24 May

Faces Of The Mansion: Meet Lisa Cox, Designer, Horse Lover, Fox Hunter, Businesswoman

by Jon Katz

Tania Woodward told me I would be surprised by Lisa Cox,  who came to the Mansion last November. I met Lisa today for my “Mansion Faces” portrait series, and I left thinking I’d need a book to tell her life’s story.

I admit I was surprised by her energy and wit, her mind is strong and active, and her life is full and fascinating. She is uncomplaining, vital, and cheerful.

I enjoyed getting to know her.

Lisa grew up in Long Island, studied art at Bennett College, design at the Parson School of Design at Benett College at the Parson School of Design in New York City, and Architecture at Pratt University in Brooklyn.,

She used her design skills as a successful businesswoman, but she married a horse lover out of college and became one herself.

Her love of horses changed the direction of her life.

She has devoted much of her life to horses, which she rode and worked with almost every day for decades.

She was wait-listed for the U.S. Equestrian Olympic Team and was an official of the U.S. Equestrian Federation.

Her favorite horses were Man O’War, considered the greatest racehorse of all time, and Sefton, the British Army Cavalry Horse, who was critically injured in London’s Hyde Park IRA bombings.

She never got to see either of them.

(The entire nation rallied to pay his surgical and medical costs, and Sefton recovered enough to return  to active service and was named “Horse Of The Year.” Sefton also became a favorite of Queen Elizabeth.)

Lisa started a successful business selling British horse gear and clothing. That was when her design training helped her a great deal.

She and her husband ended their marriage amicably. She went forward with her life.

She came to the Mansion when a member of her family became seriously ill, and her family wanted to ensure he was cared for while they cared for him.

Lisa is cheerful, thoughtful, and articulate. We did hit it off, I invited her to come to meet the donkeys on our farm, and she lit up when I told her I had two donkeys.

Horses were her life, and she misses them dearly. Maybe the donkeys could help.

Tania offered to bring her to the farm.

I asked her if she needed anything at the Mansion, and she said she didn’t; she had everything she needed. But she did respond when I offered to get her the new book  Palace Papers.

At Tania’s whispered suggestion, I also tracked down a book about Sefton – Sefton: The Story Of a Cavalry Horse. I got hold of the last one at a used care online service.

It’s on the way. She also loves murder mysteries, and I will be bringing her some.

I started the “Mansion Faces” campaign because I thought it essential that the people who live in the Mansion be known outside of their new home.

But I have been repeatedly surprised and delighted to meet some of the interesting, engaged, active, and compelling people who live there.

People in the Mansion have some beautiful stories to tell, and I want to tell them.

I was intrigued when Lisa told me she was a longtime member of the Old Chatham Hunt Club, located just an hour or so south of our farm.

I didn’t expect to find a fox hunter in the Mansion. She was quick to tell me that she loved fox hunting. It wasn’t, she said, about killing foxes. It was about working with dogs, something I very much relate to.

She said after years of fox hunting, the hunt had only caught up with one single fox, and he was old and sick.

“It isn’t cruel,” she said, “the boxes have plenty of places to hide. We love the riding and the dogs. I loved it.” She said a fox had befriended a member of her family and a regular visitor to her home.

That wasn’t a conversation I expected to have at  Mansion. I enjoyed meeting her very much. I’ll see her again on Thursday when Maria goes to the Mansion to conduct an art class.

Lisa said she’d heard a lot about it.

I’m going with Maria and bringing Zinnia, with Covid under control; I’m going to visit the Memory Care  Center and some of the residents who spend a lot of time in their rooms and whom I rarely see.

I’m eager to see Lisa’s art.

___

If you wish to write Lisa a letter, I’m sure she’d love to receive it. Lisa Cox, 11 S. Union Avenue, Cambridge, N.Y., 12816.

9 August

Melisandre Needs A Home

by Jon Katz

Melisandre needs a home. She’s a young adult who is the mother a litter of kittens that were all easily adopted and has been with  Community Cats for a couple of months.

