Quilting: A Domestic Violence Story

PART 1

Thirty years ago, I sat all night on the sofa in my upper flat, smoking Benson & Hedges, with my mother’s green and orange afghan wrapped around my shoulders, waiting for my addicted, unpredictable, and sometimes violent boyfriend to pull up in front of my house, get out of his car, and use the key I had given him by mistake to come in and kill us all.

After spending all night on the couch looking out the window at the corner intersection and waiting for his car to pull up, I showered, dressed, got my daughter ready for school, and went to work. As if nothing had happened.

My fear had happened. My lonely, secret, gut-wrenching fear had happened – fear so deep that I was afraid to close my eyes even for a minute lest I be taken by surprise.

When this happened, I was finishing coursework for a Ph.D. I had a job at a human service agency. It didn’t pay a lot but it was a decent job. I paid the rent. I owned a car. I had a good upbringing with decent parents. No one had ever laid a hand on me in anger. No one.

But I was terrified of my boyfriend when he was ‘off’ which he wasn’t always. Just once in a while. The rest of the time, he was mellow and funny, involved in the community, tons of friends, devoted to me.

It was hard to tell what would happen — it was crazy-making.

Women you know this very minute are in this situation. If they are really scared or, worse, physically abused, they can seek shelter, assuming they are willing and able to leave where they live. They can call hotlines and learn how to develop safety plans. Stockpile resources and make a run for it if things get bad enough. I never got to this stage. I believed I could protect myself – at least until one fateful night a year or so later – so seeking shelter, asking for help for my situation never occurred to me. I wasn’t the person with the problem.

He was.

And there wasn’t any help for him.

The question was — was I supposed to change? Change my life, my residence, uproot my child to be safe? He’s the villain and I’m the damsel in distress?

I should have retreated into shelter so he could find the next woman who would try, in vain, to convince herself that how mellow and funny he was outweighed how terrifying he could become every now and then?

I didn’t think so then and I don’t think so now.

PART 2

Not long after the endless night keeping watch out the window, after a bunch of happy evenings with my boyfriend, a trip or two to the racetrack, a drive in the country with a stop at a funky bar, and, oh, maybe a concert or two thrown in, enough to make the distance between that night’s me and me now so wide that the fear became imagined and extreme, an overreaction, not long after that the phone rang one night.

It was my boyfriend’s ex-girlfriend, the woman he’d lived with for five years.

“You don’t know me, but I have things I need to tell you.”

It felt like a wood sliver sliding under my fingernail. “Like what?”

She told me about her twisted arm, the black eyes that kept her home from work and the pillow over her face.

She told me about the apologies and the regret. How he would ask for forgiveness and promise not to do it again.

She warned me. “That’s what he’s really like. He’s not the person everybody thinks he is.”

“Nothing like that has ever happened with us,” I told her, only partially lying because it was the threat, the seemingly imminent possibility, of something like that happening that put me into that weird watching out the window place rather than it actually happening.

“He’s different now. That kind of thing would never happen. I wouldn’t put up with it. First sign of anything like that and I’d be done – that would be it.”

I hung up the phone just as he walked in the door, holding a pizza and a six-pack of beer.

I’d been warned.

PART 3

It went on like this for a couple of years. Long periods of calm interrupted by longer moments of panic and terror.

I remember….a long night watching my boyfriend sleep with a butcher knife in his hand wondering whether he intended to use it on me or himself. Being chased across town and, thinking it was the safest place I could find, pulling up in front of the 5th District Station. Being trapped in the kitchen of my upper flat which, I figured at the time, was probably the worst place in the house to be. Banging the car door against his leg as I tried to pull it closed and flee after an argument in the Dells. Listening to him tapping on my back door all night long wanting me to let him in so he could apologize.

But still he had never laid a hand on me. That had become my bottom line.

I got through the terror by convincing myself that he would stop himself from actually hurting me. But it became harder and harder to believe as time went on, sort of like thinking that even though everyone else’s basement was flooded, mine would stay dry.

It was the classic frog in boiling water. I lost sight of how out of whack my life had become. How unexplainable. How chaotic. How private.

The fight scene. Man and woman in a hotel room in Des Moines. He’s been drinking all day – beer and Irish whiskey. He wants to go out. She thinks he’s too drunk. He threatens. She grabs the keys to leave. He tackles her, pins her to the bed. And puts his hands around her neck.

Calling on angels, she gets out from under his 280 lbs and runs into the hotel hallway screaming. People open their doors and look at her standing there. He’s in the doorway shrugging his shoulders. She is ashamed.

