Tuesday, June 5, 2018

The Gay Divorcee Goes to Lowe’s


It was because of the rabbit.  

Our pet rabbit managed to escape into the back yard where it was so overgrown, she was able to hide from us for about 8 hours.  Using a stick to prod the underbrush in the far reaches of the yard in an unsuccessful attempt to flush her out, I was forced to face what I had successfully avoided since my divorce three years ago: yard work.

One of the benefits to living in the Pacific Northwest is all the gorgeous greenery.  One of the disadvantages is that, if left unchecked, the greenery can quickly overrun your home like that abandoned hospital on the leper island off the coast of New York City.

I’ve spent a number of minutes over the last three years gazing out at the tiered and complex landscape of my backyard, a yard which I would never have owned on my own, having a black thumb, but which my ex-husband insisted upon.  Now that yard is mine, along with my continued interest in not dealing with it.  But as I watch a third Spring unfold, it’s becoming more and more apparent that somebody has to.  And there are no other somebodies here except the one smirking at me in the mirror.

I started with the baby step of buying gardening gloves on Amazon which gave me a false sense of accomplishment for a few days, but I guiltily suspected there was more to this gardening business than online shopping.  I think gardening is a lot like learning to swim – you are afraid to try it, you put it off as long as you can, and you’re pretty sure you’ll die.  But eventually, you just have to jump into the deep end and figure it out.  Ultimately I knew I couldn’t put it off any longer.  I was going to have to go to Lowe’s.

Don’t get me wrong.  I’ve been to Lowe’s before.  I had to get a weird light bulb there once, and a couple times I had keys made.  I mean, I knew where the store was and all.  But I hadn’t ever ventured into the gardening section and had no idea there was a whole sub-culture going on there.

The Lowe’s parking lot on a sunny Saturday resembled a tailgate party.  There were people in the parking lot eating, socializing and walking their dogs.  A lot of dogs!  Did people come to Lowe’s and stay all day, just to meet other weirdos who over-obsessed about their yards?  It took me forever to park, and I almost ran over a dog too small to see and, boy, did the guy walking the little fucker give me the death look, like I was the one wrong for driving through a dog run!

I finally found a spot in Siberia and, armed with the knowledge of my gardening gloves – “Hey, I’m totally one of you guys!” – strutted confidently across the lot, grabbed a cart and, in my haste to get into the giant greenhouse structure on account of I saw something pink, accidentally went out the in door.  Panicked, I remembered my training in corporate America for successfully maneuvering through any hairy situation: I simply looked at the people blocking my way with a harried and irritated expression, leaving them to believe (I thought) that I knew what I was doing so much that the rules of in and out didn’t apply to me.

The first thing I came across was dirt.  Did I need dirt?  Lots of other people were buying dirt.  I knew I had approximately one billion trillion dead leaves to remove from my yard and once cleared it would probably be pretty bald and maybe I should get dirt.  But why would you put dirt on top of other dirt?  If you just, you know, dump dirt on top of the ground, doesn’t it just get washed away or tracked by squirrels into their squirrel homes where their squirrel mothers would yell, “I just washed that tree hole floor!” or wherever squirrels live?  I wasn’t sure, but I was fairly certain I needed dirt, based on Lowe’s clever marketing campaign of having a shit load of it right out front for easy grabbing.

What’s weird is that a) you have to pay for dirt and b) there are different kinds of dirt.  I didn’t know what kind of dirt I needed.  Should I get the most expensive dirt?  What differentiated the expensive dirt from the cheap dirt?  Did it come from a more privileged background (or just “ground,” as it were)?  Whatever, just pick some dirt.

Dirt is heavy.  See the gay divorcee casually lift a bag of dirt while trying not to appear as if she weren’t at all prepared for the weight and was planning to crumple to the ground all along because everyone knows this is the new safe way to lift things.  I heaved 3 bags of dirt into my basket, having zero clue as to whether that was how much I needed, but defaulting to whatever could fit in the cart.

