Christmas and New Year's is a lonely time to be single. It is even lonelier if you just recently broke up with somebody. Or didn’t break up with him, per se, but just let the relationship fade away into oblivion. Saving him the trouble of breaking up with you.
I met my perfect man a few days after my birthday. Just when I least expected it. I was a few weeks into my surgery rotation, when I looked my least attractive due to lack of sleep and the required uniform of ill-fitting scrubs. Yet despite my puffy eyes and blue jumpsuit, I met the man of my dreams. He was tall and very handsome, with dark hair and brown eyes lined by glossy black eyelashes. He had a great sense of humor, and could do funny impressions of people (a talent I really enjoy because I happen to be quite the mimic myself ahem). And an added bonus was that he was Cuban. Sexy, latin, and a revolutionary. (I felt slightly let down when I found out that he had become a US citizen, but let’s face it, I was still high.)
Carlos was one of the other medical students who joined our surgery rotation. I pretty much just looked at him as a classmate the first few days. I always feel pretty asexual in the hospital, and I usually don’t think much of people hitting on me, but for some reason, Carlos caught my eye after a while. He would flirt with me and give me winks and whatnot, but the tipping point was when he stood up for this pathetic, nerdy student in my class, when he was being yelled at by one of the surgeons. I love a valiant man! I was hooked.
Carlos and I were soon talking every day, and texting like love-crazed high schoolers every night. We would sneak away for off-campus lunches, and make out in the stairwells of County General. He was smart, funny, and kind. He showered me with compliments. There was one little fly in the ointment, however. Ok, maybe not a fly. More like an elephant. Carlos had a girlfriend. A girlfriend of four years, actually. I shooed her away in my mind. She’s far away, in Indiana! And Carlos lives in NY now, only leaving to visit his family in Miami! He’s mine. Besides, she can’t possibly be as cute as me. (I am slightly embarrassed to have thought this, but if you can’t tell the truth in a blog, when can you tell it?)
On our first date, after making out in the middle of the street in SoHo, I asked Carlos if he still had his girlfriend. “No, no, I took care of it.” Took care of it? I winced at the idea of some poor girl getting a phone call from her perfect man, breaking it off… But I quickly shook my head of the thought. We went to a bar for some drinks, and it was literally within minutes when the second bomb dropped.
For some reason, religion came up. “Are you Catholic?” Carlos asked me.
“Yes,” I replied in my most angelic way, only then to give a wink and say, “but I’m a very bad Catholic girl.” Rather than a normal response, which I suppose would be to smirk back at me, and imagine a very naughty rendezvous involving spanking and the like, Carlos instead said this: “I used to be Catholic, but now I’m a Christian.” My stomach turned to lead, knowing what was coming.
“What do you mean, Christian?”
“I’m a Born-again Christian, I’ve accepted Jesus Christ as my personal savior.”
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
My heart screamed out. My brain told me to run, run far away. Shush! I silenced myself. How could you run from the perfect man?!
What does this Christian thing mean anyway, I wondered to myself. My uncle was born-again, and years ago, he sent the entire family what is now known as “the hell letter”—a letter informing us that if we did not accept Jesus as our savior, then we would burn in a fiery hell for eternity. My mom told her brother if he ever tried a stunt like that again, she would never speak to him again. Later, a roommate in college, who turned out to be a dear friend, educated us. Although she believed we would not be saved on Judgment Day, she still had close friends outside her religion. Comforting. The only other experience I have with this particular sect is the memory of waking up early one day as a child and stumbling upon some weird cult church show while flipping channels on the television. The priest was yelling in tongues and striking people down—even children! I was terrified. (Carlos informed me recently that this is entirely different—Evangelical Christian—but terrifying just the same.)
“Maybe since his religion was repressed in Cuba, this is his way of expressing his beliefs,” my mom offered some words of comfort. Romantic, but unlikely. I took his Christianity and shoved it far in the back of my mind, hoping that if I ignored the issue, it would go away.
Days later, and essentially no dinner dates later, we slept together. It was way too early, but I let him pressure me into it. I was VERY pleased to find out that he was not at ALL very Christian in bed! Just a blur of Spanish and acrobatics. As we lay in bliss, Carlos actually said, “I was just thinking of how attractive our children would be.” HIGHHH!!!!
We continued like this, sneaking off in the hospital for a make-out shesh, making crazy Latin love at night, texting and calling each other all the time. Despite my visions of beautiful half Cuban, half Nordic children, I did not feel intimate with Carlos. It was forced. I didn’t feel like he was my boyfriend at all. But I so wanted to feel that way. Intimacy takes time, I knew this. But did Carlos?
Meanwhile, the church questions were becoming more and more frequent.
“Did you go to church today?” He asked me every Sunday.
“No! You know I never go, its sooo boring!” I would giggle every time. He would laugh too. I decided it would not be the best time to tell him the funny story about how Brian Wilder and I accidentally got wasted off the consecrated wine during the Christmas Eve mass in high school…
Sooner than later, despite my best effort to be charming and adorable, things started to change. Texts got less flirty. Phone calls slowed, and then stopped. I asked Carlos, carefully, what was going on.
“Cosita, you’re perfect. I think we have something really good going on here, and I just want to take things slow. You have to understand, I just got out of a four year relationship.”
Wait. A. Second. Mister! My heart screamed out, but my face stayed calm. He was the one who pursued me! He was the one who pressured me into sleeping together, into calling each other boyfriend and girlfriend, and who showed pictures of me to his family!! “I totally understand,” I smiled.
That was the truth. I understood all too well. Years ago, I had a long term boyfriend. We dated for years, and I was in love with him. I built dreams around him. Living in a house by the sea, babies in white hats playing on the beach…
But I broke my own heart when I realized we would never work out together, and I broke up with him. I rebounded into a whirlwind affair with someone completely different—loud, dark, outspoken and passionate. I was high off Johnny. But after a few weeks, the ghost of my old love haunted me. I couldn’t get him out of my mind. And he became untouchable; no man could ever compare to him.
Was I becoming to Carlos what Johnny had become to me? A fun, fiery affair, but just a careless rebound?
The last time I saw Carlos was the night of his birthday. We went out with his friends in the city, and had a fantastic time. We both had too much to drink, but what’s too much if you’re having fun, right?! But that night, in bed, came the third bomb.
After the usual imitation-porn-movie series of moves, came the question. Actually, more like a statement. “I want to put my ___ in your____.”
Let’s just let that hang in midair, because that’s basically how I felt. I did my best to express that I wasn’t into that (especially after only dating for like a month and a half, are you crazy??!!)
“Well, we don’t have to…tonight,” was his Christian response. I’ll leave out the gorey details, but let me say for documenting purposes that he tried this a few more times, and when he dropped me off the next morning, I was left feeling very uncomfortable about the whole situation.
Carlos headed down to Miami that day. We spoke a few times afterwards, only because I initiated. A few days before Christmas, I stopped calling. It’s his turn, I figured. I still wanted him to be enamored with me, like he was in the beginning. I was dying for him to miss me, to surprise me and come up for New Years Eve. But day by aching day, I never heard from him. My dreams I had just begin to build around him faded away. Dried up, like a raisin in the sun. And just like that, I was on my own again.
It is not Carlos who I miss, but the idea of him. I miss the man I created, who was basically a skeleton of Carlos, once you stripped away the religious zealot, the cheating boyfriend, and the wannabe porn star. So, not Carlos at all really. After a few days of grieving, drinking and eating cookies, (the latter two which I would do anyway during the holidays) I will be my laughing, cheerful self once again. Besides, I already met another tall, handsome guy who just might be the one.
Un clavo saca a otro clavo.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Sunday, December 20, 2009
December 21
Snow fell in clumps. It looked like confetti, like fake snow. “It’s too heavy to be real,” I thought. My chin rested in my palms, elbows on a cushiony pillow, and stomach on the rug. As The Santa Clause boomed on the TV, Alex and Michelle giggled, but Becca and I didn’t. We just existed there, looking at the fake snow. “They don’t get it,” I thought. “How can they? It’s not their family.”
Becca was quiet as the other girls laughed again. “I wonder if Becca wants to stay too? Probably.” Nancy carried milk and graham crackers into the TV room. “Wow. We are never allowed to eat outside of the kitchen,” Michelle chirped. Becca turned her head and just stared at me, whispering a million wishes to me in one glance.
“Want anything else, girls?” Nancy asked. She was looking at Becca and me. Her eyes were wider than usual and her eyebrows wrinkled. She knelt down and rubbed Becca’s back.
“We’re okay,” I answered for the both of us.
“Yea?”
“Yea. Have you heard from our mom yet?”
“No, sweetie. She hasn’t called yet.”
“Okay.”
Alex and Michelle chuckled at the movie, but Becca and I were silent. “I remember the movie being much funnier,” I mused to myself. The room was warm, warm enough that I could take off the blanket on my back. I sat up, crossed my legs, and reached for a glass of milk. “The graham crackers look good,” I said, but I didn’t eat any. I took another sip of milk, put the glass down, then returned to lying on my stomach, legs stretched out behind me.
Creeeaaak. The front door bellowed. Becca and I looked at each other but didn’t move. Nancy came in a moment later. “Your mom’s here. She’s in the living room.” The knot in my chest that had been there all day suddenly strangled my lungs. I was nauseated. My heart flung against my ribs in a rhythmic beat of panic, quicker and quicker. The thumping started travelling up my throat. Becca and I lifted ourselves from the floor and casually went to meet our mom. She stood there, stuffed like a teddy bear in her winter jacket and hat and scarf, her cheeks bright pink and blotchy, scratched by the wind. “It must be really cold outside,” I realized, so detached that I felt like I was floating. She smiled and scrunched up her face. “That’s what Nancy did before,” I thought as I looked at Mom.
“Come here girls. Let’s sit down.” Mom had only been away for a night, but in that time the world had changed. She put her arms around us and walked over to the sofa. We all sat down and she slowly pulled off her hat, placed it on her lap and tugged at a loose woolen thread. I looked out the window, shocked at how high the snow had piled. I knew what she was about to say, and I wanted to just sit there in silence, realizing it was all over but not hearing her words confirm it.
“Girls, Daddy passed away a few hours ago.” I sat there. My eyes started to burn and I saw Mom's chin start to dimple. I hated seeing her cry. “Uncle Rick and Aunt Gail were there with us. I was right next to him. Aunt Gail told us something funny that happened to her, and we all laughed. Daddy smiled and then he let go. He’s out of pain now, girls.” I wiped my damp face. “He loved you so much.” She paused. I looked up and realized she couldn’t speak because her face was full of tears and sadness. “You’re all he was talking about.” We three sat there, three who didn't know how to be anything other than four.
Just then I realized Uncle Rick was in the room, still wearing his jacket and slouched against the wall with this thumb and forefinger in his eyes.
“Do you girls want to walk home with me?” Mom asked. It was the oddest question. Wouldn't we all want to cling to one another and never be apart again? Wouldn't we all want to go home to our own beds, no more hospitals for Mom or neighbor's futons for us, and figure out how not to crumble to pieces? But at the time the question made sense to us. What exactly do we do now?
“Umm,” we looked at each other. “I wanna stay here tonight.”
“Me too,” Becca breathed.
“Are you sure?” Mom asked.
I had no idea what I wanted to do. “Umm, yea.”
“Ok. I’ll be at home whenever you want to come back. I love you girls so much. I’m so sorry,” Mom croaked while squeezing us tightly. I couldn’t feel anything.
Becca and I stood up, walked past Nancy and Michael, and sunk back into the TV room. Alex pressed the rewind button and I watched the gray lines on the screen. She pressed play and we continued watching the scene we stopped at minutes before.
A few seconds passed before Becca and I turned to each other.
“Wanna go home?” I asked her. I started to feel the weight of my body. I was so tired.
“Yes.” she nodded.
We stood up. “Bye,” I said to Alex and Michelle.
“We’re so sorry,” they whispered.
“Uh-huh,” I uttered.
Becca and I walked out of the room and saw Nancy and Michael sitting at the dining room table. “We’re gonna go home.”
“I’ll walk you home, girls.” Michael smiled faintly with his red, sunken eyes. Nancy stood up and gave me a tight hug.
“I’m so sorry, Jo,” she said. Her chest vibrated against my head while she spoke. “We’re always here for you. Always.”
I slid my arms into my snow jacket. It was bulkier than I remembered. I wrapped my scarf closely around my neck and zipped my coat up halfway. “What’s the point,” I thought. “It’s only a few houses away. How cold can it be?”
We left through the front door and marched into a sheet of snow. It fell madly from the sky. I closed my eyes and tilted my head down, walking right behind Michael. Wind slapped my face like sandpaper. Becca followed next to me. The streetlights were caked with snow and the light was gray, the street so quiet. I couldn’t even hear my own footsteps.
We got to our front door, opened it, and began shedding our layers of down and nylon. Mom was there, waiting for our return. The Christmas tree lit up the living room and housed piles of presents. There were hundreds of them. I looked at the tags and quickly realized they were from almost everyone we knew. Over the past month people had left presents, casseroles, cookies, and anything else that might distract us from the fact that Dad now lived in the hospital. Seeing all the gifts sparkle under the blinking bulbs seemed like a huge waste.
I stared at the tree and watched the light show dance on the walls and stairway. The Christmas tree flickered, completely unaware of what had just happened to Dad.
***
I remembered when Dad brought in last year’s tree. He had it on his broad shoulders, carrying it through the door as if he held a prize from a hunting trip. He propped the tree up in the same corner as always, and then secured it into the base. We watched him artfully loosen the branches from the netting and fluff the tree into an amazing sight. As he pulled down one of the branches he whispered, “Ah. Look…what…we…” and continued to reach deep into the thicket, “have… here.” He slowly pulled his arm out of the pine needles and held a perfect little bird’s nest in his hand. It was the size of his wide palm. Becca and I shrieked and scurried over to put our faces up close to the discovered treasure.
“Wow! That’s so cool!” I said marvelled. We touched the little branches that comprised the delicate nest. Mom ran into the room and then she too hovered over the finding. “What a cool bonus to getting the tree,” I thought.
“Did you know that finding a bird’s nest in your Christmas tree means you’ll have good luck for the whole year?” Dad said, in his soft voice. He gave us a smile and opened his eyes wide. I felt the luck already.
***
It is almost fourteen years since that cold night in December and I am now twenty-five. During the time my father was losing his life to cancer, I did not know how my mother, sister, and I would soldier on, but I knew we had to.
It was appropriate for us that he died on the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year, because we were ready to find a sign of light. It was also an appropriate time for him, being in sync with the natural world, that he should leave this earth as the seasons quietly switched acts. December will always be a difficult time for me and each year I continue to feel a sadness wash over me as the first day of winter approaches, but with each year comes more successes, more promise for the future. Although it would be impossible to retrace the steps we took from that day forward, it is those small steps, those choices, those moments of strength that have allowed not the tragedy to define our family, but rather, our endurance and love instead.
Becca was quiet as the other girls laughed again. “I wonder if Becca wants to stay too? Probably.” Nancy carried milk and graham crackers into the TV room. “Wow. We are never allowed to eat outside of the kitchen,” Michelle chirped. Becca turned her head and just stared at me, whispering a million wishes to me in one glance.
“Want anything else, girls?” Nancy asked. She was looking at Becca and me. Her eyes were wider than usual and her eyebrows wrinkled. She knelt down and rubbed Becca’s back.
“We’re okay,” I answered for the both of us.
“Yea?”
“Yea. Have you heard from our mom yet?”
“No, sweetie. She hasn’t called yet.”
“Okay.”
Alex and Michelle chuckled at the movie, but Becca and I were silent. “I remember the movie being much funnier,” I mused to myself. The room was warm, warm enough that I could take off the blanket on my back. I sat up, crossed my legs, and reached for a glass of milk. “The graham crackers look good,” I said, but I didn’t eat any. I took another sip of milk, put the glass down, then returned to lying on my stomach, legs stretched out behind me.
Creeeaaak. The front door bellowed. Becca and I looked at each other but didn’t move. Nancy came in a moment later. “Your mom’s here. She’s in the living room.” The knot in my chest that had been there all day suddenly strangled my lungs. I was nauseated. My heart flung against my ribs in a rhythmic beat of panic, quicker and quicker. The thumping started travelling up my throat. Becca and I lifted ourselves from the floor and casually went to meet our mom. She stood there, stuffed like a teddy bear in her winter jacket and hat and scarf, her cheeks bright pink and blotchy, scratched by the wind. “It must be really cold outside,” I realized, so detached that I felt like I was floating. She smiled and scrunched up her face. “That’s what Nancy did before,” I thought as I looked at Mom.
“Come here girls. Let’s sit down.” Mom had only been away for a night, but in that time the world had changed. She put her arms around us and walked over to the sofa. We all sat down and she slowly pulled off her hat, placed it on her lap and tugged at a loose woolen thread. I looked out the window, shocked at how high the snow had piled. I knew what she was about to say, and I wanted to just sit there in silence, realizing it was all over but not hearing her words confirm it.
“Girls, Daddy passed away a few hours ago.” I sat there. My eyes started to burn and I saw Mom's chin start to dimple. I hated seeing her cry. “Uncle Rick and Aunt Gail were there with us. I was right next to him. Aunt Gail told us something funny that happened to her, and we all laughed. Daddy smiled and then he let go. He’s out of pain now, girls.” I wiped my damp face. “He loved you so much.” She paused. I looked up and realized she couldn’t speak because her face was full of tears and sadness. “You’re all he was talking about.” We three sat there, three who didn't know how to be anything other than four.
Just then I realized Uncle Rick was in the room, still wearing his jacket and slouched against the wall with this thumb and forefinger in his eyes.
“Do you girls want to walk home with me?” Mom asked. It was the oddest question. Wouldn't we all want to cling to one another and never be apart again? Wouldn't we all want to go home to our own beds, no more hospitals for Mom or neighbor's futons for us, and figure out how not to crumble to pieces? But at the time the question made sense to us. What exactly do we do now?
“Umm,” we looked at each other. “I wanna stay here tonight.”
“Me too,” Becca breathed.
“Are you sure?” Mom asked.
I had no idea what I wanted to do. “Umm, yea.”
“Ok. I’ll be at home whenever you want to come back. I love you girls so much. I’m so sorry,” Mom croaked while squeezing us tightly. I couldn’t feel anything.
Becca and I stood up, walked past Nancy and Michael, and sunk back into the TV room. Alex pressed the rewind button and I watched the gray lines on the screen. She pressed play and we continued watching the scene we stopped at minutes before.
A few seconds passed before Becca and I turned to each other.
“Wanna go home?” I asked her. I started to feel the weight of my body. I was so tired.
“Yes.” she nodded.
We stood up. “Bye,” I said to Alex and Michelle.
“We’re so sorry,” they whispered.
“Uh-huh,” I uttered.
Becca and I walked out of the room and saw Nancy and Michael sitting at the dining room table. “We’re gonna go home.”
“I’ll walk you home, girls.” Michael smiled faintly with his red, sunken eyes. Nancy stood up and gave me a tight hug.
