Prince Swears Off Cursing. You Won’t Believe What Happened Next.

210px-No_gesture.svgI remember the first time I heard my mother curse.

I was about 10, eating breakfast at the big, round table that took up much of our small kitchen and she was opening a box of Devil Dogs – presumably to put in our school lunches and not to serve for breakfast, but this was the 70s – when all of a sudden I heard her bark, “Shit!”

Of course, back then, you didn’t try to engage with an angry parent and ask what was wrong, so I just assumed she cut herself opening the box, and went back to my Cocoa Puffs. But inside I was thinking, “Wow. Mom just used a really bad curse word.”

That never happened.

Other than getting my hands on a George Carlin comedy album around 1976 and listening over and over to his infamous “Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television,” I don’t remember hearing anyone around me using controversial language on a daily basis. It was a G-rated world.

So when something PG-13 was uttered, I took note. Once, my dad told a story and its punch line, in which he told one of his employees at a Burger King in Yonkers to get his “Puerto Rican ass off the counter and get back to work,” was so hilarious, I decided to retell it while having dinner at my friend Katy Leary’s house. And while that punch line received uncontrollable laughter at my grandparents’ house one Saturday night when my father told the story over a table littered with Budweiser cans and ashtrays, it garnered icy silence and nervous stares from my friend’s family and a follow-up phone call to my parents from Mrs. Leary.

Probably around the same time – I guess you could call this my profanity awakening – I heard some older boys, maybe 7th or 8th graders, at my tiny Catholic school using the F-word and couldn’t believe my ears.

“How could they say that about a woman’s body?” I thought, because at that point, I was under the impression that all forbidden words had something to do with the female reproductive system.

I remember standing on the quiet street in front of my suburban New Jersey house with other kids in my neighborhood, trying to work out just where the “shit” and “fuck” were located.

Almost 40 years later, I’d bet that my 11-year-old son has a better understanding of what a lot of those naughty words mean. Today, we are surrounded by expletives. They jump out at us at every corner. They’re all over the radio and on TV. In fact, last night on The New Girl one of the characters compared a folded napkin to a vagina, which isn’t one of those dirty words (although used in this case improperly) but the visual just seemed to cross a line. I was like, “Wow.”

And Jimmy Kimmel hosted his first annual Celebrity Curse Off the other night between Julia Roberts and Sally Field and you should’ve heard the mouth on Gidget. After Sally unloaded a big fat “motherfucker,” poor Julia looked at the audience and said, “Why am I in a curse-off with the Flying Nun?”

Not that I am any language prude. In fact, I have a tendency to sprinkle much of my day-to-day conversation with salty talk. It worked back in college, when my freshman roommate – a cute little blonde debutante from Baltimore – cursed like a sailor. We got along great, swearing and filling up a two-foot ashtray with Marlboro cigarette butts.

Over the years, I’ve developed enough sense to know when I needed to clean up my act, like at work and around my little children. Back in the day, “stupid” and “dummy” were on the list of words you weren’t allowed to say around our house and I think I might have washed a little mouth or two out for employing such offensive language.

But now that they’re bigger, well most of them, I seem to have lightened up my restrictions on cursing around the kids. I have confessed to yelling, “Fuck you” into a phone at my 21-year-old and was cursing to high heaven during a drive to Virginia two weeks ago. Just ask my daughter, who was sitting next to me in the car when I learned, via a text sent by my girlfriend, that I had not only missed my fifth grader’s Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) graduation but that his essay had been selected as the best in his class and he got to read it out loud at the assembly.

“Are you fucking kidding me?” I shouted, thinking of all the DARE graduations I’d attended not only for my other children but covering as a local reporter. “Do you mean to fucking tell me after all these fucking years, one of my kids finally fucking wins and I’m not fucking there?”

“Motherfucker!” I howled.

My daughter pretty much kept quiet during the expletive-riddled outburst but later that night at dinner, she reported my bad behavior to the rest of our family. “You should have heard Mom,” she told them over a giant tower of onion rings. “She had, like, a total temper tantrum driving down here.”

“What a diva,” they all concurred, as I sat picking at a salad while they plowed their way through the spire of fried rings.

But sometimes, nothing gets the point across quite like a well-placed expletive. I do tend to employ curse words probably more than the average person in my everyday conversations — which I consider a part of my charm — and that carries over into the blog. And let’s face it; the blog is just like one giant conversation in which I get to do all of the talking.

