4.29.2006

The Sitter (Cue Hitchcockian Music)

So I know I'm new to this whole babysitter thing and all, but I do have fairly good instincts. And when the sitter shows up smelling like pipe smoke (a smell that Nate and I had to work very hard to convince ourselves wasn't alcohol)--a little weird, right?

When she introduces herself by shaking your hand and saying, "peace and blessings," all while sporting a Bush = Hitler illustration onto her messenger satchel--a little weird right?

(And hey, you all know how I feel about Bush. But I can assure you I wouldn't show up at a new job sporting a two-foot long cartoon rendering of him side by side with the fuhrer.)

And when she talks about her children, and then you ask her how old her children are and she says, "well they're not really my children but when you take care of them like I do they're your children" but then later tells you that she does have children--a little weird, right?

And when she doesn't stop telling you how nice everything is, and how nice your furniture is, and how nice your art is, and how nice it would be if she had the money for such nice things--a little weird, right?

And when she calls your cell phone a mere half hour into your SigOth's big thirtieth birthday celebration for a non-emergency; actually a query as to where some teething biscuits might be long after the baby was supposed to be sleeping--a little weird, right? Oh, and she didn't ask because the baby was fussy or teething or anything, but because, "well I just thought it would be nice for her to have one. I mean, babies like that stuff. Hey, I'd like one myself right now if you have one."

And when you get home and ask what time the baby went to sleep and she can't quite remember but "maybe 10...no, 9:30...no wait, somewhere near 9. Or 9:30" and you ask why, because after all, you told her to put the baby to sleep around 8 and she answers, "yeah, I tried but she just wanted to hang with me. So we hung for a while."--a little weird, right?

I mean, just a little?

Oy. This mothering thing is going to be the end of me.

4.27.2006

A New Day

My readers are better than your readers.

Think it's too much to put on a t-shirt to wear to BlogHer? Because I'm seriously considering it.

I've gotten a lot of food for thought from all of you over the past few days, and considering how little time for thought I've had, I appreciate that you're all feeding me. Or something like that. I'm still a little tired from the redeye last night to create metaphors that make much sense outside of my own brain.

What I'd really like to do is email each and every one of you with a gushing, girlie, Emily Post-sanctioned note of heartfelt thanks. Every comment posted deserves at least that much. But if I did, that would be like six less hours I have in my day and I'm already just a wee bit taxed. Please understand. Also know that I have read every single comment more than once, as has my mother, who wants to invite you all over for Thanksgiving dinner and feed you pie.

As many of you said, I had a bad day. Those words were racing through my head most of yesterday: It's just a bad day. Tomorrow will be a better one. And just as I was thinking that--I swear, I'm not making this up--that You've Had a Bad Day song came on the radio. And once again that proverbial light bulb went on over my head and I realized things could be so much worse.

I could be that guy who sings that crappy ass song.

I could be that guy who struggled his whole life to make it, and when he finally landed a hit, landed it with a song so heinous, he will forever be known as the guy who wrote the song that made millions of people want to gouge out their eardrums and run shrieking from the room.

So there's that.

Back home in New York now with a black and white milkshake from the diner, and the baby happily playing with some choking hazard or another next to me, things are already inordinately better. And other things have become inordinately clearer.

You see, the whole 101 aspect of Mom-101 is more than just a funny "new mom" thing.

I never knew whether I would have children or not. At 34 I was still single, not ever imagining that I would meet a man "in time." Or at least not a man who'd stick around long enough to impregnate me. And I had mostly come to terms with it, but not entirely. Not because I was desperate to be a mom. More because I hate hate HATE more than anything being told what I cannot do. Tell me I can't sing, I will sing every chance I get. Tell me I can't go to Kirsten Silverstein's house after school because her mom lets her smoke pot, that's where you'll find me. Tell me I can't climb Everest--well, I will not climb Everest. But I will resent you and maybe say a few catty things about you behind your back.

So whether or not I wanted a kid was besides the point. I just wanted that choice.

And then I fell in love with a man who desperately wanted a family. And it freaked the shit out of me to be actually presented with the opportunity. I remember the turning point: a work-sponsored boondoggle to the Magic Kingdom two years ago, where magic is evidently shorthand for children screaming or crying or whining or hitting their sisters. I became lost in a sea of weary, sweaty moms, each mechanically muttering, stop hitting your sister don't put that in your mouth no you can't have another churro because I said so that's why and thought, is this what it's all about? And if so, I can't do this. I don't see myself pushing a sticky rented stroller through Fantasyland in August heat, while wearing plaid Bermuda shorts that come up to my JC Penny bra. But I had a partner who I knew wanted children, and I wanted him.

My heart raced and my palms got damp and I wasn't quite sure I could stand any more. I collapsed onto a mercifully nearby bench, blurting, "I don't know if I can do this. I don't know that I can be a mom. But I know how important it is to you and I don't know what to do."

We sat together in silence for a moment as Nate processed the information I had just spilled on him like a cup of scalding coffee. He handed me a cool Poland Spring from his backpack and I took a sip, then pressed the bottle to my forehead.

"Well," he said at last, "if I have to spend the rest of my life with just one person, I'm glad it will be you."

And with that, the burden lifted. There was just me and this man who I loved and no pressure at all. It was at that moment I knew I was ready--not specifically to be a mom. But to start becoming a family.

[you know what happens next]

So now we've got this kid you see, and I love her like nothing in the world. I love her so much it hurts and I know it's a cliche, but God it's a good one. I finally understand why mothers don't care about the baby food stains on their clothes or the leaky bottles in their purses. And certainly not the dirty noses. Though I've got to admit, I'm blindsided by the entire thing. Didn't see it coming. Not one bit.

I told my boss through my whole pregnancy, "don't worry. I'm coming back. And I'll be willing to work even more when I do, that's how committed I am to this job."

Duh.

The 101 in Mom-1o1? It doesn't mean that being a mom is new to me. It means that even the idea of being a mom is new to me.

Some people have their whole lives to get ready for motherhood. Hell, Nate tells me that when he was young and Mormon, the girls learned songs in preschool about wanting to grow up and be mommies. Me? I only had nine months to get ready. After more than 30 years of not being ready, that hardly seems enough.

It's going take some effort to figure out the balance between my old life and my new one, especially since someone forgot to give me that whole working mother manual when I left the hospital. Or maybe I never figure it out at all. Maybe the best I can do is to learn to accept the compromises a little better. To acknowledge that, as so many of you pointed out, you miss some stuff, but you're there for some other stuff. Or as my mother pointed out, that she'll have plenty of other things to hate me for in fifteen years, but traveling for three days in April will just not be one of them.

