14 July

Know-It-Alls, The Hidden Scourge Of Social Media. They Remind Me Of Mosquitoes, I Swat Them On Sight, They Keep Coming Back. They Itch.

by Jon Katz

I had a virtual session with my trusted and long-term therapist this week. She knows me better than anyone on the earth except Maria.

We talked about anger and my feeling (and have been told) that I ought to be nicer to people who offend me. A lot of people have said to me that in my life. A few have told me I am friendly, especially compared to many men.

One woman said I was so scary she was afraid to recommend my blog to her friends.

My feeling is that I am complex. I have no saint ambitions. I can be nice; I can be nasty. They call it being a human.

At one point, the therapist cautioned me not to listen too closely to the people urging me to be friendly and to not speak up directly or harshly to people who anger or even disgust me – narcissists, the pompous, the arrogant, the hypocritical,  and moving towards the top of my list – the know-it-alls. We all want a sweet and gentle world.

But we live in the one we have.

She urged me not to feel badly about being called nasty or disgusted or angry but about what people do or say to me. I don’t hurt or threaten people; I have strong feelings about things. She called them values. She said there is no need to pretend to be someone else; just be yourself. Know-it-alls challenge almost all my values – privacy, thought, civility, and creativity.

I liked this value idea. I don’t often think of myself in that noble way, but I like the idea of having values and sticking up for them.

This was liberating.

It doesn’t mean I’m returning to the troll fights; that was pointless and useless; I’m much happier without them. But I have values and opinions and will continue fighting for them and challenging people who offend me.

Expressing my values directly and honestly is appropriate and healthy. Many people disagree, but I was happy to hear it and took it to heart. Don’t be ashamed of that, she said, be yourself. I found that liberating; I’ll be happy to challenge know-it-alls. If I had more time, I would be nicer.

But I get messages from know-it-alls every day. No matter what I write, someone will correct it, challenge it, or tell me why I’m wrong. Or naive. Or stupid. They are of all ages, all colors, and races; they come from all parts of the world at all times of the day. I sense they are mostly little people who want to be bigger or taller like cats scratching a post.

Early in my life, I noticed a curious thing about knowledge and intelligence; it made a deep impression on me.

The dumbest people I encountered thought they knew the most about everything and could never admit to making mistakes or being; the most intelligent people I have known freely admit how little they know and believe they learn the most from mistakes. Those are my people.

This observation stayed far back in my mind – it didn’t affect me much – until the rise of the Internet, social media, e-mail, and texting. The digital culture has spawned countless know-it-alls, next to hypocrites, my least favorite people. If you ever want to write on social media in the open, on a blog, on Twitter, on Facebook,  Instagram, or TikTok, they will come for you like flies on donkey manure. (I guess I’m the manure.)

People who enter my personal space to tell me and everyone who puts it out there online are seen as fair game – foxes on the hunt. The fact that I am dyslexic makes it easier for them. They are not invited or welcome or helpful.

They practically guarantee that I won’t listen to what they say. They don’t care. They never admit wrong or change their minds. They have to be swept away. Deleting them is like swatting flies with a baseball bat.

Social media is paradise to the know-it-alls; they can proclaim unsolicited opinions about everything to anyone, it’s free, easy, and there are no consequences or accountability. Nobody keeps a recall of what know-it-alls say, and being a know it is not against any law I know of. Maybe one day.

They are different from the trolls. They just want to correct and opine. They just want to be more prominent people.

Social media reminds me of the hungry dog who stumbles across a juicy steak. He can’t stop eating it.

First, some definition: My grandmother was the first to warm me about know-it-alls. “They are stupid,” she said. Intelligent people are too busy to tell other people what to do or what they know.

I asked a psychologist friend to determine a known all. She was happy to oblige. “Your grandmother got it right,” she said. “They are small people, and knowing it all makes them feel bigger.”

Know-it-alls think they know everything, she said. They feel superior, are dismissive of others’ opinions, are unwilling to listen to others, and relish telling others how to do their work and how to feel. They live to correct. They feel and sound superior. Know-it-alls like to hear themselves talk and often become addicted to it. This behavior, the psychologist said,  may become so ingrained that it becomes part of their emotional DNA.

They can’t stop; it’s who they are. One know-it-all drew me into a ridiculous two-day argument about whether Maria and a fellow sower were “seamsters.” The insisted sewer was a kind of dirty word (city sewers), thus offensive. When I said Maria and her friend were not “seamstresses” because neither made clothes, they said I was wrong and nasty.