When I first started posting, I used foul language pretty liberally but now I try to save the really big ones for where they’re going to have an impact on the story. I’m trying to keep it classy over here in the blogosphere. But I can’t tell you how many people have commented to me about how I described my ex-husband’s shoveling skills. Not to brag, but it’s goddamn poetry.

But after a weekend of driving almost 18 hours and contending with the terrible drivers south of the Mason-Dixon line, I pulled as many expletives that I could think of out of the bad-word arsenal when I wrote about the experience for the blog. 

And that post prompted a very nice e-mail from one of my Internet boyfriends – which is what I like to call my guy friends who follow my blog mostly because, even though they’re all married and there’s nothing romantic or unseemly involved whatsoever, I think it sounds really funny – suggesting that all the cursing detracted from my writing.

At first I thought, “Fuck him.”

But then I saw on the Today Show that Prince – and if you really know me, you know I loved that weirdo so much I had a poster of him hanging in my freshman dorm – had sworn off cursing. The Purple One recently told Essence magazine that he quit all the cussing out of respect to others. “Would you curse in front of your kids? To your mother?” he asked.

This from the man who sang “Let’s Pretend We’re Married” and “Sexy M.F.”?

[Here is where I spent countless minutes trying to find a YouTube video of either of these songs, which apparently do not exist in this country. Trust me, they’re racy.]

And so, out of deference to my own mom and the few of my children who read the blog, along with a handful of local officials, colleagues and other folks I’ve known on a professional level who’ve found my blog and read along, I think I might have to follow suit.

Don’t get me wrong: Some drivers will always have to be called out for their douchy ways and some guys will always shovel like, well, you know how they do it.

But I’m going to make an effort to keep things a little cleaner. I mean, they are just words, upon which we’ve decided arbitrarily to attach negative connotations, making them a threat to society. But there is something appealing about trying to preserve a sense of civility. I mean, it’s either that or we chuck it all out the window and start wearing jeans to church and chewing with our mouths open. Licking of fingers would not be far behind followed by sweatpants at the office.

I will be one small blogger trying to maintain some level of dignity in an increasingly undignified world.

And really, if I can give up pizza and bagels, cursing should be no fu… um, no problem. No problem at all.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

28 Hours

I-81.svgYou guys, I ended up driving a total of 28 hours last week and am still lying in my bed recuperating.

As we all know by now, I very famously added to my drive home from my kids’ college down in Virginia last weekend by driving in the wrong direction for about an hour along scenic I-81 with my third child and not-very-good-copilot. That little detour added about two hours to the already eight-hour drive and brought the grand total of driving last weekend to 18 hours. Zoinks.

My trusty sidekick and I got back into our car early Thursday morning to drive north, this time to visit a few colleges in Upstate New York. Now, I’m the kind of driver who just plugs the endpoint address into my iPhone and follows along as I drive. I don’t study the route and have no idea which way Siri is taking me until she starts barking orders during the drive.

So when she announced that in 23.7 miles we would be exiting left for I-81 north, my daughter and I started to scream.

“WHAT??” I yelled. “Is that a joke?”

And apparently, since I don’t really think Siri has any sense of humor — much less irony — it was not a joke and we ended up on 81 a bit further north than where we generally get off to go home from Virginia. However, I am happy to report, I kept my north and south in check and we made it to our most northerly destination in a little under five hours.

By the time we pulled back into our driveway around 8:30 Friday night, after more than five hours of driving that day, we were both thoroughly over road trips and Siri. I actually started screaming at her at one point late into Friday’s drive when she had me exit a major interstate to cut south on a two-lane highway with traffic lights. I don’t know what Siri is thinking about some times. Ask my daughter, I was yelling like a crazy person.

All that driving kind of cut into my blogging last week, but I did have a little free time to write about our journeys along I-81 and my observations of fellow drivers. Here, try some and for the love of pete, keep right except to pass:

___________________________________________________________________

400px-Keep_Calm_and_Carry_On_Poster.svgThe Day I Went South

The following is based on actual events. 

This. Totally. Fucking. Happened. 

Let me begin by issuing a disclaimer: I have never purported here to be particularly smart. And while I often seem to by trying to prove quite the opposite in the stories I share on my blog, hopefully I come off – at the very least – as someone who knows her left from her right. Her up from her down. Her north from her south.