She is spayed and friendly and playful, a little timid in unfamiliar situations, says Darlene Phillips of Salem Community Cats. She’s easy with cats, has never been around dogs.

She is in Salem, New York in Washington County.

Darlene thinks she would make a wonderful pet. Darlene’s group has been focusing on feral cats – trapping, neutering, and returning them to where they were caught.

There are 70 million feral cats in America and Darlene’s group has caught and returned more than 100 of them.

She also has 27 cats and kittens in foster homes and is running out of space as well as money.

I’m going to talk with her this week to see how she might get money for a larger space – I’m thinking of a GoFundMe page that I could support on the blog.

I strongly believe in trying to help feral and abandoned cats, they suffer awful sickness and death in a country that mostly ignores the problem.

Darlene Phillips and her group are doing heroic work in this field. You can contact her about Melisandre through her e-mail ([email protected].).

You can visit the group’s website here.  You can donate to the group here.

I hope they agree to a gofundme page, it’s the best way for them to raise the money they need, with our continuing help. In the meantime, they could use some help.

Just this weekend they dook in two mama cats and their combined seven kittens as well as another sweet ginger kitten they trapped and a friendly adult stray.

The majority of the adults are either healing from injury, recovering from illness, or waiting to be spayed or neutered,” writes Darlene. “The majority of the kittens will very soon be ready to go into homes. In the meantime, we are about out of space and need to either move along the few adoptable cats we have or find more fosters. Any help you might offer would be greatly appreciated. We are so grateful for all you’ve already done to boost our cause.”

I’m hoping to adopt this group of animal angels into the kind realm of the Army Of Good and support them as best we can. As you know, this is a rough kind of work to do. And expensive.

I’ll keep you posted. I’m glad to be supporting this work.  I hope someone goes for Melisandre, she needs a home and sounds like a great pet. ([email protected])

2 April

Book Review: “Small Fry,” A Memoir By Lisa Brennan Jobs

by Jon Katz

I should say up front that Steve Jobs was an important figure in my life.

He made it possible for people like me, who are technically impaired and know nothing about computing, to write my books on a computer, do my banking on a cell phone, take photos that people buy, start a blog in my own office, store my photos in space, even take short movies of my life on the farm.

And he made sure there is always someone on the other end of the phone to help.

I will always be grateful for what his genius did for people like me, but the Jobs I read about in this memoir makes my stomach turn over.

Lisa  Brennan-Jones, his first child,  loved him dearly but even if she says she forgave him for  how he treated her, I found it hard to do so after reading her book, Small Fry: A Memoir.

The book begins as an account of the relationship between Lisa and Chrisann, a volatile artist who once lived with but did not marry Steve Jobs. They had a child, Lisa, who Jobs refused to acknowledge for years, although he sent money from time to time.

Lisa wants nothing more in life than to be close to  her father and spend more time with him. It doesn’t happen, except when she is dragged on trips against her will.

By the time Lisa gets to middle school, her fights with her mother become so intense that Lisa moves in with her father, and his new wife, Laurene. Sometimes, Steve and Laurene make out in front of Lisa, “moaning theatrically, as if for an audience.”

Jobs was a transformative figure, he changed our world. In so many ways, he made my creative life possible. I do not believe I would be writing today of not for me, I always believed he was a fierce advocate for people like me, he had so much more to do with my life than my own father.

Yet in Small Fry, the Jobs we meet is an almost pathologically troubled and insensitive human and father. Lisa, who  spent much of her life ping-ponging back and forth between her dysfunctional mother and her cold and cruel father, has written a very powerful memoir about her very unhappy life and her life-long efforts to be loved and known by her father.

I am by no means a perfect father, but I kept wishing in this book that somebody would call child protective services  and get her out of there. It was a kind of torture by indifference and manipulation.

Job’s wife Laurene and his sister Mona Simpson issued a statement after the book came out saying this view of Jobs was not the Steve Jobs that they knew and loved.

