Dawson County news. (Dawsonville, Georgia) 2015-current, June 29, 2022, Image 9
PAGE 9A Send a letter to the editor to P.O. Box 1600, Dawsonville, GA 30534; fax (706) 265-3276; or email to editor@dawsonnews.com. DawsonOpinion WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2022 This is a page of opinion — ours, yours and others. Signed columns and cartoons are the opinions of the writers and artists, and they may not reflect our views. Politics chat with Ryo Morning Coffee Club DICKYARBROUGH Columnist You can tell from the way the telephone rings who is on the other end of line. It is Skeeter Skates. When Skeeter calls, the phone doesn’t just ring. It jumps off the hook. He has that kind of effect on phones and people, too. For those of you who may be new to this space, Skeeter Skates is the owner of Skeeter Skates Tree Stump Removal and Plow Repair in Ryo, Georgia. He is a man of few words but those words are as unvar nished as, well, a tree stump. “Hoss, we got a question for you,” Skeeter said with no preamble. Preambles are not a part of who Skeeter Skates is. The “we” in this case are the members of the Ryo Morning Coffee Club. In addition to Skeeter who serves as the de facto chair man, the group includes Walleye, who runs the bait shop over in Red Bud, Booger Bledsoe, who operates a local roadside veg etable stand on State Route 136 near Sugar Valley and Uncle Coot, recently retired from the porta potty transportation industry. Skeeter said, “The boys and me were talking a little politics this morning and nat urally we thought of you cause you know as little about politics as anybody we can think of.” Skeeter says that every time we talk. I haven’t figured out if he is kidding or not, but it is best not to ask. “What we was wondering was if that ol’ orange-haired boy was ever gonna give up claiming he is still the president? He keeps on talking like he won and has got a lot of folks stirred up and acting all crazy like,” Skeeter said. Before I could answer, Skeeter went on. “The reason we was curious is that if that bunch could go into the capitol up there in Washington and tear the place up, what’s to keep them from coming to Ryo and trying to do the same thing?” I assured him I didn’t think Ryo was a target for the protesters. They probably have other things on their mind at the moment since a bunch of them are in jail or about to be. Skeeter didn’t seem to be lis tening to me, which wasn’t unusual. He’s always too busy talking. “The reason I am asking,” he said, “is they might want to think twice before they do. We ain’t got no gazpacho police down here like that gal that represents us in Congress likes to talk about, but anybody wearing buffalo hats and thinking about going into Walleye’s uninvited and making a mess is in for a world of hurt.” I could hear Walleye yelling “Amen!” in the back ground. Skeeter added, “Next time you are on Facepaint or Twerp, you might want to let them know.” I think he was talking about Facebook and Twitter but this wasn’t the time to bring that up. Skeeter Skates was on a roll. Booger Bledsoe got on the line and told me that he wasn’t as bothered about the orange-haired guy as Skeeter was. He was more concerned with the one that took his place. Booger said he looks like he is half asleep most of the time and the few times he looks to be awake, he seems to be more worried about boys who have turned into girls and girls who have turned into boys being able to play volleyball than in trying to get inflation under control. “The price of tomatoes has gone up 20% in just a year,” Booger said, “which don’t much matter because nobody can afford the gas to get to my vegetable stand, anyway. And Sleepy Head is fretting about boy-girls getting to play volleyball? Obviously, he ain’t buying his own tomatoes or having to gas up his own car.” Booger has a valid point. I asked Uncle Coot if he wanted to weigh in on the current state of politics. He said no but that he had some entertaining stories he would be happy to share with my read ers about the dynamic porta potty transpor tation industry. I told him I would keep that in mind. Skeeter Skates got back on the line and said, as usual, they didn’t know any more about politics than before they called. I said that is because politics can be very compli cated. Skeeter said, no. Grinding a 6-foot cypress stump in knee-deep swamp water is complicated. Politics is just downright weird. As much as I hate to admit it, he just may be right. Keeping secrets can help shelter others SUDIE CROUCH Columnist Last summer, we had a really scary situation that result ed in me taking Cole to the ER. It was a nasty case of food poison ing that made him so dehydrated, I didn’t think they had enough fluid in the hospital for him. It was nearly midnight before they let him go home and we headed on our way. As I rushed him around the mountain roads to the hospital. I felt certain it was food poison ing, but when your child is get ting all kinds of tests run and needs bags and bags of fluid and looks frighteningly weak, it makes every fear come to life. Lamar was texting me every five minutes wanting to know if I had an update, which I didn’t. It was stressful and unnerv ing. I didn’t tell my Mama about it until the next day. “Why did you text me?” she demanded. “Mama, what could you have done?” I asked. “You’re two hours away.” “I could have been praying,” she said. “You would have been wor rying,” I replied. “I got him to the hospital and he was OK. But I didn’t want to upset you.” Truth is, I knew she would have been frantic. This is a woman who will call the sheriff on me if I don’t call her the instant