Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Your basic, unavoidable, emotional mash-up.

New Year's Eve is a funny thing. It looks all glittery from a distance, but I believe most people would say it consistently disappoints given any scenario.


Say you are having an incredible time, a real blast, a totally thrilling night where everything goes right and magic is in the air, once the ball drops and everyone disperses, you're suddenly weepy because change is coming and nothing could ever top this moment and now it's a new year and you want to sleep and those doughy potstickers are mixing with four sugar-rimmed appletinis to make your party dress tug at the seams.


On the flip side, if you have a terrible time, where nothing happens as planned and the weather is crap and your company is crappier or maybe you have no plans at all and you're planted on the couch flipping between Mystery Diagnosis and ABC's Rockin' Eve with poor Dick Clark, then the whole evening and all its hype is a total let down even if your sweatpants are a pleasure.


And those are my rather bleak-sounding thoughts on the holiday. I'm generally an optimist, definitely upbeat and resilient during the worst of times, but also a realist. In my opinion, New Year's Eve is doomed to disenchant because feelings are clashing at high speeds.


Now poll the same group of people (from my pretend poll) and they will probably loathe the resolution concept, too. But I think it's great! I make the same ones over and over. I resolve to be more patient with certain individuals who drive me insane and I vow to be on time for appointments and activities. The last one promises I will scream less at my children and that is a fantastic bonus outcome. I embrace the yearly nudge to be better and do better.


Just for fun, and because this blog is about recording memories as well as thoughts, I will now piece together my personal New Year's Eve timeline. 


When I was real young, my parents dropped me off at my grandparents' house and went somewhere groovy to disco dance. This may be my imagination colliding with top trends of the era, but let's go with it.


Then for a few years, they brought me with them to my friend's house because - get this - they were friends with her parents. It was the perfect set-up! Parents partied downstairs. We hung upstairs and I can't remember much else. Apparently the sparkling grape juice was pretty potent.


During my teen years I babysat for a giant group of unruly children who were ignored while I scavenged for snacks. At that age, other people's pantry items are far more appealing than anything you have in your cabinets at home. It's a rule. 


For the next decade and a half, my "eves" seem to run together. I couldn't place them in sequential order if you paid me. (And no one's paying me for this blog, which is precisely what Jon is thinking when I complain about my self-imposed Friday deadlines.)


There were a couple of years spent in basements that smelled like old laundry. I was in New York once. Not Times Square. And, for reasons unknown, I went to Wildwood, NJ, to watch a Grateful Dead cover band and stay in perhaps the dumpiest motel on planet earth. We also swung by Atlantic City during that trip and after requesting only cash for Christmas, I gambled it away in about ten minutes.


When Jon and I were first married and living in our cute little house in Baltimore, we started hosting a small but stellar party every year with only close friends, appetizer recipes cut from magazines and quality music mixes. We were caught between the allure of a grown-up world and our pre-kid youth, meaning we launched the night with signature cocktails and smart discussions on world events, and ended it with breakdancing to Grand Master Flash. 


We even took on the daunting challenge of welcoming the millennium. I couldn't believe anyone would trust their HAPPY 2000! moment to my party planning skills. To quell the pressure, I drank too much and passed out at 12:05. Guests had to roll me off of their coats in order to go home. You'll be happy to learn that I didn't throw up on anyone's pricey pashmina. (Though who would have cared? Pashminas were so 1999!)


Since moving back to Philly, we've had friends over a few times with kids and noisemakers and champagne headaches. It was fun and sentimental and a little sad, too. Your basic, unavoidable, New Year's Eve mash-up of emotion.


Tomorrow we are laying low by design. There were possibilities, but we decided to stay home. It will be a glitz-free evening with the possible exception of a Toddlers & Tiaras marathon if the stars line up in my favor. Nothing boosts potentially sagging holiday spirits more than train wreck families who spray tan their children. 


And if this is our last New Year's Eve, with the world ending at some point during 2012, I will be satisfied knowing I didn't spend it in clothes that bind.


What are your thoughts on New Year's Eve? 
How many New Year's Eves can you recall?


Thursday, December 22, 2011

Santa's beard and jelly doughnuts.

When the first journals were hot off the press, we shopped them around... to family. My dad was one of my first customers. No discount. He paid the full price for his very own Black and White Original Know Me Journal. My accountant (Jon) would have it no other way.

Fast forward to present day and if you're standing real close to me, I may slip a journal in your pocket. I give them away a lot. But I always write it down. So my accountant (Jon) can document the slow bleed.

My father dutifully filled out his book using his very best scribbly chicken scratch handwriting, which is probably what I love most about it. He answered and reflected and included a really sweet childhood memory I never knew about. (And never would have known about had he not been asked in the book. So buy a book because they are great! Or stand real close to me and check your pockets.)

My father was born during the Depression. He lived with his working class parents and sister in a tiny Sears shotgun house. They didn't have much. But at Christmas, my grandmother would make things magical for her kids even though there weren't a ton of presents. My dad told the story of how she trimmed hairs from their white dog and left them by Santa's note as if his beard had shed. How sweet is that? 