Then I wandered down the rows and rows of flowers, eavesdropping on others’ educated and spirited discussions about their yard plans, spying on their carts so I would know what to buy without having to actually talk to anybody. 

An aside: doesn’t “perennial” sound like another word for asshole?  Maybe it’s just me.

Wandering around Lowe’s was a humbling experience.  I tried hard to fit in, but something gave me away.  I don’t know what.  Maybe my sequined shoes?  I kept waiting for that Pretty Woman moment where someone would come up to me and say, “We don’t have anything for you here.  Please leave.”
The cashier was very friendly to the couple in front of me who clearly knew their way around a backyard, but when I stepped up she looked at me like I came from that overgrown leper island.  Maybe I got pretentious dirt?

I got all the stuff loaded into the car, drove it home, carried it up my extremely steep driveway (my driveway is the subject of many of my friends’ jokes, and another blog subject entirely), deposited everything in the backyard, and contemplated dying instead of doing anything more because I already had sweat dripping off my nose.

It was at this point that something just went click.  Up until then, I had been cowering in my insecurities, trying to pretend I knew what I was doing when really not only did I not, but I didn’t want to.  But something happens to you when you’re out in public and sweat is dripping off your nose and you can’t even wipe it away because you are wearing those stupid gardening gloves covered in dirt: you stop really giving a shit.

So I embraced it.  I went for it.  I went Joan Crawford on that backyard (“TINA!  Bring me the ax!”) and cleared out years of debris, sweat pouring from all of my body parts now, and blood too, because another great thing about the Pacific Northwest is all the black berry stalks covered in small knives.  But I embraced that too.  I was fucking bleeding and sweating and I smelled like a man and I had the time of my life, even though I knew I would have to wash my bra afterwards, something I normally only do every six months, whether it needs it or not.  It was therapeutic, and endorphin-releasing, and filled me with a sense of accomplishment that physical activity rarely did.  I enjoyed myself.  When I finally cleared out the forest of weeds that had choked a flower bed I announced breathlessly to the tulips, “My name is Karen Bertiger!  I’m here to rescue you!” and then I laughed and laughed, by myself, covered in sweat and blood, high on my achievement of freeing those tulips.

Today my everything hurts.  I have cuts on my arms and legs and there are probably still twigs in my hair even after a shower.  But let me tell you, thanks to those gloves my hands are fucking soft and lily-white.


Sunday, January 17, 2016

Back On the Horse In the Pool with the Fish

I'm freshly divorced.  That sounds so odd.  I'm divorced.  Divorced.  Even though my ex and I were together for twelve years and had two children, I still hadn't gotten completely used to the idea that I was married. Maybe by 2035 I'll be used to being divorced.  By which time maybe I'll be married again, so I'll have to get used to that.  Although frankly the idea of ever getting married again sounds about as appealing as going to a football game in the rain, which is to say, not at all.

However at some point, likely in the very near future, after the ink on the divorce decree has dried, I will want to seek out some form of companionship.  Ideally, this "companion" will fall out of the sky and land on my doorstep at a convenient time such as the hour in between the kids' bedtime and my own, or on one of my every-other-kid-free weekends, and he will be 6'3" and the Sean Connery kind of middle-aged, fully insured, with a healthy 401(k) and a desire to travel.  I'll give that approach a couple of years to see if it pans out and then will, very reluctantly, have to consider jumping back into the dating pool.

I don't want to.  I hated dating.  Even when my ex-husband and I were at the height of our misery together, when we'd fight in furious whispers before the girls were in bed and at full volume afterwards, when every little thing he did, like breathing, made me want to take my own life or his, I could still say to myself with smug satisfaction, "At least I don't have to date anymore."

