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Calie - Autumn - Cindy - Christian - Monica - "B" - MikeBlackie & Spot Click on the names in the Left Column to see their Bio's ( I pulled this out of my Journal because it didn't seem appropriate there but it is a sentiment I wanted to save so I am putting it here) (My comment to a Social Worker who attempted to lecture me on caring for Michael as though his troubles were some how induced by me for not being a doting father) You know nothing about me, my name is Peter Allen Daggett, I am 59 years old, I retired from Pacific bell after 30 years working my way from Frameman (Main Frame Attendant now-a-days) to Technical Support Manager. I have three grown boys in their 30's and two grandchildren. I have had heart bypass surgery, I enjoy Genealogy and going to the movies, I ride a motorcycle every chance I get. We have taken in 15 Foster Children over the years, we have adopted seven of them because there were no people hopping from foot to foot to take them in. Our kids have all been deemed un-adoptable by DC&FS they would all have been hospitalized, returned to abusive parents or put in Residential/Custodial Care if we hadn't fought for them and ultimately adopted them. I am not convinced that they couldn't be better off somewhere else but I think they are doing OK and 'Somewhere Else' never presented itself as an option. We have cared for and loved them the best we could, we have been abused by the system, lectured by doctors, teachers and administrators, snubbed by neighbors and chastised by friends and family for having so many kids but we really feel we had no other moral option. We are fighting for Michael now, like we fought for Calie, Cindy and "B", we will never receive any gratitude from any of them and that is just a given, Mike may even hate us before this is over. We got all the help we could get and made our decisions based on the recommendations of the pro's but we feel we have done the right thing...
Another “Inane Observation” I am an aspiring genealogist and I am always curious when I meet people whose names don’t match their appearance. I met a young woman who had a German surname but was most definitely not 100% German. If I had to guess I would have guessed she was American Indian… so, being naturally curious (curiosity is another word for nosey), I asked her what nationality she was, . She said “I am half Chinese and” … there was a pause, her hands sort of waved around like she was trying to pull a word out of the air, then she said… “and half white person.”
I have been reflecting on the ramification of that phrase “White Person” and the pause that preceded it. Aside from the fact it was truly none of my business and my nosiness was totally uncalled for, "White Person" makes me think that I, as a member of the White Person tribe, should try to emphasize my heritage to my kids so that they can respond with a little more clarity when asked who/what I am. I am English; both the parents of both of my parents and their parents and back as far as I can go (about 520 years) were English. The young woman was very clear about her Asian Heritage, and very vague about her White half, I guess. I am making a mountain out of a grain of sand but after all the research/plagiarizing I have done to accumulate my Family Tree I think that it is important to know where you came from. It seems to me that to be able to place yourself in historical context gives you some insight into who you are.
Saying you’re American means a lot of things culturally but is meaningless racially. When you fill out a form and it asks for your Race unfortunately you have to put something other than American. Mike, when asked what race he is says "I am Grey, half White and half Black" (pretty cool, in your face, wanna make something out of it?... sort of Mike thing to say), Calie Who is about half English and half African looks down at her arm and says "I'm brown", Monica is Mexican and something else, Middle Eastern (I think) she says "I'm brown." too… . "B" is Mexican/Indian, Cindy and Christian are at least Half English because of the surnames they were born with, and Autumn is Irish. I have some strong feelings about classifying people by some bureaucratic arbitrary racial criterion… It seems to me that there is more to race than color, and more to culture than Ancestral origin. I am no more English than Edi Amin culturally. Perhaps ethnicity is a better word by implication though not definition. By definition of "Ethnicity" I would be retired American Telephone Man My kids are, as near as I can tell, African, English, Irish, Mexican, and probably 20 other nationalities too, I will probably never know their ethnic ancestry but they will definitely know as much as I can find out.
What our Kids teach us(I didn't write this... It was sent to me by Marcy Daggett, I saw on the net where a fella named John Gross claimed to be the author... not substantiated)
When I look at a patch of dandelions, I see a bunch of weeds that are going to take over my yard. My kids see flowers for Mom and blowing white fluff that you can wish on.
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