Until now. (READ MORE … )

___________________________________________________________________

Stop-motion_lego5 Most Annoying Types of Drivers

I might have mentioned yesterday that I spent the weekend doing a fair amount of driving. Eighteen hours of driving, in fact, and mostly along major interstates that slice through Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains and meander across Pennsylvania farmland. And over the course of those hundreds of miles of roadway, I came to a very big conclusion: Other drivers are assholes. (READ MORE … )

 

 

 

 

5 Most Annoying Types of Drivers

Stop-motion_legoI might have mentioned yesterday that I spent the weekend doing a fair amount of driving. Eighteen hours of driving, in fact, and mostly along major interstates that slice through Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains and meander across Pennsylvania farmland. And over the course of those hundreds of miles of roadway, I came to a very big conclusion: Other drivers are assholes.

I mean, I’m sure it’s not you guys. You guys are conscientious drivers who adhere to the rules of the road. It’s all those other jerks behind the wheel that make me nuts. But what I can’t decide is whether they’re just totally clueless, like they haven’t figured out where their cruise control buttons are, or they just don’t give a shit. It’s mind-boggling.

And because I had so many hours to think about the state of my fellow drivers this weekend, I’ve come up with profiles of the 5 most annoying drivers out on the road. See if you agree:

  1. The %$#@ Truck Driver: I hate to make blanket statements but I feel pretty good about saying that all truck drivers are douchebags. Okay, you might be thinking that I’m prejudiced after that 18-wheeler sideswiped me this winter, but that is not the case. I just think that those who drive big rigs either lack the self-awareness of just how large their vehicles are, much like when my size 12 son comes downstairs squeezed into size 8 jeans, or they just don’t give a fuck. I’m guessing it’s the latter. I would like to propose that all vehicles with more than four wheels be restricted to just one lane on two-lane roadways. I had a giant FedEx truck – the kind that is like two giant trucks linked together as one – swerve in front of me as I was about to pass it in the left lane and then follow behind it as it lumbered for miles to pass as many trucks as it could in the right lane before a break let me zip around it on the right. It was all I could do not to honk and let loose the bird.
  2. The King of the Fast Lane: You know who they are. They’re the drivers that get in the left lane and stay in the left lane for their entire trip, regardless of how fast they’re going. I just don’t understand that brand of thinking. That rudeness. I’m a pretty fast driver, but I stay to the right unless I’m passing. Just like it says in the rules of the road book. Duh.
  3. The Accelerator: Jesus, this driver makes me crazy especially because I am all about cruise control. First of all, my foot gets tired, pressing down on that accelerator for all those hours. Second of all, I think it goes along with my philosophy for life in general: Maintain a steady pace.  This driver, who is probably the same one hogging the left lane, is generally driving slower than you are, until you try to pass him on the right. Then, what do you know, he really starts to put to pedal to the metal. I have no patience for this dude and even if I have to go over 80 mph to get around his vehicle, I find that once he’s been thoroughly passed, he slows back down again and quickly recedes from my rearview mirror. Fool.
  4. The Old Dude in the Hat: I don’t know what it is, but every time I’m driving behind a car that appears to be driven by someone who just learned how to drive, employing every annoying habit, I spot the telltale trucker’s cap perched atop the driver’s head – usually emblazoned with some military insignia or else advertising as a promotional giveaway at the racetrack – who is a man of a certain age. Old guys are terrible drivers, aggressively slow and uneven with their use of blinkers and braking, and the hat is like a giant red arrow that helps you identify them. Pass him and move on.
  5. The Cell Phone Addict: This driver generally looks, well, just like me. She’s some blonde woman of a certain age driving a giant SUV. (Unless it’s the goombah driving a Mercedes.) The only difference between me and that first driver is that she is fucking addicted to her iPhone. She can’t disconnect, even at 80 mph and drives like a douche because of it. Lady, do us all a favor and if you can’t wait until you get home, figure out how to hook up your Bluetooth, for the love of pete. Plus, you’re teaching your kids how to be douchebags and continue the cycle. Stop for humanity’s sake.

Did I miss anyone? Any other driver out there who makes you crazy? Be sure to let me know in the comments below.

 

 

How to Get a Spray Tan

IMG_2945Because I am a woman of a certain age living in New Jersey, there might be certain assumptions you’ve made about me.

Perhaps you think I tawk a certain way, embrace big hair and have had my breasts surgically augmented up to here (hand at throat). But while I’ll admit to being a fairly aggressive driver and knowing all the words to most Bruce Springsteen songs, I don’t really fit that “Real Housewives of New Jersey” profile. I like to wear my hair short and flat to my head, my boobs look like the kind of boobs you’d find on a 47-year-old woman who’d nursed four kids and a woman I interviewed with once years ago in Manhattan for a PR job with Gucci couldn’t get over how I spoke.

“You don’t sound like you’re from New Jersey,” this Italian woman marveled repeatedly after I told her I grew up in the Garden State.

