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	<title>motherload &#187; Miss Kate</title>
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	<description>diary of a modern-day housewife superhero</description>
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		<title>Ho Ho Hanukkah</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/12/ho-ho-hanukkah/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/12/ho-ho-hanukkah/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Dec 2011 08:57:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Holidays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Milestones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Preschool]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4277</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Friday when I picked up Paigey from preschool her teacher handed me her lunchbox and said, &#8220;I didn&#8217;t know you guys celebrate Christmas and Hanukkah.&#8221; To which I answered, &#8220;We don&#8217;t actually celebrate Hanukkah. Whoever might have given you that idea?&#8221; She and I smiled down at Paige, who practically started whistling and kicking [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On Friday when I picked up Paigey from preschool her teacher handed me her lunchbox and said, &#8220;I didn&#8217;t know you guys celebrate Christmas <em>and</em> Hanukkah.&#8221;</p>
<p>To which I answered, &#8220;We don&#8217;t actually celebrate Hanukkah. Whoever might have given you that idea?&#8221;</p>
<p>She and I smiled down at Paige, who practically started whistling and kicking the dirt to look all innocent.</p>
<p>My friend Shira just wrote <a href="http://www.mamapedia.com/voices/the-underdog" target="_blank">a sweet, funny blog post</a> for my day job about growing up Jewish in a Christmas-hyped world. My daughter will likely blog some day about her unfulfilled childhood longings for latkes and <a href="http://www.myjewishlearning.com/holidays/Jewish_Holidays/Hanukkah/At_Home/Dreidel/How_To_Play.shtml" target="_blank">dreidel play</a>, and how she&#8217;d tear through her stocking on Christmas mornings hoping to find <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanukkah_gelt" target="_blank">chocolate gelt</a>.</p>
<p>And really, as <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/05/the-jewish-thing/" target="_blank">a wanna-be Jew myself</a>, I totally appreciate where Paige is coming from. In fact, this week I nearly ran away with <a href="http://klezmatics.com" target="_blank">a Klezmer band</a>.</p>
<p>Sure, lots of people have chosen to follow The Dead, or become rock groupies. And really, who hasn&#8217;t read&#8212;and <em>loved</em>&#8212;Pamela Des Barre&#8217;s classic <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Im-Band-Confessions-Pamela-Barres/dp/1556525893" target="_blank"><em>I&#8217;m With the Band</em></a>?</p>
<p>But me? I want to throw caution to the wind and go on the road with a band that plays traditional Hebrew music dating back to Biblical times. Now THAT is hot, people. That&#8217;s how I&#8217;m plotting my rebellion.</p>
<p>And sure, it helps that one of my most beloved friends is the front man for them. They&#8217;re exuberant, joyful, funny, quirky&#8212;and alternately pretty deep and sorrowful. But before I start to sound like a music reviewer (and fail miserably at it), I&#8217;ll just say that the music they make draws you in, makes you clap, chuckle, stomp your feet, and belt out verses like &#8220;Oy yoy yoy yoy yoy!&#8221; And somehow, without even knowing what 90% of the words mean, you feel totally connected and a part of it.</p>
<p>Trust me, it&#8217;s good stuff.</p>
<p>I saw the band play Thursday night in Berkeley and was so fired up I decided to take Kate to their Saturday night gig. Which was an hour and a half away. And started at her bedtime.</p>
<p>But if as a parent you have ever had a moment of feeling like what you are doing is so exactly the thing you should be doing with your child, even though in all practical ways it seems totally wrong, well Saturday night was just that for me.</p>
<p>Kate spent the day yammering on to her dolls (and anyone else who&#8217;d listen) about &#8220;going to my first concert.&#8221; When we arrived, she marveled at the modest, rural community center, &#8220;I think this place is a mile long!&#8221; She played foos-ball with the drummer backstage. And when she saw Lorin walk up to the mic and start singing, I thought she&#8217;d levitate off her seat with bliss.</p>
<p>Even when I poured her exhausted, rumpled body into the car for the long, late-night drive home, part of me thought, &#8220;Let&#8217;s just drive on to L.A.! Let&#8217;s tap into more of that amazing, addictive energy! Let&#8217;s start writing set lists and chanting at encores for <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHP-j5Vf23k" target="_blank"><em>Mermaid&#8217;s Avenue</em></a>.&#8221;</p>
<p>Oh, I wanted to oy yoy yoy all the way down to Disney Hall. But instead I drove home, tucked Kate into bed, and satisfied myself by watching them play tonight on the <em>Conan </em>show. My special band on TV for the whole world to see.</p>
<p>Here it is, less than a week away from Christmas and Mark and I have <em>still</em> not figured out what to buy poor Paigey. So Mark, in all his brilliant practicality, asked her yesterday what she wanted. And without batting an eyelash she made her pronouncement: &#8220;I want a menorah.&#8221;</p>
<p>Well then, of <em>course</em>. So as soon as I hit &#8216;Post&#8217; here I&#8217;ll be going onto Amazon to find one. (Is that even where one buys a menorah? I&#8217;m such a hopeless <em><a href="http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=goy" target="_blank">goy</a></em>.)</p>
<p>Yes, I think Paige has made her point loud and clear. The next time I pack up Kate and hit the road to follow a Klezmer band, I&#8217;ve got to make room for one more groupie.</p>
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		<title>I&#8217;m a Loser</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/im-a-loser/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/im-a-loser/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Nov 2011 10:14:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4243</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Mark and my first wedding anniversary we&#8217;d recently moved into our house, and I was pregnant. Extremely pregnant. Before heading out to a celebratory dinner (where Mark would drink expensive wine and I&#8217;d sip water), he gave me a present. We were in what would be the baby&#8217;s room, sitting on the floor. And [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On Mark and my first wedding anniversary we&#8217;d recently moved into our house, and I was pregnant. Extremely pregnant.</p>
<p>Before heading out to a celebratory dinner (where Mark would drink expensive wine and I&#8217;d sip water), he gave me a present. We were in what would be the baby&#8217;s room, sitting on the floor. And Mark handed me a little turquoise box from a brilliantly-branded jewelry store. I think you know the place.</p>
<p>Inside it was a beautiful necklace&#8212;a platinum chain and a diamond solitaire pendant. I absolutely LOVED it.</p>
<p>Mark put it on me, and we sat there on the floor for a while, looking at the new crib and rocking chair and the pile of laundered, twice-rinsed baby clothes, marveling over how much our lives had changed in one year&#8217;s time.</p>
<p>Then Mark had to stand up and grab both my hands in order to pry me up off the floor.</p>
<p>Ah, good times.</p>
<p>A few weeks ago we went to Seattle. We had an amazing weekend with wonderful friends. We ate at great restaurants, got a private tour of <a href="http://www.chihuly.com/" target="_blank">Chihuly</a>&#8216;s studio, went for walks on the beach, and even saw two bald eagles up close and personal.</p>
<p>But somehow in the course of all that fun I lost my diamond necklace. And I&#8217;m just sick about it.</p>
<p>The thing is, I was insanely organized that weekend. Like even <em>more</em> so than usual. Our hosts don&#8217;t have children, so I tried my utmost to keep the sprawl of our stuff controlled. I folded clothes and placed them neatly back in our luggage. I paired shoes closely together and set them at the edge of our beds. I gathered wayward toothbrushes, detangling spray, and princess panties that had been flung around the bathroom and tucked everything away in its place.</p>
<p>So I&#8217;m not sure how that necklace got away.</p>
<p>Damn my recent growth spurt around accessorizing. A couple years ago I wouldn&#8217;t even HAVE another necklace to change into. But recently I&#8217;ve made an effort to mix things up a bit. I&#8217;ve bought some bold, statement-ish jewelry hoping to up my maternal style quotient.</p>
<p>All I know is that beloved diamond necklace went to Seattle and never came back.</p>
<p>This is the WORST feeling. That pit-in-your-stomach, beating yourself up, woulda coulda shoulda feeling.</p>
<p>The thing is I also know what it&#8217;s like to feel this way then to suddenly find the lost item and to snap out of it. To feel awash with sudden relief and renewed love for that once-lost thing. I keep hoping I&#8217;m at the brink of finding the necklace on the bottom of my toiletry kit (even though I&#8217;ve emptied it out and shook it upside down eight times now).</p>
<p>But as the weeks march on and it doesn&#8217;t turn up, I&#8217;m losing hope.</p>
<p>All this would be bad enough on its own, but a couple weeks before Seattle I pulled another regret-laden move. It was a rainy, stormy, low-visibility morning. I was driving to work in a crazy slew of traffic. My 20-minute drive took nearly an hour.</p>
<p>I finally arrived at the parking garage in downtown San Fran. Hurray! I made it in one piece.</p>
<p>But when I pulled into the garage and took a sharp right to get into the row of to-be-parked cars I heard a loud scraping sound. No, it was more like a crunching. I looked up to see that I&#8217;d hit the edge of the doorway&#8212;a wall covered with a black rubber bumper and bright yellow reflective tape.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m such an optimist that I hopped out of the car, hopeful that&#8212;despite the horrific crunch of metal&#8212;the damage wasn&#8217;t too bad. [Let me throw my head back here for some hearty rueful laughter.]  Yeah, well, no luck there. I pretty much took out the front passenger-side door AND the rear passenger-side door. Oh, and I scraped up the edge of the bumper too, just for good measure.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not sure why I&#8217;m in this self-destructive mode. Maybe my moons are in retrograde? Or my insurance company is controlling my actions like a marionette? Maybe&#8212;despite my age, my marital and maternal status, and my professional standing&#8212;I&#8217;m still that irresponsible, reckless teen who crashed her car into a snow bank, lost her mother&#8217;s pearls, and had her Kelly green rugby shirt stolen because she didn&#8217;t lock her locker.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t <em>feel</em> like that girl any more, but try as I will, maybe I just can&#8217;t shake her.</p>