“I’m so sorry, Jo,” she said. Her chest vibrated against my head while she spoke. “We’re always here for you. Always.”
I slid my arms into my snow jacket. It was bulkier than I remembered. I wrapped my scarf closely around my neck and zipped my coat up halfway. “What’s the point,” I thought. “It’s only a few houses away. How cold can it be?”
We left through the front door and marched into a sheet of snow. It fell madly from the sky. I closed my eyes and tilted my head down, walking right behind Michael. Wind slapped my face like sandpaper. Becca followed next to me. The streetlights were caked with snow and the light was gray, the street so quiet. I couldn’t even hear my own footsteps.
We got to our front door, opened it, and began shedding our layers of down and nylon. Mom was there, waiting for our return. The Christmas tree lit up the living room and housed piles of presents. There were hundreds of them. I looked at the tags and quickly realized they were from almost everyone we knew. Over the past month people had left presents, casseroles, cookies, and anything else that might distract us from the fact that Dad now lived in the hospital. Seeing all the gifts sparkle under the blinking bulbs seemed like a huge waste.
I stared at the tree and watched the light show dance on the walls and stairway. The Christmas tree flickered, completely unaware of what had just happened to Dad.
***
I remembered when Dad brought in last year’s tree. He had it on his broad shoulders, carrying it through the door as if he held a prize from a hunting trip. He propped the tree up in the same corner as always, and then secured it into the base. We watched him artfully loosen the branches from the netting and fluff the tree into an amazing sight. As he pulled down one of the branches he whispered, “Ah. Look…what…we…” and continued to reach deep into the thicket, “have… here.” He slowly pulled his arm out of the pine needles and held a perfect little bird’s nest in his hand. It was the size of his wide palm. Becca and I shrieked and scurried over to put our faces up close to the discovered treasure.
“Wow! That’s so cool!” I said marvelled. We touched the little branches that comprised the delicate nest. Mom ran into the room and then she too hovered over the finding. “What a cool bonus to getting the tree,” I thought.
“Did you know that finding a bird’s nest in your Christmas tree means you’ll have good luck for the whole year?” Dad said, in his soft voice. He gave us a smile and opened his eyes wide. I felt the luck already.
***
It is almost fourteen years since that cold night in December and I am now twenty-five. During the time my father was losing his life to cancer, I did not know how my mother, sister, and I would soldier on, but I knew we had to.
It was appropriate for us that he died on the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year, because we were ready to find a sign of light. It was also an appropriate time for him, being in sync with the natural world, that he should leave this earth as the seasons quietly switched acts. December will always be a difficult time for me and each year I continue to feel a sadness wash over me as the first day of winter approaches, but with each year comes more successes, more promise for the future. Although it would be impossible to retrace the steps we took from that day forward, it is those small steps, those choices, those moments of strength that have allowed not the tragedy to define our family, but rather, our endurance and love instead.
Phoenix or bust
As much as I think I’m trying to be financially responsible, I’m not. Responsible adults pay their gas bills and have functioning stoves. They also receive letters saying their credit limit has increased and that they just earned extra sky miles. I don’t get those letters. I get dangerously thin envelopes with the words Final Notice stamped across the front, letters written in all caps, forcing my eyes to read the words I’ve been ignoring for many weeks, words like Due to accruing late payments and Your credit rating has been lowered. In fact, not too long ago, I opened a letter from The Gap and wrongly assumed it was a bill for yellow corduroys I purchased for a modernized Snow White costume. But no, the letter was even less forgiving than tight yellow pants—it informed me that my credit limit had been reduced to $100. I wanted to yell, “That’s ridiculous! One hundred dollars doesn’t even pay for a chunky knit sweater these days!” Confused and ashamed, my vision inevitably focused on the familiar words that read Due to your recent late payments on other credit cards… Ah, my injured relationship with the bank had been leaked! In the world of payee-payer relationships, I am not redeeming myself with good behavior, and I’m looking at fifteen to life, with only some ill-fitting cords to keep me warm.
Recently, throwing caution to the wind, I bought lunch near my school on the Upper West Side. After much shoving around by high schoolers and fellow lunch goers, I decided on split pea soup and a veggie wrap. I chucked my debit card across the counter, trying to get out of there as soon as possible.
“Sorry, ma’am. It’s declined,” the cashier said, handing me the curled receipt inked with the D-word. “Do you have another card?”
“First of all, ‘ma’am’ isn’t necessary. And please try that card again,” I smiled uncomfortably.
The man rolled his eyes, as if to say, You’re making my life more difficult than those high schoolers behind you trying to steal cans of soda. But he ran the card, and again shoved the receipt reading declined in my face.
“Do you have another card or what? There’s people waiting.”
“Um, yea, hold on,” I said, fumbling through my wallet, “try this one.” I tossed him my sparkly for-emergency-purchases-only credit card.
“Ma’am, card’s no good. Do you have anything else?”
Glowing all shades red, I shook my head, handed the food back over the counter and mouthed, “I’m sorry.” I dialed my bank immediately. When a man picked up, I spurted, “My debit card is no good. I tried to buy lunch and they said no! It’s been declined. Why?”
“OK, Miss (read: Crazy). Hold on…Well, it seems like we’ve put a hold on the card, ma’am.”
Yes, so that it wouldn’t go up in flames the next time I swiped it at Loehmann’s, I thought to myself.
“What’s your social security number, ma’am?” he asked, then followed up with, “And the state in which you received your social security card, ma’am?” The onslaught of ma’ams combined with starvation was all too much. Not only was I being called old and told I may not eat, but my card was being put in a time out. The only thing that could have made the moment worse was if the banker’s next question was, “And when was the last time you actually went to the gym?”
Informing the banker I was born and bred in New York, he said, “So, you didn’t purchase anything in a Walmart in Phoenix, Arizona yesterday?”
“Um, no. I didn’t.”
“Well, it looks like someone has been charging things to your account. At WalMart and Safeway.”
“Oh my goodness! That’s terrifying!”
“Yes, ma’am, it is. We’re gonna go ahead and cancel this card for you, and I’d recommend you close this account, just to be safe.”
“But I’m leaving for Ireland in two days! How fast can I figure all this out?”
He cleared his throat as if to say, You have $200 in your account, you seem to go out for dinner quite a lot, but yet you’re going to Ireland. Don’t choke on your whiskey.
He was right. Who do I think I am? I had two overdraft fees this month and The Gap won’t even allow me any more dark-washed denim. I realize the card cancellation is unrelated to my recklessness—since Fake Me was unaware of who she had swindled while buying armfuls of junk at Walmart—but maybe it takes a scammer in Phoenix to stop the Real Me from committing any more financial harm.
So after work, I darted to my nearest bank to open up a new account and withdraw some cash for my trip. A new checking account and a few twenties in hand, I filtered onto the rush hour subway, desperate for a seat and some sympathy. I squeezed in between a gaggle of high school girls, a sprinkling of sad nine-to-fivers and two moms with strollers. Holding onto my wallet and handrail, both for dear life, I couldn’t help but overhear a mother and teenage daughter next to me.
Daughter: Mom, who are you giving the Tiffany’s gift card to?
Mom: Not sure, probably Kirsten. I still don’t know who to give that Cartier caviar set to though. The only people I’ve seen serve it recently are Barb and Doug. So maybe I’ll give it to them.
OK, so apparently not everyone buckles down when the economy bites the dust. It’s a harsh world out there, and getting harsher—just ask Fake Me, who required my buck for her shopping spree! I know it’s going to be a steep and messy climb out of this hole I’m in, full of ample time in last season’s clothing to think about my sinful ways. I’ll start repenting as soon as my plane takes off for Ireland.
Recently, throwing caution to the wind, I bought lunch near my school on the Upper West Side. After much shoving around by high schoolers and fellow lunch goers, I decided on split pea soup and a veggie wrap. I chucked my debit card across the counter, trying to get out of there as soon as possible.
“Sorry, ma’am. It’s declined,” the cashier said, handing me the curled receipt inked with the D-word. “Do you have another card?”
“First of all, ‘ma’am’ isn’t necessary. And please try that card again,” I smiled uncomfortably.
The man rolled his eyes, as if to say, You’re making my life more difficult than those high schoolers behind you trying to steal cans of soda. But he ran the card, and again shoved the receipt reading declined in my face.
“Do you have another card or what? There’s people waiting.”
“Um, yea, hold on,” I said, fumbling through my wallet, “try this one.” I tossed him my sparkly for-emergency-purchases-only credit card.
“Ma’am, card’s no good. Do you have anything else?”
Glowing all shades red, I shook my head, handed the food back over the counter and mouthed, “I’m sorry.” I dialed my bank immediately. When a man picked up, I spurted, “My debit card is no good. I tried to buy lunch and they said no! It’s been declined. Why?”
“OK, Miss (read: Crazy). Hold on…Well, it seems like we’ve put a hold on the card, ma’am.”
Yes, so that it wouldn’t go up in flames the next time I swiped it at Loehmann’s, I thought to myself.
“What’s your social security number, ma’am?” he asked, then followed up with, “And the state in which you received your social security card, ma’am?” The onslaught of ma’ams combined with starvation was all too much. Not only was I being called old and told I may not eat, but my card was being put in a time out. The only thing that could have made the moment worse was if the banker’s next question was, “And when was the last time you actually went to the gym?”
Informing the banker I was born and bred in New York, he said, “So, you didn’t purchase anything in a Walmart in Phoenix, Arizona yesterday?”
“Um, no. I didn’t.”
“Well, it looks like someone has been charging things to your account. At WalMart and Safeway.”
“Oh my goodness! That’s terrifying!”
“Yes, ma’am, it is. We’re gonna go ahead and cancel this card for you, and I’d recommend you close this account, just to be safe.”
“But I’m leaving for Ireland in two days! How fast can I figure all this out?”
He cleared his throat as if to say, You have $200 in your account, you seem to go out for dinner quite a lot, but yet you’re going to Ireland. Don’t choke on your whiskey.
He was right. Who do I think I am? I had two overdraft fees this month and The Gap won’t even allow me any more dark-washed denim. I realize the card cancellation is unrelated to my recklessness—since Fake Me was unaware of who she had swindled while buying armfuls of junk at Walmart—but maybe it takes a scammer in Phoenix to stop the Real Me from committing any more financial harm.
So after work, I darted to my nearest bank to open up a new account and withdraw some cash for my trip. A new checking account and a few twenties in hand, I filtered onto the rush hour subway, desperate for a seat and some sympathy. I squeezed in between a gaggle of high school girls, a sprinkling of sad nine-to-fivers and two moms with strollers. Holding onto my wallet and handrail, both for dear life, I couldn’t help but overhear a mother and teenage daughter next to me.
Daughter: Mom, who are you giving the Tiffany’s gift card to?
Mom: Not sure, probably Kirsten. I still don’t know who to give that Cartier caviar set to though. The only people I’ve seen serve it recently are Barb and Doug. So maybe I’ll give it to them.
OK, so apparently not everyone buckles down when the economy bites the dust. It’s a harsh world out there, and getting harsher—just ask Fake Me, who required my buck for her shopping spree! I know it’s going to be a steep and messy climb out of this hole I’m in, full of ample time in last season’s clothing to think about my sinful ways. I’ll start repenting as soon as my plane takes off for Ireland.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
True Blond
One of the reasons I chose to do my surgery rotation at the county hospital was because I heard that you could “get lost” there; meaning, the doctors were so busy, and there was so much going on, that as a medical student, you could just hang out all day and not be missed. “They don’t even notice you’re gone,” the upperclassmen told me. Perfect! I thought. Surgery does not interest me in the least; I looked forward to showing up for a quick surgery, and then leaving early like everyone else.
“WHERE’S BLONDIE?” I heard my attending doctor bellow as I hustled down the hallway, late for evening rounds.
“I’m right here Dr. Barkley, the ENT clinic ran late, I’m sorry.”
“Well I’m glad you decided to grace us with your presence, we’ve been standing around waiting for you.” I glanced around at the surgery team. Besides the residents, only one other student was there; six were AWOL.
“Why is he always on my case? He never asks about the others…” I whispered to my one friend resident, a tall, handsome man with golden curls, who I would imagine the angel Gabriel to look like.
“The blondies can’t hide!” Gabriel whispered back with a wink. I felt momentarily comforted by these words of understanding from a fellow blond.
I have never had the privilege of being inconspicuous, not even for a moment. I must mention that I not only blond, but platinum blond—a result of Nordic heritage mixed with God’s idea of some genetic fun. Since I was an infant, people have been commenting on my hair. My mom tells me strangers would reach into my stroller to pet my head, before she learned to snap at them not to.
“Is that your real hair color?!” Yes.
“Do you know how much people would pay for that?” Not really…
“Wow, you’re soooo blond!!”
“Yes…” Smile and shrug.
“Can I touch it?” No, but I see that you’re going to anyway.
These are the daily questions and comments but I’ve heard the gamut. Yet for some reason, despite twenty-five years of attention, I still feel awkward and slightly embarrassed receiving it. My usual response to a compliment is simply, “Thank you,” a phrase that is far underrated.
I’m sure some of my awkwardness regarding hair color was born around the time of puberty, when there was nothing cute about having glasses, braces, and being pale as a ghost. Growing up, I had to endure Casper comments or kids asking if I bleached my hair (ironically, by girls who now bleach their own hair in their twenties). One boy who sat behind me in my ninth grade math class used to whisper “soft cornsilk” into my ear, and occasionally would stroke his fat fingers around a lock of my hair before I flung myself forward, out of reach.
I remember praying to God to give me brown hair. Around puberty, I started losing huge amounts of hair. I would shower or comb my hair and handfuls would come out. My hair was all over the house. Then I started finding random dark brown hairs in my scalp. I panicked. God was replacing all my blond hair with brown hair! “Dear God, please, please, I changed my mind! I want to stay blond! Please let me stay blond!” I pleaded pathetically. I now know that the variations in my hair color was simply from hormones and growing, but it took an event like that for me to start appreciating what I had.
Thankfully, I have outgrown that wretched stage, but as any ugly duckling (or self-perceived ugly duckling) can attest too, the self- consciousness that developed during youth dies, but never truly disappears. Today, I am at peace with having platinum blond hair. The truth is, now I love being blond! It suits my personality and style. Not that I have much experience having dark hair.
I dyed my hair once, before embarking on a six month teaching stint in Qatar. “You’re a target, Cece.” My mother has been drilling this phrase into my head since the age of twelve, when I first started going to Manhattan alone with friends. In some ways she was right; I walk down any city street and I hear countless men call out, “Hey Blondie, wassup?” “Blondie, where you goin’?” “I’ll carry that bag for you, Blondie!” I’ve learned to handle this, however. All a girl has to do is wave and smile. Assault/mugging averted. I’m probably the only girl you’ll see smiling at bums and drug dealers, but I assure you, it is all in self preservation! So, to avoid being a “target” in an Arab country, where women don head to toe black abayas, I dyed my hair brunette. Well, it was more of a honey color. “You’ve made yourself worse!” my mother lamented. Although the hair color was pretty, I did not feel like myself. I was happy when the color started fading out. It was also fun seeing the reaction of my Arabic friends as my hair became lighter and lighter as the weeks went on. The lighter my hair got, the more free things I seemed to receive—coffee at Starbucks, VIP tables at clubs, invitations on random princes’ yachts… As it turns out, the Middle East may treat blonds better than anywhere else on earth!
My hair color may even have saved my live once. I was three years old, and we were visiting family friends out on the East End. They lived on a farm, with endless fields of cabbage. My mom lost sight of me for a few minutes, and I disappeared into the fields. (Later, I informed my parents I was searching for the Cabbage Patch Kids.) If it were not for the reflection of the sun on my head, my mom may never have found me, already a far distance away!
The other day in clinic, as I presented a patient to Dr. Barkley, a resident interrupted to ask the doctor a question. “Excuse me!” Dr. Barkley yelled. “I’m talkin’ to Blondie here!” Dr. Barkley stared at me, distracted by the interruption. (Face reddening begins.) “You’re a true blond, I can tell. Do you know how you can tell if a girl is a true blond?” he asked the audience of residents. (Face now catching fire.) Dr. Barkley has a reputation for being extremely inappropriate, and is probably the most chauvinistic person I have met. I feared the worst, and memories of being cornered in a frat house and being asked if the “curtains matched the carpet” came flooding back.
“She has no roots.” Oh thank you Jesus.
Dr. Barkley slapped me with a medical question. Mercifully, the answer reflexively came to me. (If I think too hard about something, sometimes the answer escapes me!)
“So perhaps, the old saying about blonds being dumb may be proving to be false…” Dr. Barkley concluded. Perhaps…
I guess the lesson in all this is to own up to who you are, no hiding, no shrinking away. And being different has its perks—people can find you in a crowd, or even in a cabbage patch.
“WHERE’S BLONDIE?” I heard my attending doctor bellow as I hustled down the hallway, late for evening rounds.
“I’m right here Dr. Barkley, the ENT clinic ran late, I’m sorry.”
“Well I’m glad you decided to grace us with your presence, we’ve been standing around waiting for you.” I glanced around at the surgery team. Besides the residents, only one other student was there; six were AWOL.
“Why is he always on my case? He never asks about the others…” I whispered to my one friend resident, a tall, handsome man with golden curls, who I would imagine the angel Gabriel to look like.
“The blondies can’t hide!” Gabriel whispered back with a wink. I felt momentarily comforted by these words of understanding from a fellow blond.
I have never had the privilege of being inconspicuous, not even for a moment. I must mention that I not only blond, but platinum blond—a result of Nordic heritage mixed with God’s idea of some genetic fun. Since I was an infant, people have been commenting on my hair. My mom tells me strangers would reach into my stroller to pet my head, before she learned to snap at them not to.
“Is that your real hair color?!” Yes.
“Do you know how much people would pay for that?” Not really…
“Wow, you’re soooo blond!!”
“Yes…” Smile and shrug.
“Can I touch it?” No, but I see that you’re going to anyway.
These are the daily questions and comments but I’ve heard the gamut. Yet for some reason, despite twenty-five years of attention, I still feel awkward and slightly embarrassed receiving it. My usual response to a compliment is simply, “Thank you,” a phrase that is far underrated.
I’m sure some of my awkwardness regarding hair color was born around the time of puberty, when there was nothing cute about having glasses, braces, and being pale as a ghost. Growing up, I had to endure Casper comments or kids asking if I bleached my hair (ironically, by girls who now bleach their own hair in their twenties). One boy who sat behind me in my ninth grade math class used to whisper “soft cornsilk” into my ear, and occasionally would stroke his fat fingers around a lock of my hair before I flung myself forward, out of reach.
I remember praying to God to give me brown hair. Around puberty, I started losing huge amounts of hair. I would shower or comb my hair and handfuls would come out. My hair was all over the house. Then I started finding random dark brown hairs in my scalp. I panicked. God was replacing all my blond hair with brown hair! “Dear God, please, please, I changed my mind! I want to stay blond! Please let me stay blond!” I pleaded pathetically. I now know that the variations in my hair color was simply from hormones and growing, but it took an event like that for me to start appreciating what I had.
