10.31.2007

Toasting the Sunrise

Not yet 6AM and entirely worth it

Watching the sun rise above the Sea of Cortez is a humbling experience.

Anyone can catch a sunset. Any drunken tourist stumbling from happy hour on the beach to a liquid dinner at some bad chain restaurant can glimpse the sun sinking down past the horizon, briefly toast to the moment then carry on. A sunset is a public celebration. But a sunrise, that's a private one.

While I sat there in my little hotel terrace chair, feet extended over the railing and bathrobe clutched around me, it gave me time to reflect on the weekend.

There was a teary goodbye with the children, and then 24 hours and two flights later, a margarita deposited in my hand within seconds of pulling up to the hotel to help make it all better. There were the dusty knick-knack shops of San Jose del Cabos and the frightening tourist trap of downtown Cabos San Lucas. (Do people really go all the way to Mexico to eat at Johnny Rockets?) Someone even got in a good culturally insensitive crack in about the Home Depot on Highway 1 and how the parking lot is probably filled with Americans looking for work.

The resort where the wedding took place provided, bar none, the single most indulgent, exquisite poolside lounging experience of my life. When the staff sated me with homemade fruit popsicles, dabbed at my temples with a cold, lemon-scented towel, and then personally sprayed me down with cooling oxygen mist (I know!) I nearly died. I was torn between the liberal guilt of enjoying such luxuries and thinking hm, maybe I should turn Republican, master Wall Street, screw the poor, vote to dismantle social security, and come here like, every week for the rest of my life.
The view from "Does Not Suck."

If you ever have a chance to save half your yearly income and stay at one of the top hotels of the world I highly, highly recommend it. If you ever have the chance to sell one of your children and do the same, I also recommend it. Me, I just slummed it at the Hilton and crashed the fancy place.

Considering everything I saw and drank and ate over 4 days, the images that are most vivid in my mind are still those of the wedding:

A candle lit at the beachside ceremony for grandparents no longer with us.

A brother nervously preparing a best man speech and asking for the proper pronunciation of "fortuitous."

Three adult siblings in an impenetrable group hug, consumed by emotion at the youngest giving away her son.

A beaming 89 year-old great-grandmother hoisted above a crowd in a chair for a hora which would soon segue into a traditional Indian dance.

A table of six cousins crying with laughter into their cocktails, hardly able to relay to the spouses the childhood stories of "shows" performed at family reunions.

Two beautiful sisters toasting a stunning bride without a hint of ill will or envy.


And then it dawned on me as the sun grew higher in the sky, casting shadows across the water from the early morning flights of the seabirds - this is what it's all about. This is the reasons for the stretch marks, the leaking boobs, the sleepless nights turned to bedtime debates, the bottle battles, the preschool anxiety, the Elmo. This family business, this inarticulable experience of connecting and belonging to something far greater than ourselves, this is why we do it. This is what we're all here for.

In 20 or 30 years, it will be my girls hugging at a wedding, toasting their cousins, laughing about childhood, rolling their eyes as their parents and aunts and uncles dare to do the Hokey Pokey on the dance floor. And those moments will live longer than I do. Longer than even they do.

Thank you, sunrise. For the light. But also for the clarity.


10.24.2007

Vamos A La Playa (Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh)

Nate and I are preparing to depart for the land of sombreros, ponchos, and other lame cultural clichés tomorrow. This also justifies my gross blog neglect this week - I could either spend a few more hours with my kids...or with all of yours. Mine won out, although a little narrowly for comfort.

This will be our first ever real vacation since I got pregnant with Thalia, and certainly the first time we've left Sage at all. Of course my heart starts breaking into bits at the thought of leaving them. Teeny little microscopic bits that just lie there in a big soup of guilt, quivering and heaving, and sometimes bumping into the small pieces of ham. I guess Guilt Soup is not kosher. Which is surprising when you think about it.

But then I remind myself about all the beachy wedding festivities in store, the boat tour, the free-flowing margaritas, seeing my nearly 90 year-old grandmother dancing the hora as played by a mariachi band, along with the then possibility of my first full night's sleep in twelve months (!!!) and I think it will be just awesome. Provided I can get over the fact that I have to wear a bathing suit in public.

Hey, I tell myself, I weren't meant to have thighs the size of small schooners, God wouldn't have invented the pareo.