<p>The other night at dinner Paige asked me to tell her a story about when I was &#8220;a little girl.&#8221; I find these requests both sweet and annoying. The egomaniac in me loves the invitation to hold court on my favorite topic: myself. But the tired old mom in me just wants to clear the dishes off the table and start running the bath water. Haggard Mom thinks summoning up some story to tell takes more energy than she has.</p>
<p>But egomania won out.</p>
<p>Me: &#8220;Okay, so when I was a little girl my mother used to save all the old stale cereal and crackers and bread that we didn&#8217;t eat. She&#8217;d put it in the trunk of her car. And whenever she drove past the golf course or the pond on Poppasquash Road she&#8217;d pull over and feed the old crackers and stuff to the ducks.&#8221;</p>
<p>Kate: [wild-eyed] &#8220;You&#8217;re not supposed to do that!&#8221;</p>
<p>Me: &#8220;What?&#8221;</p>
<p>Kate: &#8220;Feed bread to ducks! We just learned this on our field trip. If ducks eat bread they get this disease where their wings get stuck like this [holds her arms straight out behind her]. Then they can&#8217;t fly!&#8221;</p>
<p>For some reason in my wrung out, end of the day, slaphappy mode, I found this utterly hilarious. And I started to laugh.</p>
<p>Kate: &#8220;No, Mom, it&#8217;s <em>true</em>! Their wings get like this [holds her arms out stiffly again]. It&#8217;s NOT FUNNY.&#8221;</p>
<p>And really, it&#8217;s not funny. But something about my daughter&#8217;s sweet earnestness, and something about how all those years my mother was trying to do something <em>good</em> but was essentially crippling the object of her affection&#8212;gave me a taste of how powerless we can be as we make our ways through the world. Try as we may to do the right thing, sometimes the universe conspires against us.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Keeping it Real</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/keeping-it-real/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/keeping-it-real/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Nov 2011 15:15:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cancer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Manners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Scary Stuff]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4222</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I am a Nazi about thank you cards. Sending them, that is. And like all people with militant beliefs, I work hard to instill them in my children. Call me old school, uptight, or etiquette-bound, but I want writing thank you notes to become second nature to my kids. As it turns out, I have [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am a Nazi about thank you cards. Sending them, that is.</p>
<p>And like all people with militant beliefs, I work hard to instill them in my children. Call me old school, uptight, or etiquette-bound, but I want writing thank you notes to become second nature to my kids.</p>
<p>As it turns out, I have no need to worry. At least with my oldest child, Kate, who is a great maker of cards. A tremendous and relentless maker of cards. It&#8217;s somehow just in her genes, I guess. And I know that my mother&#8212;an ardent disciple of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_Post" target="_blank">Emily Post</a>&#8212;would approve.</p>
<p>Not all Kate&#8217;s cards are thank yous. No, she whips up cards for birthdays, sick friends, Valentine&#8217;s Day, the death of a pet. When she learned that Paige&#8217;s teacher broke his foot last year, she immediately dashed off a card. She made another to bid adieu to our dear gaybors the night before they moved. (Just a few blocks away, but we&#8217;re all still sick about it.)</p>
<p>The heart-shaped card she enclosed when we mailed Halloween candy to the troops said, &#8220;Dear soldiers, thak you for protecting the U.S.A. Soldiers rok! p.s. My name is Kate.&#8221;</p>
<p>(P.P. S. I told her how to spell &#8216;soldiers.&#8217;)</p>
<p>Kate made a card to welcome <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/10/a-fish-called-wanda/" target="_blank">her pet fish, Karen</a>. It&#8217;s hanging by the fishbowl in a spot, I assume, where Karen can easily read it. It says, &#8220;Dear Karen I hop you like your noo hom! Your onr Kate.&#8221;</p>
<p>The &#8220;your onr&#8221; line still slays Mark.</p>
<p>I admit, Kate&#8217;s thank you note routine has been a bit trying at times. Now that she can write&#8212;albeit with her school-condoned &#8220;creative spelling&#8221;&#8212;she&#8217;s not just doodling on the sea of notes that I churn out. She labors over each one. I&#8217;ll have a list of 20-plus gift-givers to get through and Kate will get hung up on one card for 15 minutes, cutting an elaborate snowflake decoration to enclose with it. I don&#8217;t want to stifle her creativity, but I <em>do</em> want to get the birthday thank yous out before we get snowed with the Christmas ones.</p>
<p>The contents of Kate&#8217;s notes range from the fascinating non sequitur variety&#8212;&#8221;Thanks for the book. I just had hot choklit!!&#8221;&#8212;to the brutally basic. To her great grandmother she recently wrote, &#8220;I put the muny in my banc akont.&#8221;</p>
<p>There are also the times when Kate&#8217;s spelling is inadvertently inappropriate. There was the series of cards that said, &#8220;Thak you for cuming to my party.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>Wince.</em></p>
<p>She wrote a thank you note to a neighbor who gave her magic markers. The pens, it turned out, were permanent ink. Mark and I discovered this after an art sesh left indelible marks on our dining room table.</p>
<p>The first draft of that note went something like, &#8220;Thank you for the magic markers. My mother took them away from me.&#8221;</p>
<p>I certainly want to encourage honesty, but I asked for a do-over on that one.</p>
<p>Today we were invited to an ice cream party. My friend Lily was celebrating the end of her chemotherapy (yay!), so she invited 60 friends, relatives, kids, and neighbors to her house for an old school ice cream social. It was the perfect fun lighthearted celebration to mark the end of a truly trying and terrible year.</p>
<p>Now, as you may know, I tend to be <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/03/the-cold-hard-truth/" target="_blank">a rosy sunshiny, hide-the-bad-details-from-the-kids kinda mom</a>. I&#8217;m the one who has assured a worried child there are no robbers in Oakland. I&#8217;ve gone so far as to brush off the notion that earthquakes could ever take place in the Bay Area. (&#8220;<em>Here?</em> Pishaw!&#8221;)</p>
<p>But when Lily got sick I didn&#8217;t sugarcoat it for my kids. They&#8217;d seen me sniffle and weep after bad-news phone calls, so they knew something was up. But that wasn&#8217;t why I was so unlike-me honest about it. The situation was so real and raw, I couldn&#8217;t fathom pretending it was something else. Something not so bad.</p>
<p>They knew Lily was sick. And I told them she had to take a kind of strong medicine that would make her hair fall out. And that the kind of sickness she had could be really scary and bad, which is why I cried about it sometimes&#8212;because I was scared. Because some people die from it.</p>
<p>So this morning as we got ready to go to the end-of-chemo ice cream party, Kate asked if she could make Lily a card. And I said, &#8220;Of course. She would love that.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then I got really curious to see what she would write. I half-expected the card to say, &#8220;Dear Lily, I&#8217;m happy you didn&#8217;t die.&#8221;</p>
<p>But my concerns were unfounded.</p>
<p>The card said:<br />
&#8220;Dear Lily: I am igsided thet you dot hef to tace metsin eney mor!!!!!!!! love Kate!!!!&#8221;</p>
<p>Of course, I bawled when I saw it. I bawled about three different times before the party, and at least once more on the way home. I bawled because I think that in getting ready to celebrate this bad hard part being over, in giving into relief, I opened some door inside myself and big blasts of how scared I&#8217;ve been snuck out too.</p>
<p>I was totally projecting when I thought of what Kate&#8217;s card to Lily might say. The thing that <em>I</em> wanted to say if I weren&#8217;t an adult and didn&#8217;t know better that it was too bracingly honest: &#8220;Please please <em>please</em> kick this cancer in keister. I love you so much my dear, and I <em>really</em> don&#8217;t want you to die.&#8221;</p>
<p>Because the fact is, she&#8217;s not totally out of the woods. Today&#8217;s party was like a milestone pit stop. A celebration that the end of the woods are now at least in sight.</p>
<p>It was a glorious sunshiny day. There was a Mickey Mouse jumpy house in full swing in the back yard. We arrived early, but before we knew it their big home was buzzing with friends chatting and laughing, kids running past our legs holding cups of ice cream.</p>
<p>Amidst all those people and all their talking I&#8217;m nearly certain no one actually said aloud that they&#8217;re relieved that Lily is here and alive and nearly almost altogether well. We didn&#8217;t have to. Today what we had to do was eat ice cream.</p>
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		<title>Belated Birthday Interview</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/belated-birthday-interview/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/belated-birthday-interview/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Nov 2011 06:16:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Birthdays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4206</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Our friend Adam&#8217;s father used to interview him every year on his birthday. Even better, he recorded their conversations, and Adam now has all the tapes. I absolutely LOVE this idea. I was dead-set on doing this with my kids. But along with my intention to make elaborate photo-filled scrapbooks of each of their lives, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our friend Adam&#8217;s father used to interview him every year on his birthday. Even better, he recorded their conversations, and Adam now has all the tapes.</p>
<p>I absolutely LOVE this idea. I was dead-set on doing this with my kids. But along with my intention to make elaborate photo-filled scrapbooks of each of their lives, and to never feed them frozen chicken nuggets&#8212;let&#8217;s just say my plans changed.</p>
<p>A few days ago I was reading <a href="http://www.millionsofmiles.com/" target="_blank">Millions of Miles</a>, the blog of a lovely woman named Megan who I met at BlogHer this summer. She posted a interview she&#8217;d done with her son on his fifth birthday. And I thought, &#8220;By gum, I can do this! IT IS NOT too late!&#8221;</p>
<p>Sure, Kate turned six about six weeks ago. And there are those first five years that I totally missed. But instead of kicking myself that it wouldn&#8217;t be perfect, I decided to just start now.</p>
<p>And no, I didn&#8217;t record it. In fact, I didn&#8217;t even write the questions myself. I hope Megan doesn&#8217;t mind I ripped off her questions. If I decided to write my own, another year might pass by.</p>