Thankfully, I have outgrown that wretched stage, but as any ugly duckling (or self-perceived ugly duckling) can attest too, the self- consciousness that developed during youth dies, but never truly disappears. Today, I am at peace with having platinum blond hair. The truth is, now I love being blond! It suits my personality and style. Not that I have much experience having dark hair.
I dyed my hair once, before embarking on a six month teaching stint in Qatar. “You’re a target, Cece.” My mother has been drilling this phrase into my head since the age of twelve, when I first started going to Manhattan alone with friends. In some ways she was right; I walk down any city street and I hear countless men call out, “Hey Blondie, wassup?” “Blondie, where you goin’?” “I’ll carry that bag for you, Blondie!” I’ve learned to handle this, however. All a girl has to do is wave and smile. Assault/mugging averted. I’m probably the only girl you’ll see smiling at bums and drug dealers, but I assure you, it is all in self preservation! So, to avoid being a “target” in an Arab country, where women don head to toe black abayas, I dyed my hair brunette. Well, it was more of a honey color. “You’ve made yourself worse!” my mother lamented. Although the hair color was pretty, I did not feel like myself. I was happy when the color started fading out. It was also fun seeing the reaction of my Arabic friends as my hair became lighter and lighter as the weeks went on. The lighter my hair got, the more free things I seemed to receive—coffee at Starbucks, VIP tables at clubs, invitations on random princes’ yachts… As it turns out, the Middle East may treat blonds better than anywhere else on earth!
My hair color may even have saved my live once. I was three years old, and we were visiting family friends out on the East End. They lived on a farm, with endless fields of cabbage. My mom lost sight of me for a few minutes, and I disappeared into the fields. (Later, I informed my parents I was searching for the Cabbage Patch Kids.) If it were not for the reflection of the sun on my head, my mom may never have found me, already a far distance away!
The other day in clinic, as I presented a patient to Dr. Barkley, a resident interrupted to ask the doctor a question. “Excuse me!” Dr. Barkley yelled. “I’m talkin’ to Blondie here!” Dr. Barkley stared at me, distracted by the interruption. (Face reddening begins.) “You’re a true blond, I can tell. Do you know how you can tell if a girl is a true blond?” he asked the audience of residents. (Face now catching fire.) Dr. Barkley has a reputation for being extremely inappropriate, and is probably the most chauvinistic person I have met. I feared the worst, and memories of being cornered in a frat house and being asked if the “curtains matched the carpet” came flooding back.
“She has no roots.” Oh thank you Jesus.
Dr. Barkley slapped me with a medical question. Mercifully, the answer reflexively came to me. (If I think too hard about something, sometimes the answer escapes me!)
“So perhaps, the old saying about blonds being dumb may be proving to be false…” Dr. Barkley concluded. Perhaps…
I guess the lesson in all this is to own up to who you are, no hiding, no shrinking away. And being different has its perks—people can find you in a crowd, or even in a cabbage patch.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Guess who's coming to dinner?
There comes a time in a young professional’s life when she must switch career paths or U-Haul it out of Manhattan. I chose to move. Having heard and answered the call of teaching and then skipping through graduate school in fourteen months, my only option was to move from my two-bedroom (shared three ways) on the Upper West Side and venture outward. To the boroughs. Teaching may have fed my soul but it wasn’t filling my pockets, and there’s only so much scrimping a girl is capable of when all the boutiques along Columbus Avenue know her name and everyone’s glad she came—with the happiest of them all being her credit card company.
I spent my last Sunday morning as a city girl camped out at one of those coffee shops that’s too cool for coffee and has now moved into the realm of exotic teas and gluten free baked goods, reading the Sunday Styles and phrasing my own wedding announcement. “Ms. Finley, who will keep her name, wed Mr. Whitman last night at some magnificent waterside soiree.” I may not have been able to afford the croissants and cabs of New York City anymore, but the tradeoff was having some money tucked away for monogrammed napkins and a honeymoon next summer. I could deal with that.
And so I began making the negotiations betrothed people make. I (begrudgingly) traded in the bustle of Manhattan for the bustle of a Nicole Miller gown, and decided to head east. With Curtis working on Long Island and me teaching in the city, we battled it out in a mean game of Tug of War. Curtis would heave the red taped-off center on our rope toward Huntington, then I would yank it back near Brooklyn. Both tired and ready to let the real negotiations begin, the rope started to hover over Queens. I neatly packed up my books, stuffed animals, and college photo albums, and off I inched—watching the rows of brownstones and parade of hipsters fade behind the horizon—hoping LL Cool J was right when he sang, Queens got the vets, Queens be the best.
Far from my best-laid plan, I went apartment hunting with my mom. Curtis, knowing all too well the impulsive decisions we would soon make, wisely instructed, “Don’t sign anything.” After researching the address of some buildings near the 7 line, my mom and I hopped into her Honda and hightailed it for a day of looking and thinking... Oh, who were we kidding? We were signing.
I can picture my first impression now: whitewashed arched doorframe and quaint walkway, two gleaming, marble fireplaces in the lobby, and a staircase that cleaved left and right. In my pathetic attempt to play it cool, I just smiled and exchanged this-is-it looks with my mom, all while jumping up and down. Smooth. (As we’ve always said, we could never work for the CIA.) Then I saw my potential home sweet home, a corner apartment on the sixth floor, cattycornered to the floor’s garbage disposal. All the closer to throw my garbage out with. The level of delusion still frightens me when I think about it. I’ve been told I see the world through rose-colored glasses, but let’s be honest—it’s more like I take intermittent, frenetic glances from behind a satin eye mask.
“Great door! So cute!” I chirped.
“Mmm-hmm!” mom smiled back.
Goners, the broker cackled to himself. “And this is the kitchen,” Mr. Broker explained. And luckily he did, because the sterile white room sans cabinetry or appliances that we were staring into could have gone one for one against a psychiatric holding room. I appreciated the clarification.
“And this is the living room,” Mr. Broker pointed out as we continued the tour, or rather, herding of sheep. “And the bathroom...” Mr. Broker trailed off. OK, so it had a hole in either corner of the room, marking the place the toilet and bathtub would one day be affixed to. My gut told me I needed that apartment, and beyond that my gut was also telling me that it was the last apartment left in Queens. What is that, gut? The last apartment ever? Oh no, I better sign. What’s that, gut? You think I should sign immediately? You’re probably right, gut. (I ate Indian food the night before and I realize now that I might have misread that message from my gut. Either that, or I was high off veneer and paint fumes.)
Why the deranged obsession with a frighteningly unfinished apartment? Why the need to move into that apartment right then? This is where I’m reminded of sage advice I received in a fortune cookie years ago, a fortune I’ve saved and framed: A handful of common sense is worth a bushel of learning. Full of knowledge, there was no room left for common sense. I ended up signing the lease because it resided in Sunnyside. Yes, I chose my future home based on my attachment to the song "Stay on the Sunnyside," a song Curtis put on a mix tape for me while we were dating.
The name was a sign.
The name was all I needed.
The name turned out to be the best part of the whole place.
***
A few weeks after moving in, I woke up to a familiar scene for the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, or any other creature living in the sewers. Green-tinged water trailed down my bedroom wall and pooled on the increasingly warped wooden floor. The ancient heating system released enough scorching steam at night to press my shirts or power an engine, and it was definitely hot enough to create a mirage. I prayed for a mirage, or at least a reflection from another building. I tiptoed out of my bed, toward the slimy cascade, wiping beads of sweat from my hairline. I slid my fingers down the shellacked mess and I realized it was no illusion. The walls were leaking and quickly turning into mold. Overnight. My rose-colored glasses and eye masks gathering dust in the corner, I was quickly settling into life in Sunnyside.
There was no live-in Super, so it was nearly a week before I contacted a human being at the leasing office, then another few days before they arranged for someone to come check out the "eledged" mold, and from that timeframe I estimated it would be about a year or so before it was cleaned up.
Yet clean it up they did. But of course, it had to be before 4:00, and since I’m with students everyday until at least 3:40, I hailed a cab faster than you can say, “Spores are killing me!” Thank goodness I made it home in time to watch the barely functioning employee douse my wall with bleach, mop up the floor, and extend his hand for a tip. Here’s a tip: Fix the leak!
He assured me it was, “All better, all better,” and left me seething with clenched teeth. By the end of that week I started to notice bubbles popping out of the bathroom wall. My adolescent walls (that cried at night and sprouted acne by day) needed obvious and immediate repair. Yet before I had time to dwell on what might be inside the bubbles, one of said bubbles grew an arm! Upon closer inspection, the protrusion wasn’t an arm as much as, with God as my witness, a mushroom. And unfortunately, the only mood altering this mushroom produced was agitation.
Getting dressed the morning of the fungi finding, I mindlessly outfitted myself in my teacher uniform of cardigan and khakis. With each button I fastened, I silenced my gut that kept whispering, "I might have been wrong. Sorry, Alice. Apparently this ain’t no Wonderland."
I scratched my neck and cursed the heater for sucking all moisture from my skin. As luck would have it, the defunct heating system averaged the perfect temperature to not only farm mushrooms, but also bake my skin. As I slammed my front door closed, I saw a flyer posted on it with the word ATTENTION: MEETING RE. BUILDING LAWSUIT. Frankly, I wouldn’t have been surprised to learn my apartment was condemned, but it was just a friendly reminder regarding the building meeting later that night. My first thought was, “If it starts at 5:00, how soon do I need to come home to avoid the meeting and how quiet do I need to be in order to pretend not to be home yet?” Despite the strong tug of my desire to avoid all things group, the tug of why the fuck is this building involved in legal matters won out.
Skip to quarter past five that evening, upon tripping over some disgarded furniture in front of my building, I flew through the lobby doors and took my place among the we’re-fed-up-and-we’re-not-going-to-take-it-anymore crowd goers.
“It’s been a few months since we last gathered to discuss the legal proceedings against Vantage Management,” the Tenant Advisory Board chairwoman said. “But before we catch everyone up, does anyone have new concerns or issues with their apartment?”
“My rat problem has gotten out of control! Now I’m trapping about one a week. They keep finding their way through that sliver of space between the pipes and the floor,” one neighbor complained.
“Try stuffing that space with Brillo pads and then covering it with caulk. Worked for us, so far,” offered a fellow friend.
“Well, I have roaches all over my kitchen,” voiced a third person. “No matter how well I seal bags and containers, they keep finding their way into my cabinets!”
“Have you tried sealing bags and boxes with tape and then enclosing them in Ziploc bags?” suggested another member of the masses.
I thought I had it bad with mold, a radiator that seemed to be housing a prisoner trapped inside clanging to come out at 5:30 every morning, and a toilet that sporadically went on strike. Maybe I had broken out in hives over the last few months, but who wouldn’t have a visceral reaction to a crumbling apartment and foreclosed dreams? I was starting to realize that I had it easy and that I would take the path of least engagement; nod and look fed up, then scurry like a good little mouse up into my apartment and count the days until Curtis moved in. Why deal with it when you can ignore it? So that’s exactly what I did. Hives making my woolen sweaters unwearable, I soldiered into the winter months warmed by the knowledge I would soon live with my husband-to-be. Staying on the sunny side would be markedly easier with him next to me.
When moving day finally came the weekend after Valentine’s Day and our six-year anniversary, it seemed as though all the loose ends swirling around my head were neatly weaving together into a cuddly cashmere knit. In preparation for our imminent cohabitation, we treated ourselves to a modern day marriage bed. Foregoing one strewn with hand-dyed fabrics and rose petals, we opted for the current mark of a couple’s switch from single life to commitment: a pillow-top mattress and box spring set from Sleepys, and a massive mahogany sleigh bed from Pottery Barn. Those two components were also the last to be moved in from Curtis’s truck, and at the end of a day serving as a painful test of patience and love, we were approaching the finish line. I could see the Gatorade and the shiny medal awarding us Best Couple Ever. Bring it on, mold! Bring it on, busted radiator and plumbing!
Since my old mattress cost about a hundred dollars Memorial Day weekend two years prior, it weighed about as much as a hundred dollar bill. Its lack of cushioning and back support had greatly impeded my hours of rest, but it made the last step of moving day incredibly easy. We lifted it off the metal frame, turned it over, and each let out of breathy gasp.
“Is that… Is that a… stain?” I asked.
“It’s moving. I’ve never seen a stain move. Have you?”
“Look! There’s like five of them. What’s all this black stuff in the corner over here?”
Our eyes met, our faces blanched with realization, and we uttered the words that have left an indelible mark on our lives and bedding. Bed bugs.
Writing this now I am itching the nape of my neck and the back of my leg, worried for a moment that they’re back. I dream about them, so much so that last week I woke up clawing at my forearm. I then wandered into the medicine cabinet, and applied hydrocortisone, all because I thought they had started climbing over my body and left blistery welts in their wake. I generally come to around the time in the nightmare that someone, usually my mom, consoles me by saying, "It's only a mild case. I won't tell anyone."
As soon as we uncovered the fully functioning micropolis living under my nose -- a civilization I had unknowingly fueled with my own blood -- we looked left, toward the plush, pristine pillow-top that peered out from the hallway, shrink-wrapped and untouched. It seemed so wrong to bring such innocence into such filth. Then Curtis and I turned our heads to the right toward the solid wooden bed frame, ready to cradle our hopes and dreams. Little did the sleigh bed know the only thing it would soon provide would be impossible-to-raid hiding places for our little illegal immigrants.
Then, one by one, oddities of the past few months started making sense. I pulled up my sleeves and stared at my mottled arms, red dots blazing on my pale skin. Those were no hives! And the heater might have caused dry patches, but that itch resulted from a far smaller, sneakier villain. My own bed mates! And all those mattresses, side tables, couches, and bed frames that had increasingly piled up on the curb, they weren’t the unlucky cast offs of interior makeovers—they were testimony to a home infested. The peculiarities I had previously shrugged off began to slap me in the face, or, rather, bite me in the ass.
Having no clue where to begin and already overwhelmed by the enormity and minutia of it all, we popped our collars, slipped on sunglasses, and ducked into the hardware store. We were in desperate need of some Grade A juice, some real hard stuff.
“Psst. Hey, Larry. Yea, what’s good for killing bed bugs, really knocking them out. We need the good stuff.”
Larry winced and shook his head. “Nothin’ kills ‘em. They’re out of control, man. But your best bet is to spray them with this,” he said, holding up a white plastic bottle that I could already picture in my pest killing holsters. “Then, you’re gonna’ want to fill any holes in your floors and walls with this,” and he took a machine gun-looking caulking tool off the shelf. Armed with sprays, covers and caulks, we sped home to unleash guerilla warfare. Tools and weapons gave me back glimpses of the power and control sucked dry by the enemy.
We washed all of our sheets and towels, and all the clothing we stored in our bedroom. That was a solid nine loads right there. I still cringe upon opening our linen closet when I eye each tightly folded piece of cotton, crammed onto each shelf, towering four feet above my head. I think, "What if?" as memories of my laundry abyss take over. During the raid, we had to wash the curtains and circular rugs—but we decided just to toss those. We sprayed down each of our expertly restored antique dressers with the magic liquid in the white bottles, heretofore known as White Magic, zapping a few bugs here and there. Once the furniture had been cleaned out and sprayed and all the clothes washed, we began the caulking of the floors and walls. It seemed like no two pieces of wood connected and we found ourselves all but refinishing the floors with the gloppy white mess. There went Saturday and Sunday. Not sure which of my bites were old and which were recent, I figured they would all disappear, give or take a week, after our chemical laden raid. I was practically developing DNA mutations as a result of all the shit we unleashed into the air.
But the red, itchy, welts emerged like clockwork, averaging two a night. They would glow strong in my morning shower, either on the back of my calf, or forearm, or thigh, even on my shamed cheek. I was becoming my own version that doll whose make-up appears after you put hot water on her face—a wave of the “magic wand” and she had her face on, ready for a night of debauchery and tomfoolery. Yet, the only thing hot water revealed on me were marks of disgrace and defeat that were growing harder to cover up as the warmer months approached.
So, we tried Boric acid under each foot of furniture in our apartment. Larry said that might work—except it didn’t.
We also pulled each staple out of our box spring, the place the most bugs tended to burrow, and one by one the metal fasteners fell to the floor with a tinny sound—resonating in our fabric-free room, reminding us that despite all our efforts and might we were steadily losing the battles and it was becoming clear we were losing the war.
Next, the sleigh bed fell victim. Upon dismantling each slat we realized the pieces formed a tightly knit breeding ground for the bugs. The fact alone that it was wood made the bed frame a likely candidate for the enemy to usurp. We placed the sections along our bedroom wall and commenced our habitual spraying down of all things contaminated with White Magic. As winter slowly turned to spring, and snow melted away to reveal new growth and promises of dormant life, so too had our bedroom been exposed. Our unmasking, however, stripped the room of the trappings of comfort and safety, leaving us to sleep on a distressed mattress on a floor sprinkled with Boric acid and crumbling caulk. The scene, resembling an installation at the MoMA, was as follows: walls lined with the one time formidable headboard and footboard, a dejected boxspring, and rows of empty spray bottles. Title: Psychological Warfare. Each night that Curtis and I surrendered to our bed, he would hold me and whisper, “I’m so sorry I can’t stop them from biting you. I’m so sorry they’re still here… somewhere. Those little fuckers.” I would sigh and leave an understanding kiss on his cheek before rolling over to retrieve the bottle of Skin So Soft and begin my nightly ritual: Spray sheets and pillow, spray arms and then legs, tuck pants into socks and shirt into elastic waistband. Curtis, watching me prepare for a fitful night of sleep, looking on while I geared up to battle during my rest, had ironically enough never felt the sting of our pests. Apparently, he wasn’t as sweet. What he was pedaling was of no interest to the little bloodsuckers, making the abuse I continued to endure all the more unfair and senseless. Whenever he did discover a rouge bug, he would drop it into a clear film canister filled with the chemicals used in the daily dousing of our mattress. Sometimes I’d find him holding the bottle of captured terrorists up to his face, just staring at their upturned bodies lifelessly floating atop the sea of toxins. I think it gave him some sense of victory, of valor, proof that he had at least saved me from these creepy crawlers and that yes, we were infested, even though eyeing culprits were hard to come by as the altitudinous emotional damage mounted.
By this point we stopped inviting people over. We had also stopped going to the movies, what with the upholstered theater chairs and thickly carpeted aisles striking fear in our damaged minds and all. We couldn’t risk it. Netflix became our main connector to the outside world, allowing us to appreciate new stories and interesting people with the security of a plasma screen between us. Our wedding was quickly approaching and our nightly visitors continued to mark me with thick, rough bumps, so I decided once school let out to hide at my mom’s house until the big day. Wearing my strapless, sweetheart gown that put my arms, shoulders, and back on display would be the first little snitch to reveal my dirty secret. Camping out in my old twin bed at mom’s was my only option. Curtis, free of bites, continued to battle it out behind closed doors—defending my honor with every squirt of White Magic and caulking of open spaces.