The dictionary didn’t impress them; they just ignored it, and I finally woke up to the absurdity of the argument and delegated them both—shame on me.

Once in a while, no-it-alls can still get to me, but reality seems worth fighting for sometimes.

I can be a know-it-all; I know it. I think anyone can be one. It’s so easy on social media. Perhaps this is why I dislike them so much.

I am always learning how little I know and have never been wiser. Sometimes the most essential words in the English language are “I don’t know.” Brilliant people say that all the time.

A month ago, a college professor, Dean,  sent me a lengthy and unsolicited critique of my blog, which offered me some patronizing praise, and said I should not write about politics, philosophy, or spirituality. He said it slowed the blog down. He didn’t mention my flower pictures.

I didn’t post his wisdom, I did tell him to get lost, and he did. I said I didn’t ask his your opinion and was uninterested. If I had posted that response, a chorus of know-it-all enablers would have scolded me for being nasty and intemperance. I was just being honest; I successfully ran another pompous windbag off my comments page for lecturing me on reading books.

He was furious that I refused to let him buy me a $250 dog book which he insisted I needed and would “inhale.” He said he knew I was making a big mistake.

It takes unconscionable gall in my mind to invade the space and domain of another human without being asked and presuming to tell them what to do or what is true. The sincere person asks questions; the know-it-all never does. That’s what gives them away. They do not propose ideas. They make absolutist statements.

I regret owning up to my admiration for the wisdom of the heavy moral philosopher Hannah Arendt; she is a great hero of mine. She wrote this about hypocrites, but it is precisely how I feel about the know-it-all:

As witnesses not of our intentions but of our conduct, we can be true or false, and the hypocrite’s crime is that he bears false witness against himself. What makes it so plausible to assume that hypocrisy is the vice of vices is that integrity exists under cover of all other sins except this one. Only crime and the criminal, it is true, confront us with the perplexity of radical evil; but only the hypocrite is rotten to the core.

I would add know-it-alls to her list. They corrupt knowledge and truth; they demean listening and learning. They betray their false purpose by claiming to know things rather than listening or teaching anything of value. They seek to shrink knowledge to their narrow understanding while choking the idea of knowledge.

Like the troll and the hypocrite, the know-it-all does not advance learning; he stifles and smothers it.

The know-it-alls strike on all subjects, but they are especially drawn to anything relating to health, medicine, dentistry, politics,  animals, or sickness. A woman assured me that our dying sheep Liam was starving because he had no teeth. She said our vet was incompetent and that I was cruel for letting Liam die and arranging for him to be put down, and she was eager to shame me as I grieved Liam’s death.

Animal know-it-alls, like political extremists, are imbued with an almost holy and fanatic sense of purpose and self-worth. No one can know more than they know. If I get another message about Hunter Biden, who absolutely no one in America cares one thing about, I might just have to run and hide.

Just last week, someone wrote me to warn me that the periodontist inserting an implant into my jaw was greedy and dishonest and should not be trusted. She said I should never get Implants; they are a sham, just a chance for dentists to get fat. She is a public school teacher.

What on earth gave this person the idea that I was looking to strangers on social media to tell me what medical procedure I should accept? She had not seen the X-rays, talked to the doctor, or asked me how I felt. Social media loves the intrusive and the pretentious.

I cringe whenever a dog gets sick and brace myself for the onslaught; the dog know-it-alls are among the most intractable and insistent of the genre. They diagnose from blog pictures and have never learned the words “I think”  or “perhaps,” words I insert into almost everything I like. If you defy them, you are a cold-blooded monster.

Radical feminists are enthusiastic know-it-alls, as are Trumpists, conspiracy theorists, and extreme liberal ideologues. They never think or doubt themselves, and they never ask. They know. They are just labels.

The know-it-all has come to glory in our town; he or she now has access to millions of blogs and posts and has never been taught by Mom or Dad to be polite, respect privacy, mind their own business, respect the boundaries of others, and recognize natural intelligence as no less an intellect than Einstein defined it:

Intelligence, he declared, is not about knowledge but imagination. People with dreams don’t waste their time seeking out strangers. They will never meet to tell them what to do, hear or say. They will raise questions and share ideas. I get messages like that, too, every day; bless them.