<p>Me: If a genie would grant you only one wish, what would it be?<br />
Kate: To only eat bubble gum.</p>
<p>Me: What do you want to be when you grow up?<br />
Kate: A ballet teacher.</p>
<p>Me: Do you want to get married when you grow up?<br />
Kate: Maybe.</p>
<p>Me: Do you want to have children?<br />
Kate: Maybe.</p>
<p>Me: Do you feel different now that you are six?<br />
Kate: Yeah.</p>
<p>Me: How so?<br />
Kate: I&#8217;m taller. Way, way taller.</p>
<p>Me: What is your favorite color and why?<br />
Kate: Turquoise because sometimes the ocean is turquoise.</p>
<p>Me: Who is your best friend and why do you like them?<br />
Kate: Lily. Because she&#8217;s so nice.</p>
<p>Me: Now that you are six, do you think you&#8217;ll have a boyfriend?<br />
Kate: Uh-hmm.</p>
<p>Me: What do you think about world peace?<br />
Kate: It should always be nice and calm around the world. No wars.</p>
<p>Me: What is your favorite TV show?<br />
Kate: [pauses] Let&#8217;s see here. My favorite? <em>Mickey Mouse Clubhouse</em>.</p>
<p>Me: What do you like most about school?<br />
Kate: Free time.</p>
<p>Me: What do you like to do in free time?<br />
Kate: Drawing and writing.</p>
<p>Me: What is your favorite thing about yourself?<br />
Kate: I like to eat bubble gum.</p>
<p>Me: That&#8217;s your favorite thing about yourself?<br />
Kate: No! I&#8217;m good at drawing.</p>
<p>Me: What is your favorite song?<br />
Kate: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGJuMBdaqIw" target="_blank">Fireworks</a></p>
<p>Me: If you could have any super power what would it be?<br />
Kate: Turn into mermaid and breathe under water.</p>
<p>Me: What is your very favorite thing to do?<br />
Kate: Color. Art projects!</p>
<p>Me: What are you most afraid of?<br />
Kate: Wolfs [sic]</p>
<p>Me: What is your favorite thing about me?<br />
Kate: Cause you love reading to me. We love reading together.</p>
<p>Me: What is your favorite thing about Daddy?<br />
Kate: He&#8217;s such a good doctor when I have boo-boos.</p>
<p>Me: What is your favorite thing about Paige?<br />
Kate: She&#8217;s so fun to play with. [pause] Can I do an exclamation point after that?</p>
<p>Happy birthday, sweet Kate. Here&#8217;s to hoping I remember to do this again next year.</p>
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		<title>A Fish Called Wanda</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/10/a-fish-called-wanda/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/10/a-fish-called-wanda/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Oct 2011 06:11:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Kate's Friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shopping]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4108</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At a dinner party my sister hosted once, one of her guests left the table to use the bathroom and his boyfriend leaned over and whispered, &#8220;I&#8217;m sorry that Roger&#8217;s not been himself. He&#8217;s been a total wreck ever since Brenda died.&#8221; &#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m so sorry,&#8221; my sis responded. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t know&#8230; Who&#8212;if I may [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At a dinner party my sister hosted once, one of her guests left the table to use the bathroom and his boyfriend leaned over and whispered, &#8220;I&#8217;m sorry that Roger&#8217;s not been himself. He&#8217;s been a total wreck ever since Brenda died.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;m so sorry,&#8221; my sis responded. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t know&#8230; Who&#8212;if I may ask&#8212;was Brenda?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Our cat,&#8221; the man said solemnly.</p>
<p>This just slayed my sister and me. Not that her friends&#8217; beloved pet had croaked, but their cat&#8217;s <em>name</em>. I mean, really. How many cats out there are named <em>Brenda</em>?</p>
<p>Last week we had a playdate with a boy from Kate&#8217;s class. He, as it turns out, has two cats (neither of whom are named Brenda), two rats (who were surprisingly loveable), several fish, and a yard full of carnivorous plants.</p>
<p>His mother read in this here blog about <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/10/how-much-is-that-guppy-in-the-window/" target="_blank">our attempts at buying a fish for Kate</a>. Our failed attempts. And as a self-described &#8220;fishaholic,&#8221; she kindly offered to give me a crash course. Call it Fish 101.</p>
<p>A bargain-hunter after my own heart, Fish Mama emailed me links to used tanks on Craig&#8217;s List. She offered to escort us to a pet store to pick out some finned friends when our tank was up and running. And in the meantime, she invited us to hang out at her house to meet their menagerie of pets and meat-eating plants.</p>
<p>Needless to say, it was incredibly thoughtful and helpful. I&#8217;d put my incompetence on display, and she was throwing me a lifeline. One that might get us closer to making good on Kate&#8217;s birthday present, instead of having to sell her on the benefits of a pet rock or imaginary puppy.</p>
<p>Besides, this mom and I had been meaning to get together for over a year now. Ever since I sent her a crazy-lady email following her visit to Kate&#8217;s school when she <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/01/its-rocket-science/" target="_blank">talked to the kids about her job</a> sending robots to space for NASA. Yes, it was the most impossibly cool &#8220;What Mommy Does for Work&#8221; classroom presentation ever. One which NO MORTAL COULD EVER FRICKIN&#8217; HOPE TO FOLLOW.</p>
<p>And yet, even though I lashed out at her that she&#8217;d set the bar stratospherically high (no pun intended) for the rest of us, she was genteel and friendly, even suggesting we get together some time.</p>
<p>Anyway, if you&#8217;d seen how overwhelmed and utterly inept Mark and I were in our recent efforts to buy Kate a fish, you might&#8217;ve thought to yourself, &#8220;It doesn&#8217;t take a rocket scientist to buy a kid a goldfish.&#8221;</p>
<p>But for us, apparently it does.</p>
<p>Although, as it turned out it didn&#8217;t work out that way. Because the day after our playdate&#8212;in which I was indoctrinated into the world of fish and filters and cleaning out tanks and led to believe how easy it all could be&#8212;the girls and I ducked into a bird store. A local little place that looks trapped in the 70&#8242;s, next door to our favorite ice cream shop. And there, tucked away on the back wall, Kate fell in love with <a href="http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.bettafishguru.com/images/bettafish.jpg&amp;imgrefurl=http://www.bettafishguru.com/&amp;h=250&amp;w=313&amp;sz=37&amp;tbnid=x2FWWOO1aPIbfM:&amp;tbnh=90&amp;tbnw=113&amp;prev=/search%3Fq%3Dbetta%2Bfish%26tbm%3Disch%26tbo%3Du&amp;zoom=1&amp;q=betta+fish&amp;docid=E6pPbqkVZm6SvM&amp;sa=X&amp;ei=zhOnTsvfDKThiAL93fSbDQ&amp;ved=0CGAQ9QEwAg&amp;dur=529" target="_blank">a bluish, purplish fish&#8212;a betta</a>. Just a single little dude swimming around in an old-school glass fishbowl.</p>
<p>I immediately tossed in the towel on the idea of an entire aquarium. And that Saturday, while I was out of town visiting a friend, Mark and the girls brought that little, inexpensive, low-maintenance bundle of love home.</p>
<p>For all its flowy beauty and apparent lack of brawn, it turns out the thing&#8217;s a pretty aggressive &#8220;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siamese_fighting_fish" target="_blank">Siamese fighting fish</a>.&#8221; So much so that you can&#8217;t have more than one of them in a bowl at a time. I guess it turns into some sort of back-alley pit bull willing to fight to the death. Not very good at working and playing with others. Looking at the puny, femmy thing, it seems unbelievable&#8212;like calling an orchid a bully&#8212;though I have no intention of testing how amicable our new fishy friend really is.</p>
<p>Bettas are also one of those animals where the males get the all pretty colors and the females are more drab and dull. So the shopkeeper informed the girls that our new family member is a &#8220;he.&#8221; This fact meant little to Kate, who is resolute in her determination to believe that all the dolls, stuffed animals, inchworms, ladybugs, butterflies, and snails that she ever encounters and takes under her wing are girls. In Queen Kate&#8217;s world being a girl is the only option.</p>
<p>When I returned home late in the afternoon of Fish Acquisition Day, Kate raced to meet me at the door and yanked me by my arm  to our built-in hutch, the home of the new fishbowl. She stood in front of it, then jumped aside to do a Big Reveal (all HGTV-like) and to make the very special introduction. &#8220;Mama,&#8221; she said, her eyes shining with glee, &#8220;this is our new fish. Her name is&#8230; KAREN!&#8221;</p>
<p>Yes, <em>Karen</em>.</p>
<p>A week later, Mark brought a snail home from the pet store. And not because Karen was lonely (though I have fretted about that). No, Mark bought it because he&#8217;d read [Warning: The following content may not be suitable for all readers] snails EAT THE FISH&#8217;S POOP.</p>
<p>What, you may wonder, is the upside of that vile fact? You have to clean the fish bowl less often, of course. And we&#8217;re all about low maintenance here. (And yes, I&#8217;m currently in the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Research_and_development" target="_blank">R &amp; D</a> Phase of creating a strain of snails that you can stick in baby diapers. I know, I know&#8212;it&#8217;s GENIUS.)</p>
<p>After plunking the snail into the fishbowl to commune with Karen, Mark stood back and asked the girls, &#8220;What do you think we should name it?&#8221; And without a second&#8217;s thought Kate blurted out, &#8220;CARLOS!&#8221; As if she&#8217;d always known that she&#8217;d someday name a snail that.</p>
<p>Of COURSE his name would be Carlos. <em>Duh</em>.</p>
<p>So then, we&#8217;ve got Karen the male fighting fish, and Carlos the shit-eating snail. I take back anything I ever said about Brenda the cat.</p>
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		<title>Oh Danny Boy</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/10/oh-danny-boy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/10/oh-danny-boy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2011 14:14:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Mom Moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Birthdays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kate's Friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Misc Neuroses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4069</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I screwed up my very first relationship at age six. We were in the line to go the bathroom at school. Boys on the right. Girls on the left. And Danny Palumbo leaned over and whispered in my ear, &#8220;You&#8217;re my girlfriend.&#8221; This news came as a surprise. I mean, I wasn&#8217;t totally clear what [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I screwed up my very first relationship at age six.</p>
