I am becoming one of those people who is angry about Obamacare.
I am a sole practitioner, so all of my health insurance is paid for by ME.
First, right after Obamacare, my premiums went up by $150/month because the lifetime limits on benefits were removed. I didn't mind that so much, because I sort of understood it, but it was distressing, nevertheless.
Now, I find out that my insurance is going away entirely. I was in a group sponsored by the New York State Bar Association. Apparently, under Obamacare, the New York State Bar Association can't be a group. The only groups can be partnerships or employers with W-2 employees. This implies that the firm that I am of counsel with can also not list me as part of their group, even if I wanted to pay premiums.
How is this helping more people get insurance, by limiting what constitutes a group and destroying a group that's been providing insurance to hundreds or even thousands of people for years?
Friday, October 17, 2014
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
On visiting Sterling Hall 6/29/2007
I wrote this poem back in 2007 when visiting Madison, Wisconsin. My father was a physics professor who taught in Sterling Hall. Sterling Hall was bombed in 1971 and a student was killed. There is more about this in the book Rads
On Visiting Sterling Hall June 29, 2007
By Anne Barschall (daughter of late emeritus professor H.H.
Barschall)
There is something about that door
That old and dingy looking door
Its concrete ornamentation grayed
By years of not so gentle weathering
Something dingy like the old photos
Of physicists, years ago
Photos I grew up looking at.
I thought the photos merely old
When I looked at them as a girl,
But I see now that, no,
Those scenes were always a bit dull
To the eye.
The fire that burned there
In corridors vilely beige and green
Was the fire of the mind
The lightening of genius within
Not without.
Sandaled feet,
A crop of disheveled hair,
Awkward glasses,
Baggy shirt and pants
Of indeterminate color,
Covering a slender form --
The archetypal physicist --
I saw him again today
Walking through the overpass
Between Sterling and Chamberlain,
No apparent difference having arisen
In 80 years of fashion
For the seekers of the watchworks
Of the cosmos,
His dedication to that same search
Showing in his external sameness,
A grayed and dingy sameness;
And a tracing of new brickwork,
On the building’s façade,
Still tells a story of a different type of fire
That I remember from my childhood
A silent memory of a loud noise
In the night.
I hear they will renovate you,
Monument to vanished memories,
Infusing an aura of newness.
Will they try to make the sandaled gentleman
Wear something spiffier as well?
Wear something spiffier as well?
----------------
interview with Dave Schuster, my father's student, who was injured in the blast
My father's biographical memoir on the National Academy of Sciences website includes some information about the blast
Monday, August 4, 2014
Making my bed
I was
making my bed yesterday. I don't do it often enough. I used to do it every
week. Now I've gotten lazy and do it maybe once a month.
I do try
to take a shower before I get in there, so I won't be sleeping with a lot of
germs, and they'll only be my internal germs, I guess, since I sleep
alone.
When I had a cat, I wouldn't let him sleep with me. Maybe I avoided
toxoplasmosis infection that way.
More
recently I read an article that explained that this disease causes a particular
type of brain damage that makes you want more cats, a curious type of
symbiosis.
So I was
making my bed, and I noticed how easily I pop pillows into pillow cases, and
flip covers onto the bed. I've developed all sorts of conditioned reflexes that
make this almost effortless, which makes it hard to understand why I do it so
seldom.
I'm better
than my kids in this respect. The only times their sheets get changed are if I
have a house guest when they're away and I put clean sheets on the beds for the
guest, or if I really nag a lot.
So, I'm
doing this task, and I'm hit with the memory of when I was five and my mom first started teaching me to make a bed.
It was
very hard then. I was a lot shorter, so to reach the side near the
wall I had to crawl over there on the bed, which them messed up the covers. I
hadn't yet developed a strategy for dealing with these issues, but I had
listened to my mom read Mrs. Piggle Wiggle. That book had a story about
teaching kids to make a bed. In that story, it was emphasized that the bed
should have no wrinkles. Probably, my mom told me the same thing. As a result, the problem of getting rid of wrinkles while crawling about was distressing to me.
Then the
thought of the likely recurrence of cancer came to mind, along with the consciousness
of the limit on the number of times that I can use this skill that I've
acquired over the course of many years, and how all the effort that I've put
into learning these little skills may soon just disintegrate.
