Bobbi Ann Johnson Holmes

For us, Valentine’s Day changed fifteen years ago.

Since owning a restaurant many years ago, Don and I have never been big on going out to restaurants on Mother’s Day or Valentine’s Day. Just too many people.  But fifteen years ago, Don and I decided to do something crazy, we planned to go out to dinner on Valentine’s Day. We were living in Lake Havasu City(LHC) at the time, and planned to drive to Laughlin, and eat at one of the restaurants there.

It was a Sunday, and that morning we received a call from Don’s mom, Doris. Our home was above the high school. Don’s parents also lived in LHC, not far from us, off Palo Verde below the high school.

Doris told Don her husband, Don’s stepfather, Walter, had fallen while they were getting ready to go to church. Walter was 89 years old. He had lost a leg several years prior and wore an artificial prothesis. 

Walter was from Hawaii. His mother was Portuguese, and his father was Puerto Rican. He was born in Hilo, Hawaii, raised on a sugar cane plantation, where his father worked. To say he came from a big family would be an understatement. According to Walter, his mother had over twenty children. 

He was twenty years old when Pearl Harbor was attacked. Hawaii wasn’t a state yet. I remember Walter telling me how after Pearl Harbor he had to bus Japanese Americans to internment camps, something that he didn’t want to do. Many of those Japanese Americans were his friends.

Walter remained single for many years, helping to raise and support his siblings, even buying his parents their last home in Hilo, which his parents ended up leaving to one of his brothers.

He moved to California, where he met his wife, Don’s mother. They worked together in Sunrise Market, in Covina, California. Doris was a young widow with two small children. Her husband had died of lung cancer at the young age of thirty-two. Walter was 39 when he married Doris, and for Don, he was the only father Don ever knew.

Walter could be cranky and contrary, but I always got along with him. He would frequently  tell me I was his favorite daughter-in-law, and I would remind him, I was his only daughter-in-law. 

He and my own father were very different from each other, yet they had a few things in common, aside from sharing the same first name. They were both hard workers and extremely honest. They both enjoyed fishing, yet Dad preferred lake fishing, while Walter liked any fishing—as long as he was catching fish. They both  enjoyed gambling. Although Dad preferred blackjack, while Walter liked the slots. 

When Walter lost his leg in his eighties, my respect for him grew. He bravely accepted his new challenge, and I never heard him complain. I found it inspirational how he handled himself, and how he helped a young woman in his church, who had lost her leg in a motorcycle accident.

On that Valentine Sunday, by the time Don arrived at his parent’s house, his mother, with the help of a neighbor had already managed to get Walter to his feet. Don immediately started asking his father typical questions one might ask an elderly person who had fallen, while Walter kept insisting, he was fine.

Despite Walter’s wishes, Don called 911, and after the paramedics showed up, they started asking him many of the same questions Don had just asked, to which Walter grumbled, “My son already asked me that.”

The paramedic asked Don if he thought Walter’s color looked off, to which Don told him, yes.  It was after this they slipped the oxygen mask on Walter.


The next moment, Walter died. Just like that. Without fuss or drama, he was gone.

The paramedics went into resuscitation mode, and rushed Walter off to the hospital, but Don knew.  His mother, didn’t. And as they drove to the hospital, Doris wondered aloud how long they would keep Walter in the hospital.

Of course, Walter never came home. Like Don suspected, when the paramedics took him away, he was already gone. It was difficult for Doris, losing Walter so suddenly. She would often express her shock at his sudden exit, asking why he had to go. Yet, Don always says when it is his time, he wants to go like Walter did. Of course, Don also witnessed the excruciatingly drawn out deaths of my parents. But the truth is, when you lose someone, you love, death is never easy for the person left behind, regardless of a swift or slow exit.

Don and I didn’t go out to dinner that night, and for a few years after that, Doris always wanted us to go out to dinner with her on Valentine’s Day, to one of Walter’s favorite restaurants.

A few years after Walter’s death, Doris sold her house, and we built a guest house on our property for her, where she lived for a couple of years, before she passed away. We had both Doris and Mom living with us during this time. Don and I used to say we had them both living with us because we wanted to go to Heaven.

Mom deeply missed Doris when she passed on. The two had been close, with much in common. They were the same age, shared grandchildren, and then great-grandchildren.  Doris passed away on October 26, 2014, and Mom passed away almost exactly ten years later on October 24, 2024.