<p>We were in the line to go the bathroom at school. Boys on the right. Girls on the left. And Danny Palumbo leaned over and whispered in my ear, &#8220;You&#8217;re my girlfriend.&#8221;</p>
<p>This news came as a surprise. I mean, I wasn&#8217;t totally clear what being Danny&#8217;s&#8212;or anyone else&#8217;s&#8212;girlfriend really meant. But I assumed that if I <em>was</em> someone&#8217;s girlfriend, I&#8217;d at least have known about it.</p>
<p>So, with the defiance of a budding feminist, I put my hands on my hips and leaned back towards the Boys&#8217; Bathroom Line to inform Danny, &#8220;I am NOT.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then I spent three years consumed by a crush on him. Ah, the power of suggestion.</p>
<p>Danny had glossy black hair, worn in a bowl cut. (This was a fetching look back then.) It was very <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_mt98NUcmfSs/TFkbBzKjuRI/AAAAAAAABoQ/hYHlUsPPb2Q/s1600/7539M~The-Three-Stooges-Moe-Posters.jpg" target="_blank">Moe</a> from <em>The Three Stooges</em>. And where I was a good girl&#8212;walked around by my teacher to the other classrooms to show off my handwriting&#8212;Danny was a bad boy. He had a sidekick, Les Dunbar, and their antics no doubt sent teachers home desperate for a drink at the end of the day. Once they went to the bathroom and put on all their clothes backwards. This created quite a ruckus when they were called up to write on the chalkboard. Good times.</p>
<p>The way they rolled was the second grade equivalent of driving motorcycles and smoking unfiltered cigarettes. And I <em>loved</em> it.</p>
<p>Anyway, after much reflection I decided that if I could have a do-over, I&#8217;d respond to Danny&#8217;s claim on me quite differently. I&#8217;d gently help him reframe his statement. &#8220;Danny, are you trying to tell me you&#8217;d <em>like</em> to be my boyfriend?&#8221; I could say. I mean, if it weren&#8217;t for my knee-jerk feminist slap-down&#8212;I am SO not your chattel, dude!&#8212;we might&#8217;ve trooped off happily in our respective bathroom lines with the magic of romance tingling in the air.</p>
<p>Well, my little Kate&#8217;s in first grade now. Last year everyone in her class was matched up with a second grade &#8220;partner pal.&#8221; Throughout the year these pals do various projects and activities, in the hopes that their pre-fab friendships will generate some inter-grade community love.</p>
<p>And it totally works. It&#8217;s a sweet program. Very smart of the school to do.</p>
<p>For a long while I knew little to nothing about Kate&#8217;s partner pal. She told me he was a boy, and I sometimes heard about their craftsy collaborations. Like, Kate mentioned they made masks together at the school&#8217;s <a href="http://www.festivusweb.com/" target="_blank">Festivus</a> party. (What? Your kid&#8217;s school doesn&#8217;t celebrate Festivus? <em>Weird</em>.)</p>
<p>And for some reason I had the fleeting thought that because Kate&#8217;s partner pal was a <em>he</em>, he might not be down with having to hang out with a kindergartener. I hoped&#8212;for both their sakes&#8212;that their enforced times together weren&#8217;t too weird or awkward.</p>
<p>Then, at a school event half-way through the year, I finally met the kid. And in no time I realized that he and Kate certainly <em>are</em> pals. In fact, when she saw him that day she ran up to him and hung on him like those monkeys with long arms that they sell in the zoo gift shop&#8212;the ones where you Velcro their hands together and can loop their limbs over something like a lasso.</p>
<p>Although it pained me to see how annoyingly in-his-face Kate was, it seemed that this boy was either impeccably polite, or not annoyed by her attention. Or both.</p>
<p>Perhaps he was more sympathetic to my kindergarten daughter than I thought he might be.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ll call him Ted. Kate calls him Ted-Ted. Yes, apparently Kate&#8217;s one of those females who&#8217;ll call her boyfriend &#8220;David&#8221; when everyone else on the planet calls him &#8220;Dave.&#8221; Or worse, she&#8217;ll call him some wretchedly-personal pet name for all the world to hear. So I&#8217;ve got that to look forward to.</p>
<p>For Kate&#8217;s birthday party she made up a list of guests. When given this opportunity she thankfully doesn&#8217;t go overboard, wanting to invite 300 of her closest friends (like I do). Instead, she included her besties from school, a couple neighborhood chums, some close family friends, and Ted.</p>
<p>I wasn&#8217;t sure whether I should discourage this. He was, well&#8230;. <em>older</em>. And Kate&#8217;s a young first-grader. Would he really be keen on the scene at a sixth birthday party? For a girl no less?</p>
<p>But I saw his mother&#8212;a super friendly, down to earth mama&#8212;in the schoolyard the next day. I sidled up to her and mentioned that Ted made it onto Kate&#8217;s party list. Then I found myself trying to convince her that it wasn&#8217;t weird Kate wanted him to come. &#8220;There&#8217;ll be a couple other older boys there,&#8221; I stammered. &#8220;And we&#8217;re having a magician&#8212;so it won&#8217;t be all girly.&#8221; Finally I shot out, &#8220;I mean, if he doesn&#8217;t <em>want</em> to come, that&#8217;s totally fine too.&#8221;</p>
<p>But she smiled her down to earth I&#8217;m-so-centered smile and put her hand on my arm, &#8220;Ted is comfortable around kids of all ages.&#8221; She scratched her address on a post-it, and handed it to me. &#8220;I&#8217;m sure he&#8217;d love to come.&#8221;</p>
<p>These days when I drive Kate to school, if she sees Ted walk by she frantically screams to him from our closed-windowed car, &#8220;Ted-Ted! <em>Ted-Ted!!</em>&#8221; as if she&#8217;s warning him a tidal wave&#8217;s about to crash over his head. When I pick her up, if I stop to chat with another parent she&#8217;ll sometimes ask if she can hang out with Ted until we&#8217;re ready to go. And thrillingly, Ted did come to her party. He was the oldest child there by far, but his mom dropped him off happily, and he was totally comfortable in the scene. He even engaged in brilliant banter with the magician.</p>
<p>Some little part of me still frets that Kate&#8217;s annoying this chap. That her unbridled adoration is getting old. That he&#8217;s on the brink of getting some playground restraining order on my naive young daughter. But when I emailed his mom to ask for her address (again) so we could send them a thank you note, she mentioned that Ted had a great time at the party. She even commented on how much she likes the &#8220;sweet friendship&#8221; they&#8217;ve formed.</p>
<p>Which just goes to show that my ability to understand the elementary-school male is still apparently broken.</p>
<p>I snapped out of my neurotic mama mode and realized that it <em>is</em> sweet. This Ted fellow is a genuine, friendly, nice boy. Hardly the rogue-ish Danny P. of my younger days. Why <em>wouldn&#8217;t</em> he like hanging out with my genuine, friendly, nice daughter?</p>
<p>If anything, I should probably be worried that my assertive girl has leaned this lad&#8217;s way and claimed with an air of authority, &#8220;Ted-Ted, you&#8217;re my boyfriend.&#8221;</p>
<p>And for all I know, he&#8217;s said, &#8220;That&#8217;s right, Kate-Kate. I am.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>How Much is that Guppy in the Window?</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/10/how-much-is-that-guppy-in-the-window/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/10/how-much-is-that-guppy-in-the-window/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Oct 2011 14:10:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Birthdays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discoveries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shopping]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3973</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Karma&#8217;s a bitch. Here I was lacking a plan, so I took the easy path. And where did it lead me? Hell. Specifically, pet hell. I&#8217;ll explain. Kate recently turned six. And Mark was away for work the 10 days before her birthday. So I planned the party, and shopped for the pinata, and food, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Karma&#8217;s a bitch. Here I was lacking a plan, so I took the easy path. And where did it lead me? Hell. Specifically, pet hell.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll explain. Kate recently turned six. And Mark was away for work the 10 days before her birthday. So I planned the party, and shopped for the pinata, and food, and decorations. I came up with activities for the kids, hired a magician, <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/09/down-undie/" target="_blank">attempted to gussy up our yard</a>. I scoured social media outlets, cookbooks, and the Inter-Web for <a href="http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/beattys-chocolate-cake-recipe/index.html" target="_blank">the most succulent, moist chocolate cake recipe</a> in all the land.</p>
<p>Then one night, toiling over a hot laptop and reviewing my gift purchases on Amazon, I lamented that I hadn&#8217;t ordered a special present for Kate. So I emailed Mark.</p>
<p>&#8220;What do you say we buy her a fish?&#8221; I suggested. &#8220;I mean, just write a promissory note, then we can all go together and she can pick it out.&#8221;</p>
<p>From Down Under, hours later, Mark received the email and shot back, &#8220;Great idea.&#8221;</p>
<p>I brushed my hands together with the smug satisfaction of a mother who <em>had</em> in fact done it all. Easiest. Present. Ever.</p>
<p>That must&#8217;ve been when the gods looked down at me and shared belly laugh. &#8220;Foolish mother!&#8221; they chortled. &#8220;She thinks it&#8217;ll be <em>easy</em>, does she?&#8221;</p>
<p>Then, to put my all my perfect party planning to shame&#8212;to show how powerless I truly was&#8212;they cursed me with overcast weather on the day of the party. It&#8217;d been in the low 80s and gloriously sunny for over a week, but the day of the party&#8212;the outdoor party in our backyard&#8212;was bleak and chilly. The Bay Area&#8217;s legendary Indian Summer let me down.</p>
<p>Had I only known that the gathering of gray clouds that day was a foreshadowing. Oh, the party went off without a hitch, weather aside. But the next day we piled into the car, the girls chanting &#8220;Fish! Fish! Fish!&#8221; and Mark and I smiling at each other from the front seats, smug with the sweet knowledge that we were doing something wonderful to enrich our darling nuclear family.</p>
<p>Hey, we were hardly buying the kids a Labrador Retriever. But, you know, baby steps.</p>
<p>Mark had sussed out fish stores online and took us to a place two towns over that was supposed to be &#8220;the best.&#8221; The squat, windowless building was covered with a mural of tropical fish, and I delightedly sing-songed to the girls as we pulled up, &#8220;Guess which place we&#8217;re going to?&#8221;</p>
<p>It was all so thrilling and wonderful. I took a history-capturing photo of Kate, arms and legs stretched wide, in front of the mural before we entered the building. Mark gallantly held the door open for me and I smiled as I slipped in. A happy young family on our way to add a fishy friend to our ranks.</p>