In this sense, social media doesn’t expand the mind; as it claims, they kill the reason.

Intelligent people who read my blog know I am not a big fan of unsolicited advice, which is often wrong, inaccurate, and almost always annoying. There are times when it is helpful and times when it is valuable. But never when it comes from know-it-alls.

Foolish people send me messages that begin with “I know you don’t like advice, but…”  Duck. I can’t fathom sending advice to people I know in advance don’t want it.

Quite often, this “advice” is not advice at all but the work of know-it-alls who believe their instincts and knowledge are so accurate and vital as to override the oft-stated wishes of their targets. Their brilliance will persuade me. They are so wise in their minds that I must appreciate their advice, even if I say I don’t want it.

A famous African proverb holds that wise men know nothing, and fools know everything.

I am a proud fool and proud to say I know very little for sure. And my shrink is right. I should speak openly and honestly when my values are challenged or disrupted.

And I know even less in the overall scheme of themes, almost nothing, and I know it. This is why I would never offer strangers advice or tell other people what to do. May the know-it-alls choke on their cereal and take some hypocrites with them.

 

21 June

Art Photo Journal, Thursday, June 22, 2023. Can I Celebrate Victory In The Foot Struggle Tonight? Maybe…Fingers Crossed (Not Toes).

by Jon Katz

Tomorrow might just be a big day for Maria and me.

Early Thursday morning, we are headed out to see Dr. Daly (and get blood work along the way) to check on my toe a week after surgery and see if it is healed. If it is healed, this will be a big step towards some return to a normal life. The long fight for my foot might be over; perhaps, I just have another week or two of monitoring.

I’ve been awaiting her judgment for years, she is a truth-teller, and I admit I’m a little on the nervous side, although the food looks and feels great.

Normal means regular shoes, taking shoes, skipping bandages and anti-biotic ointments, and most importantly, walking again in the way I’ve always loved and wanted to do. The surgical bandage fell off last night, so Maria had to change it. It’s my first look at it since the surgery. Since I can’t see the bottom of my foot, Maria takes photographs with my Iphone.

We both thought it looks good, but we have been wrong before.  We’ll wait for Dr. Daly to say it before we believe it.

I feel good about all of this and hopeful. It’s time.

David Missiner is hard at work on my new brace, which is expected to make a huge difference. A lot of disruption, pain, and struggle, but I feel both hopeful and good about it. Thanks for all the support you have offered to me and Maria (and may still be needed yet) I’ve learned a lot, and I believe I’ve gained a lot.

I might be out of surgical boots for the first time in many months.

To me, that makes it all worthwhile. Wish me luck. I’ll see you this afternoon. Above, a new flower, I just bought it today. I really like it, and I don’t know its name.

The poppies are my most inspiring flower. They never quit, they always pop up.

 

 

My new flowers (coreopsis) are always hopeful, reaching upward. Me, too, hopefully.

I love mixing up the colors of flowers; they radiate beauty and hope.

There’s always dining and being born in my garden beds. This one is about growing and giving birth. You almost want to drop crumbs or worms into their mouths.

 

I m fond of these small flowers, they are all about color.

7 May

A Full List Today: Planting Potatoes, Scrubbing St. Joseph, Mowing Weeds, Spreading Manure, And Taking Care Of The Farm

by Jon Katz

Today was taking care of Bedlam Farm Day. We got up early with many things we wanted to do. Maria is still working on them; I’m taking a hiatus.

Maria loves physical labor; I enjoy returning to some, although I can’t do as much as she can. Any farm requires a lot of maintenance – wind, mud, feces, animals – real farms are almost impossible to keep up with.

In the winter, we do nothing but hunker down in the farmhouse and get the hay out to the animals. Spring opens everything up, and there is a huge pile of things to do. We got to replace the plastic window the other day; the list of to-do things is down to about a dozen.

We are considering surrounding Maria’s studio with trash bags of leaves to provide some insulation in the winter.

We have it easier than the real farmers, but it’s never easy. People write us all the time to suggest we live perfect lives “in paradise,” but there is no such thing for normal human beings.

We love Bedlam Farm, and caring for it is grounding and meaningful. I loved working on St. Joseph, the stonewash was miraculous, but the crevices stuffed with lichen were a grind.

I think I got to all of them.

(Above, St. Joseph this morning)

I decided to clean our statue of St. Joseph, which has graced both of our farms for nearly 15 years. We finally figured out it was St. Joseph. It took years.