The girls (I'm still not used to saying that - how weird) will be staying with Grammy and Grandpa, who have graciously agreed to take over costume making duty, thus sparing Thalia the humiliation of going trick-or-treating around our building as something incorporating Saran Wrap, tin foil, and a black sharpie.

Grammy asked me to put together a list for her with instructions for the girls, and as I write her bedtime instructions, it is making me laugh.
-Thalia likes to go to sleep with many binkies. She will ask for "More binkies!" regardless of how many she has. So give her two or three and hold one for negotiation. You will need it.

-Thalia wants to put her PJs on "all by herself." Make sure to help her with this.

-If Thalia asks to sleep in her sleeping bag, it's not actually a sleeping bag. It's a small, drawstring cotton bag that a sleeping bag came in. A sleeping bag bag. She fits in it up to her hips.

-Put her in the sleeping bag bag, then layer blankets on her in the following order: Purple blanket (shiny side down), pink blanket, cherries blanket, Momsie blanket. If you forget the sleeping bag bag, you will have to start the layering process all over again.

-You may be tempted to leave her bottoms off if the warmer weather keeps up. I'd caution not to think of them as pajama bottoms - think of the as thing that keeps her diaper on.

-If you do not keep her diaper on you will not be happy in the morning. Let's just leave it at that.


It's funny how our kids' routines seem so, well..routine, until we have to describe them to someone else. And how much sometimes we curse these routines for taking our time and energy when there's a show to watch or a dog to walk or a post to write or something we'd rather be doing. And how much sometimes we wish we could pass these routines onto someone else.

And then, when we do pass them onto someone else, how very much we will miss them.

Adios, amigos. I'm happy to do a Cuervo shot for you - but you're on your own with the hangover.


10.20.2007

Asleep To Dream

This morning Thalia woke up more excited than usual.

"I saw something mommy! I saw a dog. With my eyes closed."

"Your eyes were closed, honey? You saw a dog when you were sleeping?"

"With my eyes closed. I saw a dog! There was a dog!"

"You had a dream sweetheart. That's what a dream is."

And for some reason that just made me happy beyond belief.


10.18.2007

Getting the Lead Out

Recently I ran into a friend without kids and he asked me about the toy recalls.

He wanted to know whether it was really as big an issue to moms as the media makes it out to be, or whether it's a whole lot of front-page yapping about nothing.

My answer was, you know what? It's toys.

It's toys.

When hamburger meat gets recalled, it's scary. When salad contains e coli, we panic, and rightfully so. But when it's some saxophone-playing Cookie Monster that turns out to be overrun with lead I think it breaks your heart a little too.

We brave the malls or the crowded toy stores, we plop down our hard-earned money, and we bring that shitty plastic figurine home because we know our children's eyes will light up and it will make them happy--maybe for five minutes. Maybe for five years. Either way, when that toy changes hands and that sweet little voice says WOWWWWW! we feel like the greatest parents in the world. It doesn't matter that we were too tired to give them anything but cereal for breakfast, or that the night before we put our children down for bed a half hour early because we just couldn't deal any more.

(That, or we're trying to buy our kids' love with plastic. Which - well, not me. I'd never do that. We practice achievement for its own sake around these parts, and after my two year old has finished her morning chores, I occasionally reward her with a second bowl of gruel.)

So as soon after all this stupid toy recall business started happening, team Cool Mom Picks started featuring even more handmade playthings, safer toys made in Europe, and locally made or fair trade items for kids. But soon we found we had so many of these ideas, so many great online stores for parents to shop at, so many cool artisans doing awesome things with wood and felt and yarn and NO FREAKING LEAD, that we put them all in one place.

Enter the Cool Mom Picks Safer Toy Guide.

Safer Toy Guide 2007

We think it's a really cool thing. In fact, Kristen and I got to go on Martha Stewart Radio and talk about it this week.

I know!

(And no, Martha was not there, and no the headphones were not hand-crocheted. But still - Martha! If only they knew that I have never in my life even seen a glue gun in person.)

I don't promote Cool Mom Picks stuff here too often because, well..that's that and this is this. But I'd be really honored if you went and checked it out and supported the really cool artists and shops that we've found.

And if you're so inclined, you can post a button on your blog. Laurie made them and they're pretty.