But somehow, with time and effort and probably a bit more venting, I'm going to figure out how make everything work.

Don't tell me I can't.

-------

A Perfect Post

4.26.2006

Epiphanies: Hate 'Em.

Sometimes you have a moment of clarity. In cartoonland it's indicated by a lightbulb over the head. In the real world it's usually indicated by a total breakdown in your shrink's office. Or maybe that's just New York City, where the "realness" of said world is up for debate.

For me the epiphany was marked by an onslaught of unexpected tears after a string of events, any one of which would have been manageable on its own.

Yesterday at work, one of the more lovely women there, a grandmotherly type, made the comment, "you're back here again? That baby of yours isn't going to recognize you!"

I stopped, stunned. I stammered a moment, and babbled something about having a webcam.

Then I called Nate who was at the playground with the baby. He tried to put the phone to her ear but instead of the usual she's smiling at the phone, or she's cooing at the phone, or she's eating the phone, he told me she seemed more interested in watching the other children on the swings. (And who could blame her.)

And then Nate called me at 10 pm New York time, screaming about how a friend's late night phone call woke the baby and how this is NOT ACCEPTABLE and how I need to call her RIGHT THIS INSTANT and yell at her about it. A few moments later he called back and apologized, informing me it had been a difficult day with Thalia since she had spiked a low fever--her first--after her shots that morning.

Her first fever.

Then this morning, as soon as I woke up, I raced to set up the webcam but I couldn't find the usb connector for it. Then I found the connector but my ichat wasn't working. Then Nate's ichat wasn't working. Then it was time for the baby's nap so we tabled the whole thing until later today.

But that's not why my world came crashing down.

I suggested that Nate call the doctor about Thalia's fever, which was apparently the worst thing I could have possibly said in the whole world. Far worse than your mother wears combat boots while sucking on donkey balls and voting republican.

Because my suggestion was met with the response, don't tell me how to do my job.

Which sounds to me a whole lot like, that's not your job.

Which sounds a whole lot like, your job is there, in LA. Your job is writing commercials and flying around the country and going to meetings and ordering room service and being glued to your laptop and did you hear the phrase "take care of your baby" in that list? Yeah, that's what I thought.

And then I cried.

Because I really don't care about my hotel. I don't care that the soap is smelly or the sheets are ugly or that valet is incompetent. I'm not some sort of high-maintenance corporate bitch diva, although I think I've been doing a reasonably good impression of one this week.

But it's easy to be angry with a hotel. It's hard to be angry with yourself.

A Tribute to Joey Pants (And a Cute Baby)

Oh, Joey.
Joey Joey Joey Joey.

You cannot imagine how much you have heightened an otherwise mediocre hotel stay, merely by the fact that this is your room.

When I first pushed through the door and spotted the disco-era bedspread and Thomas Kinkaid art, I thought well, not my style but if it's good enough for Joe Pantoliano...

When I unwrapped the smells-like-movie-theater-bathroom-air-freshener soap I thought, well, it's no Aveda but if it's good enough for Joe Pantoliano...

When, starving, I ordered a hearty plate of mac and cheese and it arrived in a thimble, I thought, well, I'll probably go to bed hungry but if it's good enough for Joe Pantoliano...

When I had to interrupt the valet's personal cell phone call--twice--to ask whether I might get my car sometime before the November elections, I thought, well, I usually don't like waiting twenty minutes for my car when I'm the only guest standing here, but if it's good enough for Joe Pantoliano...

And when I was awakened at 5 am by the chirping aviary outside my window, the sounds of which were deadened only by the construction in pretty much every other room in this wing besides mine, I thought, well, I normally like sleeping a wee bit later but if it's good enough for Joe Pantoliano...

Oh, Joey. Sweet, wonderful Joey. Until now, you were just Guido the Killer Pimp. Teddie from Memento. Ralphie. Ralphie's head. But now? So much more.

We will always have room 303.

-----------
Hello, Mama? Hi it's me! If you come home tomorrow, I promise to do more cute things so that you have funny material to write about instead of just complaining about your hotel room...Okay...see you then...oh, and while I've got you on the line, would you mind stopping by Fred Segal and picking me up one of those $110 pair of baby jeans with the...no? Oh okay.

4.25.2006

Guess Where I Am...

Hello. Over here...no right here...here I am!

I know you didn't recognize me in these Gucci sunglasses, especially since it's nighttime and all, but it's part of the uniform here in LA. Oh yes, I'm back in LA. It's been a whole week since I was last here here on business, which was like two weeks since the previous trip, which was a good two weeks since the one before that, and so I figured I was overdue for another trip.

And as luck would have it, I'm staying in the very fabulous the company gets a corporate rate so you have to stay there hotel.

Wanna know just how fabulous it is? I'm blogging from the hotel lobby. I know! SO fantastic. Because after waking up at 5 am New York time (that's 2 am LA time for those bad with the time zone thing), making the 8 am flight, landing at 11, going directly to a five hour meeting, then heading back to the office for another hour, I just really don't want to go to my room. I have absolutely no interest in kicking off my boots that I've been wearing for 18 hours, putting on a bathrobe, ordering a grilled cheese on sourdough from room service, and watching pay-per-view. Not one bit. Which is why it works out just perfectly that the hotel's entire computer system is down and they can't check me in to begin with.

Really, I couldn't have asked for more auspicious circumstances.

In fact, were I to be in my room right now, I would never have been chatted up by a guy in a nametag and coke bottle glasses who's like central casting for a pedophile in the Lifetime movie-of-the-week. And I'm telling you folks, until this has happened to you, you just haven't lived.

And what's more, the complimentary drink that the desk clerk didn't offer me? Delicious. Pinot Noir is my favorite. And the free suite upgrade they didn't offer me? Spectacular, or so I've been told. The room is spacious and the views unparalleled.

I'm all about this hotel. I've been here an hour and already I know I'm coming back and bringing friends.

-----

Update: I am in the room. It is the "pre-renovated" wing, as Sean the bellman informs me. However my (crankiness) displeasure is dampened both by the non-complimentary glass of Pinot Noir and the fact that this is the room Joe Pantoliano stays in when he's here.

Me and Guido the Killer Pimp. That's two degrees, ladies.

Oh yeah.