 

St. Joseph is often portrayed as having lilies nearby. The lilies symbolize integrity and indicate that Saint Joseph was the earthly spouse of the Virgin Mary, whose purity is represented by the chaste white lily. Three flowers are used to describe the Blessed Trinity.

The statue (above) was covered in lichen and dirt and was discolored. I’ve never cleaned it.  It bothered me. St. Joseph has watched over us for a long time, and he deserved better.

I suspect the statue has never been “washed” I know it was buried in the ground for a long time. It didn’t occur to me to clean him until I read about stonewash, available at hardware stores and on Amazon. I have no idea how old it is, the monster was built more than 200 years ago.

We haul it over from the first Bedlam Farm.

The toothbrush and a stiff brush saved the day.

(St. Joseph looks fine now)

I got a big mug of stonewash, some brushes, and a toothbrush and went to work, dipping rags in the stonewash and brushing the nooks and crevices.

It took two or three hours, but I left it alone to let the stonewash do its work.

It did.

(I’m not sure if Saints are real, but if they are, they deserve to look great and clean.)

The lilies are how we finally identified the statue, which was saved from a monastery that was being demolished. I bought the body, then the shoulders; we never found the head.

(Above, the statue yesterday, almost black)

We were especially busy today. She mowed tall growth behind her studio and along the South pasture fence. She spreads manure all over the pastures, planting potatoes (below).

(The statue today.)

Maria has leveled the manure pile and is planting grass seeds left behind by the winter. A friend gave us some potatoes; they went right into the vegetable garden.

I’m exhausted and not quite back to my pre-surgery energy level. This Thursday, I can wear regular shoes again. Friday, sound wave surgery for my lone but large Kidney Stone. I will be anesthetized.

30 April

Success! The Toe Post Mortem: What A Good Decision That Was.

by Jon Katz

We thought last Thursday was the day the bandages came off, and the stitches came out, but we were off by a week; that procedure is scheduled for this coming Thursday; it can’t come soon enough.

The surgery took more out of me than I realized, and I saw today that my strength and energy were finally returning to me; it took longer than I thought it would, but then, I am older than I sometimes realize. Surgery is surgery.

The extra time has given me a different perspective. There is no pain or discomfort in my foot; my balance is not affected; I walked more today than I have in a long time. I am tired but thrilled.

Soon, the specialists will start building a second brace, and my years-long struggle to walk normally will be successful (even if it means wearing a brace, or especially if it means wearing a brace.

Soon, people will stop looking at me with pity and deep concern and stop being pleasantly surprised that I am alive. It was a big deal, but not that big a deal.

Minah, a waitress at Jean’s restaurant and a kind person, said something this morning that was important to me – she said women who have undergone hysterectomies also feel that something important was lost, and a part of them was taken. That part is a lot more important than the part I lost.

The staff at Jean’s (we had breakfast there this morning, our favorite brunch place again) are all social workers, in a sense, as many good servers are. Ninah saw my surgical boots and wanted to know what happened. They seem to care.

Sitting on the front steps with Zinnia and my gargoyle was revelatory. I feel excellent. It is over now; the bandage is just a formality.

My decision to get the toe removed – however squirmish it made me – was an excellent decision. I feel perfect about it and am eager to finish the job of walking often, well, and comfortably. The toe was in the way; the toe had to go.

I wish I’d done it a couple of years ago.

But still, there are always things to learn.

I learned that I no longer bounce back from these things in a day or two as I used to. I can feel the body recovering at its own pace. But this weekend, I still feel tired but almost fully recovered.

Rest and quiet made all the difference. In a couple of weeks, I have a different kind of surgery in the hospital – would wave bombardment that can (no guarantees) shatter and remove a growing kidney stone that is causing some trouble.

It has no pain, and I hope to keep it that way.

I will take the surgery seriously, invasive or not, and make sure to allow time to rest. I think I am around 40 years old. It’s time to get real.

26 April

Looking Back On Painful Toe Month: When It Gets Bad, We Get Closer. It Was Tougher Than I Realized.

by Jon Katz

Tomorrow hopefully marks the end of what I am calling the Toe Experience; my stitches should come off, and I can wear shoes, walk, wear pants, shower, lift, and get a new brace again.

Maria and I have been thrown together more intensely and continuously than expected, the closest since our early days of struggling to rebuild our broken lives. We were hardly apart those first weeks, day or night. I was that needy.