So after the fight scene, while people from the hotel stood and watched, I got my things and my car keys and I left. Wanting to drive home but afraid to, I found an old hotel downtown and checked in to a room on the 4th floor where I pulled the chest of drawers in front of the door and sat curled up on the bed until dawn.

I drove back to Milwaukee to pick up my daughter, back from a two-week Western vacation with her dad. “Hi Mom, you’re late.”

Part 4: The Coda

Two years ago, I went to my old boyfriend’s funeral. I milled around with old and old-looking friends and colleagues, talked to his nieces, now adult women, with whom I’d spent several Christmases so long ago, and every now and then glanced over at the urn that sat on an unadorned table. There was no picture there – no montage of photos from a long happy life. His siblings were furious at him for what they said he had put them through. After so many attempts and threats, including several when I knew him, he had finally taken his own life.

A middle-aged woman standing alone was pointed out to me as his girlfriend. Thinking I should offer my condolences to the closest thing that he had to caring family at the moment, I introduced myself. She launched into a quiet explanation about why she, alone, was responsible for his death. She’d just ended their relationship because of his violent behavior, she wasn’t able to help him. “And now look what happened.”

It was in that moment that it hit me. In the many years since Des Moines, I had fallen in love and married someone else, moved into a big old house and raised a family of four children, started a business, had friends. If I died, there would be a lot of pictures.

He had circled back and started over. If the length of our relationship was a predictor, he probably had four or five more serious relationships, all ending the same scary way.

If all the women who’d known him sat in a circle, we would tell the same story, make a quilt with identical squares. And the quilt would be very large.

This man, to whom we had all been attracted because of his gentle heart and fun-loving spirit, never intended to hurt anyone. Whatever trauma or damage he had in his early life that would explain his violent episodes, no one really knows.

I do know it kept him from having any pictures at his funeral.

Take It Easy

A powerboat is thrilling.  Thrilling, risky, and nervewracking if you’re a person prone to wracked nerves. Any number of things can go wrong – the boat can fall off the trailer, the car can back too deep into the water at the marina, the battery can go dead, the rotors get chewed up by unseen rocks, the engine stall in the middle of the lake or river or you can get swamped by a wave, or, if your boating companion is in love with speed fast enough to make the boat’s bow slap, slap, slap while jetting across two foot swells, you could simply keel over from a stroke from the dreaded fear of flipping.

I loved the idea of a powerboat and we had a little beauty – a 1989 Bowrider, white with mauve accents, with the original teak trim.  I loved it so much — but it scared the crap out of me.  I’m brave about things with big engines only in the abstract.  Riding on the back of my first husband’s Harley Sportster, even with a sissy bar, and zooming up the on-ramp to the freeway remains the single most physically scary thing I have ever done.

So I was sad when my husband decided two years ago, after spending yet another boatload of money on fixing the old boat’s undependable engine, that it was time to donate the boat to charity and give up the powerboating life.  I was bummed because cruising the Milwaukee River at about 5 miles an hour, drinking wine and eating pretzels was about the loveliest thing ever but he was bored by that.  He wanted a boat to go across Lake Michigan, one we could use on Lake Superior.  To me, Lake Superior is for freighters.  Although….look what happened to the Edmund Fitzgerald, for heaven’s sake.

While our powerboat was cute and fast and stroke-inducing, our canoe is sublime in all ways.  It also is cute and fast, an Old Town canoe that is wide and sturdy with wood/wicker seats.  We use wood paddles that came from another canoe a long time ago.  My paddle is dinged and worn down but is light and perfect for me.  I sit in the front of the canoe and I see and I paddle.  My husband sits in the back and steers.  He has this honor because he was Color Wars General at Pine Forest Camp when he was 14.  Even without this credential, he is an exceptional canoer.  He is calm, steady, and can thread the needle with our wide little canoe.  I never have to scream, “Look out, look out!  We’re going to hit the dock!”  I just mellow out up there in front.  Minding my business, looking ahead.  Just being so very, very, very chill, as they say.

I know that in a lot of circles canoeing isn’t all that hip.  Very old school.  Not like kayaking with all the great gear and the sleek look.  I wear my old sneakers, roll up my jeans and put on a baseball cap when we canoe.  That’s as fancy as it gets.  Plain.  I really like that.

Plus it’s one thing to see the water from the land but it’s another thing altogether to see the land from the water.  And to be going slow enough to really see it. That, I really love.

Say What?