Maybe not, but it was the one Lisa Brennan-Jobs lived with and loved, and the one she describes in her memoir.

She was caught in a never-ending whirlpool, fighting with her mother so intensely that her  school threatened to call the authorities, hating life with her father so much that she went to live with some neighbors. She seemed to go from one Hell to another.

Lisa was endlessly accepting  of her father’s cruelty and abuse, she never did get enough of him, and he never gave her much of anything – no heat for her room, tuition for her college, or  even agreeing to say good night to her when she was lonely and begging for company.

The best line I’ve read about this book was from Katy Waldman of the New Yorker, she wrote that Job’s beautifully written book seems more wounded than triumphant, more confused than clear,  at times it feels like “artfully sculpted scar tissue.”

Sometimes, it hurt just to read it.

It is also a gripping read, hard to put down. You almost can’t wait to see what Jobs or her mother will do to her next.

In her telling, Jobs was not only unpredictable, but sexually inappropriate – he insisted on fondling his wife in front of Lisa. He refused for years to admit Lisa was his daughter, and denied for years naming a computer after her.

Shortly before he died, he told her she smelled like a toilet. Lisa forgives  him everything but writes a devastating portrait. Her famous father appears as a brilliant man with no idea how to be the father he wanted to be and that she desperately wanted him to be.

As described in this memoir, he was emotionally unfit to be a parent to this child.

He was not quite a monster, except once or twice. Yes, he could be loving and generous at times, and yes, he could be pointlessly cruel and heartless at times.

Shattered by repeated rejections (he wouldn’t permit her in family photographs or pay her last year’s tuition at Harvard or speak to her for years because she didn’t invite him to a family weekend, she seemed to retreat into kind of fantasy world.)

Her life, according to her memoir, centered around the idea that Jobs would love and accept her, something we know from the first chapter will never  happen.

A curious thing about this book is that Lisa meticulously details Job’s offenses against her, but never once condemns him or his behavior. I found myself doing a lot of it for her.

In the memoir, there are two Lisas, one in unbearable pain, the other desperately trying to charm her father and draw him closer to him. It hurts to read this kind of broken-hearted schizophrenia and passivity. I often read that this is how abused women sometimes behave.

She sometimes forces herself to leave, but always comes back for more.

I understand that Jobs could simply not be a normal father, I’m sure he was doing to his daughter what was done to him. I’m sure there are reasons for this behavior. It’s just that none are mentioned.

I don’t understand why as sophisticated and passionate a man as jobs could do this to his daughter, and Brennan-Jobs never really tries to explain it. She just suffers through it. Again and again.

This remains a bewildering mystery to me when I think of this book.

It seems to me that when a writer paints do devastating a portrait of a parent and writes so detailed  an account of it, she might at least try once to tell us how he came to be this way. Did she ever wonder?

I am learning over and over again – I read lots of biographies of brilliant people – that the people who accomplish the greatest things are also often the most damaged and screwed up. I just have to accept it, something about fractured souls produces great things. I now separate the deeds from the people. I accept both.

Their brokenness sometimes and somehow leads them to visions most of us don’t have and will never quite grasp.

Jobs almost single-handedly transformed the lives of billions of people around the world. He was one of the greatest figures in my lifetime.

Mostly, this memoir, and it is a memoir, not a tell-all celebrity study – can break  your heart. There is the awful mess that Lisa’s life was, almost from the first day. And there is Job’s utter and sometimes inhuman  failure as a caring and compassionate human being, at least when it comes to this child.

“I wish I could go back,” he tells his daughter on his death-bed. “I wish I could change it.” She responds in the book that she grieves “our missed chance at friendship,” and the scene, and the book,  ends.

You were a genius, Steve. You of all people must have known it is lame to hope to go  back in time to someone you hurt that much. Why did you wait so long to apologize?

It was not a satisfying ending for me, Job’s cruelty to her daughter left her with great talent, but also a kind of emotional dysfunction and paralysis, at least in this book.