4.24.2006

Thalia's Cute Non-Sucky Thing of the Day

Many years ago, when I was best defined as The Single Girl around the office, I had a co-worker and friend with whom I worked quite closely. He was the quintessential proud daddy of a newborn son, and every morning he had the same routine. As we settled into our seats in preparation for another day of creating life-altering ads about gin, there would be this moment where his eyes locked on nothing in particular and suddenly he was far away.

Then the grin would emerge.

It started out small at first, something that you might not even notice were you not actually looking for it. But over the course of the next minute or so, it transformed from subtle harbinger of contentment into this thing with a life of its own. It taxed his cheeks, crinkled his eyes, stretched his lips to their physiological limit until it could no longer be contained as anything less than a full-blown smile.

At this point, my co-worker would set his coffee down, lean toward me and ask, "wanna hear Luke's cute thing of the day?"

And I did. I mean anything that could generate a smile like that, right?

But each time I answered, "sure!" I became the recipient of information like Luke turned his head or Luke's hand opened and closed or Luke burped all by himself.

And I'm like, very nice thank you so much now excuse me while I RSVP to this party at Lot61.

I couldn't have possibly understood why something as small and (I thought) insignificant as Luke noticed his right foot today! would generate such unfettered joy. I mean a first tooth? That I could understand. Waving bye-bye? I'm all over it. Little bit of hair? Great! Show me the pictures and I'll ooooh and ahhhh and awwww with the best of them. But this stuff? Eh. Didn't get it.

If I've learned anything over the years, it's that the universe always has plans for us beyond what we plan for ourselves. Also, the universe is a big fan of irony. (If you ever have to buy the universe a gift, I would suggest an early edition hardcover of Gift of the Magi. Signed, if possible.) And so now I find myself in my co-worker's proverbial shoes with a baby who's doing new things by the minute. And to top it off, I've got a big mouth.

Oh, also a blog.

Enter: Thalia's Cute Thing of the Day.

Scratch that--it's Thalia's Cute Non-Sucky Thing of the Day. Because while I may get all excited about the sucky things like her teeth poking half a millimeter further out of her gums, or a new consonant that she's babbling non-stop, I'm not nearly a good enough writer to get you excited about them too.

This week, my nine and-a-half month old daughter has discovered reading. For real. I thought she had done so months ago, but after seeing her reaction to Brown Bear Brown Bear this week, I realize I had been mistaken. (Sort of the way I rushed to the hospital at 41 weeks pregnant shouting, "my water broke!" only to discover that I was leaking KY from that morning's internal exam. Good times.)

Until this week, books were drums. They were teething biscuits. At best they were time with mommy. Now, they are stories, each one with words to be smiled at, pictures to reach out and touch, and pauses between lines during which she can look up at me wide-eyed and giddy as if to say, "this is SO COOL!"

Plus, she's turning the pages. Herself. Oh yeah. So not sucky.

And Craig? I'm so sorry. I get it now. If you have any of Luke's milestones to share with me, sucky or otherwise, I am here and ready to listen. I know he's probably about to shave by now, but still. If you want to talk about which shaving cream he picked out or how he missed a spot on the right side, I am here. And I'll smile right along with you.

4.23.2006

A Little Sunday Morning Rant

I just turned on PBS to see if there was something of mild educational value I could plop Thalia in front of while I (read blogs) checked my email and (read blogs) responded to some coworkers. Good mommy!

I tuned in just in time to hear that Buster is brought to me by the No Child Left Behind Act of the US Government.

We're now using children's PBS programming to promote failed educational initiatives of the Bush administration? One, I might add, that was revealed this week to be such a failure, that the feds are allowing states to underreport minority students' test scores in order to "prove" that the act is working?

I guess it should be renamed No Wealthy White Child Left Behind. And PBS should be renamed too. I don't think it belongs to the public anymore at all.

4.22.2006

Fair trade?


Nate: Please take the dog out?

Me: No way! It's so late.

Nate: Oh come on. I'm tired and I'm sore and I'm sunburnt and my muscles hurt and I have allergies...

Me: Okay, fine. Fine. But you owe me one.

(Nate farts)

Nate: There. Now we're even.

4.21.2006

And the discussion continues...

"What did you think of my blog post yesterday?" I asked my dad over the phone. "I mean, you didn't say anything about it all day. Did you read it?"

There's a pause.

My father and I are extremely close, and we speak sometimes ten times a day. We call to trade industry gossip (he's also in the New York advertising world); to share color commentary on TV shows (Hurley did NOT just say that); to point out very important breaking news stories (Did you see Katie Couric's new haircut? Horrible!); to rejoice in baby milestones (she said "ba!"); to notify one another about celebrity sightings (Liv Tyler in the bathroom of Bliss! I heard her pee!); or sometimes simply to say hi, just checking in and I'll talk to you later. I know him I think as well as a daughter can know a father. And while gaps in the conversation generally mean he's doing four other things while on the phone with me--hm, wonder where I get that habit-- this time I wasn't so sure.

"So, did you read it?" I pushed.

"Yes, I read it."

"Okay. Because I thought I said some nice things about you and, well, you didn't respond so..."

"I wouldn't call myself a feminist."

"Oh," I said. This was not nearly the response I was expecting. "Oh. Well...okay. Oh."

"Yeah," he said.

Even my father, my sensitive, politically progressive, loves his family so much that he tears up every time he reads his Father's Day cards father--didn't want to be called a feminist. Phooey, get that icky label away from me! Begone with you!

His rejection of the designation, one I had meant as the highest praise, hit me hard. In those few seconds while we hung silently on the phone, I considered many possibilities, none of them good. Was I too quick to label him? Was I giving him too much credit? Did it embarrass him somehow? Did this have something to do with my mother, even 28 years after their (pretty damn bitter) divorce? Or worse yet, oh my God--did I make something up entirely for the sake of a compelling sentence in an essay?

Why did I call him a feminist, exactly? I mean, he never used the word himself. We've never even discussed it. At the time it seemed perfectly suitable as I assessed his attitudes towards me and women in general. Now, I wasn't so sure.

"But you are, don't you think?" I asked. "I mean based on the way I defined it, don't you think you are? You didn't march or anything, but the way you brought me up...you always encouraged me and pushed me and never thought twice about bringing me to a baseball game with Jeff, or..."

"How long is a baseball game?" my dad interrupted, chuckling.

I knew just what he was talking about.

When I was seven and Jeff was five, my dad took us to our first Yankee game. I admit I was probably more excited at the prospect of eating hot dogs and Cracker Jacks AND ice cream, but still. Both Jeff and I brought our baseball mitts, as we had been told that fans do, but my brother took it to the next level by sporting full Yankee regalia--the jacket, the shirt, the cap with the perfectly creased lid. Adorable, of course. Who can resist a pre-schooler in full Yankee gear? (No comment from you, BoSox fans.) Apparently not the kindly old stadium groundskeeper.