You might think I'm being a bit overly dramatic, or that my attitude is a simple matter of deep-seeded insecurity.  Both are true, but also true are my battle scars from the first go-around.  Here I will share with you the only positive side-effect of dating, which are the stories you can use to entertain your paired friends.  Allow me to entertain you here with some stand-outs from 10 years of dating:

1) The spitting hunchback.
You think I am kidding?  Tall, scrawny guy who stooped aggressively when he sat and despite the lack of any mouth hardware had a tough time keeping his saliva to himself.  Why did I go out with him?  He was a writer for Comedy Central.  He was fucking hilarious.  But I kept having to scoot my chair back from the table to avoid the precipitation until I ended up on the other side of the restaurant.  At the end of the date he said sadly, "I had a really great time and would like to do it again, but I don't get many second dates so I understand if you don't call me."  Shocker.

2) The Matt Damon Lawyer, also known as 50 First Dates.
He was a lawyer.  Who looked like Matt Damon.  Happily ever after, right?  No.  There was absolutely no chemistry between us.  He was still hung up on a shiksa he'd fallen in love with, but his family wouldn't allow him to marry outside the Jewish faith.  I counted as suitable, even though I couldn't tell you what any of the Jewish holidays mean, and we both seemed like someone the other should fall in love with, so we kept going out.  But we never got past the stilted, awkward conversation of a first date.  We didn't go out 50 times, more like 7 or 8, before I grudgingly admitted that, because the fates have a sick, twisted sense of humor, I wasn't attracted to him and he wasn't attracted to me.

3) The Guy Who Couldn't Find Chocolate in February
Cute guy.  Can't remember what he did for a living.  Great idea for a first date - the Met - but when I met him on the steps of the museum he handed me a grocery bag.  In this grocery bag was a box of nondescript cookies.  I looked at him, puzzled, and he explained, "I wanted to get you chocolates but I couldn't find any."  It was the first week of February.  You couldn't make a move anywhere in the city without knocking over a Valentine's Day display.  So I had to assume either he had this box of cookies sitting around his apartment that he wanted to get rid of, or he was blind, or he was a complete fucking moron.  

4) The Simpson's Guy
He was a screenwriter.  Score!  Except screenwriters are jittery, socially phobic introverts.  At least, this one was.  If I remember correctly he had something to do with one of the Scream movies, but after most of us had moved on from the genre.  Maybe the third one.  Or was there a fourth?  In any case, this was the only thing he could talk about, not in a bragging way, but in a "I don't really have any other personality trait" kind of way.  We met at a bar, and over the bar was a television on which played a muted Simpsons cartoon.  He spent the entire evening watching the Simpsons over my head and occasionally throwing in some Simpsons trivia for my enjoyment.  I got the feeling the Simpsons were his security blanket, and maybe he'd tipped the bartender to put it on so he wouldn't have a panic attack during the date.

5) The Guy on Drugs
He called on a Tuesday night around 7 and asked if I was free.  I thought, why not? He was already seated at the bar when I got there, and seemed very nervous.  Like, the FBI are going to find me here any minute kind of nervous.  He was practically vibrating.  He kept drumming the table.  His knees bounced up and down so rapidly they were a blur.  When I asked if he was all right he replied, wild-eyed, "Oh man, I just did a LOT of drugs."

There are so many more.  And I know I was a story in some of their repertoires as well.  Like the time a blind date took me to the Four Seasons for a drink and I tried to sip my Diet Coke out of a glass stirrer because I was twenty four and had never been anywhere fancier than the Hot Wings for 10 cents place back home.  And the guy I met for a beer whom I apparently offended in some incredibly grievous way because he abruptly cut the date short and then wouldn't walk me home.  It was New York City, it was late, and a neighbor had recently been attacked by a serial rapist in her vestibule.  Even an asshole's company was preferable to walking home alone.  But apparently he thought this was a ruse to have sex with him, on account of he'd been so charming all evening, and resisted until I decided my mace was the only gentleman I could count on that night.  On his list, I was probably That Offensive Woman Who Tried to Get Me to Sleep with Her With a Bullshit Serial Rapist Story.

I don't think my self-esteem could take another round of this at my advanced age. Or rather, at my advanced age I no longer have the patience for another round.  But there are many fish in the sea and every pot has a lid and you have to get right back on that horse.  

