Friday, April 28, 2006

Occasionally Upset


I am watching the late-night re-run of Larry King Live. This is my first problem.

I should be sewing, but I am tired enough that I keep cutting satin backs for blankies to the wrong size. Lately, I am always a little too tired to perform my assigned tasks with any degree of accuracy. I'm in that place where my plate is a little too full and I feel a little too overwhelmed to balance it with any grace.

So I called it quits, and brought my computer to bed in order to write one of the half dozen blog posts I have brewing: reflections on feminism, L.'s pre-school conference report, introducing my best frenemy, my mom's liposuction...there's just so much to say and tell. My sister, whom I pushed to blog, now tells me that I need to post more often. Chalk this up to one of the half-dozen things that I want to do and don't have time to do well. Or rather, to do well enough to suit myself.

And now I'm watching previously enjoyed Larry King. The show tonight is about the 9/11 movie, United 93. Even though I try to keep it in perspective, it's upsetting me, yet I can't seem to turn it off. My throat closes and I keep tearing up a little, but I'm watching anyway. It makes me think about the day itself, my pregnancy with L., my Dad, and loss in general. I lost my Dad to colon cancer almost two years ago; the memory of the day he died evokes the same kind of tight-chested fear that I experienced on September 11th. One of those days was huge and earth-shaking, the other was personal and family-shaking. But the trauma of the events, and the way the images, sounds, and smells are indelibly burned in my synapses seem similar. The smothering sensation of loss is oddly the same.

I live in Southeastern Minnesota, and I grew up in Upstate NY. But although I have now lived in 2 different countries, 3 of the world's major cities, and 3 states, I consider myself a New Yorker. Any of you who are real New Yorkers (and my sister, my husband and somewhere out there, my Dad) can allow themselves a large guffaw right about here. I lived in a med school dorm in the Northeast Bronx for two years, and then spent three years on the Upper East Side while Dirk completed his residency at the city's largest public hospital. I am clearly, by most standards, not a New Yorker. But the city I never intended to love captured my heart completely. While Dirk and I agree that we aren't going to be house-poor and join the charter school/private-school rat race that Manhattan inspires, I think about it every day. In fact, I've already picked out our retirement home, right on East 84th, between York and East End. It's a lovely garden townhome with a one-car tuck-under. Perfection...and likely a pipe dream.

We both happened to be home, in our 400 square foot apartment on First Avenue on 9/11. I was 6 months pregnant with L., and unsure at best what my life as a future SAHM would be like. To be truthful, I was terrified. And that was before I turned on my T.V. that morning. It was a rare morning that I didn't have the T.V. turned on to watch Good Morning America, but Dirk had just finished a night-float shift, and when he got home at 8:30 and went to bed, I dragged my pregnant self back to bed with him. My phone rang just after 9:00, and I heard my sister on the answering machine.

"K? Are you there? Pick up. I'm in the car, and they're saying on the radio that something happened at the U.N. Can you turn on your local news and see? Pick up!"

So I picked up the phone and turned on the television. You know the rest.

Now, by all measures, I was a lucky resident of Manhattan that day. We lived about 7 miles uptown from the WTC. All the smoke on your screens that day blew over the harbor and Brooklyn - but in my neighborhood it was a picture-perfect September day. My mom kept calling to ask me if any of the fires were creeping closer, but the sky outside my window was blue and cloudless, except for the plume that rose in the distance. I didn't know anyone who worked that far downtown. I was probably as far removed from the event as anyone on the island that day could be. When I have bad dreams, when I watch the sky - still, even here in the middle-of-nowhere MN, when I watch Larry King and cry, I think that I must have a serious problem with melodrama. After all, I was really only witness to the event in the same way that most of you were witness to it: on T.V. I have no real claim to PTSD, five years after an event I watched from a fairly safe and sanitized distance.

But it was still the scariest day of my life. And I think it was the day that I became a mother. My overwhelming thought was fear for the safety of the little girl inside me. I had a daily pregnancy journal, bought at the B&N on E. 86th, and later that day - after the towers had come down, after we'd ventured outside to see the smoke rising and thousands of silent people in suits marching North on the sidewalks lining a deserted First Ave., after we found our neighborhood bars and pizza joints stuffed full of wide-eyed zombies - I sat down in the bathroom to jot down my daily thoughts.

I am not, as one might tell from this blog, an avid journal writer. While I consider myself to be introspective, I am not one to write out my hopes and fears. Every few years, I take down a battered composition notebook and jot down some drivel. So my daily journal for the duration of L.'s pregnancy was a forced exercise that I put myself through in order to try to psych myself up for the impending arrival of my bundle of terror. But that was the day that I began to think about her safety and well-being, instead of my own. I began to think about what life we may or may not be allowed to share with her. As I wrote that I would strive to teach her tolerance above all, and raise her to be a woman who would help bring peace to our clearly troubled world, I began to think about what kind of parent I would be, instead of how my life would change when she arrived. Her, not me.

