Disturbia, fiction, family, friends, and everything else between the lions.
Published on April 16, 2008 By Tova7 In Blogging

There is an older couple close to my home who are for various reasons raising their grand children.  The man was medically retired years ago because of massive heart problems.  The woman is long past retirement age, close to 70, but still works every day so they can support their grand children.

I speak with the woman often.  She describes the horror of not having enough money for anything but the essentials, and those only most of the time.  The devastation of starting over with children knowing she may not live long enough to see them into adulthood, etc.

She drives a beat up old blue Nissan with two spare tires on the front.  She works hard all day while her husband sits home, smokes cigarettes, (which I can't believe they can afford), and complains about everything, including how frustrating it is to live with a woman he is forced to take the check book from for having the AUDACITY to go to the grocery store FOUR times in one week.  For SHAME.

His anger toward his wife seems to go back years.  Recently it was brought to new heights when she moved her mother in with them.  He's never liked her family because "all they ever do is centered around the church and God."  The woman is in her 90's and still mentally clear, just physically not able to get around well.

Because we know they are struggling financially, my family will often do things to help them out.  We do these things without asking permission first.  We learned they will always say "No, thanks," if we ask first.  I'm not sure but I think it has to do with their generation and not wanting to ask for help.

In the winter, we shovel their drive.  In the fall, we rake their leaves.  Stuff like that.

Today, I took $140 in frozen food to their house.  Mostly vegetables, but also some things the kids might like..pizza, pot pies, Boston Market mac and cheese, chicken strips, ice cream, etc.  Things I know they can't usually afford but still enjoy.

My son and I carried the bags over, set them down on the porch and rang the bell.  If they weren't frozen items, I would just leave them anonymously, but they needed immediate refrigeration so I waited.

The man came to the door and conscious of his generation and pride I fudged the truth and said, "Hi Mr. J.  I was just cleaning out my freezer and realized I have too much to fit.  I brought this stuff over thinking you can maybe use it because I don't want it to go to waste."

He shook his head and said, "We can't use it."

I didn't want to lug it all back home.  I didn't buy it for us.  I don't have a place to put it if I did.  "Are you sure?  It'd really help me out.  I'll feel bad if I just throw it away.  There's some stuff in here the kids will like, ice cream, chicken strips."

"I am living with a woman who has no idea how to run a household.  We can't take it.  I am throwing $35 in food a way every single week because she has no idea what she's doing."  (Which is a lie because she told me once they couldn't afford more than $100 a week for food.)

I stood there for ten minutes listening to him trash his wife, her family, his grand kids, you name it, all the while knowing her mother was inside listening to every single word.

He refused food for his family out of spite.

Pure unadulterated SPITE.

I loaded back up, drove to buy ice, and was forced to put the stuff in a cooler (what didn't fit in my freezer).

And the whole time I was thinking, would it be rude if I shoved this food down his throat?

I know the family needs it.  They've taken food donations from us before.

Gah.

I have no idea what to do with all this food now.  Except maybe wait until she comes home and ask her, but then he will probably throw it away just to spite them.

Gah!

 


Comments (Page 1)
2 Pages1 2 
on Apr 16, 2008
Gah!


Channeling LW a bit, are we?

I agree.

Gah!

If someone came over with food, I would definitely accept it. I would be like, "I can afford it myself, but if you're going to just give it to me, now I can afford something else this week, so sure!"

I would, though, try to remember to invite them to dinner.

The devastation of starting over with children knowing she may not live long enough to see them into adulthood, etc.


That's tough. But, hey, their actual parents aren't seeing them into adulthood, either, apparently. So it's better they have something than nothing.

Except maybe for that grandfather. Man.
on Apr 16, 2008
What a douche.

I likes me some spite, now...but intentionally starving your own family? Kids, even. No...no way in hell.

~Zoo
on Apr 16, 2008

I know....call the kids over and have a B-B-Q with ice cream for dessert. 

 

 

on Apr 16, 2008

If someone came over with food, I would definitely accept it. I would be like, "I can afford it myself, but if you're going to just give it to me, now I can afford something else this week, so sure!"