But first I'm going to wait a little longer for Sean Connery to fall out of the sky.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Theo - December 31, 1995 - October 19, 2011

When I graduated from college I had 3 goals: get a job, get an apartment, and get a dog.

After securing the first two, my friend and I drove way out into the Tucson desert in response to an ad for Lhasa Apso puppies for sale. There were 3 puppies, only one of which was female. I asked the woman which was the female and, when I laid eyes on the little brown and black Ewok lookalike, I fell instantly in love. When the woman corrected herself and told me the one I held was male, I didn’t change my mind. He was mine.

My friend held the wriggly, furry mass in her lap as we pulled away from the house and retraced our path down the unpaved road. I’d only gone a few hundred yards when I suddenly slammed on the brakes, looked at my friend in panic, and said, “What am I doing? This is a HUGE responsibility! I don’t know if I’m ready for this.”

My friend held up the puppy so I could see his cute little button nose and big, eager, friendly brown eyes and said, “You want to say no to this? Turn around; we’ll take him back.” Of course, I couldn’t.

I named him after Theodoric of York, for the perfectly logical reason that when I was a kid we had a Lhasa Apso who was named Roseanne Roseannadanna.

Theo and I lived in Tucson for about 6 months before I was transferred to Flagstaff, Arizona for my job. That was the first of many life hurdles Theo got me over. I didn’t know anybody there; it was just me, and Theo. I didn’t like it there much, but Theo had a fantastic time bounding through the snow which, I was pretty sure, reminded her of her native homeland of Tibet.

Did you know Tibetan monks used to give Lhasa Apsos as gifts to visiting foreign dignitaries? They believed when you died, your spirit went into the Lhasa Apso. Theo has a very strong heritage of nonsensical traditions, but it has never seemed to bother her much.

When Theo was a couple months old I took “him” to get neutered, which is when the vet informed me, with wide-eyed skepticism that anybody could be this blatantly stupid, that Theo was a girl. I thought she was a boy who peed funny. I never bothered to part all that hair between her legs and confirm when the woman told me she was a boy. I will never, ever, EVER live this down with my family. Ever.

When Theo was almost a year old I took her to the groomer for the first time who held up Theo’s entire pelt, so matted that it stayed together in one piece after it was shaved off, and said sternly, “NEVER do this to your dog again.” I never did. Man, was Theo pissed at me, though, for losing all her hair. She stayed under the bed for 3 days, embarrassed by her nakedness.

I didn’t make any friends in Flagstaff for the year I was there. I did date a guy for a while who was absolutely no good for me. Theo knew it. Once while the guy was over Theo shat on the bed – first and last time she ever did that. Theo has always had very strong opinions. She’s my kid, after all.

Theo loved chasing toys that squeaked, and she had a lot of them. The first one was a stuffed toy in the shape of a man. I named it Alfred, and Theo erroneously equated “Alfred” with “toy.” So Theo did not have toys, she had Alfreds.

After a year of misery in Flagstaff I decided it was time to take a leap. Make a huge change. Start really living my life and exploring the world. I decided to move from Arizona, where I’d spent the first 24 years of my life, to New York City – but I never would have had the courage to go through with it if I didn’t have Theo with me. She was my furry, walking, barking security blanket.

I set a world record for how fast I found an apartment in New York. It is seriously one of the biggest challenges I’ve ever faced. But I was driven by two things: one, I didn’t want to impose on my uncle’s family for any longer than necessary but, more importantly, I missed Theo, who had had to stay behind with my parents until I found a dog-friendly building. Not easy to do in NYC.

It took a while for Theo to become accustomed to the city. She never did like avenues. She was okay with streets, but as soon as we turned onto an avenue her tail would go down and she would skulk as fast as she could to the next street.