But there is one thing about me that kind of fits the “Jersey Shore” profile and that is my penchant for tanning. It just makes everything better: Middle-aged belly fat, wobbly arms and a face left pale by cold and snowy Jersey winters.

Dudes, I am a firm believer that if you can’t tone it, you need to tan it.

I’ve embraced this notion since I was a teenager, when I returned home from a two-week stay at my parents’ condo in Boca (so Jersey) and garnered attention not only for my deep tan but my overall attractiveness level. It had gone way up. It turns out I’m one of those girls who just looks a lot better with a little color.

After that revelation, I dedicated myself to tanning. I spent hours sitting on the beach with my high school BFF, slathered in Bain de Soleil, sipping Diet Cokes and puffing away on our Merit cigarettes (the picture of health, circa 1983).

When tanning beds came into vogue, you can bet I’d scrape money together to go and bake on those glass beds, my eyes shielded by those little rubber goggles like someone participating in some weird science experiment.

But then, like the delicious Diet Cokes and cigarettes, we found out that all those rays — whether real or blasted out of a tanning bed — were not so good for you.

So when a spray tan place opened in town 10 years ago,  I was an early adapter. I quickly adjusted to standing in just a paper thong and a hair net in front of another woman, while she instructed me to turn my leg this way and that, and then turn around and bend over a little to avoid that dreaded ass wrinkle.

I’m kind of sorry I know these things.

Now, you don’t have to go au natural — you can wear a bra and underwear or a bathing suit — but I mean if I’m getting tan, I am going to get a tan.

And I’ve learned over the years that being as brown as a berry was cute when I was 8 — when my siblings and I would pile into the dentist’s office for a check up after a long summer playing under the sun sans sunscreen and the receptionist would say, “Look at all you brown little berries” — but not so attractive on a grown woman. Witness the poor “Tan Mom.” A little glow is really all you need.

I visited the nice ladies at the spray tan place in anticipation of my Florida Ladycation last weekend because you could be sure I didn’t want to hit the beach fresh off this brutal winter weather. I really needed something to tone down those big, blue veins on the backs of my legs.

Really, I consider it a public service.

Here’s the difference between getting sprayed now at 47 than a decade ago: The technician needs to employ one of those sponge brushes to gently prop the skin that sags towards my knees up to get inside those wrinkles. It’s come to that.

I became concerned when the woman who sprayed me didn’t have me kind of bend over to spray my front, thus preventing my boobs from shading half my torso, and told her as much. She then came over and, one at a time, kind of lifted up my boobs with her fingers to get under there.

“Wow,” I told her. “That’s the most action I’ve gotten in a while.”

I mean, what else are you going to say in that situation? I treated it as if she was a doctor or a mammogram technician.

Before entering one of the back rooms to get sprayed, I was chatting with the owner and a mom waiting as her teenage daughter got sprayed for a prom. I had mentioned that I was preparing to go on a trip and the mom said it never occurred to her to get a spray tan before going on a sunny vacation. It never occurred to her? I even make a beeline to the spray tan place to spruce up for a big party.

The owner tried to encourage the mom to try a quick spray on her face to see what it’s like in case she wanted to come back before going on vacation the following week, but the mom demurred, saying she’d think about it.

Clearly, she must not be from New Jersey.

Are you a Jersey Girl who enjoys a little tanning? Just click here to share it!

 

Amy’s Long Night

Screen Shot 2014-04-02 at 8.01.44 AM

by Nancy Garber (Author), Lynn Wheeling (Illustrator)

When I was a little girl, my first grade teacher gave me the book “Amy’s Long Night” for Christmas. This was 1971 in a tiny Catholic school so neither the fact that the teacher gave students gifts or that they were specifically for Christmas was weird.

The teacher, Miss Zinc, handed out a book to each of the probably 15 kids in the class but mine had my name on it and made me feel super-special.

The book tells the tale of Amy, a fairly precocious youngster who only wants to stay up all night for her sixth birthday. I loved reading about how her older siblings went to bed and even her mom and dad retired, leaving Amy and her dog, George, to wait out sunrise (which, of course, never happens because she passes out on the floor around midnight).

Back then, nighttime just seemed endless and slightly mysterious. Like the black hole of my day, especially since — barring a bad dream about Witchiepoo that had me up and looking out the window once (I’m sorry but that show was terrifying) — I spent most of my long nights of childhood fast asleep.

I think about the book a lot, especially when — as it so often happens nowadays — I find myself wide awake at 2:30 a.m. As I did last night.