I'm just hoping that soon I can resume my regularly scheduled worrying about swallowing pennies and missing preschool application deadlines, thereby dooming my two year-old to career opportunities that involve the phrase, "Would you like fries with that?"

Oh wait, I haven't told you about the preschool application ordeal yet? Stand by. That's a fun one.


10.16.2007

A Mighty Wean: The Sequel

Hi Liz,

I'm one of the three moms who runs Adiri, makers of the Adiri Natural Nurser and the Breastbottle. I read your blog tonight and loved it and saw that you are considering these
bottles. As a fellow blogger (I write for SV Moms Blog and have my own as well) I'd love to send you a sample of our new Adiri Natural Nurser if you'd like to try it...The new one is, as you mentioned, BPA and phthalate free, simpler to use, and it looks a hell of a lot cooler. If you would like a sample please let me know where to send it!

-Sarah

Now THAT'S how you do it, PR people.

I received this email about 3 weeks ago and it changed my life, sweartagahd. This product is the single most awesomest bit of awesome-y awesomeness that ever did enter my household. (And considering we have a big-ass TV and Guitar Hero: 80s Edition, that's saying something.)

Sage is eating. She is eating from a bottle. Hallelujah! Right in time for the insane travel schedule to begin again, too.

And so with a wee bit of melancholy and a whole lot of expectation for more sleep in my future, A Mighty Wean: The Sequel begins.

Breastfeeding to me has never been my cause (although it's a good one). It's not an "issue" for me. It was just how I fed my babies. And now it's time for me to move on.

The entire nursing business been bittersweet. There are moments I love it and moments I curse its wretched, nipple-torturing name. There were times I held Sage to my breasts and stroked her cheeks as she ate and grew teary at the experience. There were times I looked in the mirror at these minivan-sized milk bags and grew teary at the experience.

I've dealt with engorgement and plugged ducts and oversupply and the pain of pumping (Argh! Pumping!), and yet I know I've had it easy compared to so many.

(Humble bow to the lactivists here; not trying to be discouraging but I have to speak my truth.)

It's a strange thing, this knowing that Sage is baby # last. It often makes me hyper-aware of the firsts that are lasts--of the fact that I won't again say, "Look, she rolled over for the first time!" Or "Nate get in here, she's sitting up!" But sometimes it's just the opposite. I'm so busy just trying to keep up with the juggle, I don't have time to reflect on the lasts at all--like 36 hours ago, when I last pulled Sage up to Old Reliable Righty, just for a moment, just for a little relief.

That was the end.

It came without fanfare or celebration or reflection or really too much thought at all. Mostly, I was thinking that I wanted a toasted bialy with some muenster cheese on it.

So now I take this time to say goodbye to the biological function of the boobs, to thank you with the utmost gratitude. You've served two kids very well and the nursing bra industry hasn't complained either.

I can't entirely say I'll miss you though. Maybe a little. But not a lot. That's the truth.

Nothing personal.


10.14.2007

Quite Possibly The Saddest Thing Ever


"I'm making milk for the giraffe!" Thalia squealed. Nate and I turned to see her, shirt raised, clutching a former favorite animal to her body.

"Oh, like mommy does? From your nipples, sweetie?"

"No. From here!"

Thalia looked down at her belly.

"I guess that's where my boobs are these days, huh," I said.

Nate didn't respond.


10.09.2007

Week in Review

This was one of those weeks. One of those weeks where there was too much to say and no time to say it. So, for your reading pleasure (which may be an optimistic assessment) I present a Metro Dad style week in review, or at least the highlights.

Monday: It was hot. I don't remember what I did but I think I was sweaty when I did it. Also I forgot to call my sister-in-law for her birthday. HAPPY BIRTHDAY MAGGIE.

Tuesday: I realized I was a pussy of the highest order as I sent Nate to take Thalia to her follow-up visit with the Doctors With Attitude. I know! I know! I'm going to switch practices. I just haven't gotten around to it yet - Much to the chagrin of the Time Out/Kids reader who read my column about this, and felt compelled to write me pretty much the snottiest email I ever received, disguised as advice:
The piece about taking your daughter to see Dr. S at DWA was pretty cute, but I really must ask: has it never, ever occurred to you that maybe your child's pediatricians are just not very good...[my doctor is the best blahblahblah thisiswhypeoplehateNewYorkers blahblah my doctor blah blah]... Give him a try. Unless, of course, you prefer to stick with the crummy docs because they can be counted on to provide material for a column every now and then.
Man, I hate people who basically make you feel like shit, proceed to tell you how much more awesome they are than you, and then pat themselves on the back for it.