Even though I am sadly human, I have to be honest; we both agreed that these past few weeks were the most intensive and unsettling time we can remember going through. They were also the most meaningful.

When I saw my wounds for the first time, it just struck me deeply, even as I began to heal.

We have been through a lot and come through it all, as many humans do, with patience, love, and courage. Every trouble – pain in life is inevitable – has made us stronger and our love deeper. This one was no exception; now that it is ending,  I can look back on it, and she can also.

We were together day and night.

The first nights were shockingly tricky; I couldn’t stand, dress, clean myself, or get to the bathroom. I had to keep my foot elevated for days and try to sleep with a clumsy and heavy surgical boot on my foot. I couldn’t eat at a dining table, and the anesthesia wreaked havoc on my digestion.

I couldn’t shop, drive or cook.

Maria was with me every step of the way.

We sometimes got irritated with each other, but we never got angry and stopped laughing, talking, and loving each other. That lifted me and gave me solid ground. It told me just how much we have come to trust one another.

I can’t recall experiencing that level of helplessness, kindness, empathy, and understanding. I must acknowledge it before life moves us back to the ordinary. I learned again what real love means and how it can affect everything.

We also surprised one another by saying this was a wonderful and affirming time for us. We could easily have driven the other crazy and pushed her apart. We just ended up closer, as usual, when there was trouble.

Today, Maria and I were separated for more than half the day for the first time since the surgery.

We were both happy about it but felt a pang or two. Something was missing. It will take us some time to get comfortable with that. But that is where we belong, with our independent lives that we love.

It was a way of saying goodbye and ending this remarkable experience together. We were always in sync, always together, always pointed in the same direction. We each called the other once or twice to check-in. We weren’t used to being apart.

As the trouble eased, we both began to grasp the power and beauty of ourselves.

I never stopped loving her for one second, and I never felt her stop loving me. In my life, that is truly astounding. I was not at my best. At times, there was a darkness of the soul.

It was emotionally challenging to lose my toe. I wanted to cry but never did. Some day, I will.

I have only seen the stump of my two twice, and I can barely look at it; each time I see it, it is a trigger that takes me back to another time. And place, a dark one.

I never tell people that someone else is going through something worse than they are, even though it is almost always true. It doesn’t make it hurt any less, and it is patronizing in many ways.

I shouldn’t do it to myself.

Maria does not wish to be anyone’s caretaker; she is happy and grounded when doing her art, and being pulled from it is an assault on her identity and peace of mind.

Art is who she is, and when she is not making it, she is sometimes uncertain of who she is and slips back to a darker place.

But she turned herself over to me without complaint or resentment (maybe once or twice :)). I could not have dealt with all of this by myself or with someone put off by me for needing it or who could not bear to look at my foot.

I never once needed help that I didn’t get it instantly. I lost count of the bandages she changed, the anti-biotics she applied, or the times she pulled my sweatpants and socks over those dreadful boots.

On her way to Belly Dancing class today, she called me to say she found the experience draining and painful, yet she had the same feeling I had about it. It felt good. We did it together.

It is beautiful for two people to come together like that and come through it with even more love and respect for each other than before.

I needed intimate help for the first time (maybe the second, (Open Heart Surgery, which was less intrusive for me, and less disturbing), and I was uncomfortable asking for it. She never once complained or made me feel guilty.

It was a far more emotional experience than I expected or owned up to at first, even to myself.

I told myself to stop hiding behind the notion that so many people have it worse than I do, so I have no right to feel bad. Of course, they do.

But I needed to acknowledge the pain and sadness to heal and move beyond it. I needed to stop playing stoic and hero.

I am neither. I needed to acknowledge the hurt, let go, and return to my wonderful life.

I have been in therapy almost all my adult life and have learned a lot. I have never been happier or more content with my life. This hard work has paid off.

Maria is, of course, a powerful part of that. Our love is genuine, and our relationship is intense.

The pain must be acknowledged to go away, something men are almost always slow to understand and accept.

We all want to be brave, challenging, and invulnerable.

Looking back on these three unnerving weeks, I feel strong. I feel relieved. I feel fortunate.

Trouble is what I learned from, built on, and learned about grace and its meaning.

And I feel grateful.

It was, in a way, my toe’s final gift after a lifetime of service.

Bedlam Farm