You know how Iron Chef has Battle Mushroom or Battle Egg?  And how everyone in Kitchen Stadium watches in awe as the Iron Chef and his challenger create amazing plates of food art to be judged by a panel of people who haven’t been hungry for six months?

Well, I’m doing Battle Ear.  In this contest, I am deciding whether to chart a graceful course into what my husband so lovingly calls my ‘descent into deafness’ or become a hot-wired queen of technology where, in addition to two hearing aids, I might have some magnetic coil thing hanging around my neck and FM receiver systems to deal with groups of people.  When the wonderful audiologist at the Center for Communication, Hearing, and Deafness told me that I could qualify for DVR assistance, I knew I’d stepped into a new and very different little puddle.

So Step #1 in my own Kitchen Stadium challenge was to go see a doctor at Froedtert who is widely known as the best ear guy in town.  Now, ENT (Ear, Nose and Throat) doctors are good but you have to realize (and this was news to me, too) that they split their loyalties three ways.  If you’ve got a serious problem with your ears, you need to see a guy who only loves ears and not noses and throats. Remember that, everyone.  It might come in handy someday.

So I was waiting in his exam room this morning, reading the citation that named him ONE OF THE BEST DOCTORS IN THE U.S. and going through a very long article about an innovative implant plus hearing aid procedure that achieved great hearing improvements but required an hour long drilling of a hole behind one’s ear.

Ok, I thought.  I’m really not keen on surgery, general anesthetic and all that, not to mention the skull drilling.  But I figured if that’s what it took, I could do that.  Damn, I thought, that would have to give a person one hell of a headache.

So the super doctor in love with ears came in the room and asked the same questions I’d already answered on the intake form.  No to every other health problem besides hearing. That’s good, right?  That’s a blessing.  I’m into counting them lately.

Anyway, so he begins the examination.  Has me turn my head one way and then another, have my eyes follow his finger, clench and unclench my teeth.  And then he takes this incredibly high tech instrument out.

This is a tuning fork.

He thrums the tuning fork and holds it behind my ear and then next to my ear.  “Can you hear this?” “Can you hear this?”

Seriously. And that was it.

Now I’ve been to audiologists so I have a stack of charts about the nature of my hearing loss but no one knows the cause.

That’s why I came to the best EAR GUY in Milwaukee. The Ear Whisperer!!!!!

Anyway, after his laying on of hands, he stood back, looked at me and said, “It’s hereditary. Doesn’t have anything to do with your age or anything else. It’ll probably get worse for a while and then stabilize. There’s nothing I can do about it.”

This sentence made me happy.  First,  no skull drilling in store for me.  Second, it’s not about my age.  I have hearing loss and I am aging but they are not causally related and I like that because the other battle in my personal Kitchen Stadium is Battle Age.

The underlying theme here is lucky.  Lucky I don’t have some terrible disease that’s causing my hearing loss.  Lucky I have the health insurance to see a Best in America doctor (even if he does use an 18th century diagnostic tool).  Lucky to have the cash to pay for all this hearing technology.  And, finally, lucky to be able to look forward to being hot-wired.

That’s not so bad.

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If you have hearing loss, these folks are top of the line in terms of expertise and support: Center for Communication, Hearing and Deafness   www.cchdwi.org

I’ve written about my hearing loss in another post http://reds-wrap.com/2012/03/28/sweet-nothings-in-my-ear/.

Sweet Nothings in My Ear

I just came home from a huge event where my husband got an award.  The award was a really pretty glass thing that probably weighed a couple of pounds but somehow hot sauce got in the picture.  You can tell that he’s pretty happy.  So am I.  If he hadn’t won, he’d have been moping for months.

But the point of the blog post isn’t about the award, it was about the huge celebration.  There were at least 600 people including a lot of people I’ve known for 20-30 years.  Wonderful to see people and, of course, to be seen.  It’s the ultimate schmoozing event for the community development folks in our city.

My problem?  I can only hear about a third of the people who talk to me and then only about half of what they say.  If a person’s voice isn’t in that very narrow band of sound that I can hear, I make a decision.  If I know them and their facial expressions, I might just fake it for a while.  Smile.  Smile.  Nod. Nod.  If my husband is around, he acts as my deaf interpreter and he is getting increasing deft at doing so.  He has stopped saying, She’s deaf.  She can’t hear you.  Which I really thought was both off-putting and a peculiar play for sympathy like look what I have to live with.

