Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Saluting the Master of Prank

My father became a bra*-burning feminist sometime in the very early 70s. He did this for very practical reasons: 1) it made sense in a strict constitutional and philosophical sense and 2) he had three daughters.  


My father never stopped opening doors ("ladies first") or standing any time a woman left a room or a table or arrived at either. And for every equal hire he made, for every way he supported Title 9 or defended his position to any chauvinist around, he could become completely incensed at a bra*-strap that dared peek out. A man has his limits, after all; a woman should, too.

My father turned 70 this weekend. His three daughters, neither of whom currently hold a paying job by the way and about whom he is undauntedly proud, met up in New York, hopped a few flights to South Carolina -- thanks to the generosity of a woman who will never be a step mother but is (at last) a friend -- and surprised that Old Man while wearing Mardi Gras masks in public. 

I know he was surprised for one reason and one only: he did not stand when we revealed ourselves at his table. He did not rise to greet us or to hold out our chairs: he just sat there.

This from a man who has pulled off more pranks than Ashton. Convincing a Canadian restaurant staff that he and a friend (both dressed like sheiks) were emirates from abroad? Their ridiculously fake Farsi sealed the deal on that one -- 4-star service all the way. Arriving at the airport to pick up a college freshman? In a Santa suit? My sister never lived that one down. Starting the Worm Defense Fund on the fly at a cocktail party when an obnoxious neighbor was incensed that "ALL the cats were killing ALL the birds"? That was a particularly good one. (I really disliked those neighbors.) 

But my father? He has never been punked. I am pretty sure it took him a solid sixty minutes to realize what was actually happening (his three daughters! his three sometimes distant daughters! all there in one place! for him!) but it took him much longer to get over his dismay at having been played.

My father lives on, seven decades in fact, and finally we three (plus one, his wife),  finally -- we got him. Someone had to. 

When he finally got his mojo back, we entertained him unknowingly: he furtively sat on his porch in the shade, listening, while we bobbed in the hot pool below him.  Our non-stop chatter, our love of bacon and egg sandwiches pool-side (delivered!), our dirty jokes, our easy curse words, our ability to be both wildly independent and yet so committed to our kids and to our husbands and to each other all at once -- what a view he had, what insight! We talked and talked and drank and talked, and somewhere along the way, I gotta believe he realized that his vision of the future for us (and maybe for lots of women like us) was right here, was this, was we three floating and happy and opinionated and making all our random, sometimes shifty, sometimes grand plans for the road ahead.

Well, minus the peeing in the bushes story, which um, you know, that's not very lady like

But we got him and we got him good.

All the best heiresses learn well from the master. Long live the master!

Monday, June 22, 2009

I'm Gonna Bribe You With Booze

I am going to BlogHer. 


Which is a conference of strangers who write on the internet. There will be events and talks and sponsors and booze. I am going for the latter.

I've been to SXSW four times, the "music business conference" which is really, the music biz Prom where the after-party begins the day you arrive. I kinda think this thing, this BlogHer? It's gonna be the same.

Me and CarolynOnline, who's latest awesome post links to JenW's hilarious one about the possibility of us going... well, it's happening. 

We've been talking about this big meet-up for a year. For a year. Which is a lot of talking. We made some huge plans but we ended up with this: 

Find  Ms Picket or CarolynOnline at BlogHer and we will buy you a drink. Preferably, a cheap beer. In a can.*

*This offer may be redeemed only once. You must hug either me or she. You must say "dude, thanks" at least once.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

The Girl Gets Thinky

It's been a while since I have been inspired to be thinky.


Well, at least here.

I get thinky far too much in my day to day -- sometimes so much so that it leaves the laundry undone and schedules unraveled -- as in: we missed Bridget's soccer tournament because my father came a week ago, I went back "home," the Kid was gone for a few days and also, did I mention, my father was here? At my house? Yeah. Thinky happens.

I missed the email about the tourney and the game was at 7am this morning which I realized at 8:30 this morning and my mother is here now at my house and two of my kids have the pig flu, so, so yeah, I said, fuck it. 

Bridget? Me? Not on speaking terms.

I am creature of habit and I get undone when my regular whirly-wheel is taken away.  I have never been good with change. Neither is she. 