(And yes, I googled her. And she has bad hair. Which made me feel a lot better.)

But I digress.

It would seem that Thalia, through a combination of Canadian bacon, chicken nuggets, and time has managed to gain two whole pounds in the last three months. Hoorah! So I didn't get a wrist slap again, Nate got the good news, and Thalia isn't wasting away into oblivion. Everyone wins.

Wednesday: Nate and I celebrated our 5 year anniversary of the night he invited himself over to watch Friends and left two days later. Grandpa babysat and we ate and drank ourselves right back in love again. A glass of wine, a glass of champagne, another bottle of wine and then a big glass of sherry will do that to a couple.

It was also the three year anniversary of the day we conceived Thalia in Montreal. (You'll have to tune into the Mominatrix podcast archives for that story.) Even if we get married, which I'm sure we'll do at some point, it's hard to imagine that that date could mean more than October 10.

Oh, and it was also the 26 year anniversary of my Bat Mitzvah, otherwise known as The Day I Wore Purple Satin Knickers in Public By Choice.

Thursday: Have you ever sat through a focus group evaluating some work you created? It's kind of like this.


Actually, it's exactly like this.
(And if you don't know the reference, this storyboard recreates arguably the most successful commercial in the history of advertising.)

Friday: Hey that's today. Happy Friday everyone.

Oh and did I mention I'm on TV with Kristen? It's true! And it's not even Meredith Vierra attacking us for drinking beer around our kids or whatever.


10.07.2007

You May Ask Yourself...How Did I Get Here?

To the Pregnant woman who passed me on Park and 27th around noon today:

This morning, my daughter Thalia and her cousin Ella were running around on the sidewalk like the crazy two-year olds that they are. You and your husband were passing by, and stopped for just a second to smile at them - that familiar smile that takes joy and anticipation and longing and sheer terror and smashes them all together until they curl your mouth up in a way that maybe only other mothers can recognize.

"You're next," I called to you, and I think your smiled brightened. I caught you squeeze your husband's hand just a little more tightly and then you walked on.

I just wanted to tell you that not so long ago, I was the one looking at little girls squealing on sidewalks and telling myself, soon. Not so long ago, I'd lurk on message boards for toddler moms and think they were speaking some special secret language filled with song lyrics and board books they knew by heart, newfangled acronyms (CIO! EBF! OMG! WTF!) and lines from TV shows I felt dumb for not having known. I thought these women all seemed so wise. So experienced. So...parental.

It never dawned on me that they were all just as hapless and scared as I was, fudging their way through this mothering business one day at a time.

They were just a chapter ahead of me in the book.

So, to the pregnant woman who passed us on Park and 27th today, don't worry. You'll be fine.

None of us know what we're doing either.


10.03.2007

Clooney Watch 2007 Comes to A Crashing Halt (Now, With Updates!)

Dear, beloved readers, I tried.

Oh how I tried to get you one single shot of The Clooney. I had the best post e-ver in my head had I achieved it but...nope. Nada. The closest I got was his stunt double ambling down the street, head down, doing the broken rib walk. He was working it for sure, and for a second I thought my heart would stop--until I realized it was indeed not The Cooney but a mediocre imitation. Magarine in a tub to The Clooney's fine, creamery butter.

I tried and I failed you. Forgive me. But I only have so many hours in a day for stalking.

I did have the opportunity to see Brad Pitt--his Navigator pulled up to dump him off at the location, but then a cluster of girls with cameras swarmed his car so fast, my first feeling was not "run!" but "poor guy." I can't imagine a life where you can't even get out of your car in brownstone Brooklyn without being attacked by screaming Brooklyn College students.

I hesitated--and missed the shot. Also I hit the wrong button on my camera. Tracey Clark I ain't.

I did see his pant leg as it disappeared through the door though. Whoo.