In a scene swiped right from the fantasy of every American kid in history, this offical-looking man on the field spots my brother out of tens of thousands of people in the crowd, and waves him down toward the dugout where he's standing. The man rests his elbows atop the stadium's blue field wall and wipes his brow.

"You caught a foul ball in that mitt of yours yet?" the groundskeeper asks Jeff.

"No," my brother answers, wide-eyed.

"Then I'll tell you what," the groundskeeper says with a wink. "If you haven't caught a ball by the seventh inning stretch, you come up and see me in my office and I'll see what I can do about it."

Well the seventh inning rolls around and wouldn't you know it, Jeff has not yet caught a ball. And so we scurry on into the bowels of Yankee Stadium.

"Stand right there," the groundskeeper tells my brother as he backs away from him. "Now hold out your mitt," he continues, "and now...catch!" And with that he tosses my brother a genuine, honest-to-goodness, real live Major League Baseball, right there in Yankee Stadium.

Cute story, right? But it wasn't. You see, I was there too. Remember me? Yeah, me. Seven year-old me. I had my mitt. I had my scorecard. But I was just...the sister. I didn't exist to that groundskeeper. He never looked at me, never acknowledged me, never smiled at me with that twinkle in his eye.

He certainly didn't let me catch a ball in Yankee Stadium.

"You were so furious," my father reminded me, "I had never seen you that mad. And I felt terrible. I mean I was delighted for Jeff, but my heart just sank for you. And we went back to our seats, and you dug your nose in Mrs. Pigglewiggle's Farm, and you pouted the entire rest of the game. You wouldn't look up, you wouldn't do anything. You just read that book, incensed, until the game was over and then stomped on out of the stadium."

"Yeah, I still remember that," I said, still feeling the indignation all these years later.

"My heart broke for you," my dad said. "It was so unfair."

"Yeah," I said. "Yeah. It really was."

I hereby confess that I was not correct in my assessment of my father. I misspoke. He isn't a feminist at all.

But he did give me all the tools I needed to be one myself. I'll settle for that.

Question: How long is a baseball game? Answer: Nine chapters long.

4.19.2006

The F Word

There's been so much interesting discussion around these parts lately about feminism, and I loves me a good discussion. GGC calls herself a Masculist, while Kristen deems herself a Feminista. Blog Antagonist has suggested that all women are inherently feminists already and so the label is purposeless. Sweetney has offered up, from her own self-proclaimed feminist perspective, the very real prospect that the entire movement is in desperate need of an overhaul.

Damn you, all you smart women for bringing up important-like topics that suck me in. And here I just wanted to be funny.

Let me tell you a little about where I come from.

I am the product of a feminist upbringing.

My bedroom light switch cover, as the family legend goes, was a toy soldier and not a ballerina. I had baseball gloves and Matchbox cars and a smokin' pair of cleats that I wore every weekend to the soccer field on which I did cartwheels during halftime. I may have been a stinky fullback, but I was indeed a fullback. I also had a closet full of tutus, a doll collection from exotic places like You-go-slah-vee-ah, and an affinity for sneaking into my mom's bedroom and coating my lids with sparkly blue eyeshadow. I was encouraged to embrace both the feminine and masculine sides of myself, because all my feminist parents ever wanted for me were choices.

Yes, that's feminist parents. With an s.

Maybe he wasn't out there marching for women's rights or burning his...whatever feminist men might have burned in those days, but my dad supported all the tenets of feminism and equal opportunity for women. In my opinion, having a supportive, encouraging father is every bit as essential as having a supportive, encouraging mother. Perhaps more so. I still remember him telling me, "you can be anything you want to be. Anything at all. Just do it well."

I responded, "what about a fireman?" (This was before we knew from firefighters.)

"Then be a great fireman."

"Well what about the President?"

"Then be a great President."

"What if I want to be a bank robber?"

"Then be a great bank robber. And don't get caught."

I've described my mother to some degree in posts past, but she may be best summed up in a line from my cousin Lane this past week. Upon learning that my sister-in-law is pregnant with my mom's third granddaughter, Lane quipped, "Oh Aunt Nancy must be so happy. Now she can have her own women's movement right out of her home."

Like Lane, the first thing many people think of when they think of my mom is Feminist. Not in any sort of angry, man-hating way, although I do recall her having a woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle T-shirt soon after her divorce. (Or maybe she just talked about getting one. It probably just stuck with me because I thought the slogan was funny.) No, I think people see her in the best possible sense of the term - enlightened, open, thoughtful, progressive. She's devoted her entire career as an educational consultant to creating equality in the classroom, and her nearly four decades as a parent to insuring that my brother and I are equipped to grab the truth and justice baton and run with it. While most family photos that grace one's living room are of weddings or babies or the snow on Christmas morning, the silver frames in my mom's home feature our family holding NARAL posters at a pro-choice rally on the Washington Mall. She is nothing if not someone who lives her values, and I've done my best all my life to emulate that.

But I think the real hallmark of my feminist upbringing had nothing to do with politics. It had nothing to do with wearing pants or eschewing skirts, playing soccer or collecting dolls. It had everything to do with my parents insuring that I found self-worth through my accomplishments.

And no, accomplishments did not include being pretty or having more Barbies than the other girls.

As my mother will tell you (and she'll do it in a way that makes her sound neither preachy nor judgmental--in fact, she'll have you nodding along and begging for more, all while passing you some homemade tabouli on a wedge of nicely warmed pita) we do girls a disservice when we tell them how beautiful they are. It's not that it's bad to be beautiful; it's that at the same time, we are telling their brothers, "I bet those sneakers make you run really fast." We need to tell our daughters that they can be fast too. And smart. And tall. And strong. I'm as guilty of this offense as the next person, and damn, I should know better. Whenever a stranger peeked in my stroller and remarked, "oh what a pretty little girl!" my mother's knee-jerk response was, "yes and she's beautiful inside too, and that's what's really important."

And yet my mother the feminist stayed at home with us until we were in school. She took her husband's name. She took her second husband's name. She refuses to color her hair, but she also refuses to leave the house without toenail polish on. She owns many fabulous earrings, the kind you'd sooner see in Barney's than in Woodstock. Which begs the question, what IS a feminist anyway?