So, I pick up a brush and a gallon of interior semi-gloss paint and I try to take back some control. I end up covered head to toe in latex white, and some roasted sesame and a little pumpkin orange too. I have flecked my diamond engagement ring and my leather watch band with the drops of paint meant to soothe me. I peel my best intentions from my fingernails -- rubber is good like that. 

I dig off what was a stupid cure anyway.

I sit down. I read somebody's else's words. I read your words maybe. I read Free Man and he makes me sad and inspired all at once. I dig off the last bit of paint from my nails and from my elbows and I read something someone else wrote, and I write. I write.

Suddenly, the world -- the alphabet, this keyboard: it's every bit of control I ever needed. It's the one thing that never changes. It's the best moment of any day. It's words on a page that I put there, that I put there. It's words that feel good when I say them out loud after I type them (on good day), but always, it's my words. 

At last.
At least. 
Only.

My words. My thinky, ridiculous words. Mine.

Free Man: that's why we do it.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Kid Writes Letter to Summer about Swine Flu*

Hello? Early Summer Vacation? 

It's me, Rory. I'm the kid with the sniffles and the fever and the quarantine.

Is it possible that you could explain to my Mom that I do not need to take stupid naps? And that it might be nice if she stops touching my forehead?

Because I am pretty sure You want me to get off this couch where my mom makes me watch Top Chef re-runs and go outside to my, well, rainy back yard (which, dude, is pretty lame) so I can get my messy, dirty game on.

I know, I know: I've got a fever which Mom says saves us money in food and chaos and bandaids or something like that and even though I have no idea what she's talking about most of the time, I know she keeps spraying that stinky spray, keeps making me drink water, and sends all my friends away.

Dude? Dude? I feel fine now, and dude: can you bring the fun part of summer on and not this fake summer of me at home with NO ONE around all day? That'd be awesome.

Thanks, man,

Rory


*Two days with a fever gets a kid banned from school for 7 days, which are the only school days the Small Town school's has left. So, yeah: she's done. And totally fine and healthy and as of two hours ago, arisen from the couch to wrestle her brother and a build some weird restaurant in the playroom. 

Monday, June 15, 2009

Confession: Little People

I am very very sorry for every icky thing I ever said about being afraid of Little People. 


Even though I blame it mostly on the the exploitive antics of Stern-like radio jocks and early web videos, and maybe a twisted memory from watching the Wizard of Oz at far too young of an age,  I still -- I must -- take responsibility for letting my phobias spill over into my grown-up life.

Thankfully, a couple well-meaning friends and a few TLC television shows taught me the awful error of my agita, but nothing would mean more than what happened this weekend.

It was raining. It was a huge party at the site of every huge party of my youth. It was, for me and the Kid at least, a Homecoming of huge proportions: nearly everyone we ever knew was there, older now, but as funny and keg-ready as ever. We were two Prodigal fools, returned from the Great North to the great white way of the Connecticut Shore and damn, if there wasn't a familiar bonfire, a familiar band on stage and catered lobsters we never ate (yup; that's right) (it's Connecticut -- they go big; they also go home late). Which we did.

We went home very late -- after I fell, or tripped or slid off the sea wall. Not sure. It was raining; I was wearing rubber flip flops and I do like to dance. Wounds were incurred, grisly ones. And who came to my rescue? Who?

Not my studly giant husband or any of the well-loved homies of my past.

A Little Person came to my rescue. A Little Person saved me. 

 

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

The Mysterious Case of the Porch Pooper

A varmint lives among us! We know this because he/she/it the devil rodent leaves its tiny poops on our back step every morning, kind of like the newspaper only really disgusting. 


The Kid has gone full-blown Caddyshack. 


He considered setting up the video camera overnight to catch the Porch Pooper in action but then realized the Flip does not come equipped with night vision nor could it hold 12 hours of video. He has laid a variety of traps but they laugh at him, empty, each morning: "poop on the glue trap!?" he hollers, impressed and appalled all at the same time. He has now decided to pour out a "fine, fine powder like substance" (his words) otherwise known as "baby powder" (my words) in order to identify the foot prints because he is, I guess, the Grisham of rodents. 
He opens the door most mornings not to sunshine and the promise of a new day but to more of the Porch Pooper's mischief. He shakes his hands at the heavens and growls. 