A coughing fit and subsequent trip to the bathroom had me up and instead of just going through the drill zombie-style and maintaining a level of semi-consciousness required to get my pants up and down, I started to have actual thoughts.

The kiss of death.

Some of the things running through my brain were not terrible, like the three posts I composed for this blog. Seven hundred word masterpieces. The unfortunate part of nighttime brilliance is that it is almost impossible to recreate in the light of day.

Which is why I’m writing about not being able to sleep and not something more exciting.

But then my thoughts started going down darker paths. I composed letters/emails/rants to all those who have wronged me over the course of a lifetime. In that group I included the figure skating instructor who made me feel stupid when I was, like, 8 for not getting the hang of skating backwards and my former in-laws.

That’s what a beady-eyed grudge holder I am under cover of darkness.

I always know when I start reliving my wedding 23 years ago or, say, high school graduation that I’ve really gone off the rails and my brain is apt to start smoking at any minute.

For some reason darkness just brings, not adventure — the way “Amy’s Long Night” promised — but doubt and disappointment. Fear.

I looked around my room, surveying the outline of book piles, camera equipment and stacks of documents and thought, “What kind of scattered, unfocused life am I living?”

And that’s when I knew I needed to reign myself in. Put a stop to all of that bad energy just radiating off me lying on the sunken left side of my king-sized bed.

I concentrated on not concentrating on anything and heard the far off horn of the commuter train speed through town and church bells somewhere clang four times.

FOUR TIMES? It’s 4-the-fucking-clock in the morning?

Right about then is when I heard the first bird tweet and knew I had to pass out before all of the fucking birds in the neighborhood started squawking and singinging and trilling and whatever other annoying noises they make at the crack of dawn.

And then. Thankfully. Darkness.

I think the next time I’m struck with a bout of insomnia, I’m going to take a page out of “Amy’s Long Night” and try to read a book to pass the time.

Middlemarch would have me passed out in no time.

Middlemarch would have me passed out in no time.

Because all those bad thoughts do no one any good and are best left under the cover of darkness.

Even make-believe Amy and George know how scary bad thoughts are.

Even make-believe Amy and George know how scary bad thoughts are.

 

10 Things I Won’t Miss About Winter 2013-14

DSC00412I didn’t need Al Roker, shivering outside in Rockefeller Plaza this morning, to tell me on this last day of winter that this has been one of the snowiest seasons on record for those of us here in the Northeast.

I’ve got the five extra pounds and tight jeans to prove it.

According to USA Today, this has been one of the 10 snowiest winters for the New York City, Philadelphia, Chicago and Boston areas, and I will be happy to hang up my trusty shovel and bid adieu to the wretched season.

I did find it interesting that this has not been one of the coldest winters on record in the region, given that I’ve spent most of the last few months cranking the thermometer up to 72 degrees in the house and curling up in a chair next to the fireplace to work. Perhaps I am becoming a cat.

But overall, it’s only the 34th coldest on record, with Winter 2009-10 averaging even colder temperatures. I guess last year’s balmy winter made us all soft.

And so, even though it means we are one step closer to summer break and all of its ensuing implications — like no school and bathing suits — I am not very sorry to say good-bye to winter this year.  Herewith, a list of things that can kiss my ass:

  1. Snow
  2. Shoveling said snow.
  3. Fighting with my children about shoveling said goddamn snow.
  4. Snow days.
  5. Delayed openings.
  6. Phone calls at 4:30 a.m. regarding said delayed openings.
  7. College winter break.
  8. Entering a room to find college kids on couch watching Criminal Minds/Breaking Bad/Dr. Who/Arrested Development/Walking Dead/The List Goes On.
  9. Skin the color of my kitchen moulding.
  10. The Polar Fucking Vortex.

What won’t you miss when we officially say “hello” to spring tomorrow? Tell me in the comments section below.

 

 

Give Us Dirty Laundry

Lh9_(5970963447)I feel sorry for the Cannings.

You know who they are. They’re the New Jersey family that made international headlines last week when their teenage daughter, Rachel, took her parents to court in an effort to get them to pay her school tuition, even though she moved out of their house in October.

Rachel accuses her mom of being the source of her battle with anorexia (she says she called her “fat” and “porky”) and her dad of inappropriate acts of affection (like kissing her on the cheek in public).

Her parents claim their 18-year-old daughter constantly overstepped the boundaries they had set for her – by staying out late, drinking alcohol and dating a boy of whom they did not approve. She’d also been suspended from her Catholic high school a couple of times.

The family appeared together in court last week, although they sat at separate tables with their attorneys, and the parents at one point were photographed mopping tears from their faces with Kleenex.