And the whole time, I was stuck with Nate in my head telling me I was the biggest, hugest, most embarrassing grade-A dork in the world for even considering spending more time at the set than it took to walk through on my way to CVS to pick up paper towels. Although I wasn't as bad as the neighbor who stumbled on the set, then returned moments later in better clothes and full make-up as if Joel Coen would spot her in the crowd, amd exclaim You! You are the woman we have been looking for to shoot a love scene with Brad Pitt RIGHT THIS MINUTE. We tried to cast for her in cities across the globe for months on end but now...here you are. What are the chances?

So, interested and too-cool-to-be-interested readers, I can only offer you the following Average Album of Celebrity Stalkerdom from my neighborhood's week-long brush with the A-list.


George Clooney's Stand-In

George Clooney's Chair


Cute Kid

Joel Coen


Ordinary mom using her...I mean, sitting with her kids


John Malkovich on his phone in a bathrobe

----
Edited to add:
(Mir, you are brilliant. But then, 800,000 readers a day can't be wrong.)


10.02.2007

See A Penny, Pick it Up...Maybe it Comes Out In Your Poo Later

"Mommy, where'd the money go?"

"What money, sweetie?"

"The money."

"Hold on. There was a penny there on the table, wasn't there."

"Where did it go?"

"Wait...where did it go Thalia?"

"I eat it."

"You what? You ate the penny? Are you just saying that?"

"I put it on my tongue. I eat it. I swallow it."

"And you swallowed it? You swallowed that penny? Why?"

"Whyyyyyy?"

"Yes, why?"

"I would like some dinner mommy."

"You ate the penny because you're hungry?"

"I would like a sandwich mommy. And milk in a cup."

"Don't eat money any more Thalia. You could choke. You could get sick. Do you understand?"

"Okay mommy."

"Or at least eat dimes. They're smaller."
----

Update 10/3: The incident has passed. So to speak.


10.01.2007

Oh Yes It's Ladies Night, and The Steak Is Right

With Nate doing a Madden Football weekend with the boys (that's the dad version of a weekend in Vegas) and Thalia doing a grandma weekend, I had Saturday night more or less, to myself. And I knew exactly what I wanted to do.

It started with a salad of baked figs, plump and silky, which accompanied a bed of mesclun greens dotted with a smattering of roquefort, sprinkled with tiny bits of crisped bacon, and dressed with a perfectly balanced vinaigrette. Next came the steak frites, medium rare as requested, the warmth melting the dollop of roquefort butter into a salty-sweet pool. The matchstick fries were beautifully crisped and salted, so much so that you could continue enjoying them long after they'd cooled. And the service was warm yet so authentically European that the query "Ketchup? Mustard? Mayo?" for the fries did not surprise.

I picked mustard.

The second glass of Pinot Noir took me straight through to the beginning of dessert, for which I went the distance with a hazlenut profiterole. Oh, mama. The chewy puff pastry was thankfully filled with ice cream and not some airy cream filling (blasphemy!) then drizzled with a bittersweet espresso-chocolate sauce and finished with crunchy slivers of blanched almonds and a little powdered sugar for show.

I had to stop myself from ordering a glass of port - it was hardly 7:30 and I didn't want to pass out before getting my fill of crappy TV for the night.

I walked out of Le Petit Marché (I wish I could link you! I love you Le Petit Marché!) a bit tipsy but not too tipsy, a bit full but not too full, and I felt whole again.

Like a human being. Like an adult.

Like I used to.

And yet there are people out there who would hate me for it.

Not hate me as in "I hate you because I was home eating Lean Cuisine out of the microwave." Not hate me as in, "you total pretentious foodie douche" - but honestly hate me.

Because Sage was there with me.

My little four month old, who alternately slept or cooed or gnawed on a hopefully lead-free rattle would, in some circles, be described as an inappropriate dinner companion. And I, in turn, would be described as a selfish, inconsiderate, breeding bitch who deserves to have my ovaries yanked forcibly through my nostrils for deigning to enjoy a nice meal out in my neighborhood--even at Earlybird Special hours--on a Saturday night.

Who's right?

Since having kids, I've followed the children in restaurants debate with great interest. I can see both sides.