Once we were hitched—the rice settled, cake eaten, and champagne sipped—we left for our honeymoon. Each night we held each other close, close enough to whisper sweet nothings.
Curtis: You’re beautiful. I love you. Did you check the mattress for bugs?
Me: I’m so happy. I love you. Yes, I checked the mattress. Did you check our luggage?
Curtis: I checked, and I think we’re fine. I can’t wait to go to sleep.
Me: I know! I dreamt about being in bed with you all day.
Curtis: Me too! Mmm… Good night!
Me: Good night! Sleep tight—
Curtis: Don’t even think about it.
The week slipped by in a blur created with five parts rum and three parts blazing sun, and before we sobered up on our second day our joie de vivre had awakened and reminded us of how restful sleep and thread-count sheets truly were. Restored and refueled, we flew home ten days later, emotionally prepared to finish the job we started months earlier.
Tattered white flag in hand, we finished the job by surrendering to the reality that we were fighting a battle best suited for Sisyphus. We put down the gimmicks, tools, and hope, and signed a new lease quite a ways down Queens Boulevard, whistling while we packed. Even though each item (frame, votive, book) had to be doused and quickly loaded into cardboard boxes, and each box then had to be placed into black garbage bags and stacked in the foyer (since the bugs could easily and relentlessly hitchhike on the cardboard), the tedium paid off. We pulled up anchor and set sail.
Dozens of boxes encased in bags later, we speedily figured out what to do with the furniture. In the manner of glossy magazine spreads that informed me at the start of each season what to keep, store, and toss, we determined the future of our furniture. Mattress: keep (after careful chemical treatment by exterminators and encasement in microfiber slipcover). Sleigh bed: store (in mom’s garage while wrapped in plastic). Couch: toss (without thinking twice).
“It’s Moving Day! We’re leaving, we’re leaving! Get me the hell outta here!” I sang as I jumped out of bed (read: mattress on floor). Curtis oversaw the moving out and I managed the moving in. The exterminators showered our new place with chemicals that killed any existing bugs and chemicals that nuked any visitors that decided to welcome us to Rego Park. Rego Park. Not as sugary sweet sounding and sentiment inducing as Sunnyside, but sentimental is so last year.
Recently, Curtis and I took an impromptu stroll through Forest Hills, and my boots clicked against the cobblestones while my neck craned up toward the pre-war buildings. We felt like we had stumbled upon the brick road leading us to Oz. “Maybe, when our lease is up next summer, we can think about buying a place here. I mean, could you imagine? The train, the subway, the restaurants—the young people!”
“It’s certainly younger than the Eastern European retirement community of Rego Park!” Curtis smiled.
“Could you just die?! Dartmouth Street!”
And as much as the idyllic town tugged at our hearts, causing Rego Park to feel increasingly like the USSR and us to feel increasingly strange in it, Curtis squeezed my hand, and pausing in the middle of the road, he leaned his forehead against mine and said, “We may live in Little Russia, with no young people for miles. We may still rent, and we may be far from Manhattan… But tonight we can go home, curl up in our clean bed and know we’re the only two things there. That's about all I need right now. I'm good.”
At the end of the day, all anyone really needs are people we love, people to share our lives with—people to help us fight our battles and help us rebuild when the spray settles. And if you’re lucky enough to find someone who will hold you close at night even when your bed is plagued with bed bugs, well, then that person is someone you can trust will hold you close for years to come. Because let’s face it, you both know each other’s deepest, dirtiest secret and that right there is enough blackmail to bond you for all eternity.
I spent my last Sunday morning as a city girl camped out at one of those coffee shops that’s too cool for coffee and has now moved into the realm of exotic teas and gluten free baked goods, reading the Sunday Styles and phrasing my own wedding announcement. “Ms. Finley, who will keep her name, wed Mr. Whitman last night at some magnificent waterside soiree.” I may not have been able to afford the croissants and cabs of New York City anymore, but the tradeoff was having some money tucked away for monogrammed napkins and a honeymoon next summer. I could deal with that.
And so I began making the negotiations betrothed people make. I (begrudgingly) traded in the bustle of Manhattan for the bustle of a Nicole Miller gown, and decided to head east. With Curtis working on Long Island and me teaching in the city, we battled it out in a mean game of Tug of War. Curtis would heave the red taped-off center on our rope toward Huntington, then I would yank it back near Brooklyn. Both tired and ready to let the real negotiations begin, the rope started to hover over Queens. I neatly packed up my books, stuffed animals, and college photo albums, and off I inched—watching the rows of brownstones and parade of hipsters fade behind the horizon—hoping LL Cool J was right when he sang, Queens got the vets, Queens be the best.
Far from my best-laid plan, I went apartment hunting with my mom. Curtis, knowing all too well the impulsive decisions we would soon make, wisely instructed, “Don’t sign anything.” After researching the address of some buildings near the 7 line, my mom and I hopped into her Honda and hightailed it for a day of looking and thinking... Oh, who were we kidding? We were signing.
I can picture my first impression now: whitewashed arched doorframe and quaint walkway, two gleaming, marble fireplaces in the lobby, and a staircase that cleaved left and right. In my pathetic attempt to play it cool, I just smiled and exchanged this-is-it looks with my mom, all while jumping up and down. Smooth. (As we’ve always said, we could never work for the CIA.) Then I saw my potential home sweet home, a corner apartment on the sixth floor, cattycornered to the floor’s garbage disposal. All the closer to throw my garbage out with. The level of delusion still frightens me when I think about it. I’ve been told I see the world through rose-colored glasses, but let’s be honest—it’s more like I take intermittent, frenetic glances from behind a satin eye mask.
“Great door! So cute!” I chirped.
“Mmm-hmm!” mom smiled back.
Goners, the broker cackled to himself. “And this is the kitchen,” Mr. Broker explained. And luckily he did, because the sterile white room sans cabinetry or appliances that we were staring into could have gone one for one against a psychiatric holding room. I appreciated the clarification.
“And this is the living room,” Mr. Broker pointed out as we continued the tour, or rather, herding of sheep. “And the bathroom...” Mr. Broker trailed off. OK, so it had a hole in either corner of the room, marking the place the toilet and bathtub would one day be affixed to. My gut told me I needed that apartment, and beyond that my gut was also telling me that it was the last apartment left in Queens. What is that, gut? The last apartment ever? Oh no, I better sign. What’s that, gut? You think I should sign immediately? You’re probably right, gut. (I ate Indian food the night before and I realize now that I might have misread that message from my gut. Either that, or I was high off veneer and paint fumes.)
Why the deranged obsession with a frighteningly unfinished apartment? Why the need to move into that apartment right then? This is where I’m reminded of sage advice I received in a fortune cookie years ago, a fortune I’ve saved and framed: A handful of common sense is worth a bushel of learning. Full of knowledge, there was no room left for common sense. I ended up signing the lease because it resided in Sunnyside. Yes, I chose my future home based on my attachment to the song "Stay on the Sunnyside," a song Curtis put on a mix tape for me while we were dating.
The name was a sign.
The name was all I needed.
The name turned out to be the best part of the whole place.
***
A few weeks after moving in, I woke up to a familiar scene for the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, or any other creature living in the sewers. Green-tinged water trailed down my bedroom wall and pooled on the increasingly warped wooden floor. The ancient heating system released enough scorching steam at night to press my shirts or power an engine, and it was definitely hot enough to create a mirage. I prayed for a mirage, or at least a reflection from another building. I tiptoed out of my bed, toward the slimy cascade, wiping beads of sweat from my hairline. I slid my fingers down the shellacked mess and I realized it was no illusion. The walls were leaking and quickly turning into mold. Overnight. My rose-colored glasses and eye masks gathering dust in the corner, I was quickly settling into life in Sunnyside.
There was no live-in Super, so it was nearly a week before I contacted a human being at the leasing office, then another few days before they arranged for someone to come check out the "eledged" mold, and from that timeframe I estimated it would be about a year or so before it was cleaned up.
Yet clean it up they did. But of course, it had to be before 4:00, and since I’m with students everyday until at least 3:40, I hailed a cab faster than you can say, “Spores are killing me!” Thank goodness I made it home in time to watch the barely functioning employee douse my wall with bleach, mop up the floor, and extend his hand for a tip. Here’s a tip: Fix the leak!
He assured me it was, “All better, all better,” and left me seething with clenched teeth. By the end of that week I started to notice bubbles popping out of the bathroom wall. My adolescent walls (that cried at night and sprouted acne by day) needed obvious and immediate repair. Yet before I had time to dwell on what might be inside the bubbles, one of said bubbles grew an arm! Upon closer inspection, the protrusion wasn’t an arm as much as, with God as my witness, a mushroom. And unfortunately, the only mood altering this mushroom produced was agitation.
Getting dressed the morning of the fungi finding, I mindlessly outfitted myself in my teacher uniform of cardigan and khakis. With each button I fastened, I silenced my gut that kept whispering, "I might have been wrong. Sorry, Alice. Apparently this ain’t no Wonderland."
I scratched my neck and cursed the heater for sucking all moisture from my skin. As luck would have it, the defunct heating system averaged the perfect temperature to not only farm mushrooms, but also bake my skin. As I slammed my front door closed, I saw a flyer posted on it with the word ATTENTION: MEETING RE. BUILDING LAWSUIT. Frankly, I wouldn’t have been surprised to learn my apartment was condemned, but it was just a friendly reminder regarding the building meeting later that night. My first thought was, “If it starts at 5:00, how soon do I need to come home to avoid the meeting and how quiet do I need to be in order to pretend not to be home yet?” Despite the strong tug of my desire to avoid all things group, the tug of why the fuck is this building involved in legal matters won out.
Skip to quarter past five that evening, upon tripping over some disgarded furniture in front of my building, I flew through the lobby doors and took my place among the we’re-fed-up-and-we’re-not-going-to-take-it-anymore crowd goers.
“It’s been a few months since we last gathered to discuss the legal proceedings against Vantage Management,” the Tenant Advisory Board chairwoman said. “But before we catch everyone up, does anyone have new concerns or issues with their apartment?”
“My rat problem has gotten out of control! Now I’m trapping about one a week. They keep finding their way through that sliver of space between the pipes and the floor,” one neighbor complained.
“Try stuffing that space with Brillo pads and then covering it with caulk. Worked for us, so far,” offered a fellow friend.
“Well, I have roaches all over my kitchen,” voiced a third person. “No matter how well I seal bags and containers, they keep finding their way into my cabinets!”
“Have you tried sealing bags and boxes with tape and then enclosing them in Ziploc bags?” suggested another member of the masses.
I thought I had it bad with mold, a radiator that seemed to be housing a prisoner trapped inside clanging to come out at 5:30 every morning, and a toilet that sporadically went on strike. Maybe I had broken out in hives over the last few months, but who wouldn’t have a visceral reaction to a crumbling apartment and foreclosed dreams? I was starting to realize that I had it easy and that I would take the path of least engagement; nod and look fed up, then scurry like a good little mouse up into my apartment and count the days until Curtis moved in. Why deal with it when you can ignore it? So that’s exactly what I did. Hives making my woolen sweaters unwearable, I soldiered into the winter months warmed by the knowledge I would soon live with my husband-to-be. Staying on the sunny side would be markedly easier with him next to me.
When moving day finally came the weekend after Valentine’s Day and our six-year anniversary, it seemed as though all the loose ends swirling around my head were neatly weaving together into a cuddly cashmere knit. In preparation for our imminent cohabitation, we treated ourselves to a modern day marriage bed. Foregoing one strewn with hand-dyed fabrics and rose petals, we opted for the current mark of a couple’s switch from single life to commitment: a pillow-top mattress and box spring set from Sleepys, and a massive mahogany sleigh bed from Pottery Barn. Those two components were also the last to be moved in from Curtis’s truck, and at the end of a day serving as a painful test of patience and love, we were approaching the finish line. I could see the Gatorade and the shiny medal awarding us Best Couple Ever. Bring it on, mold! Bring it on, busted radiator and plumbing!
Since my old mattress cost about a hundred dollars Memorial Day weekend two years prior, it weighed about as much as a hundred dollar bill. Its lack of cushioning and back support had greatly impeded my hours of rest, but it made the last step of moving day incredibly easy. We lifted it off the metal frame, turned it over, and each let out of breathy gasp.
“Is that… Is that a… stain?” I asked.
“It’s moving. I’ve never seen a stain move. Have you?”
“Look! There’s like five of them. What’s all this black stuff in the corner over here?”
Our eyes met, our faces blanched with realization, and we uttered the words that have left an indelible mark on our lives and bedding. Bed bugs.
Writing this now I am itching the nape of my neck and the back of my leg, worried for a moment that they’re back. I dream about them, so much so that last week I woke up clawing at my forearm. I then wandered into the medicine cabinet, and applied hydrocortisone, all because I thought they had started climbing over my body and left blistery welts in their wake. I generally come to around the time in the nightmare that someone, usually my mom, consoles me by saying, "It's only a mild case. I won't tell anyone."
As soon as we uncovered the fully functioning micropolis living under my nose -- a civilization I had unknowingly fueled with my own blood -- we looked left, toward the plush, pristine pillow-top that peered out from the hallway, shrink-wrapped and untouched. It seemed so wrong to bring such innocence into such filth. Then Curtis and I turned our heads to the right toward the solid wooden bed frame, ready to cradle our hopes and dreams. Little did the sleigh bed know the only thing it would soon provide would be impossible-to-raid hiding places for our little illegal immigrants.
Then, one by one, oddities of the past few months started making sense. I pulled up my sleeves and stared at my mottled arms, red dots blazing on my pale skin. Those were no hives! And the heater might have caused dry patches, but that itch resulted from a far smaller, sneakier villain. My own bed mates! And all those mattresses, side tables, couches, and bed frames that had increasingly piled up on the curb, they weren’t the unlucky cast offs of interior makeovers—they were testimony to a home infested. The peculiarities I had previously shrugged off began to slap me in the face, or, rather, bite me in the ass.
Having no clue where to begin and already overwhelmed by the enormity and minutia of it all, we popped our collars, slipped on sunglasses, and ducked into the hardware store. We were in desperate need of some Grade A juice, some real hard stuff.
“Psst. Hey, Larry. Yea, what’s good for killing bed bugs, really knocking them out. We need the good stuff.”
Larry winced and shook his head. “Nothin’ kills ‘em. They’re out of control, man. But your best bet is to spray them with this,” he said, holding up a white plastic bottle that I could already picture in my pest killing holsters. “Then, you’re gonna’ want to fill any holes in your floors and walls with this,” and he took a machine gun-looking caulking tool off the shelf. Armed with sprays, covers and caulks, we sped home to unleash guerilla warfare. Tools and weapons gave me back glimpses of the power and control sucked dry by the enemy.
We washed all of our sheets and towels, and all the clothing we stored in our bedroom. That was a solid nine loads right there. I still cringe upon opening our linen closet when I eye each tightly folded piece of cotton, crammed onto each shelf, towering four feet above my head. I think, "What if?" as memories of my laundry abyss take over. During the raid, we had to wash the curtains and circular rugs—but we decided just to toss those. We sprayed down each of our expertly restored antique dressers with the magic liquid in the white bottles, heretofore known as White Magic, zapping a few bugs here and there. Once the furniture had been cleaned out and sprayed and all the clothes washed, we began the caulking of the floors and walls. It seemed like no two pieces of wood connected and we found ourselves all but refinishing the floors with the gloppy white mess. There went Saturday and Sunday. Not sure which of my bites were old and which were recent, I figured they would all disappear, give or take a week, after our chemical laden raid. I was practically developing DNA mutations as a result of all the shit we unleashed into the air.
But the red, itchy, welts emerged like clockwork, averaging two a night. They would glow strong in my morning shower, either on the back of my calf, or forearm, or thigh, even on my shamed cheek. I was becoming my own version that doll whose make-up appears after you put hot water on her face—a wave of the “magic wand” and she had her face on, ready for a night of debauchery and tomfoolery. Yet, the only thing hot water revealed on me were marks of disgrace and defeat that were growing harder to cover up as the warmer months approached.
So, we tried Boric acid under each foot of furniture in our apartment. Larry said that might work—except it didn’t.
We also pulled each staple out of our box spring, the place the most bugs tended to burrow, and one by one the metal fasteners fell to the floor with a tinny sound—resonating in our fabric-free room, reminding us that despite all our efforts and might we were steadily losing the battles and it was becoming clear we were losing the war.
Next, the sleigh bed fell victim. Upon dismantling each slat we realized the pieces formed a tightly knit breeding ground for the bugs. The fact alone that it was wood made the bed frame a likely candidate for the enemy to usurp. We placed the sections along our bedroom wall and commenced our habitual spraying down of all things contaminated with White Magic. As winter slowly turned to spring, and snow melted away to reveal new growth and promises of dormant life, so too had our bedroom been exposed. Our unmasking, however, stripped the room of the trappings of comfort and safety, leaving us to sleep on a distressed mattress on a floor sprinkled with Boric acid and crumbling caulk. The scene, resembling an installation at the MoMA, was as follows: walls lined with the one time formidable headboard and footboard, a dejected boxspring, and rows of empty spray bottles. Title: Psychological Warfare. Each night that Curtis and I surrendered to our bed, he would hold me and whisper, “I’m so sorry I can’t stop them from biting you. I’m so sorry they’re still here… somewhere. Those little fuckers.” I would sigh and leave an understanding kiss on his cheek before rolling over to retrieve the bottle of Skin So Soft and begin my nightly ritual: Spray sheets and pillow, spray arms and then legs, tuck pants into socks and shirt into elastic waistband. Curtis, watching me prepare for a fitful night of sleep, looking on while I geared up to battle during my rest, had ironically enough never felt the sting of our pests. Apparently, he wasn’t as sweet. What he was pedaling was of no interest to the little bloodsuckers, making the abuse I continued to endure all the more unfair and senseless. Whenever he did discover a rouge bug, he would drop it into a clear film canister filled with the chemicals used in the daily dousing of our mattress. Sometimes I’d find him holding the bottle of captured terrorists up to his face, just staring at their upturned bodies lifelessly floating atop the sea of toxins. I think it gave him some sense of victory, of valor, proof that he had at least saved me from these creepy crawlers and that yes, we were infested, even though eyeing culprits were hard to come by as the altitudinous emotional damage mounted.
By this point we stopped inviting people over. We had also stopped going to the movies, what with the upholstered theater chairs and thickly carpeted aisles striking fear in our damaged minds and all. We couldn’t risk it. Netflix became our main connector to the outside world, allowing us to appreciate new stories and interesting people with the security of a plasma screen between us. Our wedding was quickly approaching and our nightly visitors continued to mark me with thick, rough bumps, so I decided once school let out to hide at my mom’s house until the big day. Wearing my strapless, sweetheart gown that put my arms, shoulders, and back on display would be the first little snitch to reveal my dirty secret. Camping out in my old twin bed at mom’s was my only option. Curtis, free of bites, continued to battle it out behind closed doors—defending my honor with every squirt of White Magic and caulking of open spaces.