She seemed to suffer a kind of Stockholm Syndrome, caught in this spiral of forgiving and tolerating and accepting her messed up father, but never really condemning him or getting angry. I couldn’t find a sense of morality, an ability to be outraged by great wrongs.

For me, that was the biggest flaw in the book.

I love the way Lisa Brennan-Jobs writes and I appreciate the vividness and care of her details. Her portraits of Palo Alto at the outset of the rise of Jobs an Apple and the tsunami that Silicon Valley was about to unleash on America were brilliant. So was her account of a troubled child, yearning for a sane and loving place somewhere in the world.

Money sure does not bring happiness or create happy people.

Whatever else her father did to her – he often told her she had no skills to bring to the world – he couldn’t keep her from becoming a terrific writer. I hope she writes about something else next time.

“I was unsure of my position in the house,” she wrote of the time she went to live with Jobs and his new wife, “and this anxiety – combined with a feeling of immense  gratitude so overwhelming I thought I might burst – caused me to talk too much, compliment too much, to say yes to whatever they asked, hoping my servile quality would ignite compassion, pity and love.”

No such luck for Lisa Brennan-Jobs. When a therapist asked them what the trouble was with Lisa, they both replied. “We are cold people.”

I’ll be thinking about this book for a while, comforting myself with the idea that people who do great things  are often not very nice people.

I do recommend this book, it is powerful reading, a wrenching memoir of isolation and lost opportunity.

14 December

Tidbits And Friends: Bud Steps Up To Help Red

by Jon Katz

( I am on retreat writing my book, this conversation never happened and will self-destruct shortly, in a poof of smoke.)

I’m surprised by Bud’s sudden placing of himself between Red and the sheep, about a week-and-a-half after  Red suffered a severe spinal injury and some temporary paralysis. I don’t pretend to know what is going on in Bud’s mind, but I do know what I see and it challenges much of what I believe.

I think he is aware Red was ill – he is very attached to Red – and is watching over him, It looks like he is making sure the sheep don’t rush Red or come after him.

Red’s work now is limited to lying down near the sheep. Bud walks in front of him and sits down as if this is his job now, or perhaps because he knows Red is vulnerable.

It almost has to be one or the other.

This is not something Bud did before Red was sick, and Red seems to take it as a given, he completely accepts Bud’s presence.  In generally, border collies don’t like to share their sheep responsibilities with other dogs.

Dogs can always surprise me, they humble me by reminding me of what I don’t know.

My idea is to watch it without rushing to conclusions. The truth is, I just don’t know. My dogs have never ceased to surprise me and humble me.

Heather called into my radio show Wednesday from South Carolina to ask a dog question,  but also to join in the conversation Thomas and I were having. We were talking about the new kinds of  interaction between writers like me and the people on social media who interact with me in all kinds of new ways,  some good and some bad.

As you know, I’ve been writing about this for years, to the discomfort of people who feel entitled to say anything they wish because I’m asking for it.

These new ways of messaging – I get hundreds of messages a day in one way or another – can be uplifting, supportive, informative, inspiring, unwanted, distracting,  undermining, intrusive, rude or inappropriate.

The internet has obliterated the boundaries between writers and singers and artists and their audiences. In many ways, this is a great thing, something I have been fighting for years.

For someone who needs a lot of space in his head, it is a daunting thing. There is no longer much space out there.

I think every  creative person who shares his or her life is trying to figure out this new world, and still have enough space in one’s head to create.

Heather asked if it had occurred to me that the people flooding me with unsought advice really just felt the were “friends,” and did what friends do, they try to help.

I loved Heather’s call, she was thoughtful and intelligent and challenging. It was lovely to speak with her. She is smart and nice. To be challenging and likeable is a rare gift these days.

It has occurred to me that many people messaging me see me as a friend because it is true – many of my friends are online. I have hundreds of friends out there I have never seen or met, think of the Army Of Good.

It’s a new kind of friendship, and I’m still learning how to accept it and also keep the boundaries around my life that I have learned to cherish and guard, and that are essential for someone like me to be able to think, which is what I do for a living.