I was raised to believe that feminists were pretty like Gloria Steinem and smart like Sandra Day O'Connor. They were the people who went to court to make sure that the girls' field hockey team didn't get kicked off the field when the boys' football team was ready to practice. They made sure that women knew it was not okay for their husbands to rape them. They spoke for those who couldn't speak for themselves, or those who didn't yet know that they even wanted to. The feminists were there for all of us. And sure, sometimes they were angry. Ghandi was angry too. Anger in itself is not a bad thing, especially when it's chanelled constructively and with purpose.

What I'm saying is, it never crossed my mind, not even once, that feminists were something bad. And so my main beef, and I think the point of this post, is that forty years after the movement went mainstream we're still compelled to describe the term with an asterisk.

I just did it myself, a few paragraphs back. I said that my mom was a feminist, but then reassured you that she didn't hate men. Need I also tell you that she shaves her legs? That she likes to cook and sew? That she owns heels? That she's not a lesbian? Yeah, sadly I do. And it freaking kills me. Because it's as good as every priest who introduces himself having to add, "but don't worry, I'm not a pedophile."

I stumbled on a blog recently where the term feminist is included in a list along with such other beauts as militant, wounded inner child, and of course, chip on my shoulder--as in, the author doesn't have one, and thus she is not a feminist. We've got the ever-offensive Pat Robertson telling us that "feminism encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism and become lesbians." And of course there's that bloated old windbag, old what's-his-name the lying sack of crap on the radio, who vomits out the term "feminazi" as a way of inextricably linking one of the most despicable and horrifying acts of genocide in the history of the world with the women's movment. How can that not make every woman on this planet sick to their stomachs?

Are there some problems with the movement? Of course. Are there some uncomfortably radical extremists in feminism? Sure. Were the women of my generation done a huge disservice by being fed the myth that we can do it all and all at once with no one's help at all? Certainly. Certainly times a hundred. I've even said it here myself. But to use a hackneyed creative analogy, it's better to get way out of the box and have to reign things in a bit than never to get out of the box at all.

And so I'm here to reclaim the term feminism. To help swing the semantic pendulum back towards the side of goodness and progress and light in an attempt to make it something positive again for my daugher and yours.

It's my obligation. After all, that's my family you're talking about.

__________

Edited to Add: I hope that if you've come this far with me, that you'll take the time to read the readers' comments. That's where the lecture ends and the discussion begins.

I am awed by the insight, the depth of thought, and the personal revelations of so many different women from so many different backgrounds. While some of us have conflicting takes on the expression "feminism" or on the women's movement as a whole, I think the readers here have demonstrated that we're perfectly capable of participating in a thoughtful, intelligent, no poopy-head calling trading of ideas on what can be a very heated topic. This is the best of what women are and can be. You've made me proud, my sisters!


4.18.2006

Why I Will Never Win Mother of the Year

1) The bottle stays out all night. It's just easier. Two bottles on the nightstand before bed = a few more minutes of sleep for me, and I'll be damned if the so-called bacteria build-up (or whatever) isn't worth the tradeoff.

2) The five second rule? It's like a 97-hour rule in our home, sometimes longer. If it falls on the floor and isn't coated entirely in dog hair, it goes back in the baby's mouth.

3) The F-word

4) The MF-word

5) The GDMFCS-word

6) I cannot snap those pajamas more than once a night. I just can't. She needs a diaper change after getting ready for bed? The pjs will remain unsnapped, the legs flopping around uselessly like some sort of 80's Issey Miyake creation.

Mama, my feet are cold and you hate me!



7) The number of times she's fallen off the bed so far: Six.

8) That I know of.

9) The crib that's been used one night and one night only. Which also explains why she keeps falling off the bed.

10) The dirty baby jeans that keep going back into the dresser instead of the laundry. Then every Friday, after laundry day has come and gone without their inclusion, I shrug and think, Eh, what's one more week.

11) The television. She shows no interest in it, unless this video is playing. And yet when we're in desperate need of a little free time we find ourselves urging, "Look Thalia! Look at the big red dog! Don't you want to watch the big red dog? C'mon, watch the doggie! Watch the doggie!"

12) The fact that we've done, um, things in front of her.

13) The fact that this list is not nearly over. Not by a longshot. No way, no how.

4.17.2006

Peaster Weekend Wrap-Up


As with Festivus, my family's Passover-Easter hybrid celebration has its own specific traditions which I touched on a few days ago. There is no Airing of the Grievances because face it, we're Jews. We do that all year long. But there is the arguing over the name Peaster.

The names Eastover and Eggover are up for consideration to replace Peaster. While this debate comes up every year, the addition of children to the mix seemed to have increased the urgency of settling the matter. I do understand the argument that the word Peaster really only borrows the P- from Passover and the whole Easter from Easter, and that truthfully, our weekend is a lot more of the former than the latter. But I just can't come around to the name Eastover. To me, Eastover is where you summer. Like, Oh Staci, I'm so glad you'll be at the beach house in Southhampton again this year! I'll be right next door in Eastover. Eggover is another option, but I feel it's better suited to a low-cholesterol egg substitute than a holiday. I firmly remain in the Peaster camp if only because let's face it, it sounds funnier. I may even be alone here, but I'm fighting the good fight.

Saturday night's dinner pretty much went as expected--meaning total chaos.

Apologies to my brother and sister-in-law who thought they could reign in the cacophony this year with their lovingly abridged Hagaddah, and a well-considered system to organize the readings by drawing names out of a hat--but no dice. Seders with my family are loud, they're funny, they're rude, and we're okay with it.

We talked over each other. We yelled over each other. We spilled red wine on the white chair. We bartered our readings. (No fair, you got the Wise Child? I wanted the Wise Child! I'll trade you the Breaking of the Matzoh AND the Seder Plate for your Wise Child.) We made up our own Hebrew words to the song Dayenu, and we made up our own tune to the song Let My People Go. I think my cousin Adam described it as twelve singers and thirteen melodies. And of course, after leaving the door ajar for the prophet Elijah, whenever the wind blew open the door we all screamed, ELIJAH! Oh, that never gets old. It’s like the rule of thirty-sixes that I learned in improv class: If something isn’t funny once, say it again. And again. And again. By the thirty-sixth time it’s hysterical. But I'm sure those of you with toddlers disagree.

We did however add one new tradition this year that I hadn't expected: Anytime something funny happens, turn to Liz and say, "Are you blogging this Liz? You're blogging this, aren't you? Take a picture of this, Liz! This would be great on your blog."

Uncle Howard volunteering to be the first family member outed here.


The Easter-inspired aspect of Peaster is quite simple. You eat breakfast, and then proceed directly to the backyard for the annual Peaster Egg-dying death match.