I find
that the prospect of loss of other knowledge, like loss of knowledge of patent
law, doesn't disturb me as much as the loss of something so basic as making my
bed. Perhaps, because I was such a small
child when I first learned, this simple task seems more fundamental to
my character, to me as a person, despite the fact that it is not at all unique
or distinctive, seeing as most people in our culture know how to make a bed.
My friend T.J. Mannix posted this link on FB
Which sort of captures my feelings about my newly made bed and wondering about what will happen to it when I can't make it any more.
Monday, June 9, 2014
Remembering Nora Solmssen
Edits:
The good thing about posting something like this is that it can help you get in touch with lost family members. Nora's daughter Mimi contacted me and offered some corrections
1) Nora had ovarian rather than breast cancer
2) Nora was tested for BRCA mutations. The first test was inconclusive and the second test was negative. This makes me wonder how accurate these tests are.
3) Nora was diagnosed in 2001 and died in 2005. My father died in 1997, so he couldn't have been the one who told me she had cancer or that she had died.
4) A second cousin on my *mother's* side says that her mother, who would have been my mother's cousin, used to play music with Mimi, and that Mimi was a violinist, not a pianist. Small world.
---------------------
The original post:
Recently, I've been remembering my second cousin, Nora.
The good thing about posting something like this is that it can help you get in touch with lost family members. Nora's daughter Mimi contacted me and offered some corrections
1) Nora had ovarian rather than breast cancer
2) Nora was tested for BRCA mutations. The first test was inconclusive and the second test was negative. This makes me wonder how accurate these tests are.
3) Nora was diagnosed in 2001 and died in 2005. My father died in 1997, so he couldn't have been the one who told me she had cancer or that she had died.
4) A second cousin on my *mother's* side says that her mother, who would have been my mother's cousin, used to play music with Mimi, and that Mimi was a violinist, not a pianist. Small world.
---------------------
The original post:
Recently, I've been remembering my second cousin, Nora.
I only met her once or twice when I was a child. Her family lived in New Jersey. We lived in Wisconsin.
Her father was eight years older than my father, and my father had kids late. He was 41 when I was born. As a result, she was probably twenty years older than I.
I remember her as very beautiful. She had long, thick, shiny jet-black hair. She was slender and graceful.
She had an aquiline nose. Some people don't like that type of nose, but I always liked them, because several people in my family had them.
I dated a guy briefly who had a hooked nose, like Nora, and like my grandfather. Later I saw him and he had had his nose bobbed. I was horrified. I loved that nose. Good thing he dumped me before he bobbed his nose. He was Iranian, but he reminded me of that part of my family that was of Jewish ancestry. He considered himself Aryan, though.
Nora was a Solmssen. The Solmssens and the Mendelsohns were the great Jewish banking families of Germany.
When I was twelve, my father took me to Germany, including to Berlin, where he was born.
My grandfather was a successful patent attorney before the Holocaust. My dad took me to the building where he was born. His family had lived on the top floor. They had the whole floor. It was a large building. The whole top floor would have been a huge apartment. They had servants. There were stone sculptures, maybe of lions, on the railing of the balcony along the front of the top floor. Even with the holes in the walls left over from the WWII bombing, which were still visible, it was an impressive place. I think it was on Linden Street.
Yet my father's family were the poor cousins. He also took me to Schwanverde. I hope I have that name right. Schwanverde was the complex where my father visited his Solmssen cousins, when he was a child. The Solmssens had a different name then. They were called Salomonson. I hope I have name spelled right also.
When we went, Schwanverde had been made into a children's camp, but it was still impressive. It was a huge house, on a lake. Later I was told that it was actually an island. My father told me that every tree had been imported, that they were all exotic.
My father also told me that Hitler later confiscated that complex and lived there himself during WWII.
My father's cousin, Kurt, Nora's uncle, later told me he had had to fight with the neighbors to keep it a children's camp. They felt that a children's camp did not belong in their fancy neighborhood.
Nora's mother, Mimi, was from the Mendelsohn family, which also included the famous composer, Felix Mendelsohn. Mimi was an accomplished pianist herself. I seem to recall that Nora was a musician as well and that she may have sung with Don Ho.
When I knew them, Nora's parents, Mimi and Max, lived in an elegant mansion, in Summit, NJ. They had impressive pieces of antique furniture that, at least as I understood, they had managed to get out of Germany.
As an adult, Nora moved to Hawaii. That seemed to me a very romantic place to live.
All in all, the Solmssens seemed to me to be rather like royalty. I was very impressed with them.