So sometimes I meet a completely new person who is eager to talk to me but whose language I can’t discern.  This is different than hearing.  I can hear the person talking.  I just don’t know what he’s saying.  Making it louder doesn’t help oddly even though people sometimes will go to great lengths to shout at me.  I feel bad, disappointed in myself when the result is for naught.  I’m sorry, I still can’t hear you. 

Tonight I just told a very nice man whose name tag indicated to me that I ought to talk to him that it was not going to be possible to have a conversation.  I pointed to my hearing aids, waved my arms around the room filled with hundreds of chattering people, I’m sorry.  He looked at me like oh, ok, should I write you a note? But then he eventually wandered off to the next prospect.  It was then I decided to pack it in and come home.

It takes a lot of mental agility to handle a big crowd like this.  To smile, small talk, move through the crowd and hope that no one corrals me for a longer conversation.  It’s awkward to tell one person that it’s impossible to hear him/her and then be able to talk to the next person because his/her voice falls in the right range.  It’s that dog whistle thing.  I now gravitate to people I know I can hear even though I might otherwise not be so keen on them.

Of all the rotten, terrible things that can happen to someone, hearing loss isn’t the worse.  It is just very weird.  It’s hard to handle.  It’s hard to own.  That’s the most important thing.  It is really, really hard to own.

I’ve learned how to do a lot of stuff.  I can learn to do this.  I can own this.

Head Case

Every time there’s a hit and run accident that’s on the news, I think it involved one of my sons.  Not as the person hurt but as the driver.  It’s not until I get the make and model of the car that I start to relax although I can keep my crazy ass mind gin going for a couple of days thinking that maybe one of them borrowed the car that caused the accident.  It’s only a matter of time, I tell myself, until we get the phone call.  I sleep with my phone next to me. It used to be two phones – my cell and the house phone – until I realized that was really fruity-tooty loony.  I should just go to sleep with a headset on, waiting for one of my kids to make their one phone call before they’re thrown back into the holding cell with their fifty sweaty new pals.

What is the deal with this?

Why am I so nuts?  It’s the question of the ages. Ask my husband. He actually looks across the room at me when I insist that one of our boys was the hit and run driver and calmly refutes my claim with evidence.  The time isn’t right, he would’ve been at work. It happened at night, remember he said the lights on his truck were shot?  This is kind of him – to respond to me in a rational way but the negative effect is that it makes my initial fear more possible.  He should probably say, Stop being a complete crackpot, Jan.  But he would never do that even though that has to be what he’s thinking.  What he doesn’t say is – neither of our sons would be a hit and run driver.  And I think the reason he doesn’t say that, well, I know the reason since we’ve talked about it, is that we both so deeply feel that anything can happen.  A split second decision could turn life on its head for any of us but somehow, we feel that they are especially vulnerable.

When I read about an otherwise upstanding young man, a former Marine, hitting someone with his car and then making that split second decision to flee the scene, I can imagine it happening.  It’s not the only bad thing I can imagine happening to them but it is on my top five list at the moment.  They’re young, they’re Hispanic, they are often in the wrong place at the wrong time.  They drink.

When I told my friend Karen about this hit and run fear she said, hey, if something happens it happensYou can’t control things.  She’s been Quakerfied so she has become an unusually and unsettlingly calm and centered person.  She’s into accepting and letting go.  She tells me that my hit and run nuttiness is a metaphor for all the worries moms always have.

I hear her but I don’t get it.  I’m not that introspective. I’m just stuck on Press Play whenever these little news triggers occur.  My free floating anxiety occasionally gets really fatigued and needs a place to sit down and for a long time, hit and run accidents have been its rest stops.

I’m a 155 lb. amoeba that just responds where I’m poked.  And to the outside world, I can appear to be so smart.  There aren’t big enough letters for me to write LOL on that one.

So after the recent, terrible hit and run accident, one of my sons came by to do his laundry.  Even though a young man, same age as my son, had been arrested in that case, I couldn’t help but press him about where he was, what he was doing at the time of the accident.  He’s used to this, I think, because a normal person would’ve gotten annoyed or offended.

We chatted about it.  I felt better.

And then he looked at me and said, Ma, I’m not worried about getting in a car accident.  I’m thinking about what happened with that guy in the river.

Read more here: http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/body-recovered-in-milwaukee-river-el4moj0-143836116.html

Stay at Home Mom? Really?

Wow — there are a lot of women who stay home with their kids.  I know this because I saw about 10,000 of them at the Milwaukee County Zoo today, half of them pushing aircraft carrier strollers that double as food trucks for tots. Juice boxes, little baggies full of Cheerios, sandwiches with the crusts cut off. 