However, overall, Theo was the newest member of New York’s A List – or at least, the Upper East Side’s A List. While I remained fairly unknown on the block, everybody knew Theo, and would want to talk to her on her evening walk. I was forced to stop, hold her leash and try to look engaged and pleasant while the neighbors cooed over my dog. There was one guy, Mitch, who lived in the building next door and whose job was, apparently, to sit on his stoop 24 hours a day. Mitch was Theo’s favorite. Theo would bound up the steps to the top of the stoop, plop down next to Mitch, and the two of them would hold court with the rest of the neighborhood, laughing and joking and having a good time, while I stood at the base of the steps, ignored until Theo decided it was time to move on.

Theo and I toured the city together. She was my best and, for a long time, only friend. Theo turned her nose up with disdain at the dog park, but highly enjoyed all the places people went. She was offered a job at our local Barnes & Noble on 86th but felt working was beneath her. She could balance on the subway like a pro. (She wasn’t technically allowed on the subway, but we felt this was a stupid rule. After all, Theo was better behaved and had more bladder control than most of the human passengers.)

Theo’s vacation destination was Uncle Clem’s in the Village. Uncle Clem had two young kids who dropped a lot of food on the floor. Whenever I asked Theo if she wanted to go to Uncle Clem’s her face – her entire BODY – would light up, and she’d start jumping in the air with glee. She didn’t even care that I had to stuff her in her travel bag in order to sneak her past the subway monitors or into a taxi.

When I started making a bit more money, Theo acquired staff in the form of a dog walker who was extremely reminiscent of the character who walked Murray on Mad About You. He was polite towards me, but he and Theo really got each other.

I had two long-term relationships in New York. The first was just awful. I mean, a true waste of time. You know how well-adjusted people say they never regret any of their relationships, because each of them taught them something? Well, I regret this guy. Theo wasn’t too keen on him either, I could tell, but she knew I was lonely so she put up with him. She was really good about it, but I could tell she really didn’t care when I finally wised up and kicked the guy out of our lives.

The other relationship was much more positive although, ultimately, not meant to be. Theo LOVED him because he was a really, really good cook. She loved him even though he had a Cat from Hell who hissed and attacked both Theo and me whenever we came over. Theo never lost her optimistic assumption that EVERYone wanted to be her friend. Every time we visited she’d try again to win the cat over, and get a scratch on the nose for her efforts. She and I both mourned when that relationship ended.

Then I went and fell in love with some guy who wound up in Alabama. So Theo and I packed up our apartment and flew South. It was one of those tiny planes with two seats on one side and one seat on the other and because it was so small, Theo’s regulation travel bag didn’t really fit under the seat. So I just shoved her in there, and she had to lie curled up in a tight ball, and panted with anxiety the entire flight. By the time we landed we were both a bundle of raw nerves.

Theo loved Alabama. She had grass and trees and now two people to take care of. She had a whole house to chase Alfreds in. We bought a little carriage meant for kids that I could pull with my bike so Theo could come with us on long bike rides. She’d sit in that thing and just watch the country go by and sometimes, when we ran into other people on the trail, she’d emit a sudden volley of piercing barks that would scare the SHIT out of the other bikers, who assumed there was a human child in there, and send me into convulsions of laughter.

Then we all got married and decided to move to Seattle. This would be the fourth state both Theo and I had lived in. We drove across the country with Theo wedged in the back among all the possessions we didn’t trust the movers to haul for us. Theo loved road trips. When it was just the two of us, I had her trained not to jump into my lap until the car was in park and I’d pulled the brake. As soon as I did that, she’d leap into my lap.

In Seattle, at the age of 12, Theo finally got her own yard. She didn’t know what to do at first. It felt unnatural to her that someone wasn’t standing over her with a plastic bag when she was ready to take a dump. But she caught on really fast.

Then, the dark days arrived, in the form of a very tiny, very loud, very smelly creature that seemed kind of human, but mostly not, and gave Theo tremendous anxiety because she didn’t know how to interact with it. She eventually settled on indifference laced with irritation. Things weren’t the same after that.

Theo started to develop a lot of health problems. One that was particularly notable was the ruptured anal gland – what I affectionately called her second asshole – that required our head-coning and diapering her for a couple days. This resulted in the world’s greatest picture ever taken of a dog.