On one side there's my stepfather, Christopher, the ultimate egg-dying purist. He believes that eggs should only be colored in single, vibrant hues. No pastels, no gimmicks. Chris will use his own dye recipe created from endangered animal parts and toxic chemicals if it will generate the desired color result. This is serious stuff; he has a physical aversion to anything less than perfect, let alone touching his own meticulous craftsmanship.


On the other side, there's Team Everyone Else. It's our goal to make Christopher as crazy as possible with creative, irreverent, or flat-out aesthetically displeasing designs. The more colors we use, the more wax, the more stickers, the better.

Now keep in mind that not one person in my family is under thirty years old. This is all the work of otherwise successful, intelligent, reasonable adults. In fact the day the next generation is old enough to participate, is the day we'll distract them with jellybeans in the front yard while the egg dying slaughterfest continues secretly in the back.

Yesterday, our team generated more impressive results than usual. There was the chicken pox egg, the patchwork egg, the 3-D gemstone egg, the stoned smiley face egg, the ohmigod I can't stop putting stickers all over this egg egg, and the New York gubernatorial candidate Elliot Spitzer egg.

But the one I believe put Chris over the edge, the one that caused him to snatch one of our eggs and eat it whole--shell, dye and all--in a fit of temporary insanity...was Nate's bloody eyeball egg.


Victory is ours. And it is sulfuric.

Colored egg photo courtesy Wade Wofford at flickr, because clearly Wade Wofford knew enough to pack extra camera batteries on Easter, unlike me.

4.14.2006

See if You Can Tell What These Things Have in Common*

1. I hate milk in my cereal. Hate it. Yuck. Get it away from me.

2. I have been in three commercials: At 16 I was cast in an ad for Orajel Brace-Aid where I smiled for the camera and revealed a full set of railroad tracks on the pearly off-whites. They made me wear an ugly blue crew-neck sweater and (gasp) a collar, and I was mortified by the wardrobe. But it was fun to be at house parties (just called "parties" back then) when I came on TV. In my second advertising job, I was filmed shooting flaming arrows at a Chinet paper plate after our model called in sick, but only from the chin down. A few years ago, Frankenstein painted my toenails in a close-up for a Universal Orlando Resort ad, when our talent turned out to have long, gnarly, creepy feet.
(Notice a pattern here, by the way? The older I get, the less of me they show. In a couple years I'll be like, "hey, you can see a microscopic closeup of my clogged pore in this Bioré spot!")

3. I speak a little Bosnia. And that's pretty much what I can say: I speak a little Bosnian, in Bosnian. Also, a really bad insult that pretty much translates to Go back to your mother's [p-word euphemism deleted]. By the way, I have no problems with the P word. I just don't need any more freak-show headcases stumbling onto my site via MSN searches for "pictures of my mother's [euphemism deleted]."

4. I bungee-jumped off a 150' crane over the Hudson River. Twice.

5. As further evidence of my mastery of the laws of nerddom, I try to commit all the MTA's Poetry in Motion posters to memory when I ride the subway.

6. As Judd Nelson said in the Breakfast Club, "everyone can do something." What I can do is a spot-on impression of Beaker from the muppets.


*The answer: They are all things you didn't know about me. Six to be precise. Now see what I did here? I titled this "See if You Can Tell What These Things Have In Common." Because if I had called it "The Six Weird/Interesting Things You Don't Know About Me Meme that Wendy Tagged Me For," you wouldn't have read it, would you. Admit it, you hate memes. Hate them with all your heart. You just come here for the free booze and loose women. By the way, I would never tag anyone for a meme, but if I were to, I would tag Melanie, Catherine, Sam, Sweatpants Mom, Stephanie, Kevin, and Binky, the ever wonderful, should be required reading Binky...just so you know.)

4.13.2006

The Many L.A. Celebrity Sightings of Mom101: A Vast Overpromise

Lesson learned.

There is just no way that you can have many fabulous celebrity experiences to chronicle in your blog when your entire trip to LA is divided between your hotel room and your office. The last trip--a few fun things to talk about. This one, not so much.

Unless I were to come back to my room and find Ed Norton passed out in my bed, or go to work and discover Lil' Kim wandering the halls looking for the IT guy, celebrity sightings were not to be in the cards this trip. I even looked out my car window at every red light, just hoping to catch a glimpse of some wonderfully arcane C-lister to tell you all about. But no. With all due respect to Wayman Tisdale, former NBA star who performed hits off his album Hang Time at the Beverly Center Apple Store while I paid for my webcam, but I can't really count that as celebrity contact.

Didn't run into them at the Ivy and trade diaper rash tips.


Didn't see her in a coffee shop, and sneak some full-fat milk into her latte.


Didn't run into her at a Fairfax district Kabbalah
meeting, pull her aside and say, "girlfriend, we need to have a
serious talk about this Kevin fellow..."


Okay, well there was sort of one bit of celeb contact.

(Here's the part where I namedrop all these names you don't know, and provide links so that you can click on and go, ohhhhh THAT guy...and then make a comment about how much you like him and I'll never know the difference.)

Nate and I did manage to sneak away for one night of adult entertainment, and hit an amazing alternative comedy show with like every darkly funny comic I love, short of Marc Maron. If you do not yet know these men, let's just say if you ever thought I was funny, you will not once you get to know their stuff. Louis CK brought the house down as always. Dana Gould made me develop just a little crush on him, because as much as I think I'm over them, I still have a thing for funny men on antidepressants (see also, Marc Maron). And the "band" Naked Trucker (coming soon to Comedy Central) featuring Don Koechner from Anchorman, was as funny as they were naked. Maybe a little more funny than naked. But only because one guy did wear a Union Jack around his waist. Bob Odenkirk, Nate's boyfriend, wasn't the highlight we hoped for, but he did render his biggest fan speechless for a few moments when we saw him in the hall before the show.

(Now you're like, Mom101, SHUT UP, none of this is celebrity contact. It's a SHOW. I mean, I saw Robert Guillaume play Mungojerry in the traveling tour of Cats and and you didn't see me go bragging about it on my blog. And I'm like, whoa, chill for a second. Have some coffee. Did I say I was done here?)

Okay, drum roll...trumpet fan fare...HUGE build-up for forthcoming pathetic reveal....

Between sets, I touched Patton Oswalt's back trying to squeeze through the crowd on the way to the loo.

It was a sweaty back. A very sweaty back. Of someone on a network sitcom. And I touched it.

