Pico de Orizaba

Pico de Orizaba
Taken from Huatusco, Veracruz, the closest town to Margarita's family's ranch.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

As certain things end, others continue...

The same month that José Francisco totalled the business' truck he was driving 5 minutes from concluding the 3 hour drive from Guadalajara to the apartment we rented in Leon, Guanajuato, Angelina's late husband Oligario died and Roberto's and Paz's first grandson, Alin 14-years-old left home with his girlfriend only to return with the girlfriend to live with his parents, who didn't send her back to her own parents...  A month earlier (New Years Day) I was speaking with Alin's parents and grandparents and uncles about finding him and his younger brother Pablo good private schools for taking advantage of their academic potential...  Since we don't have children, and since no one else worries about the quality of education in the ranch, Margarita and I decided we would float the bills...  But, now, we consider the investment an extreme risk, especially since Alin's parents haven't realized that a 14-year-old boy doesn't determine how the household is run... enough to tell the young girlfriend to hop into Daddy's truck so he could take her home to her parents, where she belongs at this age.  Granted, there is a possibility that the were "saving" her from clear and present danger such as sexual abuse etc... But, for some reason, I doubt it...

Alin is bored and restless.  It's understandable.  But, after 12 years experience with 11 brother-and-sister-in-laws and experiencing how they respond to boredome and rare opportunities, I see Alin's behavior as typical, if not just a bit precocious.

Angeline died of neglect after a lifetime of experiencing the alcoholism of Oligario and her 4 sons and their neglect of their own children.  Oligario stopped drinking a few years earlier and rapidly slipped into dementia, certainly caused by the alcoholism.  A month earlier Margarita and I had bought him a very high-tech wheel chair that reclines so that he didn't have to be lifted from the chair and carried to his bed if he were tired...  One of his legs and arms had failed months earlier...  Oligario was approaching 88-years at his death...


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