It’s just so sad.

That’s all I could think when I looked at those pictures online was how sad it was that the pretty common trials and tribulations of being and raising a teenager were now public fodder for online forums.

Scrolling through the long thread of comments under just one Star Ledger article on the case, I noticed posters were quick to point the finger of blame at just about everyone involved – from Rachel, to her parents to the family who took her in after she left home.

Even the Star Ledger was taken to task for posting photos grabbed off Facebook of Rachel wearing a bikini (which I did not find lurid but instead just a cute picture of her snuggling a seal during a family vacation in the Bahamas).

And because many folks who post comments online are the trolls of the Internet, lurking under the cloak of anonymity to spread vitriol wherever possible, so much of what’s being posted is mean and downright self-righteous.

Posters call Rachel “troubled,” the family “dysfunctional” and the father of the friend Rachel is staying with – who happens to be an attorney who’s fronting her legal bills – “creepy.”

One poster wonders about the Cannings, “If they were such a wonderful family how did they end up with such a self-absorbed entitled daughter who didn’t want to respect her parents?”

Another commenter posted, “The parents should have done a better job at raising this child, they were definitely a dysfunctional family.”

Ouch.

Have none of these holier-than-thou commenters ever lived with, raised or spent time as a teenager?

If they had done any one of those things, they would know that it is NOT easy. Who are any of us to judge?

I don’t know about you, but I would not want the intimate details of my family life – my struggles raising my teenagers in particular – splashed all over the Internet.

I mean, okay, I do my fair share of writing about personal stuff on this blog but I promise you, you don’t know the half of what goes on around here.  And that’s how it should be.

Believe me, I know just what it’s like to try to live with someone who’s under the impression that the number of candles on a birthday cake gives him or her the right to do whatever s/he pleases, house rules be damned.

I think the Cannings just wanted the best for Rachel and her sisters and thought they, in turn, were doing their best for them. Just like the rest of us.

I think that some kids are just more difficult than others and Rachel might be one of those.  I have some experience with that.

I had separate discussions with both of my daughters recently about the Cannings and thought it was interesting that neither jumped to Rachel’s defense. They were both kind of like, “What?”

“Every kid’s got, like, rules they have to live with,” observed my 20-year-old. “Nobody likes it, but that’s just the way it is.”

My younger daughter, who’s 16 and still at a stage where the less syllables she has to use in a conversation with me the better, just said of Rachel’s plight, “That’s stupid.”

And I agree, the Cannings’ disagreements with their daughter – ones I bet a lot of us have had with our own kids – just got out of control.

I hope they can figure out a way to work things out and that Rachel moves home because that’s where she belongs.

And if one of my kids tries to run away and live with a friend, to those parents I say: Please, don’t do my child any favors.

Poop Happens

IMG_0063Today I would like to talk about poop.

Specifically, I would like to discuss animal poop, and even more specifically: my feelings about cat poop.

Because even though I’ve been a reluctant cat owner for, like, four years or something, I still haven’t been able to get a handle on all the poop she makes and just the whole kitty litter box thing in general.

It’s gross.

And right now, it’s become my fucking problem since her real mother—my oldest daughter who carried on about keeping it when we found the half-dead cat in our garage one snowy night—is away at school, leaving me to deal with the little turds that pile up in a plastic box on a daily basis in our upstairs bathroom.

Again, gross.

And then there’s all the litter she kicks up onto the tiled floor after she’s done her business. One of my kids actually refuses to use that bathroom – dubbed the “kids’ bathroom” – because of the specks of grey litter scattered across the floor, and uses my bathroom instead.

In fact, since the litter box was set up in the kids’ bathroom a few years ago, no one really uses that latrine any more. I often come upstairs to use my own bathroom to find the door locked, Z100 blaring on the portable radio next to the sink while my 11 year old stands in the shower for 20 minutes before exiting sans soap or shampoo and leaving a towel on the floor in his wake.

And then there’s my concern about all that weird dust that gets stirred up while I’m scooping things out of said plastic box. The lavender-scented dust floats in the air right in front of my face, which I thus inhale, and I am convinced the matter will be the cause a decade from now of my mesothelioma diagnosis.

How can this be good for my lungs?

What I’d like to know is: how do people have more than one cat?  I can’t even imagine the type of waste maintenance involved in such an endeavor. One of my daughter’s friends recently mentioned his family had four cats and all I could think was, “How does that even work?” I can’t even go there.

I didn’t really grow up with cats, I mean, my mom had acquired one while I was away at college, but I was never involved in any of her upkeep and so still don’t really feel like I know what I’m doing with mine.