Once we were hitched—the rice settled, cake eaten, and champagne sipped—we left for our honeymoon. Each night we held each other close, close enough to whisper sweet nothings.
Curtis: You’re beautiful. I love you. Did you check the mattress for bugs?
Me: I’m so happy. I love you. Yes, I checked the mattress. Did you check our luggage?
Curtis: I checked, and I think we’re fine. I can’t wait to go to sleep.
Me: I know! I dreamt about being in bed with you all day.
Curtis: Me too! Mmm… Good night!
Me: Good night! Sleep tight—
Curtis: Don’t even think about it.
The week slipped by in a blur created with five parts rum and three parts blazing sun, and before we sobered up on our second day our joie de vivre had awakened and reminded us of how restful sleep and thread-count sheets truly were. Restored and refueled, we flew home ten days later, emotionally prepared to finish the job we started months earlier.
Tattered white flag in hand, we finished the job by surrendering to the reality that we were fighting a battle best suited for Sisyphus. We put down the gimmicks, tools, and hope, and signed a new lease quite a ways down Queens Boulevard, whistling while we packed. Even though each item (frame, votive, book) had to be doused and quickly loaded into cardboard boxes, and each box then had to be placed into black garbage bags and stacked in the foyer (since the bugs could easily and relentlessly hitchhike on the cardboard), the tedium paid off. We pulled up anchor and set sail.
Dozens of boxes encased in bags later, we speedily figured out what to do with the furniture. In the manner of glossy magazine spreads that informed me at the start of each season what to keep, store, and toss, we determined the future of our furniture. Mattress: keep (after careful chemical treatment by exterminators and encasement in microfiber slipcover). Sleigh bed: store (in mom’s garage while wrapped in plastic). Couch: toss (without thinking twice).
“It’s Moving Day! We’re leaving, we’re leaving! Get me the hell outta here!” I sang as I jumped out of bed (read: mattress on floor). Curtis oversaw the moving out and I managed the moving in. The exterminators showered our new place with chemicals that killed any existing bugs and chemicals that nuked any visitors that decided to welcome us to Rego Park. Rego Park. Not as sugary sweet sounding and sentiment inducing as Sunnyside, but sentimental is so last year.
Recently, Curtis and I took an impromptu stroll through Forest Hills, and my boots clicked against the cobblestones while my neck craned up toward the pre-war buildings. We felt like we had stumbled upon the brick road leading us to Oz. “Maybe, when our lease is up next summer, we can think about buying a place here. I mean, could you imagine? The train, the subway, the restaurants—the young people!”
“It’s certainly younger than the Eastern European retirement community of Rego Park!” Curtis smiled.
“Could you just die?! Dartmouth Street!”
And as much as the idyllic town tugged at our hearts, causing Rego Park to feel increasingly like the USSR and us to feel increasingly strange in it, Curtis squeezed my hand, and pausing in the middle of the road, he leaned his forehead against mine and said, “We may live in Little Russia, with no young people for miles. We may still rent, and we may be far from Manhattan… But tonight we can go home, curl up in our clean bed and know we’re the only two things there. That's about all I need right now. I'm good.”
At the end of the day, all anyone really needs are people we love, people to share our lives with—people to help us fight our battles and help us rebuild when the spray settles. And if you’re lucky enough to find someone who will hold you close at night even when your bed is plagued with bed bugs, well, then that person is someone you can trust will hold you close for years to come. Because let’s face it, you both know each other’s deepest, dirtiest secret and that right there is enough blackmail to bond you for all eternity.
Monday, November 9, 2009
Golden Girl
I have a lot of grandma tendencies. From a penchant for cardigans and anything free, to being prematurely gray, I have become the grandma I’ve always wanted. Yes, I can throw back quite a few ounces of whiskey, party to Britney classics including ‘I’m A Slave 4 U,’ all while squeezed into a onesie from American Apparel, but I’ll always be home before 1:00. Chances are that this geriatric aspect of my identity stems from never having met my mom’s parents and growing up with only my Nanny, my dad’s rough and tough Irish Catholic mom. In first grade when kids talked about how their fit and fabulous Nonas and Pop Pops and Bubbies and Babas had them over for sleepovers and took them to Boca, all I could think was, “Oh shit. Nanny is seventy-six! What’s the chance she’ll live to see me get to second grade?!”
But live, she did. And she kept on living, despite repetitive threats during Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners she’d soon “be in the box” (read: bite the dust). She went on living until the dignified age of ninety-three. Nanny was not the woman I would necessarily pluck out of a line up of potential family members, however. She was the woman who told me at my fifth birthday (which she reluctantly attended in her polyester party dress and visible slip) that I shouldn’t smile. “Don’t smile, you have an ugly smile.”
Thanks for coming to my party, Grams!
Things definitely improved in the years since my five year old fete, but she never swaddled me in a hand-croqueted blanket, begged me to tell her about all the boys I liked in school, or gingerly braided my hair. The usual scene from my middle school years went something like this:
Nanny: Jesus, Mary, and Joseph you’re bigger! You’re bigger than the last time I saw you!
Me: Yea, I grew actually, but taller. Now I even wear a size 9 shoe. I grew two inches this month.
Nanny: Oh that was like Billy! Ah! He had those growing bumps in his knees and was in bed for two weeks! Ah!
Me: Yea, I know, I have those “growing bumps” too. They’re really painfu—
Nanny: I saw the Mets play today. Awful! Tisk, tisk, tisk. What’s with their pitcher? Oh, and I read something about them today in the paper. Goddammit where is that paper? (Cue the incessant shuffling of papers on the kitchen table in attempt to find the list or article or coupon she needed. The rearranging continued for the duration of our visit and could only be paused during a break for Entenmann’s crumb cake and coffee.)
End scene.
So unlike my friends who would call their grandparents to share exciting news and moments of glory, I accepted my Nanny for what she was—someone doing her best, even though her best erred on morbid and depressing—and I set off to be my own grandmother.
Genetic predispositions helped this effort tremendously. Sprouting my first gray hair at age seventeen captivated me in the way I was enthralled by my first period: I knew it was the mark of a new era in my life, but I had no idea what a complete pain in the ass it was going to be. So I oohed and ahhed over my startlingly early color change, and set out to buy Loreal, dark brown 4H.
A few years later, during another stint at being athletic (“And really this time, I’m going to run everyday, and that will mean I’ll need new stretch pants... Oh this is exciting!”) I returned from trotting around the block only to feel a shock of pain sear through my knee.
“I can’t look! You look!” I dramatically pleaded to my mom. “It feels like something’s popped out! I can’t look! Ow ow ow!” Then I cried.
“Oh no! Oh no! Sit down, roll up your pant leg, sit down. Oh no, what if you broke something!” (My mom is not the person I should go to when I’m panicked about something. She is the frayed wire to my stack of nearby papers: One false move and everything goes up in flames.)
“What do you see? Now you’re making me nervous!”
“Phew! Nothing here but a little swelling. You look fine. Oh, except... for... this... What is this?” She poked at a bulging vein in my leg. “Looks like you should get this checked out.”
“Oh no, what if I have leg cancer?” You see, ever since my dad died when I was eleven, every affliction I’ve had since has been some (usually rare) form of cancer. Got my first period: Bladder cancer. Develop a canker sore: Cheek cancer. No cancer is too rare.
Even though I’m always sure I have some fatal and complicated disease, thinking about going to the doctor makes me feel even more undone. And without fail, I slowly belay myself back down Cancer Mountain, and the mind work goes something like this (Note the gross misunderstanding of actual medical knowledge):
What if it’s something worse than I expected? The vein is pulsing, it feels like it’s about to break. Yes, it’s going to break. I should stop running—for sure! What if it’s that thing that woman had from last week’s episode of Mystery Diagnosis? (Insert quick Web MD research here.) Looks like I have deep vein thrombosis. Oh wow! That’s serious! What if I need invasive surgery? Oh fuck. Just what I need right now. How will I be able to take off from work? Now I’m really anxious. Actually, now that I think about it, it’s feeling better. It’s probably fine. I’ll ice it. Yea, no more running, I’ll be fine. Just in case, it says to wear a compression stocking. Wearing this knee brace would probably do the same thing. (Slip knee brace on.) OK, this is uncomfortable. Whatever, I’ll just slap it a few times and ice it.
Well, turns out the knee brace didn’t do the trick, and that’s how I found myself waiting in the Weill Cornell Vein & Vascular Center. After a few scans and pokes, I was ushered into the doctor’s office where he scanned my records and said, “Oh, you’re only twenty-two! You’re young…”
“Thank you?”
(Oh but he wasn’t finished.) “… to have varicose veins! Hmm. It’s only going to get worse when you get pregnant. Yup, a valve in the vein seems to have shut down. It’s called an incompetent valve.”
Fuck. I’d spent my whole life over-achieving and my own body was betraying me! Incompetent valve? Thanks, old body.
I’d like to note that just because I’ve always tended to act like a grandma and really, really want a grandma, doesn’t mean I like to hear I’m aging. There’s a fine distinction between feeling old and looking old, and the latter is something that frightens me. And so it wasn’t when the doctor informed me that a catheter was to be inserted in my calf and moved up into my groin, collapsing the problem vein along the way, that I started hyperventilating: It was when he said I had to wear a thigh-high compression stocking for two weeks straight and then after every time I work out. I realize now that was just the universe’s way of telling me I should stay put on the couch and save running for some younger, more able bodied sap.
Believe it or not, I was quite the trooper when the time came for the big surgery. I was awake for the procedure and only received anesthesia in my leg, one needle at a time all the way up from my knee. I did, however, get extremely clammy, nauseas, and green. I kept saying, in a loud monotone fashion, “I’M GETTING REALLY HOT. IS IT HOT IN HERE? I’M FINE. AREN’T YOU WARM? I’M FINE.” After all was collapsed and stitched, two nurses shoved my leg into the compression stocking and sent me on my way.
Back in my apartment, my oblivious and impossibly self-important roommates both asked, “Why are you home early today? Are you sick?” No, bitches, I had massive surgery and I’m lucky to be alive but it’s OK that you forgot after I’ve told you about thirty times. Wrapped in a blanket and sucking back green tea with honey, I pictured my legs during my ninth month of pregnancy and the image was that of a topographic map. “Now I’m old, ugly, and getting worse,” I indulged myself. And just like that, Ethan called.
Our moms were best friends and we spent all of our summers together on the shores of Long Island. Ethan, the funniest person I know, is my panacea for all things troubling. His timing was impeccable. Instead of slipping into the looming depression coming on, I flung off my blanketed encasement and busily prepared my outfit.
No heels—bad for the vein. No dress—can see the stocking. Pants then. I smacked some make up on my ashen face and slicked my sad hair back with a headband. It was the best I could do. Ethan arrived, with open arms, and we set out for an adventure. While giving him the dramatic play-by-play of the day’s events, Ethan was most taken by the stocking aspect. “Let me see it!”
I inched up my pant leg, and revealed the thickest, oddest flesh colored nylon one has ever seen. And with that, Ethan gripped his stomach, flung his head back with a verging-on-evil laugh, and screamed, “Oh my God! You’re Blanche from the ‘Golden Girls’!”
“Shut up! You’re an asshole! ... But you’re right.”
I was bearing the cross, or nylon, of my incompetent body, all while fabulously dressed and up for a night of dirty martinis. And if I do have to be my own grandmother, I might as well be Blanche—the coolest grandma of them all. She too had lived with a bunch of egocentric gals, never let her glamorous guard down, was a favorite with the guys, and leaned toward the dramatic side of life. She made her uncharted Mecca to Florida and invented the rules as she went. If Blanche could do, so could I. Now if only I could get in touch with my podiatrist for some new inserts…
But live, she did. And she kept on living, despite repetitive threats during Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners she’d soon “be in the box” (read: bite the dust). She went on living until the dignified age of ninety-three. Nanny was not the woman I would necessarily pluck out of a line up of potential family members, however. She was the woman who told me at my fifth birthday (which she reluctantly attended in her polyester party dress and visible slip) that I shouldn’t smile. “Don’t smile, you have an ugly smile.”
Thanks for coming to my party, Grams!
Things definitely improved in the years since my five year old fete, but she never swaddled me in a hand-croqueted blanket, begged me to tell her about all the boys I liked in school, or gingerly braided my hair. The usual scene from my middle school years went something like this:
Nanny: Jesus, Mary, and Joseph you’re bigger! You’re bigger than the last time I saw you!
Me: Yea, I grew actually, but taller. Now I even wear a size 9 shoe. I grew two inches this month.
Nanny: Oh that was like Billy! Ah! He had those growing bumps in his knees and was in bed for two weeks! Ah!
Me: Yea, I know, I have those “growing bumps” too. They’re really painfu—
Nanny: I saw the Mets play today. Awful! Tisk, tisk, tisk. What’s with their pitcher? Oh, and I read something about them today in the paper. Goddammit where is that paper? (Cue the incessant shuffling of papers on the kitchen table in attempt to find the list or article or coupon she needed. The rearranging continued for the duration of our visit and could only be paused during a break for Entenmann’s crumb cake and coffee.)
End scene.
So unlike my friends who would call their grandparents to share exciting news and moments of glory, I accepted my Nanny for what she was—someone doing her best, even though her best erred on morbid and depressing—and I set off to be my own grandmother.
Genetic predispositions helped this effort tremendously. Sprouting my first gray hair at age seventeen captivated me in the way I was enthralled by my first period: I knew it was the mark of a new era in my life, but I had no idea what a complete pain in the ass it was going to be. So I oohed and ahhed over my startlingly early color change, and set out to buy Loreal, dark brown 4H.
A few years later, during another stint at being athletic (“And really this time, I’m going to run everyday, and that will mean I’ll need new stretch pants... Oh this is exciting!”) I returned from trotting around the block only to feel a shock of pain sear through my knee.
“I can’t look! You look!” I dramatically pleaded to my mom. “It feels like something’s popped out! I can’t look! Ow ow ow!” Then I cried.
“Oh no! Oh no! Sit down, roll up your pant leg, sit down. Oh no, what if you broke something!” (My mom is not the person I should go to when I’m panicked about something. She is the frayed wire to my stack of nearby papers: One false move and everything goes up in flames.)
“What do you see? Now you’re making me nervous!”
“Phew! Nothing here but a little swelling. You look fine. Oh, except... for... this... What is this?” She poked at a bulging vein in my leg. “Looks like you should get this checked out.”
“Oh no, what if I have leg cancer?” You see, ever since my dad died when I was eleven, every affliction I’ve had since has been some (usually rare) form of cancer. Got my first period: Bladder cancer. Develop a canker sore: Cheek cancer. No cancer is too rare.
Even though I’m always sure I have some fatal and complicated disease, thinking about going to the doctor makes me feel even more undone. And without fail, I slowly belay myself back down Cancer Mountain, and the mind work goes something like this (Note the gross misunderstanding of actual medical knowledge):
What if it’s something worse than I expected? The vein is pulsing, it feels like it’s about to break. Yes, it’s going to break. I should stop running—for sure! What if it’s that thing that woman had from last week’s episode of Mystery Diagnosis? (Insert quick Web MD research here.) Looks like I have deep vein thrombosis. Oh wow! That’s serious! What if I need invasive surgery? Oh fuck. Just what I need right now. How will I be able to take off from work? Now I’m really anxious. Actually, now that I think about it, it’s feeling better. It’s probably fine. I’ll ice it. Yea, no more running, I’ll be fine. Just in case, it says to wear a compression stocking. Wearing this knee brace would probably do the same thing. (Slip knee brace on.) OK, this is uncomfortable. Whatever, I’ll just slap it a few times and ice it.
Well, turns out the knee brace didn’t do the trick, and that’s how I found myself waiting in the Weill Cornell Vein & Vascular Center. After a few scans and pokes, I was ushered into the doctor’s office where he scanned my records and said, “Oh, you’re only twenty-two! You’re young…”
“Thank you?”
(Oh but he wasn’t finished.) “… to have varicose veins! Hmm. It’s only going to get worse when you get pregnant. Yup, a valve in the vein seems to have shut down. It’s called an incompetent valve.”
Fuck. I’d spent my whole life over-achieving and my own body was betraying me! Incompetent valve? Thanks, old body.
I’d like to note that just because I’ve always tended to act like a grandma and really, really want a grandma, doesn’t mean I like to hear I’m aging. There’s a fine distinction between feeling old and looking old, and the latter is something that frightens me. And so it wasn’t when the doctor informed me that a catheter was to be inserted in my calf and moved up into my groin, collapsing the problem vein along the way, that I started hyperventilating: It was when he said I had to wear a thigh-high compression stocking for two weeks straight and then after every time I work out. I realize now that was just the universe’s way of telling me I should stay put on the couch and save running for some younger, more able bodied sap.
Believe it or not, I was quite the trooper when the time came for the big surgery. I was awake for the procedure and only received anesthesia in my leg, one needle at a time all the way up from my knee. I did, however, get extremely clammy, nauseas, and green. I kept saying, in a loud monotone fashion, “I’M GETTING REALLY HOT. IS IT HOT IN HERE? I’M FINE. AREN’T YOU WARM? I’M FINE.” After all was collapsed and stitched, two nurses shoved my leg into the compression stocking and sent me on my way.
Back in my apartment, my oblivious and impossibly self-important roommates both asked, “Why are you home early today? Are you sick?” No, bitches, I had massive surgery and I’m lucky to be alive but it’s OK that you forgot after I’ve told you about thirty times. Wrapped in a blanket and sucking back green tea with honey, I pictured my legs during my ninth month of pregnancy and the image was that of a topographic map. “Now I’m old, ugly, and getting worse,” I indulged myself. And just like that, Ethan called.
Our moms were best friends and we spent all of our summers together on the shores of Long Island. Ethan, the funniest person I know, is my panacea for all things troubling. His timing was impeccable. Instead of slipping into the looming depression coming on, I flung off my blanketed encasement and busily prepared my outfit.
No heels—bad for the vein. No dress—can see the stocking. Pants then. I smacked some make up on my ashen face and slicked my sad hair back with a headband. It was the best I could do. Ethan arrived, with open arms, and we set out for an adventure. While giving him the dramatic play-by-play of the day’s events, Ethan was most taken by the stocking aspect. “Let me see it!”
I inched up my pant leg, and revealed the thickest, oddest flesh colored nylon one has ever seen. And with that, Ethan gripped his stomach, flung his head back with a verging-on-evil laugh, and screamed, “Oh my God! You’re Blanche from the ‘Golden Girls’!”
“Shut up! You’re an asshole! ... But you’re right.”
I was bearing the cross, or nylon, of my incompetent body, all while fabulously dressed and up for a night of dirty martinis. And if I do have to be my own grandmother, I might as well be Blanche—the coolest grandma of them all. She too had lived with a bunch of egocentric gals, never let her glamorous guard down, was a favorite with the guys, and leaned toward the dramatic side of life. She made her uncharted Mecca to Florida and invented the rules as she went. If Blanche could do, so could I. Now if only I could get in touch with my podiatrist for some new inserts…
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
I vote for me
“I challenge this voter!”