<p>Inside, the walls gleamed with rows of brightly lit tanks. Within them stirred all manner of colorful, flowy-finned fishies with green sea grasses swaying. The girls ran from one tank to the next. &#8220;<em>Nemo</em>!&#8221; Paige squealed. &#8220;Whoa, look at these guys!&#8221; Kate yelped peering into a tank of small silvery fish glowing with purple iridescence. &#8220;I want <em>them</em>!&#8221;</p>
<p>While the kids and I explored deeper into the store&#8217;s back rooms, Mark got the attention of a young Asian employee&#8212;a collegiate tattooed fish geek&#8212;who we eventually met up with at the front of the shop. I pulled out a scrap of paper from my purse and recited to her the amount of space we had for a tank. (I had every detail figured out.)</p>
<p>Okay, so tanks. Fish Geek Girl started reeling off statistics about cubic something-or-others of water, and pointed to a wall full of spankin&#8217; new, unoccupied fish homes. &#8220;This one&#8217;s a little smaller. It needs a light, but it&#8217;s got the filter built in. Now for a little more you can get this larger tank, with the light and the filter, but the lid is sold separately. This one is a kit and where you think it would be the best deal, you&#8217;re actually better off buying a light from these people, and a filter which will last you three to four years, then get the tank over here from this other vendor but they are totally compatible&#8212;as long as you make sure you&#8217;re getting everything in the M Series.&#8221;</p>
<p>The wall of tanks started to swirl together before me. Like fly-vision I was seeing hundreds of identical images. Despite how dazzlingly confusing just picking a <em>tank</em> was, there also seemed to be some digital ticker tape of the cost of all this flashing behind Fish Geek&#8217;s head. The numbers multiplied the more she talked.</p>
<p>At this rate we&#8217;d get one goldfish and have to decide whether it was Kate or Paige who we could send to college. I was starting to wonder whether we should&#8217;ve gotten pre-approved for a loan before entering the fish store.</p>
<p>I swallowed hard and looked over at Mark. Usually when my brain starts short-circuiting his is still going strong. (One of the many benefits of having him around so much.) Alas, turns out he wasn&#8217;t even tuned it. Instead he was preventing Paige from reaching into a tank to grab Nemo.</p>
<p>&#8220;Okay, uh, well that is all good to know,&#8221; I stammered. &#8220;Maybe you could tell us a bit about maintenance?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Well, depending on which tank you get [of course!] you&#8217;ll have to change half the water in the tank bi-weekly or one-third of the water weekly.&#8221; This was turning into a math word problem. I was afraid she was about to ask me how fast the train was traveling.</p>
<p>Then Little Miss Fish Facts moved across the room to Vannah her arms alongside a display of pumps. &#8220;Now with these pumps you can&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>I was growing dizzy. I felt like if there was just a window I could look out, I could somehow steady myself. If it&#8217;s possible to get sea sick in a fish store, I was.</p>
<p>Water changes? Filters? Lights? Thermometers? Whatever happened to those goldfish that you won in a plastic bag at the carnival?</p>
<p>Oh wait&#8230; <em>I</em> remember. After short stints as &#8220;pets&#8221; they went belly up. Those simple fish-bowl fish never lasted very long, maybe because they needed confusing costly contraptions to keep them going. Eventually they all experienced tragic toilet-borne funerals.</p>
<p>Standing in that store I felt the way I did when I almost bought a Honda Accord. It was when Mark and I were dating, and I needed a reliable car to get me to a new, far-flung job. I&#8217;d gotten so far as to select the color, interior, and options, and they were pulling my new ride up to the showroom from an off-site parking lot.</p>
<p>But I panicked. Suddenly a Honda Accord seemed like the most wretchedly safe, generic, <em>boring</em> commuter-mobile I could ever own. It was like if I bought that car I would be giving up my personality altogether. Every ounce of me-ness would be whitewashed with soul-robbing sensibility. There was no way I could go through with it. But I also couldn&#8217;t bring myself to share my change of heart with the super high-pressure salesman. So I whispered to Mark, &#8220;Uh, I can&#8217;t do this. Tell them no.&#8221;</p>
<p>I think he whispered back something along the lines of, &#8220;<em>You</em> fucking tell them! I&#8217;m not going to tell them!&#8221;</p>
<p>But anyway, this fish thing was different. We were in it together. I touched the arm of Fish Girl before she launched into a lecture on solar-powered filters and said, &#8220;I think we need a minute.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then I turned to Mark and said, &#8220;Let&#8217;s get out of here. This is insane! Maybe at that other place we can get a frog or something. Something easier to deal with.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fast-forward to Pet Store #2, where we met a tortoise. It was darling! And seemed so right for us in so many ways. The girls could take him out of his tank and play with him on the floor. Can you do that with a fish? <em>Noooo.</em> Plus, no filters! No water to change! No temperatures to fret over!</p>
<p>This all sounded great. Then the male equivalent of Fish Geek Girl informed us, &#8220;Now, these tortoises live to be 80 to 100 years old. Some breeds get to be 100&#8212;even 120.&#8221;</p>
<p>Okay, so this was the opposite end of the toilet-funeral spectrum. Instead of having to comfort the girls about the death of their fish some day, Mark and I would be moving this turtle to a nursing home with us. Paige&#8217;s grandchildren would be playing with that damn, un-killable pet.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m sorry, but even a truncated 70-year turtle existence was way, <em>way</em> too long.</p>
<p>But then, to really wrench at our heart strings the Reptile Dude plucks a couple itty bitty baby tortoises out of a tank. Suddenly every kid in the store was crowded around us. They were ADORABLE. I don&#8217;t care how long these little guys live, I wanted one. I wanted <em>two</em>!</p>
<p>&#8220;Now these fellas grow to be about <em>twice</em> the size of Martin over there,&#8221; he said, nodding his head towards an enormous tank. The turtle inside looked to be about the size of a bear cub. These turtles would require their own bedrooms one day.</p>
<p>But they were cute! I was undeterred.</p>
<p>Then Our Knowledgeable Salesperson starts in on how the tortoises eat table scraps&#8212;the ends of carrots, wilted lettuce, withered cucumbers. They were like living compost heaps. What could be greener? What could be easier? Turns out I have a refrigerator FULL OF TURTLE FOOD on any given day. What dumb luck!</p>
<p>As Kate and Paige acted proprietary with the wee turtles the other store-kids were pawing at, Reptile Ron went on. &#8220;Now these little guys have shells that are forming still. So you&#8217;ll need to bathe them in water just about up to their shell lines for 20 minutes a day. But only for the first two to three years.&#8221;</p>
<p>Did he really just say &#8220;ONLY for the first two to three <em>YEARS</em>?&#8221;</p>
<p>I nearly kicked the man in the crotch. I didn&#8217;t manage to get my own children into the bath every day for their first two to three years.</p>
<p>I snatched those darling turtles out of the girls&#8217; hands and plopped them back in their tank. <em>Not</em> an option.</p>
<p>But I never say die. There must be a perfect pet somewhere in this huge store. What else could he show us?</p>
<p>Next up, a variety of small, darling frogs. They really were cute. Brightly colored teensy things, hopping around in little mossy, leafy fairy realms. I cut to the chase. &#8220;Talk to me about maintenance. Gear. Feedings. <em>Baths</em>.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Well, you have to spray water in their tanks every day. They need the moisture,&#8221; he started. &#8220;And they eat crickets&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Live</em> crickets?&#8221; I interrupted.</p>
<p>&#8220;Uh-huh,&#8221; he said. Then he gently explained that their &#8220;live food needs&#8221; would require us to drive to the pet store once a week, just to keep us in crickets. He failed to mention how the hell you got the crickets into the tank. And the potentially-traumatizing <a href="http://www.wildkingdom.com/nostalgia/history.html" target="_blank"><em>Mutual of Omaha&#8217;s Wild Kingdom</em></a> experience of watching the wee frogs devour their dinner.</p>
<p>&#8220;And <em>how often</em> do you feed them these crickets?&#8221; I ventured.</p>
<p>&#8220;Every day,&#8221; he replied cautiously.</p>
<p>And really, I know it shouldn&#8217;t be so shocking to think that a living thing needs to eat every day, but I was horrified. Disgusted even. <em>Every day</em>? For the love of God, no.</p>
<p>I tugged on Mark&#8217;s sleeve. &#8220;Uh, I think we need to go home,&#8221; I whispered. &#8220;Regroup. Do some research. Sell the girls on a pet rock maybe.&#8221;</p>
<p>And so, we left. Somehow we got the girls into the car without them screaming, whining, throwing wild tantrums. Somehow they weren&#8217;t hurling accusations at us of being bad, lying parents who&#8217;d promised to buy them a pet. It was one of those eery times when the kids just seemed to go with the flow. They did what we needed them to do.</p>
<p>&#8220;We need some time to think about what the best choice is for us,&#8221; Mark said as he clipped them into their car seats. We looked at each other over the roof of the car before getting in, and rolled our eyes. What the HELL had we gotten ourselves into?</p>
<p>When we got home it was time for dinner. Late really. And once we&#8217;d cooked, and eaten, and cleaned up the dishes, we needed to start reading the kids their bedtime books. So we washed their hands and faces, brushed their teeth and hair, and got them into bed. There would be plenty of time for a bath tomorrow.</p>
<p>Then Mark and I went on with our evening, secure in the fact that&#8212;despite their state of compromised cleanliness&#8212;we didn&#8217;t have to worry that without having had a bath the girls&#8217; shells might dry out, shrivel up, or crack. These human pets? <em>So</em> easy. Even if when they woke up in the morning we would have to feed them all over again.</p>
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		<title>Give Me Your Money</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/09/give-me-your-money/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/09/give-me-your-money/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Sep 2011 15:02:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Mom Moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Money]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3969</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;m a sucker for a compliment. Like last year, a friend emailed me saying she needed someone like me&#8212;&#8221;a responsible person with a dynamic personality&#8221;&#8212;to do her a favor. Responsible? Dynamic? Aw, shucks. Before even reading what she wanted, I was in. Turns out she needed someone to round up some folks and get them [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m a sucker for a compliment. Like last year, a friend emailed me saying she needed someone like me&#8212;&#8221;a responsible person with a dynamic personality&#8221;&#8212;to do her a favor.</p>