Theo was my best friend for almost 16 years. Her health and interest in life have deteriorated significantly in the last couple of years, and sometimes it’s hard to remember the younger, vibrant Theo who had the agility of a mountain goat on our hikes, and, as an 8 week old puppy, licked my face when I cried in the car after running into my ex-boyfriend’s new girlfriend at a coffee shop. I was an aimless 22-year-old when I met Theo, and for all intents and purposes, really still a child. Theo raised me in my adulthood. With her by my side I tackled New York, I got married, I had a child and I found a career. And now I’m all grown up. Maybe it was time for Theo’s soul to depart; maybe, if I can indulge my own fantasy, she’s gone on to help another lonely, struggling young woman.

Goodbye, Chickabee. And thank you.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

"Terrible" Is An Understatement

When I was around nine or ten years old I discovered my female hamster, Daisy, eating one of her babies. She was crouched over the slashed-open belly of one of her young, chowing down with both front paws.

I will remember that moment for as long as I live. It was one of the most horrifying things I've ever seen, including my husband's toilet when he was still a bachelor. It has literally haunted me. I already lacked any fondness for Daisy, and had in fact put her in solitary confinement (with her young, whom she was supposed to be CARING for) because the father hamster, whose sex was unknown at first and was thus named Tootsie, had been terrorized by that bitch for months. Every night she'd chase him around the cage and he'd finally scamper up the side and wedge himself against the hamster wheel and dangle there all night to escape her. She'd march around the bottom of the cage, eating the tastier pickings out of the food bowl, waggling her fat ass pompously while Tootsie hung there for 9 hours. Sometimes Tootsie's balls would swell up to the size of two Clementines, and they'd hang halfway down the side of the cage, where she could reach them. One day she took a chomp and that was it. With my allowance I got Tootsie his own digs, a small but safe and comfortable bachelor pad.

Given all this, given the fact that Daisy was the female hamster equivalent of Stalin, you can understand the severity of my situation when I tell you that this weekend, I actually feel a tiny bit of empathy for Daisy. After spending the last 48 hours with my toddler whose head I expect, at any moment, to start spinning 360 degrees while emitting a torrent of pea soup, I can kind of understand why Daisy went a little bat-shit crazy.

And she had 6 of the little fuckers to deal with. SIX.

I don't know what happened to my sweet little girl. Every once in awhile, my husband or I will lift our weary head and offer a hypothesis - "Ear infection?"- before collapsing again in misery, or wiping her streaming nose, or coughing up a lung, or fetching more water or another snack or a suddenly fervently missed and required toy. But there is no point in guessing, because it really doesn't matter what the problem is. Knowing the problem would, for some reason, make my husband feel better, because he's one of those people who has an urgent need to know WHY, but knowing why she is being the world's biggest pain in the ass isn't going to make her any more charming. And chances are the only "why" is because she's two.

The littlest thing will set her off. It's like living with Anna Wintour. We scamper around like minions, terrified that if we don't have the milk and snack waiting the MOMENT she steps from her royal bath all hell will break loose. Because it will. And very often all hell breaks loose anyway, despite our fervent commitment. The oddest, most unpredictable things will set her off. Like, I put on a sweater because I was a little chilled and the next thing I knew my three foot daughter was making a sound akin to an air raid siren. "NOOOOOOOO Mommy NO SWEATER!"

Once she's off, there's no rhyme or reason to what will stop her. It's a lot of trial and error. Sure, the immediate reaction is to take the sweater off but really that's locking the barn door after the horse has escaped. She's off and running, tears plopping, snot dripping, hair popping out of her cute pony tails like a mini Medusa. My husband and I scamper around with humble offerings of toys, books, snacks, an empty water bottle, because that worked once, three weeks ago. Eventually, just before a vein pops in my neck, I'll hit randomly on the magic solution. "Do you want to draw with chalk outside?"

And like a light switch she'll suddenly beam angelically through the snot and tears, throw her hands up, and cry with unbridled delight, "CHALK TIIIIIIIME!"