I've been thinking about this subject all day: how I became a mother. Not a woman with a child, but a mother. You all know that it's different. Then Larry King - of all the ridiculous creatures - brought it all full circle, in a weird, roundabout, melodramatic way. Maybe I just needed a good moment of wallowing to let out some tension with those tears. Maybe I just needed to feel empathy with the parents talking about their lost children to help me see past the unfolded laundry and unfinished work.

Monday, April 24, 2006

On Display

L. attends a most awesome nursery school. Run by our local school district in conjunction with special funding from a state program called E.C.F.E., it is a nurturing place where she has blossomed. We've taken part in the classes offered in our community ever since we landed in Minnesota in 2003. I am an East Coast transplant, and when we moved to MN in order for my husband to continue his never-ending schooling at a most important hospital here, I never dreamed that anything would tie me to this place. But L.'s school did exactly that.

This has been her first year of "schooling," though. While we attended classes that were a morning here and a morning there, this year our program runs September to May and consists of two afternoons each week: on Tuesdays, we all attend. T. goes to a sibling class, I spend about 45 minutes in the age-group classroom with L., and then I attend a facilitated parents' group. Thursday afternoons are L.'s drop-off days.

Tomorrow, we have our first ever parent-teacher conference. How weird. So I say to Dirk,

"Tomorrow I have a parent-teacher conference at L.'s school. What do you think about that?"

To which he replied,

"I hope you do okay."

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Happy Anniversary Redux: Karen and Dirk

If you know my sister, then you'll note that our wedding anniversaries are just two days apart. Amy is 4 years older than I am, but I married two years earlier. While we chose the same reception site, the same photographer, and many of the same guests, our weddings were pretty different.



She was married in the Catholic Church, while Dirk and I struggled to find a "person of God" who would marry a lapsed Catholic and a half-Jewish, half-Catholic, self-professed heathen in a country club. We settled on a Unitarian; he gave us an unexpected Jesus smackdown once he had us at the make-shift altar.



I wanted nothing more than to marry my husband, and I loved that dress with all my heart.



It was beautiful. All of it.



But my memories of my wedding reflect one kick-ass dress and what can only be described as the leaning tower of cake.



My dad passed away in August 2004, and many of my most recent dirty little secrets revolve around the aftermath of his illness and death. He was an amazing, larger than life kind-of-guy. One of my favorite moments that day was right before I took his arm and marched down the aisle.



What do you think he just said to me? Yep. "Are you sure you want to do this, honey? Just checking."



I did. I wanted to do it because my husband is my soulmate. He really is. He's a nudge, and would like to give me things to write about here. He'll try to be snarky and then say, "well, will I make it?" And while sometimes he is a royal pain in the ass, he is what sees me through the dark times and into the sunshine. And it's not a secret.



April 15, 2000

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Dirty Little Secret # 9

I am not as good a person as others think I am.

"Really," you say? Well, that seems like something one should not assume. Let me explain.

Recently I received an email from my friend, Crazy Mary. And no, I don't call her that to her face. She's my friend from high school who dropped out of college, married, bore children, and divorced before the age of 25, moved her son in with an abusive boyfriend, and then left him for drug addict with whom she immediately had twins. That's right, folks, Crazy Mary.

Anyway, Crazy Mary's life is looking up lately and this is a good thing. She is still the type to get perms and send email forwards to a huge DL, and her most recent email asked us to describe her in just one word. I called her "hopeful." I am not much for forwards, but I sent it to 3 of my friends. Two replied.

Crazy Mary called me "true."
An old friend/boyfriend called me "virtuous."
I asked my husband, and he called me "determined."

I was surprised. I would have called myself judgmental, prude, and stubborn.

What would you call yourself?

Sunday, April 09, 2006

Jack Sprat

Tonight I couldn't be satisfied. In spite of a perfectly acceptable dinner consisting of chicken kabobs, green beans with garlic, and fruit salad, I was starving. Pawing through the cupboards kind of starving. Offering my four year old Tostitos so that I could eat them too kind of starving.

As soon as the bedtime stories were finished, I poured a bowl of Frosted Flakes and ate them in bed. My husband, across the hall in L.'s room attempting to settle her for sleep, later said he could hear my spoon clanging against the bowl. When he finally got her to go to sleep, I begged him to go to the local diner to get take-out pie.

Instead, my kind and generous husband found the last two chocolate chip cookies in the house and layered vanilla ice cream in between. He brought me the offering, and I ate it lying in bed. As he kept telling me he was hungry, too, I kept offering him bites of my scrumptious cookie and ice cream sandwich. He refused, and got himself...a salad.

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Dirty Little Secret # 8

I am not informing many people that I know about this blog. Sometimes a girl needs her own space.

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Dirty Little Secret # 1 - 7

1) I am a Mommy.

2) I am a bleeding heart, over-educated, feminist liberal.

3) I don't think being a stay-at-home-mommy and a feminist are at odds with one another.

4) I am sometimes that mom.

5) I lurk a lot over at Motherhood Uncensored.

6) I made my sister start a blog because I thought it would help her feel empowered. She's making me start one in return.

7) My children are the center of my life and my favorite time of day is when they go to bed.