<p>Responsible? Dynamic? Aw, shucks. Before even reading what she wanted, I was in.</p>
<p>Turns out she needed someone to round up some folks and get them on a bus to the farm where she was getting hitched. The task required a firm but friendly approach. The ability to work with old and young alike. It called for one part charm, one part organization. It&#8217;s like the gig was custom-made for me.</p>
<p>I shot her back an email. &#8220;When do I start? And do I get to carry a clipboard?&#8221;</p>
<p>So it was not surprising last spring when I got an email from the Development Director at Kate&#8217;s school, and responded like I did. They needed a &#8220;captain&#8221; for Kate&#8217;s classroom. Someone to be a liaison between the parents and the Board of Directors for the annual fund-raising drive.</p>
<p>&#8220;So many people have told me you&#8217;d be perfect for this,&#8221; she wrote.</p>
<p>What could I say to that? I mean, other than, &#8220;I&#8217;m your gal!&#8221;</p>
<p>It wasn&#8217;t &#8217;til a few weeks ago when our first meeting was announced that I wondered how I got reeled into this role. Did the Development Director <em>really</em> hear I&#8217;d be great? Or had she sent the same message to four other people before me? People who were smart enough to not take the bait.</p>
<p>I decided that she must have been sincere. That it was my winning personality that got me into this. Into what some might find an unenviable role.</p>
<p>While I got ready to head out to my first meeting, Kate stood by the sink to chat. With a toothbrush sticking out of my mouth I explained to her what the fund-raising committee does. &#8220;All the cool classes [brush brush brush] like wood shop and Spanish [spit!] and music, and movement [brush brush]&#8212;I&#8217;m helping raise money for [spit!]. You know [wipe mouth with towel], to make sure you can still have those classes [peer into mirror, fluff hair].&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Oooh</em>,&#8221; said Kate, pondering. &#8220;Well Mama, I hope you raise one&#8230; <em>hundred</em> and&#8230; <em>fifty-five</em> dollars!&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Thanks, kiddo,&#8221; I said kissing her head and slinging my purse over my shoulder. Walking out the door I thought, &#8216;God help me if that&#8217;s all I can do.&#8217;</p>
<p>But thankfully, I&#8217;ve put some thought into this whole fund-raising thing. Even if traditional approaches don&#8217;t work, I&#8217;ve come up with some innovative ideas. You know, I&#8217;m thinkin&#8217; outside the box.</p>
<p>Like, I figured I can volunteer as a car-door opener. Some parents help do this in the mornings in front of the school. It&#8217;s like drive-thru fast food meets private education. You pull up and don&#8217;t even have to get out of your car. Someone just opens your back door and yanks out your kid and their over-sized backpack.</p>
<p>I figure if I volunteer I could peer in at the parent drivers and say things like, &#8220;Nice new Mercedes, Jim! Things at the bank must certainly be going well for you. Have you thought about what you&#8217;re giving to the school this year?&#8221;</p>
<p>Alternately, people with crappy cars (like mine) must be saving money by not indulging in German automotive technology, right? &#8220;You&#8217;re certainly not throwing money away on fancy cars,&#8221; I can bellow to the driver as I use one hand to extricate their child. &#8220;Get a tax break! Bust into that nest egg you&#8217;ve been hoarding and make a fat donation to the school!&#8221;</p>
<p>I can see it now. People will be pulling over to dig out their checkbooks (I&#8217;ll have a pen handy) to make dazzlingly impressive donations on the spot. (Which may, I realize, cause a traffic jam. But really, in the end won&#8217;t it be worth it when those spiffy new xylophones arrive in the Music Room?)</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve also been scripting a few lines about donations based in direct correlation with the size of women&#8217;s engagement-ring diamonds. &#8220;What&#8217;s that there, Sheila? Two carats? <em>Two-and-a-half</em>?&#8221; I&#8217;ll purr admiringly. &#8220;You <em>must</em> have some moula you can shake free for the school, no?&#8221;</p>
<p>I can&#8217;t wait to share these guerrilla fund-raising tactics with the committee. I think they&#8217;re really quite brilliant. And to think, I never even went to business school! I was just an English major!</p>
<p>Last year I rallied the moms in Kate&#8217;s classroom to go out for drinks one night. Even deep into the school year there were so many mamas I&#8217;d barely gotten to know. Birthday parties and playdates are fun and all, but it&#8217;d be nice to hang out without kids demanding our attention. And with wine.</p>
<p>So this year I decided to start early. Back to School Night was last week. Mark was in Australia for work, so I needed a sitter. I figured I&#8217;d make good use of her services and go out for <em>une petite drinkie</em> after the meeting.</p>
<p>So I emailed the moms in Kate&#8217;s class&#8212;would anyone like to join me? Let&#8217;s tack a little socializing onto the end of a school meeting. Let&#8217;s let our hair down a bit. Let&#8217;s <em>tie one on</em>, sisters, free and unfettered, without our little ones (or even spouses) nipping at our heels. What better way to kick off the school year?</p>
<p>But I didn&#8217;t have everyone&#8217;s email addresses. Kate&#8217;s in a K-1 combo class and I didn&#8217;t know the new kindergarten mamas&#8217; emails. So I promised I&#8217;d track those women down later. But if anyone knew how to reach them, please forward my email along.</p>
<p>And what a night we had! Fast forward to me, ravaged senseless by gin and showing off my C-section scar at the restaurant. Then later, the moms of Room 2 went all <a href="http://dtabache.files.wordpress.com/2010/03/coyote-ugly-movie-08.jpg" target="_blank">Coyote Ugly</a>&#8212;dancing on the bar in an act of drunken homo-erotic bacchanalia. It was off the hook!</p>
<p>Okay, okay&#8230; so those things really didn&#8217;t happen. Our outing for drinks was lovely, but not <em>wild</em> by any means. Sure, we considered jetting off to Vegas on the fly at one point, but the idea never really took off. In fact, it was what happened in <em>planning</em> to go out that makes up this here story.</p>
<p>Because one of the moms forwarded my email to the group list the teacher uses. A perfectly reasonable thing to do. So ALL the parents in the classroom got it&#8212;not just the mamas. This may or may not have left some dad&#8217;s feeling left out. Which certainly was not my intention. But I fear that some papas were wondering why they couldn&#8217;t come and booze it up too.</p>
<p>The emails started flowing. A handful of women &#8220;would love to join.&#8221; Others were checking with their better halves to make sure they could slip away. One mama suggested a tiki bar that&#8217;s in staggering distance of her house. Another said, &#8220;as long as they have wine&#8221; she&#8217;s in.</p>
<p>Then one brave dad spearheaded the retaliatory drinking brigade. &#8220;Why don&#8217;t the <em>fathers</em> get together for a beer too?&#8221; He summoned an opposition party of wounded left-out daddies. It was a decided &#8220;if you can&#8217;t join &#8216;em, beat &#8216;em&#8221; approach. And even though I could have offered for us to all go out together, it seemed apparent that we were well past that.</p>
<p>Oh it was lively. It was interesting. My small idea was certainly taking on dimensions I never anticipated.</p>
<p>I was suddenly envisioning Back to School Night in a new light&#8212;all us parents wedged into small wooden seats in the classroom, moms on one side, dads sitting across the room separately, sneering.</p>
<p>Hell, the way this was unfolding I was maybe going to have to host a pre-party so everyone could loosen up a bit <em>before</em> the meeting. You know, some kind of tailgate in the elementary school parking lot. I mean, there wouldn&#8217;t be any drugs or anything. But you know, maybe a few pony kegs. A tray of Jell-O shots. And maybe some of the sensitive new-aged dads would get into the spirit and arrive in face and body paint&#8212;in the school colors, of course&#8212;like some misdirected, intellectual <a href="http://www.chargertom.com/raidersidio3.jpg" target="_blank">Oakland Raiders fans</a>.</p>
<p>All I&#8217;m saying is I&#8217;d be open to seeing that.</p>
<p>At the end of Day One: The Happy Hour Email Incident, the two room parents and I got a note from the teacher. She kindly cautioned us not to use the group email she&#8217;d set up. Turns out she&#8217;d also been getting everyone&#8217;s responses throughout the day. And although she was chuckling about it, several other teachers let her know that <em>they&#8217;d</em> been getting the emails too.</p>
<p>Yes, my innocent let&#8217;s-grab-a-drink-together invitation&#8212;and everyone&#8217;s RSVPs, commentaries, and alternate plan suggestions&#8212;were being sent TO EVERY TEACHER AND ADMINISTRATOR IN THE SCHOOL.</p>
<p>Um&#8230; <em>oops!</em></p>
<p>Yes, the next morning an official email went out <em>to the entire school community</em> outlining the Dos and Don&#8217;ts of the school&#8217;s group email lists. And it encouraged us to set up our own email lists.</p>
<p>Message received.</p>
<p>Oddly, a few hapless fathers continued to respond to the all-call for Dad Drinks throughout the day. &#8220;Wish I could, but I&#8217;m traveling for work!&#8221; &#8220;Sure, beer&#8217;s always good!&#8221;"Catch you guys next time for sure!&#8221; [Wince.]</p>
<p>On Back to School night one of the teachers&#8212;a sweet, funny guy who I adore&#8212;whispered in my ear as I walked into the room, &#8220;We&#8217;ll keep this quick, Kristen. We know you have some drinking to do.&#8221;</p>
<p>Nice.</p>
<p>Another mom informed me that some school staffers were now referring to Room 2 as The Drunk Tank. <em>Greeeeeat</em>.</p>
<p>Yes, it&#8217;s all hideously embarrassing. But the way I figure it, Kate&#8217;s only got four years left at that school. And Paige starts there the year after next. So hopefully in the seven years before she graduates my reputation as the Boozey Rabble-Rouser Mommy will have waned some.</p>