And you can see behind the malicious glimmer in her eye an expression that says, "It was so simple. What took you cretins so long to figure this out?"

I'm not big on cannibalism, so no need to call CPS (or "CPA" as my husband mistakenly referred to them when, in response to the latest freak-out, I sobbed, "Alcohol tiiiiime!" which my two year old latched on to and repeated, alternating with "I want alcohol!" until I was able to distract her). Nor would I ever harm my child - certainly I would never do to her what she is doing to me, namely, psychological torture. However I am starting to wonder if boarding schools take them this young.

If all else fails, I'll move in with Tootsie.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Hellooo Blogger, Well Helloooo Blogger....

Welcome to my new blog! I decided to fire my web maintenance guy (oh, wait, I didn't have one) and discontinue the old site in the interest of simplicity and coding ignorance, and also it was really broken. So now I have a brand-new site to not write on!

I haven't written much the last few years. I'd like to blame it on having a baby but that would be a) a lie and b) kind of shitty. Instead it's really c) I don't have many brain cells left after a day of work and mothering to make up funny word string usages. It really hit me how much I've let the blog slip when I started copying over the archives to this new site. It didn't take long before I had gone back to 2007. Like, 5 minutes. That's just sad.

Oh, wait - I thought of another excuse why I'm not blogging! I'm working on my novel! Well, not exactly working, as in putting words on a page, but sometimes, in my head, I hear dialogue that I'm pretty sure is part of a blockbuster struggling to come out, or perhaps a psychological disorder that maybe I shouldn't be mentioning here.

My fans, both of you (Hi Mom, Hi Dan) are probably wondering how I've been! I'll skim over the assumption that my mother would know this regardless of an up-to-date blog and tell you I've been just fine! So now we're all caught up.

So! On to some blogging... give me a minute... I'm thinking... let me get back to you on this.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Why I Wish I Was More Like My Toddler

You may be saying to yourself, "Karen, if you want to act more like a 2 year old, I'm going to have to re-evaluate the true value your friendship brings to my life." Which is totally fair. I am not saying that behaving like a 2 year old would be pleasant to those around me, but it would be incredibly nice for me.

First of all, I wouldn't care that I had a tummy that sticks out like a basketball. For one thing, by the morning it will be gone (reminiscent of the famous Churchill quote). For another, the tummy would be so cute it would actually add to my appeal.

I would be able to throw tantrums whenever I felt like it, regardless of how unreasonable the trigger was. Cafeteria is out of wheat bagels? I would burst into tears, run to the wall, fling my head against it and wail wholeheartedly for about 90 seconds and then turn around, smiling, tears still on my face, and go about my business.

I really wouldn't give a rat's ass what you thought about me, my appearance or my interests. I would be able to set aside any difficulties of the day to pay full, 150% attention to a Disney cartoon and get MORE delight out of it every time, no matter how many times I watched it.

I wouldn't eat my vegetables. You couldn't make me and, what's more, the fact that it was The Right Thing To Do and Good For Me wouldn't factor into my decision at all. I just wouldn't do it. And if you tried to make me, I would bawl like you were tearing my fingernails out with rusty tweezers until the MOMENT you stopped bothering me about broccoli, at which point I will instantaneously be happy again because I got what I wanted. I wouldn't just be halfway happy because I was harboring a little grudge, or because I still had that whole potty-training thing hanging over my head or a doctor's visit the next day. I'm completely unaware of those things until the moment they are happening to me, anyway. It would be like a switch: broccoli = unhappy, no broccoli = happy.

A bit of chocolate would solve pretty much any problem.

I could spend a good portion of my afternoon napping. The longer I napped, the happier the people around me would be.

I would never look in the mirror and make judgments. What I saw there would utterly fascinate me, and yet I'd really have no opinion about my reflection one way or another. If I discovered a booger hanging out of my nose, well, that would just make it all the more interesting. It wouldn't occur to me to wonder or care how long it had been there.

I would get a SHIT TON of presents at Christmas.