4.12.2006

Dayenu

Tonight is the first night of Passover. I don't sense I have a whole heck of a lot of Jewish readers (except you, Aunt Fredda! Hi! And hey, you too Hally!) in which case I'll elaborate a bit so that you don't log off in search of some knock-knock jokes or something a little more accessible.

For many families, Passover means an extensive Seder dinner where the family goes around the table reading aloud from the long, drawn-out story of the exodus of the Jews from Egypt before getting to eat. My blood sugar is plummeting just thinking about it. Imagine going through this whole two-hour production, where food is RIGHT IN FRONT OF YOU, but all you can eat of it is like a teaspoon of horseradish and a some parsley dipped in salt water, and a few pathetic crumbs of matzo. You do get to drain some wine in the process, but sadly it tastes like grape juice spiked with a dozen packets of Sweet n Low. And then, when you finally do get to pass some actual food around the table with whatever strength your weak, shaky arms can still muster, it doesn't look like anything you really want to put in your mouth.

We Semites may rule in some departments, but I concede cooking superiority to at least seventy-two other cultures. And that includes nomadic peoples with no access to fresh ingredients, cooking implements or fire.

Passover at my mother's house, however is one of my favorite holidays. We're not very...how do you say it...traditional. We're the family who skips right to the good parts of the Haggadah, which means reciting the four questions, drinking three glasses of non-Manischewitz wine, and singing Dayenu in a key definitely not intended by the songwriter. We put an orange on the seder plate, a new tradition inspired by an Orthodox rabbi who said something to the extent of, "we need women rabbis like we need an orange on the seder plate." Plus we open the door for Elijah on the outside chance that a prophet decides to show up at our doorstep. (Hey guys, I'm famished. It's been a long couple of millieniums getting here. Got any gefilte fish left?)

And we discuss.

Oh, there's lots of discussing.

From year to year, the conversation, at least with my mother at the table, is guaranteed to hit most if not all of the following topics:
-how the term The Chosen People is divisive and offensive to other cultures
-how history may be correcting the entire story of the exodus of the Jews
-how the patriarchy is responsible for the demeaning roles of women in the bible
-how the bible is just one guy's mythology anyway
-how George Bush is ruining the country
-how Karl Rove is gay
-how my mom and I attended a massive feminist reconstructionist hippie seder one year, and how it led us to conclude that an entire room full of Jews with no rhythm should never be allowed free access to tambourines
-how good the matzoh ball soup is
It is not a forgettable evening, I promise you this much.

But as the years have gone on, with cousins spread farther around the country, and more and more gentiles entering the fold, the Passover tradition has evolved. What we now have is Peaster, a Passover-Easter hybrid combining the best aspects of each. Expect further details about the Peaster egg-dying death match this weekend.

I was convinced we had the lock on make-your-own-Passover-tradition weirdness until yesterday when my mother forwarded me this.

I stand corrected.

4.11.2006

Why you should never drink after The Big Meeting with your boss and coworkers when your laptop is accessible

1. Because you will show your boss your blog, and his first question will be, "when do you find the time to do this?"

4.10.2006

Well, it made me laugh.

to: lists@mcsweeneys.net
from: mom101
subject: The Most Popular Penis Names of 2005 as Released by the Social Security Administration
Fred

Wayne

Armande

Big Guy

Joe-Bob

Fast Eddie

Rico

King Ralph

Anthony Jr.

You Old So-and-So

to: mom101
from: lists@mcsweeneys.net
re: your submission

Liz, I'm passing on this one. But thanks for the read.
Best,
Benjamin.

4.09.2006

Things I've Won in My Life

1975 I'm a Tumbling Nut T-shirt for holding a headstand in gym class. It featured a little cartoon metal nut, tumbling. (Get it? Get it?) It was my most prized possession until it was stolen several years later, right out of our car along with the rest of the contents of my camp trunk. Traumatic, to say the least.

1977 The pet guinea pig-naming contest in Mrs. Murphy's third grade class. Carter and Mondale were initially deemed the winning names, but upon further reflection, a re-vote was demanded and better monikers prevailed. Fuzzy Buzzy and Bootsy provided excellent companionship for the rest of the school year.

1982 Big jar of candy and assorted crap in a high school fundraising raffle.

1984 Hula hoop contest at 1950's-themed sockhop at the Westchester County Center. My friends and I went thinking it would be fun to dress up in polka-dotted skirts and do the twist. We never expected it was going to be a dance for old single people. Some of them were, like, thirty.

1997 The GLAAD media award for creating the first national tv commercial featuring a lesbian couple. There's something bizzaro about the cast of Spin City coming up to my table to meet me.

2006 $1500 from the Jeopardy slot machine at the Mirage Casino in Las Vegas. Rest assured I gave most of it back.

2006 The Crazy Hip Blog Mamas Member of the Week. It's not quite an I'm a Tumbling Nut T-shirt, but at least no crackhead with a slim jim can wrench this one away from me.



Seriously? Thanks to all who voted. It's nice to be acknowledged for something I really love doing anyway. And a special thanks to my cousin Ryan who tried to vote but was turned away for 1) not being a member of the ring 2) not having a blog 3) not having children.

As I mentioned here once before, this feels a little to me like the new girl in school being elected prom queen. But as long as you don't plan on dumping pig's blood over my head when I accept, I happily and humbly do so.
---------

You can read my interview thingie for the CHBM here.

4.06.2006

The Second Nine Months


Today Thalia turns nine months.

I had every expectation of writing a beautiful (but not sappy), engaging (but not long-winded), charming (but not flip), absolutely perfect (but not trying too hard) post about her. About how she's now been breathing oxygen as long as she was sucking in amniotic fluid. About how much my life has changed in unimaginable and unimaginably wonderful ways. About how I never thought I'd love another human being so much that it could cause physical pain--not even Chachi. Not even Chachi when he played guitar.

Instead, here I am at home (i.e. my hotel room) completely spent after another fourteen-hour day at work.

I'm feeling utterly crappy for flying my family 6000 miles across the country so that I can see them for ten minutes each morning. I'm eating Baked Lays and Boursin for dinner because I can't stand the thought of ordering room service for the eighth straight night. And I'm wondering how I can possibly plough through the exhaustion to generate any words remotely worthy of this occasion, let alone assembling those words into prose that won't make me want to cut my hands off at the wrists and never write again.

Thalia, I can only assure you that something better is coming when you turn one.

Oh God, the Cats in the Cradle lyrics have entered my consciousness and that's never a good thing.