<p>But in the meantime, I want to humbly say to all the teachers, administrators, moms, and dads whose feelings I may have hurt or whom I otherwise annoyed, &#8220;I was wondering if you might be interested in writing a nice big check to the school.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Down Undie</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/09/down-undie/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/09/down-undie/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Sep 2011 13:43:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Mom Moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Birthdays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Housewife Superhero]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Milestones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Misc Neuroses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3918</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mark&#8217;s in Australia for work. He&#8217;s already experiencing tomorrow today, thanks to fun with time zones. As for me, I&#8217;m marking the passage of time in terms of changes of underwear. Specifically, how many of these will take place between now and when he returns. And trust me, I&#8217;m not implying anything sexual here. In [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mark&#8217;s in Australia for work. He&#8217;s already experiencing tomorrow today, thanks to fun with time zones.</p>
<p>As for me, I&#8217;m marking the passage of time in terms of changes of underwear. Specifically, how many of these will take place between now and when he returns.</p>
<p>And trust me, I&#8217;m not implying anything sexual here. In fact, it ain&#8217;t even <em>my</em> undies I&#8217;m concerned about. It&#8217;s Kate&#8217;s. And by my count we have three more pairs of fresh panties to change into before Mark gets back. Three more protracted, tear-drenched, maternal-mind-losing overhauls of undergarments.</p>
<p>God help me to survive them.</p>
<p>Why, you may ask, is a simple clothing change such a chore for my sweet eldest child? Why does my body clench in stress when it&#8217;s time to do something so simple as get dressed in the morning?</p>
<p>Because I have a sensitive child. A <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensory_defensiveness" target="_blank">sensory-sensitive</a> child, to be more precise. What you and I see as a no-brainer garment we mindlessly toss on each day, is some sort of vice-like, itchy, binding, pressure chamber to dear Miss Kate.</p>
<p>It hasn&#8217;t always been about the undies. <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/02/the-princess-and-the-pea/" target="_blank">We&#8217;ve gone through this</a> with socks. We&#8217;ve experienced it with shoes. Dresses with zippers were once attempted&#8212;no more. And pants? Stiff jeans? Ha! <em>Never</em> happen. There are certain types of clothing that are unquestionably off-limits for Kate.</p>
<p>There is a way to treat this issue. We&#8217;ve seen an occupational therapist. We&#8217;ve <a href="http://www.thetherapyplace.net/newsletter/3_2.htm" target="_blank">brushed</a> her. Done <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vHSUz5m8E8" target="_blank">joint compressions</a>. We&#8217;d recite incantations if it would help. Mark and I would both probably make deals with the devil if we could. We&#8217;d do ANYthing to make this go away.</p>
<p>And for a while, it did. Getting dressed in the mornings became, well&#8212;<em>normal</em>. Unremarkable. Tear-free even!</p>
<p>But damn the new school year and all that transition times bring. In so many ways Kate has been fine. She loves school, has great friends she kept in touch with all summer, and even has the same teacher as last year because of the blended K-1 classroom. But clearly something is up.</p>
<p>Because two days ago it took 45 minutes and a sobbing freak-out for her to even TRY to put on clean underwear. And the day before, when I was desperate to leave the house? I confess. I caved. I let her wear the same undies she had on the day before. (A terrifying last resort for a clean freak like myself.)</p>
<p>And after my heart breaks that something so simple is such a struggle for her&#8212;after 25 minutes of feeling sad, I start to feel sorry for myself. And somehow the sympathy turned self-pity turns into unbridled frustration. And irrational maternal behavior.</p>
<p>Which is why, on Sunday morning when it was 80 degrees out and our friend&#8217;s pool in Napa was beckoning, I made a terrible, harsh&#8212;and ultimately ineffective&#8212;threat. I told Kate that if she didn&#8217;t get her undies on in five minutes that&#8212;that&#8212;that I would cancel her birthday party.</p>
<p>Even as I said it, I knew I&#8217;d never do it. Which is, of course, the worst kind of threat. This is Rule #1 in the Maternal Handbook of Threats.</p>
<p>Plus it seemed just plain mean.</p>
<p>But, man, was I frustrated. &#8220;On my last nerve&#8221; as my friend Jackie would say. And I wanted Kate to understand how serious I was&#8212;desperate really&#8212;about her needing to at least TRY. Without trying we&#8217;d never make progress. We&#8217;d still be sitting in that room now, with her bare-assed. I watched her flop around on her bedroom floor moaning, &#8220;ALL my panties are bad. I don&#8217;t like ANY of them.&#8221; And I wanted her to know I wasn&#8217;t planning to engage for another 45 more minutes in this fun game.</p>
<p>Did I consider letting her <a href="http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=going+commando" target="_blank">go commando</a>? Yes, for a second. Did I consider letting her wear the same panties for a THIRD DAY? No.</p>
<p>And just to be sure I wouldn&#8217;t buckle on that score (and be arrested by the Department of Underwear Health, a.k.a. The DUH), I threw the twice-worn ones into the washing machine at about Minute 23 of her tantrum. Getting back into those soft, worn-in undies was NOT going to be an option.</p>
<p>The birthday threat did nothing, other than make Kate scream &#8220;You&#8217;re mean!&#8221; and sadly make me think she was right. So I moved away from the stick, and offered a carrot. &#8220;You can watch five minutes of TV if you put on these panties.&#8221;</p>
<p>And you know what? She wiped the tears off her eyes and perked up like she&#8217;d had a shot of espresso. And then she just put them on. Just like that. Like we hadn&#8217;t just spent the past hour trapped in what seemed like a bad, overly-dramatic liberal arts school play.</p>
<p>So when she finally, <em>finally</em> put on the damn underwear, it totally pissed me off.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t get me wrong, I was happy that this long international ordeal&#8212;which was likely overheard by neighbors and passers-by who were speed-dialing Child Protective Services on their cell phones&#8212;was at long last coming to an end. I was just shocked to see that she really had it in her to put them on. Suddenly her sensory affliction seemed a lot like some let&#8217;s-torture-mommy power play.</p>
<p>All that time she couldn&#8217;t do it when I was asking nicely. Then pleading. But for a five minute dose of TV crack? Clearly that was a game-changer.</p>
<p>We had friends over for cocktails a few weeks ago. We were sitting in our back yard on the kind of glorious, sunshiny late afternoon that makes you smug about living in California. Mark was whipping up a assortment of fab-u-luss drinks. We were nibbling on overpriced stinky cheese. And we were with our beloved Brooklyn friends whose company we had for an extra day thanks to Hurricane Irene.</p>
<p>It was lovely. Lovely if you turned a blind eye to our scruffy, brown, hay-like, embarrassment of a lawn.</p>
<p>We don&#8217;t have sprinklers in our back yard. And we don&#8217;t spend much time there anyway. So I neglect it. Mark doesn&#8217;t care about it enough to warrant calling what he does &#8216;neglect.&#8217;</p>
<p>Somehow watering the lawn seems like the kind of thing balding men wearing Bermudas, black socks, and man sandals do. Which is clearly not me. Me? I neglect our lawn with gusto. I neglect our lawn with intention.</p>
<p>Except in the few weeks before Kate&#8217;s birthday party.</p>
<p>In those weeks I attempt to pack a year&#8217;s worth of loving, careful attention into the straw-like grass. It practically laughs at me as I spray the hose over it. But I am an optimist. If I water the lawn five consecutive times I expect a lush golf-course-like green carpet to spring right up. I feel like if I put my mind to it I can will that grass to grow.</p>
<p>Anyway, during our little happy hour I disparaged the lawn, and described how it would be transformed in less than one month&#8217;s time. Turns out my friend Zoe is a kindred Lawn Fairy spirit. Because just weeks before <em>her</em> daughter&#8217;s birthday (when they lived down in SoCal), she had some yard folk come in to make the nice-nice with the grass.</p>
<p>Trouble was, they spread manure along with the grass seed. Manure with a robust, shit-stinkin&#8217; bouquet.</p>
<p>In the days approaching the party, Zoe said she&#8217;d walk into their yard and sniff neurotically. Did it still smell? Was that just the old smell she was smelling, and it had actually gone away? Would her guests be throwing up in their mouths a little as they attempted to eat birthday cake while ostensibly standing in an open-air sewer?</p>
<p>I LOVE so many things about that. I love hearing how other mamas go to silly extremes to make their kids&#8217; birthday parties perfect. I love finding new reasons to admire old friends&#8212;bonding over a mutual disdain for yard work. I love knowing I&#8217;m not the only one who sometimes questions my ability to know if something is normal or not. (Is the shit smell still there but I just can&#8217;t smell it any more because I&#8217;m so used to smelling it?)</p>
<p>Kate&#8217;s party is Saturday. Mark returns from Down Under on Friday, just in time to nod off from jet lag during the pinata whacking portion of the day.</p>
<p>And sadly, all my optimism and last-minute watering have done <em>nada</em> in terms of transforming our lawn into a verdant grassy wonderland. It&#8217;s a bummer. I&#8217;d love for the yard to look fab, but I didn&#8217;t go so far as to call in a landscaper.</p>
<p>If there&#8217;s any poo smell at Kate&#8217;s party, I&#8217;m afraid it&#8217;ll be emanating from her fetid, possibly days-old undergarments. I&#8217;m doing my damnedest to get a clean pair o&#8217; panties on the gal daily, but by the end of ten days of solo parenting it&#8217;s really hard to know what will happen.</p>
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		<title>20 Things I Learned after 20 Years in California</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/milestone-pile-up/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/milestone-pile-up/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Sep 2011 07:25:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[City Livin']]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eating Out]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Little Rhody]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Milestones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3837</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s been a big week for milestones &#8217;round here. Monday was Mark and my seven year wedding anniversary. Say what you will about this marital mile-marker, but we have thus far experienced no itchiness. Phew. Yesterday was Kate&#8217;s first day of first grade. It was like some meta first-ness. Like first to the first power. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s been a big week for milestones &#8217;round here.</p>