I wouldn't care if you took a picture of me naked. In fact, I'd look so freaking cute naked, even if I understood society expected me to be shy about my body I still wouldn't care.

If my boss asked me to take on a project that was unappealing or too menial I would stomp all the way back to my office, back rounded, arms swinging loosely, head flung back and whining at high volume, "But I don't WANT TO!" over and over until I lost interest in expressing myself.

...and the number one reason I wish I could be more like my toddler is:

I could announce proudly to everyone within earshot my simplest accomplishments, such as, "I made a poop!" and be met with applause.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

The Inaccessible Toilet

In the middle of Thanksgiving dinner, my 2 year old surreptitiously left the room, went around the corner where she thought she was alone but where she was in fact in full view of everybody, squatted, and took a dump. Luckily she's still in diapers, or this story would have been completely different. My brother said, "That's so funny how she goes around the corner to do her business."

Actually, the online articles say, this is a sign that she is ready to be toilet trained. It's not the first sign she's shown, either. Others include announcing the need before she actually goes, giving me plenty of time to get her installed on a potty. We've had an Elmo potty for about 3 months now, but I've yet to break it out, despite the Signs.

Why, you ask? (Because I'm sure you're dying to know the details of my potty training theory) It's purely projection on my part but, frankly, if I had the ability to go whenever and wherever I needed or wanted to, I would be loathe to give up that freedom. The moment we potty train, we are slaves to the location of every bathroom on the planet. I am one of those people who has fairly high toilet standards, which makes it even worse. Not only do I need to make sure I remain close to a bathroom at all times, but it has to be a bathroom I consider worthy of my waste and delicate parts.

I pay a lot of attention to toilets, and I remember where the good ones are. The ones in Macy's on Fourth Avenue are lovely. Each stall has its own counter space, kind of a half-bath, and nice wooden full-length doors. The toilets at the Bellevue Mall are really nice too, very spacious, also with full-length doors. I was incredibly impressed by the toilets in the Chicago airport, which automatically apply a new seat liner for you by waving your hand before a sensor. I greatly admire any bathroom in which I do not have to touch anything. Auto flush, auto faucet, auto soap dispenser, auto seat cover installer all earn big points in my toilet book. If they could install doors that automatically open and close that would be awesome.

On the opposite end of the spectrum (is there a butt joke in there?) are toilets that embody my own personal hell. A hole in the ground with tread marks indicating where to place your feet as you squat over it - this is not acceptable. And common in Europe. Which means that when I travel there, I don't drink much. A stall with no doors is equally appalling. I won't do it. Going to the bathroom in front of someone is a recurring nightmare of mine.

Speaking of nightmares, that's another thing I don't want to subject my daughter to by potty training her. The Inaccessible Toilet Dream. Now I understand from some vague and spotty research I've done (i.e., mentioning to friends in passing conversation that I have them, and getting the "wow, you're even crazier than I thought" look) that this is not a nightmare that plagues everyone but it does plague my mother. So clearly, like a fear of bumpy things, it runs in the family on one of those DNA strands or something.

The Inaccessible Toilet Dream is one in which, for hours or weeks in dreamland-time, you search in vain for a toilet that is acceptable enough to pee in. The toilets you find, however, are either the ones that you'll find in real-life in Europe or the Middle East, or are two stories tall and you don't have a ladder, or someone sealed the opening over so that if you sat and did your business it would run all over you, or is set on a pedestal in the middle of Yankee Stadium so that in order to relieve yourself you will have to do so in front of thousands of people.

Now, the Inaccessible Toilet Dream actually serves a practical purpose, which is to prevent you from peeing in the bed. However, it would be a little more practical for my clever subconscious to just WAKE ME UP so I could use the bathroom and resume more pleasant dreams.

If I wore diapers, I'd just go. No wet bed, the brilliant science of modern diapers would wick away the moisture from my bottom, my dreams would remain untroubled, and I'd sleep happily on.

What kind of sadistic mother would take that away from her child?!

Also, I'm just too lazy to potty train her. Maybe her roommate in college can fill her in.