I'm not a fan of rowdy, hyper, disruptive kids outside the playground, much less in restaurants that don't have "E. Cheese" in the name. I am mortified when I see children running underfoot, all but ignored by their parents, while waiters carrying heavy trays or carafes of scalding coffee try to avoid them. It's stupid. It's dangerous. It's entirely their parents' fault and there's no excuse for it. If the children can't behave appropriately, remove them. Get the food you ordered to go and wait outside while the waiter brings it to you.

But then, I'm not a fan of rowdy, hyper, disruptive adults either. I've had more than one meal compromised by some drunken suit at an all-expenses paid table for twenty, some five-top of outer-borough Bachelorettes with penis hats on their heads, or some oversexed match.com couple masturbating each other under the table with their feet.

Well-behaved children and adults alike are welcome to breathe the same 02 as me any time, any place. Pull up a high chair, kiddos, Shirley Temples are on me.

I've written before about restaurant-goers who hate people with kids, the eye-rollers who assume that any family with children under 15 or so needs Supernanny on the case. I used to think it was the issue of a few self-centered childless 20-somethings (raising my hand as formerly belonging to this group), maybe a few self-centered childless 80-somethings tossed in for good-measure. But now I'm starting to think it goes deeper. I'm starting to wonder if it's an American problem--an overall lack of respect for families. Respectful families.

I see it in the pervasive notion that breastfeeding in public is "disgusting," or any of the other angry (Angry! Grr! Let's hate on the boob!) descriptions I've seen tossed about. It's in the painfully short maternity leaves. It's in the guys on the subway who stare at you standing uncomfortably with two kids, all while splaying their legs into a second seat for themselves. And it's in the pervasive belief that once you become a parent you'd better erase that silly fantasy that you are in any way entitled to the world's perfectly cooked steak frites.

Someone (edited to add: Hungry Beans! It was Hungry Beans!) recently pointed me towards this 2006 post from a really lovely NYC food blog called Megnut, about an incident where an inattentive waiter counted infants at a table towards the party of six needed to include a tip. The discussion ranges from thoughtful and articulate to downright infuriating as it veered off into breastfeeding and other parents-in-restaurant issues.

(Some San Diego tourist trap manager declared in comments that if you ignored his server's suggestion to nurse your infant in their bathroom, "your service will be perfunctory or non-existent, your food will be awful, and we won't miss you a bit when you leave and don't come back." )

I found a comment from a reader that summed up my thoughts far better than I could.
Becoming a mom, no one told me, means people will expect you to give up everything you care about. And most of the time you do it. In the first three months you don't sleep, you often can't use the bathroom when you need to, you can't eat more than a bite or two of food at a time and you can be hungry all the time while fat. Then later, you start to get bits of your life back. You have a meal all the way through, you sleep a night, then another night (then you don't sleep because of teething.) Maybe you start to cook again rather than defrost. Maybe you eat out. If you love food, you dream of that first time you can sit down and really taste beautiful food lovingly prepared...You need it in your life, especially when you are down.
Oh, she speaks for me. She speaks for a lot of us.

It breaks my heart to think that I might not wanted in the restaurant culture any more, a world that my father and grandfather introduced me to so many years ago. Some of my dearest memories involve so-called fancy restaurants as a kid. I remember learning to use a finger bowl. Tasting red wine (and hating it). Trying to figure out whether it was cool or creepy that a restaurant kept spare jackets and ties in the coat check for the rare under-dressed guest. It was a magical, special adult world and I felt so privileged to enter it a few times a year.

I knew how to behave, and so I was welcome. No one ranted about it. No one told me that "children DO NOT belong in a place like this!"

(Do people just rant more these days?)

Nate and I don't want our daughters to grow up thinking that all restaurants have a $3.95 mac n cheese special or tablecloths you can draw on. We want them to know that some meat doesn't need ketchup. Sometimes it doesn't even need fries. And sometimes, if you're not going to finish it, you just need to push it around on your plate the right way so you don't insult the chef.

And we want them to know that there are rules when you're in these kinds of places. And that if you follow those rules, people will treat you with the respect you've earned. No matter how old you are.

---

It's weird to think that one night you can sit at an airport gate, crying and banging out a post, simply to preserve your own sanity (and keep from having to make eye contact) and that a few weeks later, someone will email you to say, guess what - to me that post was perfect.

The Original Perfect Post Awards – Sept ‘07

Thanks so much, Bitsy Parker. I'm honored.