<p>Monday was Mark and my seven year wedding anniversary. Say what you will about this marital mile-marker, but we have thus far experienced no <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0048605/" target="_blank">itchiness</a>. Phew.</p>
<p>Yesterday was Kate&#8217;s first day of first grade. It was like some meta first-ness. Like first to the first power. But things like this don&#8217;t phase my unflappable girl. Within the first minute of being on the playground she was acting like the First Lady of Elementary School. By tomorrow she&#8217;ll have the kindergarteners handing over the cookies from their lunch boxes. Bless her heart.</p>
<p>And today is another biggie. Today marks 20 years to the day since I moved to California.</p>
<p>20 years!!! It&#8217;s totally unbelievable.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve lived here longer than I lived in Lil&#8217; Rhody. Which must mean that in another bat of an eyelash I&#8217;ll be wielding a walker with tennis ball wheels. I plan to have lots of flair on my walker by the way. In-n-Out Burger stickers, fuzzy clamp-on koala bears, and magenta bike handle streamers.</p>
<p>So there&#8217;s that to look forward to.</p>
<p>Anyway, in light of my 20 years as a Californian, I thought I&#8217;d share the top 20 things I&#8217;ve learned since living here.</p>
<p>1. To some people local artisan cheese is Kraft Singles. This is a good thing to think of when you are paying your astronomical rent or mortgage bill and feeling jealous of your friend&#8217;s McMansion in Sioux City. Compared to much of the rest of the country, the Bay Area offers many pains, but also many pleasures.</p>
<p>2. Redwood Trees are really tall.</p>
<p>3. Parallel parking is a Darwinian skill that one develops while living in SF. After driving around your neighborhood for 45 minutes on a parking spot quest, you can bet your pins-and-needles ass you&#8217;ll wedge your chippy-paint-bumpered Jetta into a space better suited to a Mini Cooper. On a 30% grade hill no less. After living in San Fran, going anywhere that has an actual parking lot makes you feel spoiled rotten.</p>
<p>3 1/2. (Turns out I had more than 20 things to say, so I&#8217;m trying to slip this one in here unnoticed.) You know how you go into an ice cream store and you ask the people who work there, &#8220;Wow, do you just eat ice cream all day?&#8221; and they just squirm and look uncomfortably annoyed because you&#8217;re the seventh person who&#8217;s asked them that in the past half-hour? You know that? Then they say, &#8220;Actually, <em>no</em>. When you work here eventually you get over it.&#8221; Well, I never REALLY believed them. Come ON. They&#8217;ve gotta be running in the back room stuffing themselves silly with Pralines and Cream, right? Well now that I live so close to Napa Valley I know exactly what those ice cream scoopers are talking about. Napa is stunning,  close by, and a world-renowned destination&#8212;oh, and it&#8217;s overflowing with <em>wine</em>, of course. Yet we don&#8217;t go there <em>every</em> weekend. We somehow also manage to not to always bring visitors there. It&#8217;s so close! It&#8217;s so fabulous! But I&#8217;m ashamed to say that we&#8217;ve grown to <em>take it for granted</em>. (Wait, you all don&#8217;t have hundreds of world-class wineries an hour&#8217;s drive from YOUR house?!)</p>
<p>4. Divorce West Coast style means that your father and his wife (who is younger than you) comes to your house for Thanksgiving with your mother and her girlfriend. And not only do they all <em>talk</em> to each other, they&#8217;re all best friends.</p>
<p>5. My scariest California rookie experience was ordering a burrito at <a href="http://www.yelp.com/biz/taqueria-la-cumbre-san-francisco" target="_blank">a Mission taqueria</a>. There&#8217;s a huge long counter behind which 15 or so women take orders from a constant stream of patrons. They sputter out questions like, &#8220;Black, pinto, or re-fried?&#8221; and you must use all your energy to ante up an answer&#8212;any answer&#8212;so as to keep pace with the next question they&#8217;re going to hurl your way. They move down the line two steps to the chicken and meat section where more un-decipherable questions are asked, and you whimper lightly and point. By then, sweating and disoriented you lose track of your burrito-maker, who is down by the salsas bellowing out &#8220;Hot or mild?&#8221; while a dozen other people are calling back to <em>their</em> nice burrito-making ladies a cacophony of &#8220;Pinto! No lettuce! Carnitas!&#8221; Then what happens is you start talking to The Wrong Woman. You <em>lose</em> your Burrito Maker and then suffer a sudden crushing white-girl shame because all the long-black-haired Mexican women look the same to you but you don&#8217;t want to accept that you really think that because that would be BAD and WRONG. Yet, uh, was <em>that</em> her? In the gray t-shirt? Or the one with the braids? And then suddenly she is back and in your face and yelling something and beckoning you down the long counter because you are creating a hungry human traffic jam so you wave an affirming that&#8217;s-great-thanks gesture her way so she&#8217;ll just stop asking you questions then you&#8217;re shunted to the cash register having no idea what it is that you ordered. And you have also <em>not</em> been handed your burrito. It&#8217;s been tossed in a pile with 8 other tin foil tubes that all have different letters scrawled on them. At the register they say things to you in questioning tones like &#8220;Super Veggie Burrito?,&#8221; or other phrases that include words like &#8220;Deluxe&#8221; which appear to be names for the kindsa burritos they make, but you have NO IDEA what it is that you got. Someone could offer to pay you $10,000 to tell them what is in your burrito and you&#8217;d just sit down and cry and say, &#8220;I don&#8217;t know! It all happened so fast! And she had an accent that I&#8217;m ashamed to say I really couldn&#8217;t understand!&#8221; But you manage to somehow buy something (that may or may not be yours) and don&#8217;t cry from the trauma of it all. And whatever the hell it is you eat it and decide that the holy terror you endured was SO worth it. Then eventually, 8 years or so later, after coming back about once a week, ordering a burrito becomes easier.</p>
<p>6. I sometimes feel un-cool for not being gay.</p>
<p>7. I&#8217;m more afraid that one of those <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_5s67MJWOeAg/TNhW_Sxi-EI/AAAAAAAAEEc/fbqptiul5tk/s400/coyote_acme_anvil.jpg" target="_blank">Looney Toons anvils</a> might somehow fall on my head than I am about earthquakes. When you live here, you don&#8217;t hang pictures framed with glass over your bed, and you don&#8217;t think much about earthquakes. Because really, not wanting one won&#8217;t prevent one from happening. Besides, we&#8217;re all too stoned out of our minds every day to worry about anything other than when the pizza is going to arrive. (See #12.)</p>
<p>8. You have not really gone out dancing until you&#8217;re the only woman in a gay club and by the end of the night you find yourself dancing in a black lace bra. (Just kidding, Dad! Well, as far as you know&#8230;)</p>
<p>9. It turns out Spanish would&#8217;ve been a more useful language to take than my 12 years of French. Who knew?</p>
<p>10. San Francisco Victorians are painfully cold in the winter <em>and</em> summer. They sure may look purdy, but most Turkish prison cells are more comfortable.</p>
<p>11. Everything Mark Twain ever said about San Francisco summers and witch&#8217;s tits is totally true.</p>
<p>12. Of my native-Calif friends, some scored pot from their parents with the same regularity and lack of big-dealness that I had hitting my parents for an allowance.</p>
<p>13. Whenever I was home sick from work in New York, I felt like I was the only one in my apartment building aside from the crazy old ladies who never threw out newspapers and bred cockroaches. EVERYONE else was at work. But in the Bay Area I think that people in offices feel like the outsiders. Cafes and coffee shops are thrumming with people hanging out (working? checking Match.com? betting on the ponies?) all day long. And a good drinking game, if you ever need one during the day, is doing a shot every time a man with a baby strapped to his chest walks down the sidewalk past your house. THEY ARE EVERYWHERE.</p>
<p>14. When it rains here it rains and when it doesn&#8217;t rain it doesn&#8217;t rain. These weather patterns are strictly relegated to seasons and they nearly always play by the rules. This seems odd to you at first, but later when you go on vacations outside of Northern California and after a sunny morning there&#8217;s a rain storm in the afternoon it freaks your shit right out.</p>
<p>15. There&#8217;s something warm and romantic&#8212;but also prone to knocking over your porch plants&#8212;called the <a href="http://www.atmos.ucla.edu/~fovell/ASother/mm5/SantaAna/winds.html" target="_blank">Santa Anna winds</a> that pass through the Bay Area every once and a while. It&#8217;s fun to say Santa Ana winds, and even funner to have an unusual weather pattern crop up that you&#8217;ve lived here long enough to recognize. &#8220;Oh yeah, those Santa Ana&#8217;s are blowin&#8217;!&#8221; you call out to your neighbor over the bluster while getting into your car some mornings. And you think you&#8217;re really cool.</p>
<p>16. Don&#8217;t be surprised if you are waiting at a stop light and a man wearing black leather pants, a black leather captain&#8217;s hat, and a &#8220;shirt&#8221; comprised of crisscrossing leather straps, is walking another man across the street who is on all fours, and on a leash. I don&#8217;t know <em>what</em> those wacky gay boys are up to, but it seems like good clean fun!</p>
<p>17. Speaking of leather pants, don&#8217;t wear those to the <a href="http://www.rainbow.coop/" target="_blank">Rainbow Grocery</a> cooperative. Really. Take my word on that.</p>
<p>18. And speaking of crossing the street, people in California actually stop for pedestrians in crosswalks! All that time on the East Coast I never knew what those lines on the street were for.</p>
<p>19. The <a href="www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/" target="_blank">Berkeley Public Library&#8217;s</a> library cards look like they&#8217;re tie-dyed. <em>Somebody</em> had a great sense of branding (and humor).</p>
<p>20. There is <a href="http://www.golden-gate-park.com/buffalo-paddock.html" target="_blank">a field of bison</a> in Golden Gate Park and the first time you see them you will feel certain someone slipped you a hallucenogen.</p>
<p>Thank you, thank you, Mark, for a dazzling seven years of marriage, and for being the funniest, smartest, cutest, best-cookin&#8217; husband a gal could ever have. I adore the ground you walk on, and could you pick Kate up from school today? Listen, I&#8217;ll just call you about that later.</p>
<p>And thanks to you California, for the wild, wonderful ride these past twenty years. I <em>must</em> have been having a good time, because man, that time FLEW. Here&#8217;s to the next twenty.</p>
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