Of course, too, my second cousin, Nora's first cousin, Arthur Solmssen, wrote a historical novel called A Princess in Berlin, based on Solmssen and Mendelsohn family stories. In the novel, one of the family members was a legal princess. In reality, there was no one who was legally a princess, but they lived that life.
The Solmssens also tended to be tall. I think that increased sense of awe with respect to them. In any case, children tend to be easily impressed by adults.
And yet, despited all this, my cousin Nora died fairly young of breast cancer. I remember my father telling me and being disconcerted. How could this beautiful, graceful, vibrant person die so young? I thought she must have had incompetent doctors.
Her father Max has breast cancer as well, but he managed to live to be ninety one. He outlived my father who was eight years younger, but then my father was in a radiation accident in Los Alamos.
But it was the story of Nora and Max's cancers that made me seek Ashkenazi Jewish type BRCA mutation testing.
My mother's family didn't have breast cancer at all. They are all WASPs. There were more of them and more closely related. I always thought that I would be like them. I was surprised that the genetic counselor didn't even know that WASP meant English ancestry. Perhaps she never even sees WASPs.
I never thought of myself as really connected with the more distant relatives on my father's side, but, sure enough, I have a typical Ashkenazi Jewish BRCA 2 mutation that caused my recent Ovarian cancer. Despite the apparent distance of our relationship, Nora and I apparently share this mutatino.
So I'm thinking of beautiful Nora now.
Last I saw Arthur he was writing a real history of the Solmssen and Mendelsohn families, but I don't know if he ever finished it. I hope he does finish it. I think it would be fascinating.
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Fantasies of being an Amazon
I tend to
fantasize a lot: really a lot.
Not all of
these fantasies are positive. For instance, if I have a crush on someone, I
might spend just as much time imagining what it would be like to have a fight
with him, as I would spend imagining romantic love scenes.
A big
fantasy that's been occupying me recently has to do with having BRCA gene
mutations. I heard about Angelina Jolie, about how she was told that she had an
87% chance of developing breast cancer, so she had a preventive double
mastectomy. I knew that these mutations were associated with ovarian cancer as
well as breast cancer. Two women in my gyn cancer support group who have these
gene mutations have had ovarian cancer and not breast cancer, but are being
followed for both breast cancer as well as recurrence of their ovarian
cancer. One of them takes tamoxifen.
I became
convinced that I had these genes as well. My father's side of the family is all
Ashkenazi Jewish, which is a risk factor.
My paternal
grandmother had breast cancer, albeit with onset at age 68. I never knew her
family. They may have all died in the Holocaust, or they may have been
estranged somehow. My mother said that she thought that since that family had
converted to Catholicism they did not like my grandmother marrying my
grandfather. He wad officially Lutheran, but his sister married Georg Solmssen
who was a prominent Jewish banker, so the Barschalls seemed more Jewish, our at
least weren't Catholic. My Fahey later cast some doubt about the estrangement
theory, as he says he remembered having some contact with members of his
mother's family when he was a child. In any case, for whatever reason, my
grandmother's family is a big question mark for me.
My father
was an only child so there was limited information about genetics there also.
Still, he had a male first cousin on his father's side, inner of the sons of
the famous Georg Solmssen. That cousin had breast cancer in advanced age,
though nevertheless lived to be ninety one. That cousin had a daughter who died
of breast cancer fairly young, in her forties or fifties.
My mother's
side of the family was fairly clear of cancer. They were WASPs. Women in my
mother's family tend to die slow, lingering deaths with multiple strokes and/or
Alzheimer's, making them into vegetables or childlike, before they went.
My father
died of kidney cancer. He was 81 and it had metastasized all over his organs by
the time it was discovered. He refused treatment and died three months later.
He had been in a radiation accident in Los Alamos. His urine was radioactive
after that accident. I attributed the cancer to the accident. He also had huge
black, hairy lesions all over his back that he had refused to get treated for
years, which were likely cancer. I suspected those were from alpha radiation to
his skin. He claimed never to have had a tan or sunburn on his back.
He didn't
think his cancer was from Los Alamos. Other physicists who got cancer had
gotten it much earlier. He thought this was too much later. I attributed that
opinion to denial. Los Alamos was the most wonderful, exciting thing that had
ever happened to him. It gave his life meaning that, after being a refugee from
the Holocaust, he could participate significantly in the war effort against
Hitler; even though he was an enemy alien and even though, ultimately,
the bomb was used against Japan instead. Many other physicists had
gotten beryllium poisoning, and he hadn't. He couldn't stand to imagine that
his work there had ultimately killed him.