Me too.  I'd go buy $140 worth of flowers.

Channeling LW a bit, are we?

Um, not really.  Why?  Do you think she coined the phrase?

 

on Apr 16, 2008

I know....call the kids over and have a B-B-Q with ice cream for dessert.

Which takes care of $10 maybe...now about the other $130.  Heh.

but intentionally starving your own family? Kids, even. No...no way in hell.

Well they aren't starving Zoo...but they don't have the money for any extra, which can get tedious.

 

on Apr 16, 2008
I understand your frustration and anger. And yet a part of me wonders what is going on with him. My grandfather started to act that way with the onset of Alzheimers. He was a very nice man, but once he started losing his memory, he became bitter and petty.

That is not an excuse, but perhaps something to look into? I dont know if there is a solution, or his wife is just the next saint. My grandmother was one of the last ones.
on Apr 16, 2008
It's incredible that someone can be so nasty. You gave him an easy out, and he could have kindly accepted them under the guise that he was helping you with some overflow from your fridge/freezer.

Poor grandma. And poor kids.
on Apr 16, 2008

I feel sorry for this male {Notice I call him a male because a MAN would not behave like that} having to live in his own skin. imagine the daily pain he must go through just being alive.

No good deed goes unpunished Tova. Sorry you had to listen to his tirade.

on Apr 16, 2008

I think that this family may need some help. Just leave the food anonymously in a cooler. If they have kids, try giving it to them sometime.

on Apr 16, 2008

I understand your frustration and anger. And yet a part of me wonders what is going on with him. My grandfather started to act that way with the onset of Alzheimers. He was a very nice man, but once he started losing his memory, he became bitter and petty.

I don't think he is having a memory issue, I talked with her tonight and she said "he's just that way."  But he hasn't been that way before her mom moved in....

 

on Apr 16, 2008

Maybe next time you'd be better off discreetly slipping her a grocery gift card, or mailing the same to her in an anonymous card...at her place of employment so he's none the wiser.

Excellent idea.  I allow so much a month for our groceries.  I clip coupons and some months have an "overage" which I try to use for things like this....though usually its not quite so much.  My husband was out of town for 10 days and I saved that way.  And sometimes I buy things in bulk and then just split it with them.  Depends.  But from now on, gift cards for frozen items.

I dunno about getting all that back over there without him noticing now, if you truly don't have room, why not donate it to a local homeless shelter, food bank, or mission? Does your church have a freezer they could store it in?

I talked with her tonight.  She is going to sneak over here tomorrow get the stuff and take it to work.  She will bring home bits and pieces of it from work like maybe she stopped and picked it up at the grocery.

Isn't that pitiful?  Sneaking food in because the "man of the house" is spiteful.

 

on Apr 16, 2008

Poor grandma. And poor kids.

Agreed...  You're a wonderful human being for trying, though.

on Apr 16, 2008

You gave him an easy out, and he could have kindly accepted them under the guise that he was helping you with some overflow from your fridge/freezer.

hahaha  Yeah I know.  I made it sound like he would be doing me a HUGE favor by taking it off my hands.

She was so thankful tonight.  She said, "Thank you for always thinking of us."

 

on Apr 16, 2008

I feel sorry for this male {Notice I call him a male because a MAN would not behave like that} having to live in his own skin. imagine the daily pain he must go through just being alive. No good deed goes unpunished Tova. Sorry you had to listen to his tirade

HEY MM, haven't seen ya on my blog in a loooong time.  HOWDY.

Yeah, he is so miserable and since her mom moved in, he won't even leave the house now.  He used to at least sit outside, not anymore.

I think he was expecting me to agree with him about the Mrs.  There's no way.  She is awesome and would do anything for anyone.  Obviously, she took her grand kids when the dad went to prison and the mom to drugs.

 

on Apr 16, 2008

I think that this family may need some help. Just leave the food anonymously in a cooler. If they have kids, try giving it to them sometime.

That might work, but I only have on big cooler and I need it.  Once I told him I had it though, no anon thing would work.

The thing that really irks...he didn't even look to see what I had, I bought with the family (including him) in mind.

Oh well.

 

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