I only knew my grandmother as a cranky, tired, blunt and worn out old lady. Who could blame her? Life had been a challenge at times. To read about how she, as a young mother, came up with a creative way to thrill her children on Christmas morning made me want to sob buckets. I'm so glad that image pops into my head now when I think of her. Along with the white chalky mints she always carried in her purse and the smell of scrambled eggs cooking in a cast iron pan.

This inspired me to contemplate my most memorable Christmas morning moment and I was suddenly very ashamed. Because it isn't beautiful or touching. It's not about loving family and appreciating the true meaning of blah, blah. It's about the highest high and the lowest low - in that order - and a misbehaving jelly doughnut.

I was probably about 12. The gig was up. No more Santa. All I really wanted that year was a 10 speed bike to ride to school and I bugged my parents relentlessly.


They made me wait. We opened all the gifts. No bike. Then they told me to look around. Yes! When I found my beautiful 10 speed parked on the porch, I was so very happy. It was sand colored with a suede seat. Gorgeous. 


Until my brother, while checking out the gears, accidentally (??) squirted a gush of sloppy jelly from his sloppy doughnut all over the handlebars. Total and complete devastation. If you know me, you know I like things a certain way. On occasion I can have ridiculously high standards and my bike not being perfect anymore was heart wrenching. I scrubbed and scrubbed but the purple stayed put. If only I could turn back the clock! And get my brother a plate!


Somehow I survived the tragic events of that woeful Christmas morn. I had my bike for a very long time. It came with me, stain and all, to the beach for a few summers where I logged about 10,000 miles on that increasingly less comfy suede seat. Eventually the bright purple stain blended with palm dirt and I realized it wasn't that big a deal after all.


I am a lucky girl. I have the fortune to consider the doughnut incident my most memorable Christmas morning moment. That's because it stood out among all the good. So many joyful days and wishes realized. So very many traditions kept. Warm, comfortable, funny family time that was totally natural and expected. I had a happy childhood. And now I have a happy family of my own. I am a lucky girl.


What is your most memorable holiday moment?


Friday, December 16, 2011

Baby Ben is driving.

Have you ever been sorting laundry and you have your pile of regular wash and your pile of delicates and you get mixed up half way through and you start putting delicates with your regulars and regulars with your delicates and so you accomplish nothing and need to start over? Then you sigh with frustration, begin to re-sort, zone out half way through and mix them up again? I do that a lot. It makes me feel old. I can't even concentrate for the duration of a two minute task.

I marvel at Edy who remembers intricate details with ease. She corrects me often and patiently reminds me when it's pizza day at school or when library books are due. I write frantic notes on post-its everywhere. So many post-its. Her brain is sweet and sponge-like. My brain is old and full. Not of beneficial stuff either. Pop culture details mostly. Like the name of the dog on Hart to Hart. Freeway. I'm a little savant-ish about it. I watch a lot of tv. Always have. Always will. But lately even my best friend the boob tube has conspired to make me feel extra ancient.

Just the other day I was watching the Friends episode where Ross' son Ben is born. I did a little math to come up with Ben's current age. Holy crap! That baby is 16! (I'm old.)


Then I was uber excited to see My So-Called Life on the Sundance Channel. I loved that show when it originally aired in the early 90's. So much teen angst. The hot, dumb crush. The wild best friend. Flannel tied at the hips. I couldn't wait to watch it. But you know what? I related better to the parents. The kids were ultra melodramatic. Lighten up! (I'm old.)


Still love the opening theme. But seriously, those kids need to lighten up.

So to recap, what makes me feel old? Inept laundry sorting, early episodes of Friends and the "too deep teens" from My So-Called Life.


What makes me feel young? Running regularly with no major injuries, my sweet baby Bea and Betty White's resurgence in popularity.


What makes you feel old? What makes you feel young?

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Tennis with Steve Jobs.


I went to the beach with my sister on an annual ladies’ trip she takes with her church friends. I needed to get out of town. Even if it meant daily devotionals and sharing a bathroom with nine strangers. It would be my first night away from Bea. I was apprehensive. For about a minute.


What a thrill it was to pack for just me! Turns out, I need surprisingly little to get by. But the real joy, besides the bonding time with Gwyn and the free gelato samples at Grottos, was the two plus hours in the car each way. I’m not joking. I listened to satellite radio and laughed heartily at adult content. Not the Playboy station (Playmates on air = unnecessary), just raunchy talk shows. I cruised along, didn’t flinch at the constant cursing, and silently reclaimed a piece of my soul.


On the drive home, one show was discussing each individual’s ideal heaven in a matter-of-fact and silly way. One person mentioned seeing loved ones and another thought tennis and a pool would be nice because what do you do after the reunion, when all the hugging is over? I like tennis. Tennis would be good. My game should improve by the end of eternity.