I walk in from going to the grocery store. I was racked with worry myself and at the time, I didn’t need her freaking out on me to compound my stress and anxi ety. Usually when the proverbi al stuff hits the fan, I am the one who pauses long enough to fig ure out what to do and then jump in. thinking about all the potential consequences of every action. Or as my therapist describes it: my severe anxiety makes me hyper-vigilant and causes me to anticipate every possible out come while trying to plan and overcompensate for them. It’s loads of fun. So while I was processing the fact my child was the sickest I had ever seen him, rushing him to the hospital in the middle of a pandemic, it did not occur to me to call or text my mother. Not at that moment. I told her the next day. after he was home recovering and I knew he would be fine. The fact that she was spared an alarming text only made her quarrelsome and angry. “If you wouldn’t tell me my own grandchild was in the hos pital what else are you keeping from me?” she wanted to know. Well, actually, lots of things. I don’t tell her about things that I know will cause her to worry or make her upset. It’s not out of disrespect or even trying to keep her out of those areas of my life. It’s because sometimes there are moments where you can’t find the words to process what you’re going through, so you keep it to yourself. Speaking about it can almost feel like it gives life to some of those fears. My mother, while she inher ently means well, can always jump to the worst scenario and once she has that in mind, that’s it. She won’t be swayed or lis ten to anything else, no matter what I tell her. So I don’t tell her. Not until it’s over and done with. Sometimes, that means I have to keep the good stuff from her, too. When Cole recently compet ed in a contest, I didn’t share it with her until after it was over. It was his first time competing and he came in fifth. I was proud of his efforts and what he had done, and it inadvertently slipped out in conversation. “You just don’t want me involved in his life,” she told me the next day after she had had ample time to ruminate. Far from it. Sometimes, we don’t share if we aren’t sure how those things are going to play out. It’s a lot easier to share in the disappoint ment when it’s over with, than to have some folks get their hopes up only to be crushed right along with us. A safeguard of sorts, I sup pose. It’s funny. The very same people who often try to protect us from being hurt through vari ous and sundry means are the very ones we try to shield from something so they won’t worry. Or so they aren’t emotionally crushed alongside us when things don’t go our way. She was upset; I get it. In fact. I’ve been there. “Why didn’t you tell me?” I’ve asked on countless occa sions. Lamar and Cole exchange a glance and both sigh. “We knew you’d just be upset,” Cole said. “You didn’t need one more thing to worry about,” Lamar added. “We took care of it.” In some ways, those secrets, though unsettling when discov ered, can also provide some much needed shelter and relief. Sudie Crouch is an award win ning humor columnist and author of the recently e-pub- lished novel, "The Dahlman Files: A Tony Dahlman Paranormal Mystery." LETTERTOTHE EDITOR Price-setting could keep new drugs from being developed I serve as the primary caregiver for both of my chronically ill parents. My father is a diabetic with an ampu tated leg, and my mother needs weekly dialysis treatments for her kidneys. I have seen them both struggle from every issue of managing pain to finding the right medications for their conditions. Because I see first-hand how critical access to medical care is, I oppose any measures that could hinder our pharma ceutical industries’ ability to create new treatments. The biggest federal legisla tive effort that worries me right now is government price setting. While lowering out of pocket costs is an important and well-intentioned goal, we need to ensure that any policy deci sions do not also compromise innova tion and access. And I worry that allow ing the government to set the prices of prescription medications could do just that. The Congressional Budget Office, a nonpartisan federal agency, has estimat ed that price setting legislation could result in 60 fewer treatments over the next few decades/years. One of those 60 treatments could be the medical breakthrough that could alleviate the symptoms of my father’s diabetes, or my mother’s kidney care. I hope the Georgia congressional dele gation stands for patients like my parents and they vote against price-setting legis lation. Kris Graham Dawsonville You can reach Dick Yarbrough atdick@dick- yarbrough.com; at P.O. Box 725373, Atlanta, GA 31139; online atdickyarbrough.com or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/dickyarb. Letter policy The Dawson County News wel comes your opinions on issues of public concern. Letters must be signed and include full address and a daytime and evening phone number for verification. Names and hometowns of letter writers will be included for publication without exception.Telephone num bers will not be published. Letters should be limited to 350 words and may be edited or con densed.The same writer or group may only submit one letter per month for consideration. We do not publish poetry or blanket letters and generally do not publish letters concerning con sumer complaints. Unsigned or incorrectly identified letters will be withheld. Mail letters to the Dawson County News, RO. Box 1600, Dawsonville, GA 30534, hand deliver to 30 Shoal Creek Road, fax to (706) 265-3276 or e-mail to edi tor® dawsonnews.com.