I got another much appreciated message on Facebook today, it was from Lisa:

I love how you can’t resist sharing tidbits you know us readers will enjoy! I was reflecting on how reading daily, real-time stories provide an experience very different from reading a book — matched to the pace of how life and relationships actually unfold. For example, we will know how things unfold for Red as they happen. We care and feel connected with you, Maria, Red and each member of your menagerie differently than the more condensed drama of a book (which I’m still looking forward to reading!) More like friends, I tell my husband, “hey guess what Bud did today” and share a chuckle. For me this pace fosters more inter-being, less separation of the author-characters as celebrities.”

Heather is really discussing interactivity, the powerful new reality that equalizes the relationships between people like writers and readers. I am a passionate advocate of interactivity, it is the future everyone who read anything has a right to expect. It is the reason I was one of the first writers to start a blog.  Lisa did a great job of delineating the difference between interactive new media and static and passive – and failing – old media.

I got another comment on my blog the other day from a reader saying she had come to understand my blog as a series of moments, almost like photographs, “tidbits,” Lisa called them, snapshots of my life.

I love this idea of the posts being like photographs, a running visual and textual account of a life, for all of its warts and problems. It’s not all about cute animals up here on the farm, I would never wish to mislead anyone about that.

I’ve been trying to have this conversation for years, but it seemed nobody else wanted to have it with me,  people just wanted me to shut up about it and suck it up.

That’s not how I live, alas.

I am grateful that we are beginning to have a dialogue, a conversation about expectations, boundaries, change and acceptance.

It is important and exciting, and I am learning a great deal from it. We are not calling one another names, or storming off in righteous and cowardly huffs.

I consider many people who read my blog to be friends. I have for years, I have a wonderful relationship with more of my readers than I could possibly count, or ever imagined. I am grateful for that.

I also know that boundaries and identities are being crushed all over the Internet by people demanding – not requesting – things that they have no right to expect or receive. We are pioneers, working to define these boundaries.

I have never seen it as an argument, it has always been a conversation in my mind.

And thanks to people like Lisa and Heather, it is beginning to happen.

(I am on retreat, this conversation did not happen, it will self-destruct shortly.)

5 November

Dorlisa. Mansion Aides Month

by Jon Katz

I’ve unilaterally declare November to be Mansion Aides Month, I’d like to recognize the incredible work these remarkable people – almost all women – do to care for needy people at the edge of life.

The Mansion residents tell me all the time how comfortable and safe they feel at the Mansion, how well cared for and comfortable they are, they say it feels as close to being home as is possible under very different circumstances.

One of those people is Dorlisa, currently the transportation aide, she drives the  residents to their doctors appointments, and sometimes out for shopping.

This morning I brought the 123 $50 Amazon Gift Card boxes to the Mansion and left them with Kasse,the Acting Mansion Director. She will pass them out over the holidays.

In a couple of days, the “Better Angels” pens I ordered are arriving, and I’ll pass them out myself.

(On November 28, the Mansion will be the site of our official kick-off of the new Karaoke Machine, almost ready to go. This morning I called B&H Photo and got a Samsung 32 inch screen/TV so that the residents will be able to see the lyrics clearly.)

We’ll do a dry run this week.

And over the next few weeks, I’ll be distributing more than $300 in cash so the residents can buy their own gifts for the Mansion aides and for their friends and families.

The residents speak of the great loss of dignity that comes with not being able to give presents to the people on loves. We are  helping to overcome that and restore of their dignity.

It’s going to be a good month at the Mansion and a good Christmas as well. I hope to photograph as many of the Mansion aides as I can over the next few weeks.

Dorlisa is easy to love, and everyone loves her. Not only does she do a wonderful version of Amazing Grace, but she always has a smile and hug for everyone she sees.

She is a light unto the world, she brightens the days of the residents and anyone else who crosses her path. She is a light unto the world. I am happy to recognize her extraordinary community and loving spirit. She is a Better Angel.

Bedlam Farm