In any
case, I could have all sorts of strange mutations due to my father being in a
radiation accident. I grew up with my mother being very nervous about xrays.
"Your genes have been irradiated enough," she would say. I thought
about that when I was having a catscan yesterday. I had the catscan anyway, but
it worried me.
So, you
see, I have been persuaded that I must have BRCA gene mutations, whether from
my ancestry, or from the radiation accident.
And, I've
been persuaded that, like Angelina Jolie, I was going to have to have a
preventive double mastectomy.
Therefore, I've
been fantasizing about life without breasts.
I've never
liked wearing a bra. They hurt my back. They itch.
I don't
like the idea of plastic implants. I've read that they have to be replaced
every ten years. I don't relish the idea of more surgery in ten years, if it
can be avoided.
I used to
have long hair, which I cut off in 2004, after hair blowing in my eyes was a
significant contributing factor in a serious auto accident. When my hair was
long, I used to keep my barrettes, elastic bands, and combs in a large glass jar. I noticed a
vile, chemical smell every time I opened that jar, so I surmised that the
plastic gadgets in there were outgassing something.
I read an
article in Science News about a museum that held plastic artefacts. The museum
noticed that, when the objects were about fifty years old, they disintegrated
into toxic chemicals. The suspicion was that they had been slowly
disintegrating for years, but had only been visibly affected at the end.
In my
family cottage, we had some very old plastic plates that also started breaking
spontaneously. I had a very old bottle brush in my kitchen. The plastic handle
of that brush started breaking and I had to get an new one.
I already
have two plastic devices surgically implanted in my body. I fear that the first
one may have contributed to my cancer, though my doctor emphatically denies
that this is possible. It's probably more likely that the low level hormone
replacement I was doing was responsible, that and my chronic refusal to
allocate enough time for sleep.
Still, the
idea of more plastic devices in my body, for purely cosmetic purposes, struck
me as scary.
Also, from
a psychological perspective, the idea of being a breastless Amazon had a
certain appeal. I've long had a lamentable tendency to get crushes on gay men.
Maybe they would like me better with no breasts? Also I'm trying to become a
performer. Maybe I would attract the attention of casting directors better if
there were something really odd about me like that?
I had this
whole scenario worked out in my brain. I had a long time to work on it. I was
waiting five months to see a genetic counselor at Sloan Kettering. The Angelina
Jolie effect has created quite a run on these folks recently.
I went to
see her yesterday. She agreed that there was cause to test me. Also the new
laws preventing discrimination based on the results of genetic testing, and
preventing genetic testing results from being a preexisting condition for
insurance purposes, would protect me from adverse effects.
Then we
video conferenced with the doctor in New York City. That's an interesting twist
in medicine now. I can get treatment in the suburbs here and video conference
with a doctor who is elsewhere.
This is
where reality intervened. He told me that my chemo for ovarian cancer will have killed cells that might tend to become cancerous in my breasts. Therefore, even
if I have BRCA gene mutations, my risk of getting breast cancer, at least in
the next five years, is now similar to that of the general population.
Moreover,
they would not recommend any elective major surgery in the next year, as my
body is already weakened, and my chances of recurrence of ovarian cancer are
much higher than my chances of getting breast cancer. The weakening effect of
surgery could make the treatment of any recurrence more problematic.
Therefore
no preventive mastectomy.
Tempest in
a teapot.
----------------------
Addendum 6/5/14
Genetic testing reveals that I do indeed have a mutation on my BRCA2 gene which is typically found in Ashkenazi Jews.
-------------------
Addendum February 2016
Now they're saying that maybe I should have the surgery if I'm still in remission 5 years out, so this may be reopened. I've been thinking about it a lot, because one of my friends is having a mastectomy because they're gender fluid.
My breasts have been useful. I nursed my first son for 22 months and my second son for 36 months. I found nursing to be an extraordinary experience. I was riveted by it. I pumped at work. I was in La Leche League.
Even I came to feel that breastfeeding explained my childhood obsession with vampires, that I had subliminally wanted to nurse a child all that time, hence the feeling that vampires were so fascinating. I used to think, particularly of my older son, when he was still nursing, affectionately as my little vampire.
Of course, they're no longer useful in that way.
I did read this article about a woman who developed a genetic treatment that would lengthen the telomeres in human cells. This would in some sense, theoretically, make the treated person 20 years younger. If I were suddenly 20 years younger maybe I would still want to nurse a child, even though I can no longer bear one, due to surgery for cancer. But that all seems very unlikely.
