cross all racial lines. Gwen Campbell Elliot was called to the hospital where her mother lay dying. Like Sharon’s mom, Vivian’s last words to her children were to be good, also adding for her to be good in school.

Gwen was told that her mother died in childbirth. Only when she was in college and she saw the death certificate did she learn her mother died of an illegal abortion. Her father, she said, spent a lot of time trying to find out who performed the abortion. His hope for justice went unfulfilled.

Gwen showed the viewers the Jerusalem Baptist Church, a light-yellow brick building. She said the church was the foundation of the family.

In the 1950s, it was still the custom to lay the body out at home. Vivian Campbell was laid out at Gwen’s aunt’s. Gwen knows she was at the cemetery. She remembers thinking she could go to the cemetery and wake her sleeping mom.

Her parents were separated when her mother became pregnant and she’s not sure who the father was.

Not having a mother brought other traumas. She was raised by her grandmother, who was determined her granddaughter would not be sexually active. Gwen’s periods were irregular. To make sure she wasn’t pregnant, the grandmother took her to a doctor, who did an “internal.” He also asked her if she had had sex. Gwen wasn’t sure what sex was, but she’s convinced that if her mother was alive, she would not have to be humiliated and hurt in the doctor’s office. She didn’t communicate with anyone for weeks after that. “I was a scared kid.”

“There have to be more people like me out there. If we don’t speak out the abortion will go the wrong way,” she concludes.



 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Lost and Found "X

 


BOOK LOSS

My masters thesis at the University of Glamorgan was symbolism in John Irving's work. I was surprised when at 83 he published another novel, Queen Esther. I had Pages & Sips, my favorite Geneva book store, order it and enjoyed scones and tea when I picked it up. 

Irving said that the novel carried on from his Cider House Rules, which I reread. I THOUGHT I took Queen Esther back to France with me when I go back there, but was waiting until I finished the biographies of Eleanor Roosevelt before starting it.

All excited, the day I was to begin the new Irving book, I couldn't find it. Had I left it in Geneva? Our flats are not that large so there aren't that many places for a book to go.

I figured when I got back to Geneva, if the library didn't have a copy, I'd order a Kindle.

BOOKMARK

On a cold, but clear day we walked through the Montreux Christmas Marché chalets along Lac Léman. Rick was thrilled to find his poutine, I found a wooden handmade pen for my collection. There was one chalet that looked like English library. They weren't selling books, but golden bookmarks. There were different designs. 

I fell in love with a book design (see photo). Even the 34 CHF price tag didn't persuade me not to buy it. That was 18 months ago and I've used it in the major book I've been reading ever sense. I often read two books at the same time. My other bookmark is a piece of flat wood with a lovely grain.

THE SECOND LOSS

Rick and I have back-to-back physio appointments. I take books to read while he was being worked on.

When I opened my book, the bookmark was gone. 

In our village we can walk to almost everything we need. Rick offered to retrace our steps while Reuben massaged my legs. My husband went to the Retirada musée where we'd taken his kids to see the diaspora of people escaping Franco across the Pyrenees in January 1939. He walked back to our house. He told me he looked through our flat. Giving up, he headed for his appointment.

2X FOUND 

Rick had found Queen Esther behind other books. Walking back through Place Gambetta and by the grocery store he, by chance, glanced down and there was the book mark.

The book and its bookmark were reunited and I was very happy.


Friday, April 24, 2026

Free Write - The Rock

This week's Free Write was delayed between guests and life. Next week we should be on track.


Julia's Free Write

“The Rocks in my Life”

Up yet another mountain, another field, another path; looking, always looking for signs that specialists had told him about; that formation, that type of apparently innocent-seeming rock, which, when split would reveal crystals. Over the years there had been some breathtaking moments.

Then there were the purposeless hikes, often with eyes glued to the ground, unconsciously looking for that perfect round, that whiter than white stone.

It wasn’t until he returned home from being abroad that he realized where he had gotten his fascination: his mother lifted his backpack – heavy – and laughed when she realized what he had drug across the oceans.

Then he looked around the house…everywhere small piles. But the best rock of all was the year he had no present for his father for Christmas.

He went down to the lake below their house – brrr – it was December 24th – dove and found the perfect smooth rock.

We won’t mention the other rocks in my life – too numerous to count.

D-L Free Write

Think girl!

Solid as a rock

Rock solid

Rock and roll.

Don't rock the boat

Get your rocks off

Rocky mountain (s) (high)

None fit the prompt. 

Could the white lines on the prompt be pain? Maybe some mineral. What is the type of stone?

Two minutes gone. Eight to go.

Rocks can be made into cairns. I learned about those in Iceland. My husband has built a small cairn on our patio. 

Four minutes to go.

What about skipping stones into a pond, tiny rocks. Three people by the water, each holding a flat stone. 

Make it a story. With boys.

Tom throws his. And it skips. He's not that well co-ordinated like his big brother Jason who skips his skips twice.

Jenny steps up. "Watch out boys for the champion. She winds up her arm theatrically and lets it rip. Four skips.¨

"How did she do that?" Tom asks. Jason just shrugs.

Thank goodness. Free Write time is up. 

Rick's Free Write

The rocks in my life. Literal rocks or metaphorical?

I have a cairn that I built on the outdoor patio from interesting rocks I have collected in various places, such as the beach. And re-built and re-built when moving it around to powerwash the patio floor.

There are rocks in the large flower pots along the front of the apartment. The flowers and plants are intended for privacy. The rocks are intended to prevent the street cats from shitting in the pots.

My dad used to use a phrase, “He’s got rocks in his head,” to indicate someone he thought was particularly slow-witted.

But in a sense we all have “rocks in our heads” – mental challenges that we carry around and weigh us down as we trudge through the day. Health issues, financial, family, societal…

I suppose a cairn is an attempt to create an order from the rocks in our life. Large stones on the bottom, perilously supporting the medium and small stones above. Brightly coloured or shiny rocks that highlight pleasant memories. Sometimes re-arranging the order of the rocks for better balance. Adding a new rock and trying to find a place for it.

We took Sherlock to the beach the other day – his favourite place to run. I thought about it but didn’t pick up any new rocks for the cairn… or my head.

Rick Adams is an aviation journalist and publisher of www.aviationvoices.com, a weekly newsletter reporting the airline industry  top stories . He is the author of The Robot in the Simulator. AI in Aviation Training.  

Visit D-L.'s website  https://dlnelsonwriter.com, She is the author of 15 fiction and three non fiction books. Her 300 Unsung Women, bios of women who battled gender limitations, can be purchased  at https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/300-unsung-women-d-l-nelson/1147305797?ean=9798990385504 

Visit Julia's blog. She has written and taken photos and loves syncing up with friends.  Her blog can be found: https://viewsfromeverywhere.blogspot.com/