They have all moved on. I think of them daily, and I understand how lucky I was to have such supportive parents and in-laws, who always made me feel loved and accepted. I wish everyone had that.

 I wonder, did any of them get together this Valentine’s Day?

How we feel about sex may determine the course of our country.  

In our current world of chaos and political trauma, is anyone else sick of certain groups trying to tell us how to live our lives? 

Hey, I’m all for laws that prevent me from infringing on someone else’s rights or property.  I’m all for laws that protect our planet, for the collective good. The laws I am talking about are more intimate and personal, like who we can marry or if we can get cancer treatment or not because we have a working uterus. 

We have some states wanting to ban spicy romance books. I’m seventy, been married for over 48 years; I am a mom and grandma. When I was younger, I read my share of spicy books. Hell, I have written a few in my lifetime. You don’t like them? Then don’t read them.

In Texas they can regulate how many sex toys an adult can own. Seriously people, you spent taxpayer dollars regulating how many sex toys an adult can own?  However, Texas has no laws regulating how many guns a person can own. Funny thing, I never remember hearing about a dildo shooting up a classroom of kids.

There are also folks talking about making birth control illegal. It is no one’s freaking business if an adult chooses to use birth control. I think some elected officials forget they were voted into office to work for us, not to regulate our sex lives.

It’s not always a lawmaker attempting to assert control over people when they don’t agree with someone’s life choices. Such as the person who insists on calling a trans person by their dead name. Those who defend this practice often say something like, “their birth name is their real name.” That is utter BS. They are just being intentionally mean and rude. 

Non-trans people have been changing their names forever. As a little girl I was called Bobbi Ann, and then later dropped the Ann. My husband’s real name is Donald, and as a child he went by Donnie, and today he goes by Don.  Non-trans people often go by nicknames or legally change their birthname for one reason or another.

It’s not just the overstepping legislators or those who go out of their way to ruin someone’s day. We have the Heritage Foundation working behind the scenes in an attempt to force us all to live their version of Christian Stepford Wife Utopia, where we all attend the same type of church, and the women marry, have lots of children and obey their husbands.

Here’s the thing, it’s my opinion—prove me wrong—the Heritage Foundation’s (and similar groups) views on how to live is nothing more than a sexual kink. Hey, I am not one to kink shame. If two consenting adults want to role play dominate and submissive games, that is their prerogative, but the entire country is not interested in joining you—I can practically guarantee that.

If an adult woman wants to talk in a keep-sweet voice, always look pretty for her man, and is willing to be on sexual call 24/7, while taking no birth control, with no anticipation her own sexual needs will be met, that is her business.  

That is certainly something I would have never signed up for. My mama taught me sex is a perfectly natural and beautiful act between two people who love each other, and if not mutually enjoyed, he is not doing it right.  Mom never said that last part, I just added it. But I don’t believe a man who loves his woman would ever—and I mean ever—expect her to have sex with him unless he intends to do his damnedest to satisfy her.

I suspect that’s one reason some of those states are trying to ban spicy books. They  want women to see sex as a spousal duty, for the sole pleasure of her husband. A wife  is supposed to submit her body, allow her husband to do whatever he wants, and don’t expect anything in return.  If that is your kink, fine. Just don’t impose it on unwilling adults.

Their vision is a world where a woman is nothing but an object for a man’s use and for breeding without any real consideration for her needs. When having sex, it is about his pleasure, not hers. When breeding, there is no consideration for her health. In their world, she can be denied vital lifesaving medication—even if not pregnant—for fear it may interfere with a future pregnancy. She is to cook and clean and take care of the home and children. She could easily be replaced by a robot, if only they could figure out a way for a robot to incubate human babies.

We are each given one life to live during this time on earth. How we choose to live that life is our choice.  If you believe in the Bible, then you believe we are each given free will—free will to live our lives as we want. If we go to hell for our choices, then that’s our business, not yours.

This would be a better country if people would respect the choices of other Americans.  Well, maybe not respect them, but at least mind your own business if it is not hurting you. For example, if you hate nose rings and you see a pretty girl wearing one in the grocery store, keep your opinions to yourself. She didn’t ask for it, and she isn’t wearing the nose ring for you.

If you are sitting at the park and a stranger is sitting next to you talking on the phone in Spanish, don’t say something jerky like, “Speak English, this is America.”  It is his freaking phone call, he is not talking to you, mind your own business.