Oh great.
“How am I supposed to know that this woman—“(Mind you, I’m standing right there, listening to this disgruntled voting booth worker question not only my identity, but from the sound of it, my gender…) “—is who she says she is?!”
I wanted to lean into him—while he sat behind his little plastic table and one inch thick glasses—sneer down on his little bald head, and yell, “And how am I supposed to know that you’re mentally stable?” But that would not have gotten me into the voting booth any faster. In fact, that would probably have ended with me being handcuffed and kicking my legs in the air, all while being escorted outside.
“Well, check under Whitman then,” I suggested, after Mr. Happy paged through the Rolodex of A-L and had not found me registered under my maiden name of Finley. And that’s how this whole song and dance started.
I might as well have told Mr. Happy I was planning to tar and feather the voting booths when I admitted I wasn’t quite sure what name I was registered under. It was then he threw his arms up and shouted, “Oh no! She can’t vote today! She doesn’t even know what her name is!”
Luckily, I was smart enough to stay calm and not throw my arms up too and stamp my feet. That is what I would have done in the past. Not this time! This time I made calculated and measured remarks. I explained, “Well, you see, I haven’t changed all of my identification over to my married name yet. We just got married last year and—“
“Last year? So what name do you go by?” Mr. Happy yell-asked me.
I felt like saying, "That's a great question, Mr. Happy! A question I don't really know the answer to. You see, I go by Ms. Finley during the day, but by Mrs. Whitman in my personal matters. My mail comes to Whitman but I love being a Finley... I'm so happy you asked! I'm just so confused about that." But obviously, I didn't explore that bit of irony with him in the moment.
In actuality, I said, "Yes, I was married last year, but not all of my information has been changed yet. I live here, in Queens, with my husband,” I smiled, and turned to point to Curtis, only to see that he was trying to stand off to the side, hide by the voting booth, and let me talk my way out of this mess I had so innocently gotten myself into. All I had to do was look at him to hear what he was thinking: “The only advice the clerk at Town Hall gave you when getting our marriage license was to be consistent. And here we are, not sure what our name is. I’m just sayin’…”
Ugh, I knew he was right. Not only does my driver’s license have my maiden name on it but it also has my mother’s home address—the place I officially moved out of upon going to college seven years ago. Oops! But c’mon, who wants to go to the DMV?
Just when I thought all hope was lost and that Mr. Happy would be sending me packing, three very lovely fellow volunteers swooped in and saved me! “Let’s read the manual, it has every answer to any question you could ever have,” a lovely 80 year-old Irishman informed Mr. Happy.
“What does it matter anyway, what name her driver’s license says? She voted in the Presidential election last year under Whitman. Just let her vote again under her married name!” a maternal 73 year-old vowed for me. I really had the urge at that moment to call her Grandma. I get very emotional and attached during intense moments. And anyone willing to stand up for me always and immediately becomes my best friend in my book.
“C’mon, Mr. Happy. Don’t you remember what it’s like to be a newlywed? You’re changing your life, you’re starting new, and there’s so much to do! And besides, I don’t think this lovely lady is pretending to be someone else,” my third defender chimed in.
Thanks, guys!
The four of us, standing together, creating a pretty solid case for my right to vote, was an impressive sight. Even though I was completely mortified, experiencing stomach palpitations, and compulsively eyeing the exit door, I didn’t back down. I stood my ground and knew I was going to vote for mayor and city comptroller even if it killed me—I was becoming a political activist right before my eyes! Having just come from the gym and running one very terrifying 14 minute mile, I was full of all sorts of emotions: Runner’s high, empowerment, embarrassment, excitement… The feeling was akin to what it would be like if while I led a riot and started setting buildings on fire, someone screams out, "You look so thin and impossibly fresh!" I was unstoppable. I was high.
“Fine, she can vote. Tell her she can go in the booth,” Mr. Happy informed the volunteer standing next to me.
I don’t actually remember for sure, but I felt like we all high-fived and jumped into the air and then freeze-framed. However, I think I just winked at Grandma and slunk behind the black curtain into the booth, mindful that I had caused quite a scene and should just stay mum.
But Mr. Happy touched on a nerve. Yes, I always like a good “fight for my rights” moment, but I wondered: If I don’t know what my name is, then who am I? Maybe I’ve kept my driver’s license true to my college self and in doing so preserved that time in my life. Why haven’t I just marched to the DMV and updated my license to match my new identity? Mr. Happy might be a miserable son of a gun, but he had a point…Hmm.
Yet, even if I haven’t quite navigated this limbo of names I’m in, I do know I’m the kind of person who will ultimately stand tall along the lines of injustice. And in the voting booth of life, isn't that all that really counts?
Oh great.
“How am I supposed to know that this woman—“(Mind you, I’m standing right there, listening to this disgruntled voting booth worker question not only my identity, but from the sound of it, my gender…) “—is who she says she is?!”
I wanted to lean into him—while he sat behind his little plastic table and one inch thick glasses—sneer down on his little bald head, and yell, “And how am I supposed to know that you’re mentally stable?” But that would not have gotten me into the voting booth any faster. In fact, that would probably have ended with me being handcuffed and kicking my legs in the air, all while being escorted outside.
“Well, check under Whitman then,” I suggested, after Mr. Happy paged through the Rolodex of A-L and had not found me registered under my maiden name of Finley. And that’s how this whole song and dance started.
I might as well have told Mr. Happy I was planning to tar and feather the voting booths when I admitted I wasn’t quite sure what name I was registered under. It was then he threw his arms up and shouted, “Oh no! She can’t vote today! She doesn’t even know what her name is!”
Luckily, I was smart enough to stay calm and not throw my arms up too and stamp my feet. That is what I would have done in the past. Not this time! This time I made calculated and measured remarks. I explained, “Well, you see, I haven’t changed all of my identification over to my married name yet. We just got married last year and—“
“Last year? So what name do you go by?” Mr. Happy yell-asked me.
I felt like saying, "That's a great question, Mr. Happy! A question I don't really know the answer to. You see, I go by Ms. Finley during the day, but by Mrs. Whitman in my personal matters. My mail comes to Whitman but I love being a Finley... I'm so happy you asked! I'm just so confused about that." But obviously, I didn't explore that bit of irony with him in the moment.
In actuality, I said, "Yes, I was married last year, but not all of my information has been changed yet. I live here, in Queens, with my husband,” I smiled, and turned to point to Curtis, only to see that he was trying to stand off to the side, hide by the voting booth, and let me talk my way out of this mess I had so innocently gotten myself into. All I had to do was look at him to hear what he was thinking: “The only advice the clerk at Town Hall gave you when getting our marriage license was to be consistent. And here we are, not sure what our name is. I’m just sayin’…”
Ugh, I knew he was right. Not only does my driver’s license have my maiden name on it but it also has my mother’s home address—the place I officially moved out of upon going to college seven years ago. Oops! But c’mon, who wants to go to the DMV?
Just when I thought all hope was lost and that Mr. Happy would be sending me packing, three very lovely fellow volunteers swooped in and saved me! “Let’s read the manual, it has every answer to any question you could ever have,” a lovely 80 year-old Irishman informed Mr. Happy.
“What does it matter anyway, what name her driver’s license says? She voted in the Presidential election last year under Whitman. Just let her vote again under her married name!” a maternal 73 year-old vowed for me. I really had the urge at that moment to call her Grandma. I get very emotional and attached during intense moments. And anyone willing to stand up for me always and immediately becomes my best friend in my book.
“C’mon, Mr. Happy. Don’t you remember what it’s like to be a newlywed? You’re changing your life, you’re starting new, and there’s so much to do! And besides, I don’t think this lovely lady is pretending to be someone else,” my third defender chimed in.
Thanks, guys!
The four of us, standing together, creating a pretty solid case for my right to vote, was an impressive sight. Even though I was completely mortified, experiencing stomach palpitations, and compulsively eyeing the exit door, I didn’t back down. I stood my ground and knew I was going to vote for mayor and city comptroller even if it killed me—I was becoming a political activist right before my eyes! Having just come from the gym and running one very terrifying 14 minute mile, I was full of all sorts of emotions: Runner’s high, empowerment, embarrassment, excitement… The feeling was akin to what it would be like if while I led a riot and started setting buildings on fire, someone screams out, "You look so thin and impossibly fresh!" I was unstoppable. I was high.
“Fine, she can vote. Tell her she can go in the booth,” Mr. Happy informed the volunteer standing next to me.
I don’t actually remember for sure, but I felt like we all high-fived and jumped into the air and then freeze-framed. However, I think I just winked at Grandma and slunk behind the black curtain into the booth, mindful that I had caused quite a scene and should just stay mum.
But Mr. Happy touched on a nerve. Yes, I always like a good “fight for my rights” moment, but I wondered: If I don’t know what my name is, then who am I? Maybe I’ve kept my driver’s license true to my college self and in doing so preserved that time in my life. Why haven’t I just marched to the DMV and updated my license to match my new identity? Mr. Happy might be a miserable son of a gun, but he had a point…Hmm.
Yet, even if I haven’t quite navigated this limbo of names I’m in, I do know I’m the kind of person who will ultimately stand tall along the lines of injustice. And in the voting booth of life, isn't that all that really counts?
Monday, October 26, 2009
Je suis très embarrassé
Each time I play the moment over (and over) again, I wince. It all started innocently enough -- a parent of a boy in my class coming in to read a children's book she has written. The children were nestled on the rug, sitting criss-cross, elbows digging into their knees and chins in their palms. I felt it was very important to show the students how ordinary, everyday people-- people just like them-- can become published authors. We write in school everyday and at the time, they were writing their own personal narratives about an experience they have had in their own lives. This children's book was based on the woman's son, my student, and the whole lot of us delighted in the experience of a real author reading her own real book to us. It was a beautiful moment.
I had planned an activity for the kids based on the book, where they would each illustrate on of the pages of the original book that I had photocopied. They had only the words by which to create their page in our version of the story. The students hummed and laughed while depicting their pages, respectfully asking each other for the green crayon or the orange marker. They complimented each other's illustrations while the mom and I stood off to the side, both feeling rather proud of our work-- she, her book, and I, my rocking class!
"What was the most difficult part of the writing process for you, Mom?" I asked. (We'll call her Mom.)
"Well, the writing actually poured out of me. Raising my son showed me that motherhood was, umm... Let's just say, I found a way to channel all the frustrations of raising a son into a humorous story. Lemonade out of lemons, you know? And once I realized that everything he was doing could easily be turned into an adventurous picture book, the words and the story just came right out onto the paper. The hardest part was finding a publisher!" she laughed.
"I know what you mean about finding a place for all those experiences. My best friend and I have had quite eventful years. She is in med school and I'm teaching and we're both realizing that college is long over. Anyway, we started a blog to chronicle the craziness of it all, and having a the blog is like having a place to reflect and make sense of everything."
"Miss Jo, Jimmy is using the blue but I told him I needed the blue and now he won't give it back!" I heard someone yell from the peanut gallery.
"Sorry, Mom. Duty calls!" I said as I rushed over to deal with the blue crayon situation.
"Jimmy, Kate just said she wants the crayon and you are currently using red. The crayons aren't yours to guard, and I'm sure she'll return the blue to the pack once she's finished. Right, Kate?" My two needy friends nodded and I quickly circled around the other tables, watching for any other fires that needed putting out.
"Sorry about that, Mom. We're still learning to share I guess." I apologized, hoping she was impressed with my soft manner, my delicate approach, my air of composure and calm.
"No problem! I know what it's like!" she smiled. "Hey, what's the name of your blog?"
"It's--" and there it was! The moment my secret, personal identity collided with my very public, professional identity. And those two lives do not mesh well.
I felt heat radiate off my blushing face, and I imagined that at the moment I looked like a cartoon character whose level of embarrassment could be measured by the line of red creeping up my face as if being filled with Kool-Aid. "It's, um. Ha, ha (note: nervous laughter). It's called Un Petite Mort."
She tilted her head to the side and squinted. "Hmm, a- big- death? Is that it?" I realized I had all of one hot second to talk myself out of this one, when, as if struck by lightening, Mom jerked her head back and gasped, "Oh!!! Oh! Un petite mort!"
And all I could do, I did. I wrinkled my forehead, smiled, and shrugged. "Well, it's actually nothing like that other petite mort that you're thinking of. It's just that my friend and I totally over use the phrase and are always taking things to the extreme. We're always 'dying' or saying, 'Could you die, right now?;' You know?" Yes, Jo, I'm sure she knew what I meant because she looked like she wanted to die at that moment.
Luckily Mom was super cool and just laughed and giggled to herself. She even emailed me later saying that she thought the moment, albeit awkward, was incredibly humorous! Go figure. However, I couldn't stop asking myself, "Does she trust me to teach her child?" When I begrudgingly uttered the name of this blog I saw flashes of this alternate persona of myself: I saw myself, scantily clad and adorned with a fluffy pink boa, sipping on cosmopolitans and telling racy jokes, all the while teaching my third graders addition or punctuation or geography. At the time, I was actually wearing a sunshine yellow cardigan and grey trousers at the time, but my little blog omission had the power to instantly disolve the image I presented as Pollyanna, the prim and proper teacher.
Throughout the week, as I reflected on this experience (and every time getting flushed and uncomfortable), I happened to attend a lecture on Danny Lyons, the American photographer from the 1960s. His work chronicled the Civil Rights Era as well as various motorcycle gangs that had formed across the country. Ironically enough, at some invisible moment during his two years of documenting the gangs, he became an accepted member of them. Talk about blurring the line between your professional and personal lives! One of his black and white photographs depicted a bikerider whose face was splattered with mud. The contrast of the subject's pale face behind the dark mud gave the impression that the man was wearing a mask. At that point, the lecturer posed the notion of "masking."
"This image almost forces us to question the masks we wear in our own lives. And I don't mean a mask that you wear on your face, but your entire presentation-- your clothes, your posture, your expressions. It's just interesting to think about the masks that we wear and when we wear them and how they change the way we are in the world. Something to think about."
And being the diligent student I am, I did think about that and then couldn't stop. Growing up, my sister and I were always in costume. I can actually chronicle the milestones in my life by what outfit I was wearing at the time, going all the way back to my first day of kindergarten: golden yellow shirt dress with a side pocket from the Gap. So when the prophetic lecturer threw out those ideas of masks, I was taken aback even more so since I was at that point analyzing the "teacher me" and the "personal me" -- the me I am during the day and the me I am with my friends when I go downtown to the West Village. Part of the reason I was so embarrassed by telling Mom about my blog was because my different masks were competing for attention. During the day I wear a rainbow of cardigans and clogs, using the tone and timbre of my voice to manage the behavior of my students. And after work, when I'm with my husband in our cozy apartment, I'm completely relaxed, usually wearing cuffed boyfriend jeans and white T-shirts, and am not afraid to kick my feet up and relax. The other roles and personas I take on are no different than anyone else's really, we all slip in and out of our social and professional and personal masks.
But what I have started to think about is whether or not my roles are truly as defined and isolated as I make them out to be. Why should I be embarrassed by a blog whose title means orgasm in French even though I am a fabulous and very appropriate teacher of children(if I say so myself)? I'm not sure what the answer is exactly or how I feel about my various well-outfitted roles, but I do know the next time a parent asks me what I do outside of school, I won't be so quick to tell her I write for a blog titled 'Orgasm.' That much I know for sure!
I had planned an activity for the kids based on the book, where they would each illustrate on of the pages of the original book that I had photocopied. They had only the words by which to create their page in our version of the story. The students hummed and laughed while depicting their pages, respectfully asking each other for the green crayon or the orange marker. They complimented each other's illustrations while the mom and I stood off to the side, both feeling rather proud of our work-- she, her book, and I, my rocking class!
"What was the most difficult part of the writing process for you, Mom?" I asked. (We'll call her Mom.)
"Well, the writing actually poured out of me. Raising my son showed me that motherhood was, umm... Let's just say, I found a way to channel all the frustrations of raising a son into a humorous story. Lemonade out of lemons, you know? And once I realized that everything he was doing could easily be turned into an adventurous picture book, the words and the story just came right out onto the paper. The hardest part was finding a publisher!" she laughed.
"I know what you mean about finding a place for all those experiences. My best friend and I have had quite eventful years. She is in med school and I'm teaching and we're both realizing that college is long over. Anyway, we started a blog to chronicle the craziness of it all, and having a the blog is like having a place to reflect and make sense of everything."
"Miss Jo, Jimmy is using the blue but I told him I needed the blue and now he won't give it back!" I heard someone yell from the peanut gallery.
"Sorry, Mom. Duty calls!" I said as I rushed over to deal with the blue crayon situation.
"Jimmy, Kate just said she wants the crayon and you are currently using red. The crayons aren't yours to guard, and I'm sure she'll return the blue to the pack once she's finished. Right, Kate?" My two needy friends nodded and I quickly circled around the other tables, watching for any other fires that needed putting out.
"Sorry about that, Mom. We're still learning to share I guess." I apologized, hoping she was impressed with my soft manner, my delicate approach, my air of composure and calm.
"No problem! I know what it's like!" she smiled. "Hey, what's the name of your blog?"
"It's--" and there it was! The moment my secret, personal identity collided with my very public, professional identity. And those two lives do not mesh well.
I felt heat radiate off my blushing face, and I imagined that at the moment I looked like a cartoon character whose level of embarrassment could be measured by the line of red creeping up my face as if being filled with Kool-Aid. "It's, um. Ha, ha (note: nervous laughter). It's called Un Petite Mort."
She tilted her head to the side and squinted. "Hmm, a- big- death? Is that it?" I realized I had all of one hot second to talk myself out of this one, when, as if struck by lightening, Mom jerked her head back and gasped, "Oh!!! Oh! Un petite mort!"
And all I could do, I did. I wrinkled my forehead, smiled, and shrugged. "Well, it's actually nothing like that other petite mort that you're thinking of. It's just that my friend and I totally over use the phrase and are always taking things to the extreme. We're always 'dying' or saying, 'Could you die, right now?;' You know?" Yes, Jo, I'm sure she knew what I meant because she looked like she wanted to die at that moment.
Luckily Mom was super cool and just laughed and giggled to herself. She even emailed me later saying that she thought the moment, albeit awkward, was incredibly humorous! Go figure. However, I couldn't stop asking myself, "Does she trust me to teach her child?" When I begrudgingly uttered the name of this blog I saw flashes of this alternate persona of myself: I saw myself, scantily clad and adorned with a fluffy pink boa, sipping on cosmopolitans and telling racy jokes, all the while teaching my third graders addition or punctuation or geography. At the time, I was actually wearing a sunshine yellow cardigan and grey trousers at the time, but my little blog omission had the power to instantly disolve the image I presented as Pollyanna, the prim and proper teacher.
Throughout the week, as I reflected on this experience (and every time getting flushed and uncomfortable), I happened to attend a lecture on Danny Lyons, the American photographer from the 1960s. His work chronicled the Civil Rights Era as well as various motorcycle gangs that had formed across the country. Ironically enough, at some invisible moment during his two years of documenting the gangs, he became an accepted member of them. Talk about blurring the line between your professional and personal lives! One of his black and white photographs depicted a bikerider whose face was splattered with mud. The contrast of the subject's pale face behind the dark mud gave the impression that the man was wearing a mask. At that point, the lecturer posed the notion of "masking."