So this is where all the good moms went while I was going to work.  Who the hell knew?

Now, I was at the Zoo for an actual reason.  I’m training for an Avon Walk for Breast Cancer which means in September I will have to walk 26 miles in one day (and 13 the next).  Tired of the same old trek through the neighborhood, I decided to  go to the Zoo where I walked furiously for at least 15 minutes before finding shade and checking my messages.  That’s why they call it training — working on longer periods of time between message checks.  Anyway, I had plenty of time to observe – both while walking and checking.

Every 10 feet there was another knot of mom and kids.  I watched them and thought, “That’s what I should’ve done.”  I thought about how I could’ve been all athletic-looking with a baseball cap and a ponytail.  How I could’ve been bouncy and good humored and have a lot of PATIENCE.  More to the point, how I could’ve had enough confidence, brains, or chutzpah to not have practically my entire identity tied up in work.  How I could’ve been a relaxed, fulfilled adult woman satisfied to put career plans on hold for the higher priority of raising children.  Sure.

Who are these women anyway?  Are they happy?  They look happy.  They look happier than I used to when I took my kids to the Zoo (on Saturday).  They have the look of people who aren’t always thinking about something else.  They’re actually thinking about being at the Zoo.

So my question is this.  How are they ok with this?  And why are some women ok with it and others aren’t?  Do you have to have an extreme level of self-esteem to be a stay at home mom or be an ambitionless dishrag of a person?  I just don’t know. 

I can’t imagine doing it.  I guess that’s my problem.  It really seemed appropriate to be observing all this at the Zoo.  So foreign.

Things My Mother Taught Me — Partly on Purpose

My mother taught me many things she didn’t know she as teaching me and probably had no intention of teaching me. She also tried to teach me things I had no interest or ability to learn.  This is suggestive of a lot of crossed wires between us, however, there were fewer than you might think.  I adored my mother but she remains, ten years after her death, the most enigmatic person I have ever met.

She was so much like she appears in this photograph.  Tailored, put together.  The ever-present pumps.  If you could see the backs of her legs, the seams would be absolutely straight.  She would be wearing a full length slip that hung, oh, maybe, an inch above the hem of her skirt.  And she is looking at the camera but she is holding on to herself.  Maybe it was cold there in Niagara Falls in 1938 when this picture was taken but I don’t think so.  This is just how she was.  Present but within herself.

So what did my mother teach me?  Well, here’s my short list.

1.  Find a husband with some style.

My mother had just turned 20 when she married my dad, a guy four years older, who had, as they say, been around.  He played the ‘horn’ as he called it at honky-tonks around Lansing and, as he told me in one of our midnight chats when he was about 89, “he had never met a really nice girl like her.”  Hmmmmm.

Her?  I think she was looking for a bit of a bad boy.  You can’t tell me every guy walked around looking like that in 1938.  The guy really knew how to wear a hat.

2. Make your kids look as cool as you.

My mother was just a great tailored dresser.  She didn’t do flounce – ever.  She was all about trim skirts and sweater sets.  And she was just very cool. 

She wasn’t gorgeous.  In fact, her most frequent adage to me, and this makes me roll my eyes even typing it….It’s not important to be pretty as long as you’re neat and clean.

She had style and I like to think she passed it on.

3.  Be stoic.

This is about what my mother taught me.  It’s not necessarily about what I learned.  Those things aren’t always synonymous, you know?  My mother was very stoic.  She absorbed extraordinary stress (which I also have the ability to do) without complaining (not so much).  My mother was a ‘put your head down and just get through it’ kind of gal.  She didn’t complain about my father’s business reversals.  She just hauled out all the neat tricks she learned as a kid in the Depression, like bean soup with just the beans.  It took me years and much travel to realize that bean soup could be flavored by something, like….meat.

4.  Grow where you’re planted.

She would say this but she couldn’t do this.  So I hear this phrase in my head all the time and it’s one reason why I have been loathe to move out of Milwaukee even when there’ve been good opportunities elsewhere. My folks moved a lot and a couple of the moves were uprooting and painful and almost impossible to recover from so my mother was often living in a state of ‘place-grief’.  So I think this little adage was meant as a motivational mantra because it wasn’t how she was able to live.  She was often too wounded to grow.

5. Peel Potatoes.

I was a latchkey kid.  When I got home from school, I’d call my mother at the store – our family business was a Ben Franklin Store where all of us worked starting around age 12…so these calls predated my becoming an employee. So anyway, I’d ask her what to make for dinner.  And she’d say, well, not sure, put some water on to boil and peel some potatoes.  This was the opening gambit of all her dinners. 