If you see two guys walking down the street holding hands, don’t make some derogatory remark about how gays are shoving their lifestyle in your face. They are simply living their lives, just like the heterosexual couple you passed earlier, who were also holding hands, but with them you flashed a smile. 

If someone else’s life choices don’t hurt you or others (which doesn’t include making you uncomfortable), then be a decent person, maybe even try a little empathy.  Let people live their lives and be happy. If Jimmy across the street feels more at home wearing dresses, so what? It’s just clothes. Have you seen how the founders of our country dressed? Tights, lace shirts, and wigs. 

Okay, that’s my rant for today.  But before I go, in case this is the first time you’ve come across my blog, but you’ve heard about my Haunting Danielle paranormal cozy mystery series, I should probably warn you, it isn’t a spicy romance. It’s G-rated, and my characters keep their bedroom doors shut. 

But, if you do enjoy a spicier read, you can check out the books written under my Anna J. McIntyre pen name. The Coulson Family Saga is a five book series spanning a century. It’s available in audiobook format—and the narrator did a marvelous job. Actually, I have terrific narrators for both the Coulson Family Saga and Haunting Danielle.

There are also four happily ever after romances under the McIntyre pen name.

How spicy are my McIntyre books? I suspect not as spicy as some of the romance books I’ve seen promoted over on Booktok.

One way to reduce crime and violence, yet Moms for Liberty & MAGA aren’t on board. In fact, they’re against it.

Do you know what violent criminals have in common? A lack of empathy.

There have been studies that show empathetic people are less likely to engage in crime. Empathetic teenagers are less likely to be delinquents.

Just look at drug lords. You think drug lords and the people who work for them are empathetic? An empathetic person would be far less likely to brutally kill innocent people who got in their way.

According to various studies, empathy can be taught.  As a parent, if you want your children to grow up to be upstanding citizens—who don’t commit crimes—then teaching them empathy would probably benefit them more than going to church. Unless, of course, your church teaches empathy.

However, there are some self-professed Christians on the right who teach “The sin of empathy.”  Personally, I find that a twisted interpretation of Jesus’s teachings. But men have been twisting the word of God for centuries, for their own agenda, so I can’t be surprised.

We can debate if it’s a sin or not, but the proof is in the pudding, as they say.  People who lack empathy are more likely to commit crime.

According to one study, “The literature affirms that the low level of empathy, guilt, embarrassment, and moral reasoning displayed by violent and psychopathic criminals is strongly associated with empathy-linked brain regions that are smaller in size or less developed.”

Moms for Liberty, the infamous book banners also have an issue with teaching empathy in our schools. In fact, many books they specifically target are those that teach empathy.

It seems the MAGA trend these days is to get rid of anything remotely woke, and empathy definitely falls within the realm of woke. While MAGA proudly boasts about “woke free zones” they assume the only damage will be to marginalized groups, and since they lack empathy, they don’t care. However, they should.

Why?

Because someone they love may suffer the fallout. Take, for example, gun violence in our country. Shootings in our schools, mass shootings in our communities. They happen every week. Sometimes more frequently. We’re told the answer isn’t gun control. Some suggest we need to up our mental health in this country, but that ain’t gonna happen. Our health care in the US is dismal and the president is already talking about getting rid of ACA and cutting Medicaid, and possibly Medicare.

While it would not prevent all shootings, teaching empathy instead of forbidding it could help significantly. If you don’t believe me, look up some of the studies. Google is free.

But instead of teaching empathy, organizations like Moms for Liberty act like teaching empathy to young children in schools is no different than handing out copies of Hustler Magazine to third graders.

One woman from Moms for Liberty stated, “Not every human is deserving of my child’s empathy.”

Here is the problem with that. That human she mentioned may be a troubled and severely odd youngster in her child’s school. If the students in the school fail to show empathy toward the troubled child—some even tormenting and teasing him or her—well that’s one way to birth a school shooter.

If that mother’s child is gunned down by the troubled classmate, I’m not sure what benefit her dead child gained by withholding empathy. 

While none of us are safe from violence in this country, raising up a generation without empathy will certainly make it worse.

Notable Quotes on Empathy

Plato: “The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another’s world.”

Rabbi Jonathan Sacks: ” Empathy is not a lightweight, touchy-feely, add-on extra to the moral life. It is an essential element in conflict resolution. 

Thomas Nelson Bibles: “Empathy is more than an attractive personality trait. It’s an instrument of healing. Jesus understood that better than anyone.”