"This image almost forces us to question the masks we wear in our own lives. And I don't mean a mask that you wear on your face, but your entire presentation-- your clothes, your posture, your expressions. It's just interesting to think about the masks that we wear and when we wear them and how they change the way we are in the world. Something to think about."
And being the diligent student I am, I did think about that and then couldn't stop. Growing up, my sister and I were always in costume. I can actually chronicle the milestones in my life by what outfit I was wearing at the time, going all the way back to my first day of kindergarten: golden yellow shirt dress with a side pocket from the Gap. So when the prophetic lecturer threw out those ideas of masks, I was taken aback even more so since I was at that point analyzing the "teacher me" and the "personal me" -- the me I am during the day and the me I am with my friends when I go downtown to the West Village. Part of the reason I was so embarrassed by telling Mom about my blog was because my different masks were competing for attention. During the day I wear a rainbow of cardigans and clogs, using the tone and timbre of my voice to manage the behavior of my students. And after work, when I'm with my husband in our cozy apartment, I'm completely relaxed, usually wearing cuffed boyfriend jeans and white T-shirts, and am not afraid to kick my feet up and relax. The other roles and personas I take on are no different than anyone else's really, we all slip in and out of our social and professional and personal masks.
But what I have started to think about is whether or not my roles are truly as defined and isolated as I make them out to be. Why should I be embarrassed by a blog whose title means orgasm in French even though I am a fabulous and very appropriate teacher of children(if I say so myself)? I'm not sure what the answer is exactly or how I feel about my various well-outfitted roles, but I do know the next time a parent asks me what I do outside of school, I won't be so quick to tell her I write for a blog titled 'Orgasm.' That much I know for sure!
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Kill the Buddha, Find Myself
When I first read If You Meet the Buddha On the Road, Kill Him, a book about one’s journey through psychotherapy, ironically, I had no idea how I would one day end up taking those words scarily out of context. Meeting the Buddha means you are seeking acceptance and guidance outside of yourself, allowing another person or force to hold the reins of your life. And you see, my Buddha, the Svengali of my eye, had been Lady Tremaine, publisher of all book publishers. She spouted ideas and practices I could only hope to emulate. Her rapid interpretation of new philosophies, ideas, and writing was, to me anyway, akin to a game of quick-fire. Her brilliance always astounded and awed me. So you can only imagine my elation when she asked me to work closely with her, shoulder-to-shoulder, on a journey to new epiphanies! Yes, how young and naïve I was.
My husband always tisk-tisked me about my adoration for Lady T. “You don’t need her. You are and can continue to be successful in your own right. You don’t need to work for her to make it. You just need to be you. All I’m saying is, be careful.”
“I know, I know. You’re right. Totally… But it doesn’t hurt to be associated with her – the Lady Tremaine.” That was, in a nutshell, my pat response.
He and I both knew I didn’t believe him. We both knew I was playing my own game of Follow the Leader. This grown up version, however, had new rules. Instead of commanding others to tap their heads while prancing around in line, a common command from my fearless leader was, “Get it done, perfectly, and by yesterday.” Well, that’s not true. She didn’t always explain herself that clearly.
Secretly, I was so happy to have found my Buddha. It meant she’d provide my next step—give me opportunities I had always hoped for. So what if I was blindly following her commands? She was my Buddha. How could I say no?
A few months down the pipeline in our work together and I was baring the brutal chill of her frigid moods and impossible demands while bunking at her upstate cottage. We stayed at her rustic abode in order to work through the day, be uber-productive, and remain cut off from all cell phone and Internet service. Fun! She would gulp down a pot of coffee, walk the dogs, inhale cereal and read through 100 or so pages of our manuscript all before I had come downstairs at 7:30. (I say “inhale” the cereal since there was no milk added and no spoon used, just her fingers scooping the Cheerios into her open jowls until she tossed the bowl into the sink.) Over the course of our time together that week, she would say things like, “Let me just stop you right there. From the moment you walked in here and started telling me about whatever it is you’re trying to explain, I’ve had no idea what you’re talking about!” And who could forget the classic line she delivered while I gnawed on the aglet of my sweatshirt, clammy and wane from my high BAC (blood anxiety count), wringing my hands and wrinkling my eyebrows. “You’re nervous. I see that—obviously. But just. Get. Over. It. This is no time for big emotions.” For a moment I actually thought she had cured me.
“Yes, that’s it! I’ll just stop being anxious. That’s the answer!” But obviously, those thoughtless and helpless words could not perform a task that a lifetime of therapy had yet to do. She yelled at me, told horrifying tales about raising her children, and laughed at the hardships of our colleagues. My Buddha was turning into my nightmare right before my eyes. That week went to sleep every night (while swatting mosquitoes, and making due with the pancake of a pillow) hoping for a brief respite from the crushing anxiety she conjured up inside me. With each birth control pill I popped into my mouth, I knew I’d survived one more day and had only a few more to endure. Curled up in bed, I’d pray for one of the lone kayakers on the lake, the lake we never had time to venture into, would rescue me and row me to a neighboring upstate cottage where the police could escort me home to Queens. And then, as if out of thin air, it occurred to me...
Drop two Ambiens in her cup of coffee—so simple yet brilliant! All I had to do was drop in two pills (since her hardy, German body could probably fight off the affects of one) and watch her eyelids start to flutter and her head begin to bob. I would actually fantasize sinking the sleeping pills into her ceramic mug with the flick of my wrist while preparing my breakfast of toast and cereal. All I needed were a few hours of peace, a few hours to silence the incessant criticism and settle the bar of anxiety pulsating up and down my chest. And two Ambien in her coffee would do it. It was a daydream, or as I like to call it, an option, that got me through the early days of our union. Truth be told, I never actually drugged her, but the urge is still there.
OK, so I had met my Buddha on the road and followed her so intently I might as well have baaed while I did her bidding. But all that time on the road together—with me baaing, and she steamrolling my self-esteem onto the pavement—had made me pretty homesick. What had happened to my spark, my joy, my je ne sais quoi? Where, oh where, had my confidence gone? Where, oh where, could it be? While developing a severe case of workaholism, my true self had withered away. I was tired. I was hurting.
That’s about the time my fantasies turned a morbid corner. Sleeping pills just weren’t strong enough. Homicide… Now that would do the trick. I’m not proud of the detailed tableaus I’ve mapped out, but the mind strays something gory while the body is trapped. One of my favorite musings was to imagine standing behind her at the top of the stairwell and giving her a little push. All I had to do was feign a little stumble and send her cascading down the cement flight of stairs. Sick. I know. The effect of repressing all her mockery and abuse conjured up a whole new side of me that I am not proud of. But the satisfaction the morose daydreams produced allowed me to retain whatever remained of my own power. I was taking If You Meet the Buddha On the Road, Kill Him way too seriously, knife in hand. And in my defense, and to quote William Steig’s Sylvester and the Magic Pebble, “In feeling helpless, Sylvester started to feel hopeless.” I was helpless and definitely starting to feel hopeless.
On night, after jumping through yet another one of her fiery hoops and crashing down on the other side, I knocked something back into place. I started to see things very clearly. The “hoop” entailed printing out a 300-page document and Fed Exing it to her overnight, even though I had already printed it out earlier in the week and left on her desk. (It always amazed me that she was always unable to remember or care enough to bring the anything she needed with her.) She needed the package “by the crack of dawn.” Apparently she thought I needed more direction than "by morning." So I made it to a Fed Ex in time to hand over the package to the delivery man on the last shipment going out that night, which was Friday, Friday, at 7 p.m. When I came home, sweating through my button-down, trembling with fear that the sun would rise before the delivery truck pulled up to her front door, only to see an email from her that read: If the most recent copy is the one you printed out for me, then I have it. I assumed you had done massive work on it by tonight. Guess you haven’t. Call me. – Lady T
That was it. Yet upon reading those short, very harmless (compared to what I was used to) sentences I collapsed to the floor, curled up in a ball, and started to sob. My tears came from somewhere deep inside. The flood of emotion came from a part of me that had been silenced for too long and had nowhere left to go except up to the surface. I knew what I had to do.
I quit. I called her up and, and instead of indulging her in a conversation about my inadequacy and incompetence, I quit. She threw some more barbs my way—my favorites being when she said I was, and could never be, as “emotionally robust” as she is, and when she informed me that I had been "set-up" because I could never live up to her or come near to being her and in that way was set-up.
Ah yes, and there it was.
I never could and never would come close to being Lady Tremaine. She was absolutely spot-on. Being her would mean putting her work before her family, and cutting down others to feel is superior in every way. Yet most importantly, being her would mean losing me.
Unfortunately, burning bridges didn't mean I have walked away unscathed. In fact, I know she has stolen and erased a degree of my drive and dedication somewhere along our time together. I no longer want to go above and beyond. Why bother when everything-- above or not-- is wrong? At some point she also turned me into her own self-fulfilling prophecy; treating me as if I could barely photocopy or collage actually diminished my abilities and quality of work, giving me the Shit Touch. I ended up being the inept, worthless person she treated me like. I don’t know what will come next or where my invisible compass is leading me. And for the first time in my life I’m not afraid of the unknown. The open expanse ahead is for me to navigate. And who better to lead the way than me—my own Buddha.
My husband always tisk-tisked me about my adoration for Lady T. “You don’t need her. You are and can continue to be successful in your own right. You don’t need to work for her to make it. You just need to be you. All I’m saying is, be careful.”
“I know, I know. You’re right. Totally… But it doesn’t hurt to be associated with her – the Lady Tremaine.” That was, in a nutshell, my pat response.
He and I both knew I didn’t believe him. We both knew I was playing my own game of Follow the Leader. This grown up version, however, had new rules. Instead of commanding others to tap their heads while prancing around in line, a common command from my fearless leader was, “Get it done, perfectly, and by yesterday.” Well, that’s not true. She didn’t always explain herself that clearly.
Secretly, I was so happy to have found my Buddha. It meant she’d provide my next step—give me opportunities I had always hoped for. So what if I was blindly following her commands? She was my Buddha. How could I say no?
A few months down the pipeline in our work together and I was baring the brutal chill of her frigid moods and impossible demands while bunking at her upstate cottage. We stayed at her rustic abode in order to work through the day, be uber-productive, and remain cut off from all cell phone and Internet service. Fun! She would gulp down a pot of coffee, walk the dogs, inhale cereal and read through 100 or so pages of our manuscript all before I had come downstairs at 7:30. (I say “inhale” the cereal since there was no milk added and no spoon used, just her fingers scooping the Cheerios into her open jowls until she tossed the bowl into the sink.) Over the course of our time together that week, she would say things like, “Let me just stop you right there. From the moment you walked in here and started telling me about whatever it is you’re trying to explain, I’ve had no idea what you’re talking about!” And who could forget the classic line she delivered while I gnawed on the aglet of my sweatshirt, clammy and wane from my high BAC (blood anxiety count), wringing my hands and wrinkling my eyebrows. “You’re nervous. I see that—obviously. But just. Get. Over. It. This is no time for big emotions.” For a moment I actually thought she had cured me.
“Yes, that’s it! I’ll just stop being anxious. That’s the answer!” But obviously, those thoughtless and helpless words could not perform a task that a lifetime of therapy had yet to do. She yelled at me, told horrifying tales about raising her children, and laughed at the hardships of our colleagues. My Buddha was turning into my nightmare right before my eyes. That week went to sleep every night (while swatting mosquitoes, and making due with the pancake of a pillow) hoping for a brief respite from the crushing anxiety she conjured up inside me. With each birth control pill I popped into my mouth, I knew I’d survived one more day and had only a few more to endure. Curled up in bed, I’d pray for one of the lone kayakers on the lake, the lake we never had time to venture into, would rescue me and row me to a neighboring upstate cottage where the police could escort me home to Queens. And then, as if out of thin air, it occurred to me...
Drop two Ambiens in her cup of coffee—so simple yet brilliant! All I had to do was drop in two pills (since her hardy, German body could probably fight off the affects of one) and watch her eyelids start to flutter and her head begin to bob. I would actually fantasize sinking the sleeping pills into her ceramic mug with the flick of my wrist while preparing my breakfast of toast and cereal. All I needed were a few hours of peace, a few hours to silence the incessant criticism and settle the bar of anxiety pulsating up and down my chest. And two Ambien in her coffee would do it. It was a daydream, or as I like to call it, an option, that got me through the early days of our union. Truth be told, I never actually drugged her, but the urge is still there.
OK, so I had met my Buddha on the road and followed her so intently I might as well have baaed while I did her bidding. But all that time on the road together—with me baaing, and she steamrolling my self-esteem onto the pavement—had made me pretty homesick. What had happened to my spark, my joy, my je ne sais quoi? Where, oh where, had my confidence gone? Where, oh where, could it be? While developing a severe case of workaholism, my true self had withered away. I was tired. I was hurting.
That’s about the time my fantasies turned a morbid corner. Sleeping pills just weren’t strong enough. Homicide… Now that would do the trick. I’m not proud of the detailed tableaus I’ve mapped out, but the mind strays something gory while the body is trapped. One of my favorite musings was to imagine standing behind her at the top of the stairwell and giving her a little push. All I had to do was feign a little stumble and send her cascading down the cement flight of stairs. Sick. I know. The effect of repressing all her mockery and abuse conjured up a whole new side of me that I am not proud of. But the satisfaction the morose daydreams produced allowed me to retain whatever remained of my own power. I was taking If You Meet the Buddha On the Road, Kill Him way too seriously, knife in hand. And in my defense, and to quote William Steig’s Sylvester and the Magic Pebble, “In feeling helpless, Sylvester started to feel hopeless.” I was helpless and definitely starting to feel hopeless.
On night, after jumping through yet another one of her fiery hoops and crashing down on the other side, I knocked something back into place. I started to see things very clearly. The “hoop” entailed printing out a 300-page document and Fed Exing it to her overnight, even though I had already printed it out earlier in the week and left on her desk. (It always amazed me that she was always unable to remember or care enough to bring the anything she needed with her.) She needed the package “by the crack of dawn.” Apparently she thought I needed more direction than "by morning." So I made it to a Fed Ex in time to hand over the package to the delivery man on the last shipment going out that night, which was Friday, Friday, at 7 p.m. When I came home, sweating through my button-down, trembling with fear that the sun would rise before the delivery truck pulled up to her front door, only to see an email from her that read: If the most recent copy is the one you printed out for me, then I have it. I assumed you had done massive work on it by tonight. Guess you haven’t. Call me. – Lady T
That was it. Yet upon reading those short, very harmless (compared to what I was used to) sentences I collapsed to the floor, curled up in a ball, and started to sob. My tears came from somewhere deep inside. The flood of emotion came from a part of me that had been silenced for too long and had nowhere left to go except up to the surface. I knew what I had to do.
I quit. I called her up and, and instead of indulging her in a conversation about my inadequacy and incompetence, I quit. She threw some more barbs my way—my favorites being when she said I was, and could never be, as “emotionally robust” as she is, and when she informed me that I had been "set-up" because I could never live up to her or come near to being her and in that way was set-up.
Ah yes, and there it was.
I never could and never would come close to being Lady Tremaine. She was absolutely spot-on. Being her would mean putting her work before her family, and cutting down others to feel is superior in every way. Yet most importantly, being her would mean losing me.
Unfortunately, burning bridges didn't mean I have walked away unscathed. In fact, I know she has stolen and erased a degree of my drive and dedication somewhere along our time together. I no longer want to go above and beyond. Why bother when everything-- above or not-- is wrong? At some point she also turned me into her own self-fulfilling prophecy; treating me as if I could barely photocopy or collage actually diminished my abilities and quality of work, giving me the Shit Touch. I ended up being the inept, worthless person she treated me like. I don’t know what will come next or where my invisible compass is leading me. And for the first time in my life I’m not afraid of the unknown. The open expanse ahead is for me to navigate. And who better to lead the way than me—my own Buddha.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Thursday's Child
It’s amazing how one moment you are enjoying the summer sun, laying out at the beach and barbequing, and then suddenly you are pulling out fall sweaters and picking out pumpkins for the front stoop. I love October; I love everything about it. I love the chill in the air, the smell of freshly fallen leaves, and the crunching sound of the dried up ones. October means Halloween is around the corner. It also means that I will be turning one year older.
I was born on a Thursday, at the end of October. My mom makes the story of my birth seem about important as the birth of the Christ Child, and every year she will call me up and recite the story. Although this is embarrassing, I still enjoy it, because, besides being un petit bit egocentric, even at age 25, I’m as attached to my mother as a one-year-old with detachment anxiety. Every year, my mom would try so hard to make fantastic birthday parties. One year she designed a pirate treasure hunt to search for Trolls (twenty of them laid out in a treasure box) in our backyard. Another year she organized a party at a farm, where fifteen wild girls ran rampant around the place, throwing hay bales and screaming the song from Voyage of the Mimi. She baked cakes and cut them into fun shapes like caterpillers, fish, and pumpkin faces. So what if no kids wanted to eat the cake out of fear that there really were caterpillers in the cake?
Despite all those lovely birthdays, sometime, over the years, I have grown to detest my birthday. One of my problems with turning older is that I was always the oldest in my class. Having a fall birthday, I could either be the youngest, or the oldest in the grade. Due to child care arrangements, my mom decided to send me to kindergarten older, as a five-year-old. For the next decade, I would have to explain to the other children that, no, I was not left back, and no, I was not too slow to start kindergarten “on time.” I didn’t even care that I was one of the first to drive, buy cigarettes, and buy Smirnoff. I just felt old.
Later, in college, I always felt awkward celebrating my birthday. Unlike some of my other friends who threw themselves birthday bashes, or treated themselves to big birthday dinners, I felt uncomfortable celebrating my own day. “I love your birthday,” my best friend Jo would tell me. “It’s so exciting to see you get to the new age first!” I wish I could see it like that!
A sense of regret always lurked in the shadows of my attempted birthday joy; a feeling like I’m disappointing someone by letting the year go, a feeling like I didn’t finish something.
Like any narcissist, I indulged in some self-reflection, and one of my earliest birthday memories took form…
It was very early in the morning, barely dawn, when I crept into my parents’ bedroom. For the first time, I was very aware that today was my birthday, my own special day!
“I’m five today!” I exclaimed, bursting with pride. My dad reached out an arm to pull me in.
“But I liked you when you were four,” Dad said.
After I returned to my bed to wait for the day to begin, I thought about Dad’s response. “Too bad,” I thought, miffed. “I’m turning five anyway.” And there it was. That first tinge of regret.
When I told this story to my mom, she agreed that my dad responded quite strangely, but then she added, “But Cece, you really were the most adorable four-year-old.” (Over the years, I've learned that the last time I was cute, funny, or lovable was in 1988.)
“Too bad,” I thought, “Now I’m twenty-five!”