But I am no stranger to poop.

Cleaning the litter box is a good reminder of my desire to get off the waste management crew around here for a while. Between the four kids, two now-gone large dogs and the ever-present kitty cat, I have been dealing with other creatures’ poop for two decades. Oh, and let’s not forget the guinea pig, mice, numerous fish and two hermit crabs I’ve cleaned up after – or yelled at people to clean up after – along the way. (Wait, do hermit crabs poop? I don’t remember.)

My ex-husband actually dealt with a lot of the dog poop over the years, so I have to give him that. He’d dutifully walk our first dog to the dog park in Hoboken early in the morning and again after work to do his business and later, he’d go out into the backyard to pick up all the giant piles left by our giant dog.

He also helped out with our kids’ poop management but I probably handled the bulk of the diaper changing. The accidental poops in big boy and girl panties. The poops I’d find floating in the tub after my toddler would sit down and the water acted like a giant enema, freeing waste from little bowels.

When my ex moved out, our golden retriever Rudy was so traumatized by the split he started bypassing the backyard and just pooping on the family room carpet. Super, totally disgusting. The vet actually suggested putting the guy on anti-depressants to help him cope.

Please, I was upset, too, but you didn’t see me pooping on his dog bed. Then again, dogs can’t drink wine.

Aside from the fact that he pooped, that golden was a pretty amazing dog and I miss having him constantly underfoot. At the time though, it drove me crazy when I found all 90 pounds of him stuffed under my desk while I worked or jammed under the kitchen stool while I drank my morning coffee. But he made for excellent company and only needed a scratch on the head in return for his allegiance.

Rudy would shove himself under my desk while I worked rather than stretching out on his giant bed about five feet away.

Rudy would shove himself under my desk while I worked rather than stretching out on his giant bed about five feet away.

It gets tempting when I hear that someone just got a new puppy or see some sad Facebook post about a mutt looking for a forever home, but then I remember all the poop and hold my ground.

I went out with a girlfriend Saturday night who I spent many mornings with walking through wooded trails or along sandy beachfronts while our two dogs raced joyously ahead, free of leashes and fences. They’d always loop back around to check in with us, looking up with great big smiles on their furry faces before taking off again through the brush.

My girlfriend lost her guy not long ago and already has a new dog – albeit an old rescue mutt – to keep her company. “I can’t believe you haven’t gotten another dog,” she said to me over glasses of Chardonnay.

“Well,” I said, “I still have a pet.”

She may not be the most playful creature and her idea of hanging out consists of sitting five feet away and staring at me, but my cat somehow fills the void left when we had to put Rudy down almost two years ago. She’s not exactly fun but I get a kick out of her and she’s enough of a pet right now.

And at least her poops are a lot smaller.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bounce Your Muffintop

Here we are in the fall of 1993 thinking we could take on at least five more kids each. #ignoranceisbliss

Here we are in the fall of 1993 holding each other’s baby and thinking we could take on at least five more kids apiece. #ignoranceisbliss

My friend Tara, who lives in Connecticut, and I have shared many of the same life experiences.

We both fell in love with boys at a certain military academy and the four of us found we had lots of fun, perhaps too much fun, together.

We attended each other’s weddings not long after college and then the babies started to come.

We had our first babies within months of each other and got together when those babies were old enough that at least I was already pregnant again with my second child.

We strolled the babies down to a nearby playground and pushed them on swings and talked about our plans for the future.

“I’d like to have at least four,” she said of the body count she had in mind for her family, and then reconsidered. “Maybe six.”

I nodded my head and said I’d been thinking I’d like to have that many children, too.

Clearly, we were so delusional we thought that having six children would be as easy as having a single one-year-old. Taking care of a one-year-old is like having a three-year-old dog except with the diapers.

Like, you just have to keep it alive.

How were we supposed to know then the challenges that would come with having multiple children, like the endlessness of two kids in diapers, temper tantrums in stereo and everyone crying and drooling because of Coxsackie sores?

I can’t even get started on the joys of owning multiple teenagers which makes a strong case for tubal ligation.

In the end, cooler heads (and husbands) prevailed and we both held steady at four kids apiece and are now both down to just two living at home with the other off at college.

In the early days, our husbands worked for the same Russian shipping operation in Manhattan and we’d see each other annually at the company Christmas party at which it always seemed one of us was either pregnant or breastfeeding and way too sober for the crazy antics going on around us.

Russians are nuts.

A dozen years later, it seems that Tara and I both are going through another one of life’s obstacles together: The Midlife Muffintop.

