Marybeth Burnside was never one to face the truth. Some version of it always suited her more than facing facts.
Her mother insisted that she was the cutest thing in town, although visitors', 'Wow, what a baby' was all they could muster.
'She'll grow out of it', said Marybeth's father who believed that God's creation should never be doubted, and if He had given the girl something psychic, moral or devout, then her unfortunate looks were simply part of the plan. A young woman's beauty would detract from her brains, artistry, or notions.
And so it was that Marybeth never came anywhere near the truth - if you discount the usual girl bitchiness of the playground - cross eyes and fright wigs, putty nose, and novelty store lips. To her credit, Marybeth looked the other way, hurt, deceived, and ridiculed but still upright. She would rather listen to her mother and father who knew her better than this gaggle of cunts.
College evened things out - there were enough similarly misfavored girls in her class to make her feel more comfortable in her skin, and she tended to associate with them so as to meld, to blend in such a way that her lack of feminine beauty and charm would become irrelevant.
The Young Progressives Union seemed to be the place for these young women. Liberalism was based on principles of inner worth, social investment, reformist ambition, and political commitment, and so attracted girls who were happy to have found a place where physical beauty had no place. It was the movement which counted, progress towards a more verdant, compassionate, inclusive world.
And so it was that Marybeth became a progressive's progressive - a soldier in the armies of good. She was on the hustings for climate awareness, at the barricades against police brutality and for the endemic rights of the black man, on the podium for gender equity, and in the streets to preserve democracy.
She found a mate, a man of the same ilk, one of inner value, commitment, and pride and with the same unfortunate physical unattractiveness as Marybeth. They were a good pair, passed through the radical stages of their youth, took more traditional jobs, moved to the suburbs and had two children.
Marybeth never lost her progressive fervor, however, always voted for emoluments for the poor, affirmative action and DEI, free education and health care, and taxation of the rich. She lived in a homogeneously liberal community, most of whom not only shared her political views but fell into the same 'inner qualities' camp.
Marybeth came by her inclination to look for convenient truths rather than face facts honestly. She had listened to her mother and father when they created happy fictions for her. That belief in fantasy rather than facts is what had kept her on an even keel throughout her life; and the older she got, the more she was convinced that idealism trumped reality at every turn. The world would only become a better place if we held to the highest ideals.
A priori judgement was her stock in trade just as it was for her colleagues, friends, and neighbors. Climate change was settled science, individualism was the root cause of incivility and the driving force behind predatory capitalist avarice. There were good things and bad things in the world, and only the sentient, aware, concerned, and principled person could know the difference.
Now, as often happens when idealism comes face to face with in inconvenient truth, there is always a bit of unhappiness. Marybeth's older child, Rennie, stumbled his way through the early grades of elementary school. He couldn't make heads or tails of addition or subtraction. The most hands-on, tactile, Montessori-style lessons were beyond him.
'Now, Rennie, here are four apples. Let's count them, one, two, three, four. Now watch as I take two apples away and put them in my purse. How many are left?'
The boy looked blankly at the table, the apples (he liked Golden Delicious but these were Mackintosh which were too bitter and funny-shaped), and the teacher, and said, 'Huh?'.
The same was for reading, and as hard as Mrs. Perkins tried, she couldn't get Rennie to put any two words on the page together. She helped him mouth each word separately, and then asked him to read a sentence, but the boy simply looked at her with that vacant, empty stare, and said, 'Huh?'.
Meetings with Rennie's teachers were unproductive, for there was no way that this lag in reading and arithmetic could possibly mean any serious failing in the boy. It was the fault of the teachers who didn't understand her son's particularly incisive intelligence that made him simply froth at the bit at these elemental problems.
'I will get a second opinion', Mrs. Burnside said, and consulted Robert Fein, child psychologist, professor at Johns Hopkins, author of numerous articles on child development, and known for his blunt, matter-of-fact opinions.
After five sessions with the boy, Dr. Fein said, 'He's not retarded, but close. You will have to deal with it'. Now, this is not what is expected from a medical professional who is expected to have at least some bedside manner, but as noted, the professor was not known for pulling punches. 'There is a bell curve for everything in nature, Mrs. Burnside', Fein went on, 'and your son is at the far end'.
Outraged and refusing to pay, Mrs. Burnside stormed out of the doctor's office and angrily said that she would get a second opinion. Of course it would be her third opinion, but who was counting? She had to get at truth of the matter and her son was not, repeat not stupid.
As she was canvassing the medical directory for appropriate choices - the range was daunting and included everything from herbal healers to brain surgeons - she found herself in a similarly confounding debate at work. The issue of the black man - his plight, the continuing dysfunction of the inner city, his incarceration and recidivism - was at the top of the week's agenda.
Everyone in the office knew that these problems were the result of white racism, pure and simple, and there was no need to hector the black man and harp on individual responsibility and adherence to majority norms. Most importantly, there was no need to get a second opinion. Facts were facts.
So, here Marybeth Burnside found herself in a double bind. In the case of her son, she could not accept that he was as dumb as a stone and kept looking for a convenient truth; and in on the other issue, race, she turned blindly away from the inconvenient truth - the ghetto was a sinkhole of moral vacuity, irresponsibility, and social anarchy, getting progressively more so because of its consequential sexual profligacy within a closed system.
Unless sexual partners were chosen carefully, like the Jews, the Chinese, and the Koreans, for upward mobility and for consolidation of good traits, the entire socio-moral character of the ghetto would continue to erode.
'Wrong, wrong, wrong', Marybeth shouted. 'Impossible racist assumptions. The people of Anacostia (Washington DC's most pestilential slum) are just as capable, intelligent, willing, and responsible as anyone else in the city. To say otherwise is to continue Jim Crow and big house Yes, Massa' thinking'.
The next three medical opinions were just as conclusive as the first - Rennie Burnside was as dumb as a bagful of hammers - but offered different options. One was to shoot him up with Ritalin and a new iteration of steroids which has worked wonders in improving concentration and academic performance. Another by an old B.F. Skinner advocate was to reward the boy at every right answer - a piece of candy corn which he loved for adding two numbers or reading a simple sentence; and a third to do mild electrical stimulation of the medulla oblongata.
As often happens when you are smacked in the face over and over again with inconvenient truths, you come to your senses, often suddenly; and so it was with Marybeth Burnside who had been walloped on both sides of the face at the same time.
It might be, as difficult as it was to accept, that a) her son was not the sharpest knife in the drawer; and b) the black man might not be all he had been cracked up to be; and while we're at it, climate change might not be the Armageddon promised, the gender spectrum might simply a cooked-up fantasy, and capitalism actually had a good side.
Epiphany aside, it took Marybeth a while to adjust to her new ways of thinking. The old job just wouldn't do and her son was doing well shoeing horses on a dude ranch, and after a while she regained her footing, joined a country club, applied for membership in the DAR, and baked to-die-for casseroles.