I know part of the anxiety I have surrounding my birthday is related to the timeline I created in my head. Married by age twenty-four (like mom, of course). Doctor by age twenty-six. Buy first house at twenty-seven. Kids at age thirty. And the list goes on. Well, age twenty-four came and went, sans wedding bells. I’m still years away from my medical degree, and have no plans to buy a house anytime soon. My OB/GYN rotation scared me away from having any kids at all. (Well, for now anyway...)
Although I’m not “on schedule”, for some reason, this year I don’t feel the same dread about my birthday. Maybe because that’s it--I’m entirely not on any schedule. Maybe it took missing the landmarks to free myself from the burden of those self-imposed deadlines. I am now charting my own course, and living without an agenda feels great. (Well, of course I have some agenda, I am Type A after all!)
Like the nursery rhyme says, I have far to go, and I’m looking forward to the journey. And along the way, I’ll be enjoying homemade, pumpkin-faced cupcakes every fall.
I was born on a Thursday, at the end of October. My mom makes the story of my birth seem about important as the birth of the Christ Child, and every year she will call me up and recite the story. Although this is embarrassing, I still enjoy it, because, besides being un petit bit egocentric, even at age 25, I’m as attached to my mother as a one-year-old with detachment anxiety. Every year, my mom would try so hard to make fantastic birthday parties. One year she designed a pirate treasure hunt to search for Trolls (twenty of them laid out in a treasure box) in our backyard. Another year she organized a party at a farm, where fifteen wild girls ran rampant around the place, throwing hay bales and screaming the song from Voyage of the Mimi. She baked cakes and cut them into fun shapes like caterpillers, fish, and pumpkin faces. So what if no kids wanted to eat the cake out of fear that there really were caterpillers in the cake?
Despite all those lovely birthdays, sometime, over the years, I have grown to detest my birthday. One of my problems with turning older is that I was always the oldest in my class. Having a fall birthday, I could either be the youngest, or the oldest in the grade. Due to child care arrangements, my mom decided to send me to kindergarten older, as a five-year-old. For the next decade, I would have to explain to the other children that, no, I was not left back, and no, I was not too slow to start kindergarten “on time.” I didn’t even care that I was one of the first to drive, buy cigarettes, and buy Smirnoff. I just felt old.
Later, in college, I always felt awkward celebrating my birthday. Unlike some of my other friends who threw themselves birthday bashes, or treated themselves to big birthday dinners, I felt uncomfortable celebrating my own day. “I love your birthday,” my best friend Jo would tell me. “It’s so exciting to see you get to the new age first!” I wish I could see it like that!
A sense of regret always lurked in the shadows of my attempted birthday joy; a feeling like I’m disappointing someone by letting the year go, a feeling like I didn’t finish something.
Like any narcissist, I indulged in some self-reflection, and one of my earliest birthday memories took form…
It was very early in the morning, barely dawn, when I crept into my parents’ bedroom. For the first time, I was very aware that today was my birthday, my own special day!
“I’m five today!” I exclaimed, bursting with pride. My dad reached out an arm to pull me in.
“But I liked you when you were four,” Dad said.
After I returned to my bed to wait for the day to begin, I thought about Dad’s response. “Too bad,” I thought, miffed. “I’m turning five anyway.” And there it was. That first tinge of regret.
When I told this story to my mom, she agreed that my dad responded quite strangely, but then she added, “But Cece, you really were the most adorable four-year-old.” (Over the years, I've learned that the last time I was cute, funny, or lovable was in 1988.)
“Too bad,” I thought, “Now I’m twenty-five!”
I know part of the anxiety I have surrounding my birthday is related to the timeline I created in my head. Married by age twenty-four (like mom, of course). Doctor by age twenty-six. Buy first house at twenty-seven. Kids at age thirty. And the list goes on. Well, age twenty-four came and went, sans wedding bells. I’m still years away from my medical degree, and have no plans to buy a house anytime soon. My OB/GYN rotation scared me away from having any kids at all. (Well, for now anyway...)
Although I’m not “on schedule”, for some reason, this year I don’t feel the same dread about my birthday. Maybe because that’s it--I’m entirely not on any schedule. Maybe it took missing the landmarks to free myself from the burden of those self-imposed deadlines. I am now charting my own course, and living without an agenda feels great. (Well, of course I have some agenda, I am Type A after all!)
Like the nursery rhyme says, I have far to go, and I’m looking forward to the journey. And along the way, I’ll be enjoying homemade, pumpkin-faced cupcakes every fall.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Girls just wanna have fun
Plugging my ears as a fire truck came barreling down the road at 7:30 in the morning, I had to seriously resist the urge to wave and wink at the lifesavers on board. One of the many things that bonds Cece and me is that we walk—nay, strut—the fine line between self-centeredness and the ability to be overly empathetic. When you think about it, what allows one to be excessively empathetic with others is that one can and quickly put oneself in other people’s stilettos and suede booties, what have you. It’s a double-edged sword that also causes one to be a bit too much in other people’s situations. “Yes! Me too! That’s also happened to me! Me, me, me!” It’s not that Cece and I don’t care about other people’s situations. Quite the contrary, we really do care. And overly empathizing and walking in other people’s shoes is our shared tactic to show we do. In any case, as that truck blared past me the other morning, I was reminded of how on one Christmas latte and snow filled shopping trip through Manhattan, Cece and I both, simultaneously, turned toward one of those screeching fire trucks as it came down the street behind us, and looked up expectantly as if we were being honked at. That’s right. Honked at. Flirted with, if you will, by the firemen.
“Actually girls, if you would be so kind as to move aside as we go SAVE LIVES, that would be great. Love your knit caps, but seriously… We’re not honking at you, we’re trying to get to an actual fire. You know, do our job.” OK, the firemen didn’t actually pause in all their glory and explain this to us in so many words, but it was clear when we saw they were racing down the street, trying to get the smug cars to pull over, and pull on all their gear. C’est la vie. So maybe in that instance we were not erring on the side of empathetic, but I did come right out and say we tinker with self-importance, didn’t I?!
Anyway, it was on this most recent encounter with a powerful fire truck that I had the idea (albeit, unoriginal) for this year’s Halloween costumes. I flipped my cell phone open and called Cece. I left a message saying, “Maybe instead of Disney princesses by way of trollops, we can be firewomen! That way we can wear tights, hot shorts, and tanks that we already have. And we even get to buy cute hats and say things all night like, ‘You look hot!’ What do you think? xxoo, Jo.” I knew the response I would get from Cece—“Done and done."
But much to my surprise, all did not go as planned.
All I remember from her voicemail message are a blur of phrases; “May not be able to celebrate Halloween this year,” and “On-call till 1:30 am many nights,” and “Let’s see.” I think my heart actually stopped while I listened, although I can’t recall for sure. Us not spend Halloween together? Not hit the town in matching onesies from American Apparel? I just about died.
Then a terrifying thought crossed my mind: When had our adult selves taken our youthful selves hostage?
Maybe I had spent my Sunday morning throwing up five times (or more… clouded memory) after drinking the night before at a wedding—and in doing so turned the hangover corner from pop two Advil to quiver and cry dramatically face-first over a toilet bowl for hours. Maybe I had recently taken to wearing cardigans everyday to work because they cover that pesky midsection. And maybe I do wait to watch MTV's The City on the computer the next day since I'm never awake by 10:30 anymore. However, when my plans for Halloween were threatened by Cece’s adult work schedule, I got the distinct feeling that we weren’t in Kansas anymore, Toto. Oh no.
I envision our adult selves sitting behind proverbial desks, slapping our youthful selves on the wrist for dancing on the bar to Pour Some Sugar On Me. “Ouch!” our younger selves cry. “Girls just wanna have fun!” we whimper, in between sips of Seltzer and Vodka drinks.
“Well, you’re not girls anymore!” our adult selves snap back. “You’re grown-ups now and there will be no more gallivanting on Halloween for either of you.”
“Waa!” we both cry. But it’s no use. We’ve been taken hostage. We’ve been taken hostage by ourselves—by our jobs, our schedules, and our alcohol-intolerant bodies. So what is a girl—nay, a woman—do to? I don’t have the answer just yet, but I can tell you I’m on the lookout for it. And I’m sure I’ll negotiate a way out of this hostage situation at some point, and truthfully, it’ll probably be when I least expect it… Most likely while I’m nursing a hangover, cuddled up in a cardigan, watching The City On Demand.
“Actually girls, if you would be so kind as to move aside as we go SAVE LIVES, that would be great. Love your knit caps, but seriously… We’re not honking at you, we’re trying to get to an actual fire. You know, do our job.” OK, the firemen didn’t actually pause in all their glory and explain this to us in so many words, but it was clear when we saw they were racing down the street, trying to get the smug cars to pull over, and pull on all their gear. C’est la vie. So maybe in that instance we were not erring on the side of empathetic, but I did come right out and say we tinker with self-importance, didn’t I?!
Anyway, it was on this most recent encounter with a powerful fire truck that I had the idea (albeit, unoriginal) for this year’s Halloween costumes. I flipped my cell phone open and called Cece. I left a message saying, “Maybe instead of Disney princesses by way of trollops, we can be firewomen! That way we can wear tights, hot shorts, and tanks that we already have. And we even get to buy cute hats and say things all night like, ‘You look hot!’ What do you think? xxoo, Jo.” I knew the response I would get from Cece—“Done and done."
But much to my surprise, all did not go as planned.
All I remember from her voicemail message are a blur of phrases; “May not be able to celebrate Halloween this year,” and “On-call till 1:30 am many nights,” and “Let’s see.” I think my heart actually stopped while I listened, although I can’t recall for sure. Us not spend Halloween together? Not hit the town in matching onesies from American Apparel? I just about died.
Then a terrifying thought crossed my mind: When had our adult selves taken our youthful selves hostage?
Maybe I had spent my Sunday morning throwing up five times (or more… clouded memory) after drinking the night before at a wedding—and in doing so turned the hangover corner from pop two Advil to quiver and cry dramatically face-first over a toilet bowl for hours. Maybe I had recently taken to wearing cardigans everyday to work because they cover that pesky midsection. And maybe I do wait to watch MTV's The City on the computer the next day since I'm never awake by 10:30 anymore. However, when my plans for Halloween were threatened by Cece’s adult work schedule, I got the distinct feeling that we weren’t in Kansas anymore, Toto. Oh no.
I envision our adult selves sitting behind proverbial desks, slapping our youthful selves on the wrist for dancing on the bar to Pour Some Sugar On Me. “Ouch!” our younger selves cry. “Girls just wanna have fun!” we whimper, in between sips of Seltzer and Vodka drinks.
“Well, you’re not girls anymore!” our adult selves snap back. “You’re grown-ups now and there will be no more gallivanting on Halloween for either of you.”
“Waa!” we both cry. But it’s no use. We’ve been taken hostage. We’ve been taken hostage by ourselves—by our jobs, our schedules, and our alcohol-intolerant bodies. So what is a girl—nay, a woman—do to? I don’t have the answer just yet, but I can tell you I’m on the lookout for it. And I’m sure I’ll negotiate a way out of this hostage situation at some point, and truthfully, it’ll probably be when I least expect it… Most likely while I’m nursing a hangover, cuddled up in a cardigan, watching The City On Demand.
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Wife goes on
While pinning my students’ New School Year Resolutions to the bulletin board, a twinge of anxiety shot through my body. I had the feeling that I should have a yellow card with my New School Year Resolution stapled to the board as well. But how could I write, “My resolution is to calm the fuck down,” without either getting fired or scaring the children?
As if I wasn’t already aware that I needed to do something about my personal lack of stasis (and do it stat), Rosh Hashanah rolled around. “La Shana Tova!” I began saying to all my fellow Jews. I love me a Jewish holiday. Oh, save for Yom Kipper of course. I never lose the ten pounds I think I will after fasting for twenty-four hours and it’s getting to the point of needing to be quarantined for fear of attacking my husband for saying something as innocuous as, “A day without food isn’t so bad, Jo. Just think of the bagel you’ll have tonight!” It’s after a comment like that I’ll usually fly off the handle, scream back something like, “Oh, sorry I’m starving and you don’t care!”
“Then eat!” he’ll say.
“I can’t! Argh! You don’t understand!” I’ll then respond, practically frothing at the mouth. But he does understand and he also fears for his life when I have gone without food for longer than three hours.
Anyway, the Jewish New Year is another organic time of self-reflection, as is the start of the school year. (Note: I do not include birthdays as proper places for self-reflection, however. If I had to think of how to be a better person while acknowledging that I am aging, I literally might implode. That’s another trigger for me—sagging under-eye skin, actual or imagined.) I love the dinner, the wine, the apples with honey, and the shmoozing at Temple that are all synonymous with Rosh Hashanah. It’s the “how to be a better person” thing that ruffles my feathers and sends that familiar shock of adrenaline through my system. It's that latter part I don’t look forward to.
And here’s why. I know what I need to do, what I really need to do, to be a better person. I need to calm the fuck down. I need to learn to be happy when I’m not under a constant state of duress. I need to practice meditation, exercise more, switch from coffee to tea (or—gasp!—water). I need to learn to say, “No.” and I need to learn to mean it. I need to learn how to say, “Hold on, I have another call,” without experiencing severe worry what the person I’m having “hold” is feeling put off.
I’m pretty good at giving back to the world and those in need. I teach—which at the rate I get in the New York City system might as well be a volunteer job. That stuff I’m good with. It’s the “me” stuff that I’m quite negligent about. And to myself I now say, “Je suis desolet!” But now what?
I’ve signed up for yoga but I get anxious as the class runs late because we’re trying to hold the lotus position for another freaking minute. I could just leave when I have to, you say, but I’ve tried that too and I felt guilty that maybe the instructor though I didn’t like her class. As my fellow chosen people say—Oy.
“Hello. My name is Jo and I’m an addict.” I’ve come to the conclusion that I’m an addict suffering from an addiction to anxiety. I’m addicted to the surge of adrenaline that gets my heart pumping and my mind racing every time I freak out then proceed to obsess over minutia. Then I get anxious over the fact I’m causing my heart to beat faster, worrying some more about what the anxiety will do to my skin, metabolism, and longevity. And maybe I wouldn’t even have admitted that I need to calm the fuck down if when my mom said, “Jo! You don’t have to be anxious to have fun!” I felt like I needed to put the phrase on a T-shirt.
“You don’t have to be anxious to have fun. Hmm… Interesting,” I responded, biting my nails to the quick.
“Get your fingers out of your mouth!” she said, over the phone. Damn! She’s good, that mom of mine.
This new idea of not needing to be anxious to have fun was akin to what addicts must feel when they wander into a church and “find Jesus”—so crazy that it just might work. So, I promptly walked into the first manicure place I could find, picked out a fierce shade of red, and gave my gnawed hands over to the horrified nail technician. “Bad! You bite! Bad! No nail!” Yes, I know, bad! Very bad! But hey, I’m going to at least try. And who knows; no more nervous nail biting could lead to elevated self-confidence and to the ability to say no without any regrets, which could in turn lead to a lowered supply of anxiety pumping through my veins.
“Good color,” my talented nail techie said, interrupting my delusions of instant self-transformation.
“Oh. Thank you,” I said.
“Wife goes on,” she said, showing me the name of the hue on the bottom of the bottle.
You got it sista!
As if I wasn’t already aware that I needed to do something about my personal lack of stasis (and do it stat), Rosh Hashanah rolled around. “La Shana Tova!” I began saying to all my fellow Jews. I love me a Jewish holiday. Oh, save for Yom Kipper of course. I never lose the ten pounds I think I will after fasting for twenty-four hours and it’s getting to the point of needing to be quarantined for fear of attacking my husband for saying something as innocuous as, “A day without food isn’t so bad, Jo. Just think of the bagel you’ll have tonight!” It’s after a comment like that I’ll usually fly off the handle, scream back something like, “Oh, sorry I’m starving and you don’t care!”
“Then eat!” he’ll say.
“I can’t! Argh! You don’t understand!” I’ll then respond, practically frothing at the mouth. But he does understand and he also fears for his life when I have gone without food for longer than three hours.
Anyway, the Jewish New Year is another organic time of self-reflection, as is the start of the school year. (Note: I do not include birthdays as proper places for self-reflection, however. If I had to think of how to be a better person while acknowledging that I am aging, I literally might implode. That’s another trigger for me—sagging under-eye skin, actual or imagined.) I love the dinner, the wine, the apples with honey, and the shmoozing at Temple that are all synonymous with Rosh Hashanah. It’s the “how to be a better person” thing that ruffles my feathers and sends that familiar shock of adrenaline through my system. It's that latter part I don’t look forward to.
And here’s why. I know what I need to do, what I really need to do, to be a better person. I need to calm the fuck down. I need to learn to be happy when I’m not under a constant state of duress. I need to practice meditation, exercise more, switch from coffee to tea (or—gasp!—water). I need to learn to say, “No.” and I need to learn to mean it. I need to learn how to say, “Hold on, I have another call,” without experiencing severe worry what the person I’m having “hold” is feeling put off.
I’m pretty good at giving back to the world and those in need. I teach—which at the rate I get in the New York City system might as well be a volunteer job. That stuff I’m good with. It’s the “me” stuff that I’m quite negligent about. And to myself I now say, “Je suis desolet!” But now what?
I’ve signed up for yoga but I get anxious as the class runs late because we’re trying to hold the lotus position for another freaking minute. I could just leave when I have to, you say, but I’ve tried that too and I felt guilty that maybe the instructor though I didn’t like her class. As my fellow chosen people say—Oy.
“Hello. My name is Jo and I’m an addict.” I’ve come to the conclusion that I’m an addict suffering from an addiction to anxiety. I’m addicted to the surge of adrenaline that gets my heart pumping and my mind racing every time I freak out then proceed to obsess over minutia. Then I get anxious over the fact I’m causing my heart to beat faster, worrying some more about what the anxiety will do to my skin, metabolism, and longevity. And maybe I wouldn’t even have admitted that I need to calm the fuck down if when my mom said, “Jo! You don’t have to be anxious to have fun!” I felt like I needed to put the phrase on a T-shirt.
“You don’t have to be anxious to have fun. Hmm… Interesting,” I responded, biting my nails to the quick.
“Get your fingers out of your mouth!” she said, over the phone. Damn! She’s good, that mom of mine.
This new idea of not needing to be anxious to have fun was akin to what addicts must feel when they wander into a church and “find Jesus”—so crazy that it just might work. So, I promptly walked into the first manicure place I could find, picked out a fierce shade of red, and gave my gnawed hands over to the horrified nail technician. “Bad! You bite! Bad! No nail!” Yes, I know, bad! Very bad! But hey, I’m going to at least try. And who knows; no more nervous nail biting could lead to elevated self-confidence and to the ability to say no without any regrets, which could in turn lead to a lowered supply of anxiety pumping through my veins.
“Good color,” my talented nail techie said, interrupting my delusions of instant self-transformation.
“Oh. Thank you,” I said.
“Wife goes on,” she said, showing me the name of the hue on the bottom of the bottle.
You got it sista!
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