I look at the heavens, shrug, and say "maybe they are up in the gutter or something" and go back inside to start the day. He spends fifteen minutes eyeballing the eaves for signs of his enemy. I get out the broom and he investigates the attic. He is gone so long, I forget where he's been so when he comes back saying that the "area is secure," I think he has gone officially crazy.

Tonight it is raining and perhaps the Porch Pooper will lay low. The powder won't work in the downpour anyway and the traps have been stashed away. He will put his feet up and nosh on some egg rolls, watch the game and rub his beard. But somewhere in this nightly respite, this ritual of quiet relax before sleep, for a few minutes, he will dreamily consider plastic explosives. 

His home will not be breached: his castle shall stand. The Porch Pooper must die. 

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Solid No Joke Drunk Post

I just pushed a 6' 4" man up the stairs. I am sober enough to understand physics: the forward momentum of the situation was on my side.


What is not on my side? Age.

Turns out when you boogie and hustle and break-it-down on the dance floor when you are almost 40: you will sweat. And not just under your pits. 

My lame hairdo? That's a sweaty goner. 

My husband? Likewise.

As for me? And my goner hairdo?  My goner husband?

Twenty minutes alone in the kitchen. Awesome.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

I Am the Bitch In Your PTO

I am finding it hard lately to work up enthusiastic hurrays and woohoos for the end of the school year countdown. Did I say lately? Didn't mean that. I always find it hard to work up the rah-rah at this time of year. 


You drew a picture? I've admired all your art all year but yes, let me admire that tempura-painted piece of brilliance in public. You sing all the time, but let us now sit on folding chairs to watch you mumble, embarrassingly, through the lyrics. You did math and wrote stories and I high-fived your success and struggled with you through every long division nightmare, but let's pack into this hot room and sweat together, uncomfortably, while I slap your palm again to make sure you know how proud I am.

Oh? And soccer? Your losing season will be rewarded with a trophy and a speech and a party, and I am working hard as.I.type to make that awesome for you. And (the other daughter) you? Your winning season will be rewarded with pizza and juice boxes and god knows, I have read every email about it.

I love my kids -- salute them when they need it, scold them when they need that -- all year loooooong. But now that the school year is over? We're supposed to throw down as we have never thrown down before and I find it so fake and so needless.  

I feel badly for all their teachers way more than I do myself: 22 kids + the hoopla of parties + psycho performance fever + good weather + Field Day = seriously wild, wild kids. 

Parties. Cupcakes. Juice boxes. Mini muffins. Emails out the wahoo

Am I the only bitchy mother who finds ALL of this useless to the development of my kids' best nature? Am I the only one who thinks all of this is too much for the teachers and too much for the kids TWO WEEKS before they finish school for the summer? Am I the only one who thinks it should be:

One party -- on the last day -- two packs of popsicles. Done.

And maybe a trophy after a losing (or winning season) because trophies keep longer than muffins and kids dig 'em.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

An Open Letter to Leukemia

Dear Leukemia,


First of all, your name is pretentious and hard to spell. 

Secondly, you are a sneaky son of a bitch and if there is one thing I can't tolerate, it's dishonesty. You lie when you say you are gone for good.  You slither in through a crack she just patched, the one she worked months and months to repair.

It's over between us: I officially hate you. 

I am done trying to understand you and I am done trying to cope with you. You are intolerable -- talk, talk talking all the time with too many big words. You are the thing in the room that everyone wishes would leave. Face it: we ALL despise you. 

Our family likes bad jokes and late-night dancing and card games. We honor love and generosity, tolerance and respect. We typically welcome all comers, but dude, we don't welcome you. Have you wondered why you and your kind haven't spent much time at our parties? It's because we don't dig sneaky ingrates. 

This team of ours? We are bigger and badder and meaner than you. We have fierceness and aggression and a genetic will to kick ass. We love her: we love her way more than you know and we are coming. We are coming with our fists and our minds and our hearts in our hands and with hope on our side. 

Leukemia, we are coming for you. 

Listen you asshole leukemia, once and for all: back off my cousin Delia.

The gangs in the corner, gearing for a fight. She will win.

Sincerely,

Ms Picket