So, back to the amazon fantasies, if I can resurrect them. I just bought 4 bras recently.
----------------------
Addendum 6/5/14
Genetic testing reveals that I do indeed have a mutation on my BRCA2 gene which is typically found in Ashkenazi Jews.
-------------------
Addendum February 2016
Now they're saying that maybe I should have the surgery if I'm still in remission 5 years out, so this may be reopened. I've been thinking about it a lot, because one of my friends is having a mastectomy because they're gender fluid.
My breasts have been useful. I nursed my first son for 22 months and my second son for 36 months. I found nursing to be an extraordinary experience. I was riveted by it. I pumped at work. I was in La Leche League.
Even I came to feel that breastfeeding explained my childhood obsession with vampires, that I had subliminally wanted to nurse a child all that time, hence the feeling that vampires were so fascinating. I used to think, particularly of my older son, when he was still nursing, affectionately as my little vampire.
Of course, they're no longer useful in that way.
I did read this article about a woman who developed a genetic treatment that would lengthen the telomeres in human cells. This would in some sense, theoretically, make the treated person 20 years younger. If I were suddenly 20 years younger maybe I would still want to nurse a child, even though I can no longer bear one, due to surgery for cancer. But that all seems very unlikely.
So, back to the amazon fantasies, if I can resurrect them. I just bought 4 bras recently.
Saturday, February 15, 2014
What is wrong with surveys
I wrote this sketch to illustrate what is wrong with telephone surveys, like this latest one that says 1/4 of Americans think the sun goes around the earth.
I wonder what percentage of people, interrupted in their daily activities by unwelcome phone calls, feel compelled to give serious, correct answers to questions.
ⓒ ANNE BARSCHALL 2014
Thursday, January 2, 2014
Musings on New Year's Eve and Fireworks
I spent New Year’s Eve online on twitter – under my
pseudonymous account – tweeting back and
forth with Josh Groban and his fans. He was home alone. I was home alone. He said he had pink eye, though he may have
been joking about that. I am recovering
from chemo.
I had the opportunity to go up to powellhouse.org, but
decided I was just too tired. My ex and
my sons went. They all came back with
colds. I’m glad I didn’t go, as I’m
immune compromised and shouldn’t be in close quarters with people who are
sick. Since bathrooms are shared there,
bugs go around pretty fast.
I had fun tweeting back and forth with people. It was quiet.
There was no issue about being on the roads with drunk drivers.
Later I watched the YouTube videos of fireworks in London,
Dubai, Singapore and Taiwan, in that order.
Obviously, Dubai won – hands down, no contest. Those fireworks were extraordinary – and kind
of scary. It’s amazing if no one was
injured.
I am thinking, tho, I’m glad I saw it on YouTube and not in
person. It would have been noisy. It would have been smoky.
I’m thinking back on fireworks displays I saw as a kid. I grew up in Madison, Wisconsin, USA. This was the fourth of July.
We went out to a local park where the city put off the legal
fireworks. We put on lots of OFF!,
because Madison is very buggy in the summer.
We sat on a blanket on the lawn.
The people shooting off fireworks were situated at a safe distance from
us.
They shot off one firecracker at a time into the sky. As each one went off, the whole crowd would
say “oooooo” softly, in awe, because they were very beautiful.
There was some time between each one, maybe a minute. We could watch them go up into the sky, while
we were waiting. They made a sort of
whistling sound and a slight sparking at the back of the unit as it rose, so you could track
it, so it wasn’t dull waiting.
There were a few that were merely loud, like the bang of a
cannon ball, and made a bright light.
There were a few displays on the ground, on frames, that they lit up and
they made sparkling pictures.
At the end they had a finale, where they shot off maybe
twenty or thirty at the same time.
I think it took about twenty minutes. It started at 9pm. We were home by 10. We had some handheld sparklers that we could
use at home & draw pictures with in the air. I liked those, though now I think they’re
considered too dangerous for kids. We
didn’t get hurt, fortunately. Also, we
had some caps that we could pound with hammers on the sidewalks during the day
before. Those made a banging noise.
We thought it was cool.
We had no clue what might be in the future for fireworks. The idea of what just went on in Dubai
couldn’t even have occurred to us.
When my mom was a kid, they just had a small cannon and a
few small fireworks at home, which was even smaller than what I had.
When I think about it, I wonder if we’ve gained anything here.
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