What it said to me – then and now – was just start.  Do something.  People coming home from work and will be hungry?  Boil potatoes.  Someone sick coming home from the doctor? Turn down the bed.  Relatives gathering after a funeral? Make sandwiches. Put on your apron (figuratively) and be useful. 

There’s more probably.  She tried to teach me to sew but it made me crazy — all those tucks and putting zippers in. She made a dress for me once out of the basement curtains – I kid you not – the dress had tulips along the hem.  Remember it plain as day.  She could do that. Take down the curtains and make a dress.  It makes my head spin.

My mother.

Slut: A Flashback

Do you know who the father is?

Yes. I know.

Do you know who the father is?  Slut.

Yes. I know who the father is.  He’s the only one.

Do you know who the father is? Slut.  Giving it away for free.

I’m not a slut.  He was the only one.

Do you know who the father is?

Yes.  We were there together when it happened.  I know who the father is.

I hope you know who the father is, young lady.

I do. I know who the father is.

It’s going to be very hard for you. Slut.

I know who the father is.  We were there together.

We were there together.

Couldn’t Be Luckier

28 Years. 96 Tears.

I’ve told this story a thousand times. My husband and I got engaged (so to speak) on February 21st and married a week later on February 28th (we wouldn’t have waited a week had we lived in Las Vegas instead of Milwaukee) all on a dare, double dare. A decision one-upped by one of our kids who got engaged and married within 24 hours by figuring out how to speed things up by going to Rockford, IL. Ok, so Illinois is good at something.

Anyway, this is only interesting, maybe, because we’ve been married for 28 years. If it had only lasted a year, everyone would have said, “See what happens when you rush into things!”

So tonight to celebrate, we went to the Auto Show which my husband loves because he thinks it’s ‘awesome’.  He wanders around looking at new SUV’s wearing a hat that my Dad who would be 99 if he was still alive used to wear when he talked cars.  He (my Dad) would have a stub of a cigar in his mouth.  My husband, at least tonight, skipped that part.

So after the Auto Show, we texted our son who works at a local hotshot hotel to see if he could get us reservations for dinner at their hotshot restaurant and thus get us 25% off the very expensive tab.  No go, he texted back.  So we headed to our second choice.  Walking in the door of the Jackson Grill (actually one of Milwaukee’s most wonderful, hidden restaurants), I said, “Don’t you think most people would have figured out ahead of time where to have dinner on their anniversary?”

Maybe.  But not us.  We’d rather not know what we’re doing.  It’s our best thing. Not having any idea what we’re doing or what comes next.  We got married that way, had a bunch of kids that way, and have made ridiculously important life decisions based on nothing more than a nod of the head or the turn of a key in the ignition.

There’s almost nothing better than stopping at the bottom of the driveway and asking, “Are we turning left or right?”

Love that.  People plan too damn much.  And maybe don’t trust enough.

Not our problem.

What We Can Learn from Ryan Braun

There are lessons we can learn from Ryan Braun and they aren’t about fielding or hitting.  They’re about patience and certitude, control and timing.

When Braun spoke yesterday standing by himself on the field at Maryvale, the Milwaukee Brewers Spring Training Facility in Arizona, he seemed to me to be a person with such deep belief in himself and the rightness of his position that he was utterly comfortable alone. He didn’t need to be flanked by attorneys or supporters.  It was just Ryan Braun and the green of the baseball field behind him.

In my mind, the hardest part of this doping accusation had to have been waiting in silence for the case to be resolved.  Even though there were occasional Braun tweets about eventually being vindicated, he kept pretty silent which, to me, signified his respect for the process and his control over his own emotions.

It’s the latter that I think is most impressive.  This statement from Braun sums up what that challenge must have been like:  “With what’s at stake — this is my livelihood, this is my integrity, this is my character, this is everything that I’ve work for in my entire life being called into question…”

At 27 years old, this ball player had the ability to keep his own counsel and wait.  And then when it was appropriate to speak, he did.  He didn’t hide behind a lawyer or a publicist.  He didn’t issue a statement and refuse questions.  He just stood there on the first base line of Maryvale’s field and reclaimed his territory – honest, measured, definite.

Man, I really admired that.   A long time Brewers fan, I was never all that crazy about Ryan Braun.  But I think I am now.

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Find the story at http://www.jsonline.com/sports/brewers/Braun_live22412-140317723.html (Photos from the JSonline story)