I guess I always assumed/hoped that family would be there to greet me. Probably from all the near death-themed programming I seek out on tv. If someone’s coming back from the brink and talking about it, I’m tuning in!
(This, by the way, is the very last kind of show Jon would choose to watch. I know I’m always pointing out our many differences and, yes, here’s another. Crime shows, ghost shows, not his thing. If there's a corpse and/or a tunnel of white light, I'm transfixed!)
My grandmother spent many decades caring for my grandfather who rarely left the comfortable haven of his recliner. He would smoke a pipe and listen to the police scanner all day and night. And watch Wheel of Fortune.
Pop Pop and Granny, for whom Edy is named. 
With each year I age, her leisure dresses look more and more appealing.
When Pop Pop died, my grandmother’s health rapidly declined. She ended up in a nursing home because her body didn’t work, though her mind remained sharp. She read books all day. Tore through books. Book after book. Being stuck in that place without dementia must have been torture. My friend’s great grandmother was in a nursing home and she thought it was a beautiful and well-run cruise ship. Fun!
One evening I asked my father if he’d visited Granny that day. He hadn’t but his sister had and reported that my grandmother was possibly starting to lose it. I admit to feeling a sense of relief – for her sake. When my aunt asked my grandmother about her day, she casually mentioned that Pop Pop, who was long dead, had been by. Senility was knocking. Hopefully on the door of her cruise ship cabin!
She died later that night.
So maybe loved ones greet you, but then what? Personally, I think it’s something we can’t begin to wrap our simple minds around. I remember telling Gail that. When she was semi-conscious. Heaven is just answers. The absence of wonder and worry. You know everything and everything knows you. And it’s a good feeling. (Especially after cancer when we were constantly waiting for test results, hoping, praying, not knowing why or when or how.) 
I can’t imagine what our spirits do all day, or if “days” even exist, but as I type on my Mac and dream of the iPad Santa is bringing, I bet heaven is extra cool since Steve Jobs crossed over. 
What are your thoughts on the after-life?
P.S. I considered asking Lu and Edy their opinions on heaven, but decided against it. 
Lu would stress out, start asking me about the exact ways in which someone her age could die and the statistics involved. I would field each question carefully and dodge the stuff that’s impossible to grasp, as an adult let alone a child. She would seem okay, then bring it up again at least ten more times in the next three days and twenty additional times over the next year.
Edy would say it’s GREAT! Dance around a little to get the point across. Then request a snack and move on.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Historically accurate fruit.

There is a certain divisive matter that separates the masses more than religion, politics, culture, or age. And it isn't a soft drink preference or a sports franchise.


It's how you choose to decorate your house for the holidays.


On one end of the spectrum, you have your giant displays that encompass the entire lawn and feature moving objects - usually elves with hammers - and lots of inflatables. Forget the incredible computer generated special effects our society is capable of producing (and our children are entirely accustomed to), a sleigh that rocks back and forth, all halting and wobbly-like, on a neighbor's front yard is pure magic! 


Then you have the houses with an excessive amount of glow. Just lights, but oh so many crazy lights. They may even flicker in time with music. If you knock on the door, the man of the house could quote a wattage figure.


Moving along the scale we find the reasonable houses. These perfectly practical people hang a perfectly practical number of lights, typically white, and a wreath on the door with a velvet red ribbon. Maybe a pair of grapevine reindeer. Maybe a three foot wooden toy soldier and a seasonal flag. Nothing crazy.


Then on the opposite end of the spectrum is the house in which I grew up... and several pounds of historically accurate fruit.


A little background: My mother liked old things. Traditional and all-American. Think folk art, hanging baskets and fife and drum figurines. If you're about to Google "fife and drum," you will never truly understand. 


Our house was packed with antiques and always smelled like cloves. There was lots of brass and impractically small chairs with cane seats. We had wallpaper in our hallway that featured blue and white toile sketches of Philadelphia landmarks while the hip of the world, circa 1988, decorated with pleather sectionals and neon accents.


We spent a couple of Thanksgivings in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, an 18th century reenactment town. While I would surely love it today, it was terrible as a kid. I remember lots of driving, and sulking, and reenacting, and a waitress at the Ye Old Something serving us extra cornbread because she thought my dad was Walter Matthau.


So not surprisingly, every Christmas we did it up Colonial style. There were candles in the windows and fruit, fruit, fruit. My dad took a giant board with nails and impaled apples, oranges, lemons and a pineapple, then hung it above our front door, which we never used. To be honest, I thought all that pretty produce was a yawn-fest, totally.


Until a decade later when I had poor Jon on a ladder trying to secure our very own board of fruit above the door of our very first house. The door we used every day. The only door we ever used. For the entire month of December, pineapple juice rained on our heads and made for icky, sticky shoes. But it was classy. And pretty. And completely worth it when we won the coveted neighborhood garden club award. That congratulatory stake in the ground filled me with an embarrassing amount of pride.


And then we bought our second house and had a few kids and the dripping pineapple seemed less charming. 


Now we are rapidly heading backwards on the spectrum. We passed simple white lights and have moved on to colorful, blinking bulbs and lit up plastic candy canes. 


In another few years, you can expect those elves with hammers.


How was your childhood home decorated for the holidays? Describe your current holiday decorating style?