She emailed me this video yesterday (which she needs you to know is NOT of her) and I laughed at the mom’s rap about her struggle with her bulging middle and took comfort when I saw hers that at least mine might be categorized as a mini-muffin.

It’s a fascinating mid-life phenomenon, this slowing down of the metabolism and carb bloating, and one of those things people fail to mention so that you can anticipate, like the trauma of pooping after you have a baby.

Anyway, I take comfort that I’m not alone on my journey through love, babies and muffin tops.

Enjoy the show. And bounce carbohydrate, bounce.

Slavery and Legos, All in One Day

The_Lego_Movie_posterYesterday, I fulfilled a lifelong dream and I didn’t even have to plan it.

Seeing two movies in one day just worked out without much maneuvering.

I have been trying to get to see the movie 12 Years a Slave for weeks. But I live in a certain part of New Jersey that tends to favor RoboCop, which you can find playing at the four major theaters close by, over important movies confronting our country’s history of racism and slavery, which is playing at exactly one theater, twice daily.

And one of those times is after 9 p.m. and I can promise you I could never go to a movie that started that late – I’d be asleep in my popcorn by the end of the trailers.

I have to be honest: Initially I didn’t even really want to see 12 Years a Slave. I had read and heard about the brutality depicted in the movie and just didn’t know if I could deal with it.

So when my friend, Susan, and I decided to sneak away to see it in the middle of yesterday afternoon, we kind of joked on the ride to the movie theater that it was going to be like eating our vegetables for society. A veritable Brussels sprout of a movie.

So it turns out, boo hoo for fucking us. As another friend had noted when we ran into each other in the CVS parking lot in town last week and I told her my reluctance to see the movie, she answered, “It’s a movie everyone should be required to see.”

And she was right.

It was often hard to watch and totally intense the entire two hours and 14 minutes – really, not one glimmer of any levity other when it briefly shows the main character’s home life prior to being kidnapped and sold into slavery.

This is no Roots. No slaves are getting married and jumping over brooms.

They are beaten and raped and treated like animals.

Susan and I walked out of the theater a bit stunned when it was over with another couple – a husband and wife – who had met us there.

“Remind me never to join you girls for a movie again,” joked the husband to the three of us ladies standing kind of dazed in the theater lobby.

“I’m going to go home and drink a bottle of wine after that,” said Susan, and I had wished I could join her, but I had other plans.

In order to swing the mid-day Saturday afternoon movie, I had arranged for my little guy to hang out with friends and then meet up with them at another movie theater down the highway to see the The Lego Movie 3-D. 

If there ever was an antidote for the slavery experience, it’s Will Ferrell playing an evil Lego.

Will Ferrell as Lord Business.

Will Ferrell as Lord Business.

The movie is very cute, especially if your kids – like mine – spent hours and hours of their childhood building Lego creations and have bins and bins of the little plastic pieces still sitting in your basement, just in case someone gets the urge to build a spaceship.

But even though I am really good at just sitting and doing nothing for hours on end, I felt a little antsy by the end of the movie. And seeing two movies back-to-back kind of took away from each of them.

You couldn’t really digest what just happened. Or at least that’s how I operate. I’m a muller.

So there is was, a dream-come-true day filled with slavery and Legos (oh, and I did find lots of wine in the end).

Wondering what else was going on here last week? Let me help.

____________________________________

600px-Hello_my_name_is_sticker.svgMrs. X

When I was in the end stages of my divorce a few years ago and struggling with whether I shouldreclaim my maiden name, my college roommate advised against it.

“What are your kids’ friends going to call you?” she asked, and went on to explain how her high school boyfriend’s mom was always Mrs. Whatever, even though she and her husband had been divorced for ages.

“You’ll always be Mrs. X,” she said. (READ MORE … )

________________________________________

photo-9Are You a Goodreader?

In my semi-​​retirement, when I am not eating or thinking about eating or making lists of things I’d like to be eating, I find I am catching up on things I was never able to get around to while I had a job.

Things I just didn’t have the time to do. (READ MORE … )

________________________________________

photo-10Flat Abs! Great Sex! And Other Lies We’re Sold

My 11-​​year-​​old son looked at me not long ago while we were sitting in our kitchen and said,“Mom, you should get flat abs.”

He had just been looking at the recent issue of Women’s Health sitting on the counter that I had picked up in theory for its recipes but in reality because of the picture of Heidi Klum on its cover and the FLAT ABS NOW! that screamed alongside her and her bared and toned tummy. (READ MORE … )