So here is my promise to you: This will be not be another "I'll get around to it," like the New Year's resolutions that never get written, the screenplay that never gets finished, the promised lunch dates with friends that never get made. You're far too important to me. So like it or not, more effusive, embarrassing, overwritten essays about you than you can stand are in your future.

But you also have to know that the work I'm doing right now instead of writing about you--or watching you learn to clap, or feeding you new foods, or singing our little lullaby song as I tuck you in at night--is also all about you.

Please believe this. Because you need to help me believe it.

4.05.2006

Mom 101's Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions

(With apologies to Al Jaffee who did it first and did it best.)

So, did you bring the rain with you to LA? Ha ha ha ha ha...

-Rain? Why yes I did. I had some extra room in my suitcase and thought, hm, rain or my fun fur...

-Rain? Of course I brought the rain. My favorite pastime is watching LA drivers "test their brakes" every ten feet or so; particularly the ones I'm driving directly behind.

-Rain? Yeah, sorry about that. But sunshine will kill me. I'm sure you understand.

-Rain? Damn, you found me out. It's all part of Jonathan and my grand scheme to make frizz the next big thing.

-Rain? Well to be honest I found your LA rain a bit...well, trampy. So I had some more sophisticated rain brought in from New York. You don't mind, do you?

-Rain? Crap, I ordered locusts. I knew that website seemed sketchy.

-Rain? You mean...that's not God crying because of something I did? I'm going to kill my brother.

-No habla Inglese.

4.04.2006

The wedding is sometime in 2035 and you're all invited

Archer: I must admit, this is my first blind date.
Thalia: Yeah, mine too. I can't believe our moms, setting us up like this.
Archer: So, uh, what do you want to do?
Thalia: Um...I guess we could compare feet or something.


Thalia: Say, those are pretty nice feet.
Archer: You don't think they're too big? I get 'em from my mom.


Archer: I can't help but notice your
President Poopyhead T-shirt. I take it you're also a democrat?


Thalia: You drool too? No way, me too!


Archer: So then the baby says to the bartender,
"what do you mean you don't serve minors..."


Archer: Um, mom? A little privacy here?
Thalia: Mom, you're like, TOTALLY embarrassing me.
Go back to trading birth stories, or whatever.

(Thanks, Rebecca, for making my first in-person blog contact so enjoyable that Nate had to call me and yell at me to get the hell back to the hotel already because it was way past the baby's bedtime. Bad mommy. Great afternoon.)

4.03.2006

Where the Streets Have Good Names

Saturday afternoon, the first April sun beat away the clouds and warmed the greater Hollywood area to a perfectly lovely seventy degrees Fahrenheit. I took the opportunity to use the old whatsitcalled--oh yeah, legs--and walk the twelve or so blocks from my hotel to the Hertz, so that I could hightail it to LAX for a tearful (on my part) reunion with my daughter and her daddy.

Now remember: Saturday. Sunny. Seventy degrees. Blue sky.

Over the course of those twelve blocks, I passed precisely three people on the street. One was walking from the gym to his car, one was jogging, the other was asleep in a doorway under a cardboard will work for food sign.

Everything Dale Bozio said about Los Angeles is true--nobody walks there. Nobody. It's all about the wheels.

Your car is your second home in LA. People spend more on their car stereos than they do on their home stereos, which is understandable considering you can easily get through the entire two-cd set of Elvis Costello's Girls Girls Girls on your half-mile drive home. Especially if you take the 405.

If your car is your home, then your roomates are plentiful: Gym clothes, make-up, extra shoes, several months of LA Magazine, a carton of Zone bars, some home electronics, a six-pack of Arrowhead water, some Emergen-C packets, a full music library, various over-the-counter pharmaceutical remedies, a tennis racket and a spare cell phone charger. To say nothing of actual automobile accesories. I have yet to slide into a passenger seat that didn't have to be cleared off for me first.

In New York we have a similar thing but we call it a Very Big Bag. My coworkers here say they can tell I'm from the other coast because I trudge around the office carrying everything I own on my left shoulder. "Leave it in the car," they offer, concerned that the deep welts in my shoulder caused by the bag's leather handles might be permanent; to say nothing of my posture which now pulls right as much as thirty degrees. But it's a hard habit to break. In Manhattan you leave something in the car and you face the possibility of never seeing it again.

I have a theory that the car culture is largely responsible for the fashion trends here.

Just open the pages of In Style (or, as I like to think of it, Eyeliners of the Rich and Famous) and witness the absolutely impractical-for-any- other-city fashion finds. Consider the proliferation of do-me shoes, for example. A woman here can get away with the strappy, teetery six-inchers because she only needs to wobble her way from the valet to her seat in the restaurant and back again, with one brief stop along the way to air kiss someone she doesn't particularly like. Similary, I think the braless look has as much to do with cars as it does silicone. It's not as if the tatas will be bouncing down the endless staircase of the 5th Avenue E/V station. Just avoid potholes and you're golden.

On the other hand, I can't rationalize the popularity of thongs. I would imagine most valet parkers seek out the job on account of all the crotch flashing.

Traffic not withstanding, I really do enjoy my hours in the car when I'm in L.A. In my hometown it's always gogogogogogo. If you're walking you're also Blackberrying. If you're subwaying you're also crossword puzzling. New York is a city of multitaskers and to do just one thing at a time is grounds for confiscation of your 212 area code. Driving forces me to slow down. To just sit. To watch. To think. Maybe catch up on the music the kids are listening to these days. (What is this "JZ" of which you speak?) No wonder every man, woman, and busboy in LA has a screenplay to shop--a car actually allots them a few quiet, solitary moments in the day for creativity.

So yesterday morning, Nate, Thalia and I started our day in the car with no map and no plans and best of all, no timetable.

I love cruising from neighborhood to neighborhood, watching how quickly the faces go from all white to all brown and back again. It seems a privilege to be allowed glimpses of strangers' lives for even just a few seconds. My other favorite pasttime is saying the street names that we pass aloud. Every street here sounds like something you'd order in a Mexican restaurant. Um, yes I'll have the La Cienega Platter with the Rancho Cucamonga sauce, hold the Pico, plus a bottle of La Tijera. Oh, and two shots of Sepulveda for my friends here. (Isn't Sepulveda like the best street name ever? Say it with me--Sepulllllveda.) The exception of course is Beverly Hills where I guess dirty immigrant street names are not allowed. Instead, all the 90210 thoroughfares sound like Butlers. Willoughby, fetch me my Sulka robe. Rexford, I told you to use the good china at tea today!

And then we came to a stoplight and saw this:


Only in L.A. Or so we can pray.