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	<title>motherload &#187; My Body, My Temple</title>
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	<description>diary of a modern-day housewife superhero</description>
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		<title>On Safari</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/09/on-safari/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/09/on-safari/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Sep 2011 14:46:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Doctors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3880</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I now have an Infectious Disease Specialist. I feel extremely exotic and special. At my first appointment I wasn&#8217;t sure what to expect. Aside from a possibly long wait. You know, typical doctor&#8217;s office stuff. Yet, the moment I signed in and turned to my waiting room comrades&#8212;a dreary, quiet group whose infectious diseases I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I now have an Infectious Disease Specialist. I feel extremely exotic and special.</p>
<p>At my first appointment I wasn&#8217;t sure what to expect. Aside from a possibly long wait. You know, typical doctor&#8217;s office stuff. Yet, the moment I signed in and turned to my waiting room comrades&#8212;a dreary, quiet group whose infectious diseases I couldn&#8217;t help but wonder about&#8212;I realized that I&#8217;d forgotten my Kindle. Damn it.</p>
<p>My book group has ambitiously taken on <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Karenina" target="_blank"><em>Anna Karenina</em></a>, so I try to get a page or two under my belt at every possible free minute. It gives me some hope of finishing the book by 2015.</p>
<p>Annoyed that I wouldn&#8217;t make any Anna progress, I turned to the magazine rack to find bleak reading prospects. <em>Diabetes Today</em>, the AARP magazine, and some clinically-upbeat periodical called <em>Empower</em>.</p>
<p>While pondering whether diabetes was &#8220;infectious&#8221; and what that word reflected about my own presence in that office&#8212;Was it that I&#8217;d <em>gotten</em> something infectious or that others could get something from <em>me</em>? Wait&#8212;that&#8217;s <em>contagious</em>. So I guess I&#8217;m The Infected, not The Infector, which is mildly reassuring&#8230; Anyway, while sorting through these thoughts a nurse came to the doorway and called me in.</p>
<p>Notice how I didn&#8217;t say &#8220;a male nurse.&#8221; Why is it that male nurses are always &#8220;male nurses&#8221; and not just nurses? I&#8217;m fighting for the rights of this maligned group right here and now. Just so you know.</p>
<p>So while he was taking my vital signs, the I&#8217;m-not-mentioning-he-was-male nurse brought up the fact that <em>he</em> has diabetes. Not sure how it is that we got on that topic, but he was clearly trying to take attention away from infected patients like myself by A) being male and a nurse, and B) prattling on to me about <em>his</em> illness.</p>
<p>Though he did seem like a kind man. And he thankfully managed to take my temperature and blood pressure without getting all low blood sugar on me, or slipping into a diabetic coma.</p>
<p>And before I knew it my brand new infectious disease specialist swept in to start our appointment. To hopefully diagnose the <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/paging-dr-house/" target="_blank">mysterious set of symptoms</a> that had sent two other less exotic and less special doctors off scratching their heads.</p>
<p>So he sat down and started earnestly asking questions and scribbling down notes in what appeared to be utterly illegible script. Which somehow validated that he was a real doctor. Maybe even a good doctor. The other thing that made me certain he&#8217;d get to the bottom of this&#8212;aside from his outpouring of questions, &#8220;What animals have you been around? Have you traveled out of the country? Eaten raw fish or meat?&#8212;the other thing that got me was his clothes.</p>
<p>Yes, I&#8217;m not sure how YOUR infectious disease specialist dresses, but mine wears a safari suit. Or more specifically, khaki pants and a matching khaki shirt. It&#8217;s very evocative of the kinds of ensembles one might wear in the kinds of places one might acquire an infectious disease. (Even though I got mine&#8212;if I actually even <em>have</em> one&#8212;in the wilds of small-town New England.)</p>
<p>He stepped out to get my records and I half-expected him to re-enter the room wearing a mosquito net over a pith helmet. I pictured him jumping into an open-sided Jeep, bumping over scrub brush and dirt to get to the nurse&#8217;s station. I imagined him hopping out at a dense jungle outcropping and using a machete to bushwhack his way through dense foliage towards the computer that housed my lab results.</p>
<p>No wonder he&#8217;s got male nurses, I thought. They&#8217;re probably trained to keep the wild animals at bay.</p>
<p>Anyway, he returned from his &#8220;getting my chart&#8221; adventure seemingly unscathed. And our appointment continued devoid of any thrilling aha moments or the appearance of monkeys. In fact, his summary of what&#8217;s been happening to me was about as milk toast as they come.</p>
<p>Essentially he mirrored what the other docs had said. It could be <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/lyme/" target="_blank">Lyme Disease</a>, so take the antibiotics. Get tested in two weeks to see if you got a false negative the first time. But by the time you take that second test, you&#8217;ll have been on the meds for so long, you might not test positive then. Even if you had it.</p>
<p>So? So? So? So, that&#8217;s IT?! That is the finale of all these weeks of blood tests, MRIs, and &#8220;sorry but this will be uncomfortable&#8221; nerve testing?</p>
<p>I may never know what caused my limbs to go numb, my muscles to ache, and my joints to throb with pain. I may never know if I ever even <em>had</em> what they&#8217;re guessing it mighta been. And as a consolation prize I get to take 30-days worth of stomach-churning antibiotics. Hooray!</p>
<p>Call me demanding, but this is one lame-ass final act.</p>
<p>&#8220;Be happy you feel better,&#8221; he said. And faster than a hyena running up a tree, he was gone.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve definitely learned a thing or two from this whole experience. Having an infectious disease specialist isn&#8217;t anywhere near as cool as you think it&#8217;ll be. And <em>AARP Magazine</em> is nothing to look forward to.</p>
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		<title>Paging Dr. House</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/paging-dr-house/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/paging-dr-house/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2011 15:53:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Daddio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Doctors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Scary Stuff]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3725</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Should I start with the good news or the bad news? Okay, since I can&#8217;t hear you very well, I guess I&#8217;ll pick. So, the good news is: All my blood tests have come back negative. The bad news is: I have no idea what the hell is wrong with me. If you haven&#8217;t been [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Should I start with the good news or the bad news? Okay, since I can&#8217;t hear you very well, I guess I&#8217;ll pick.</p>
<p>So, the <em>good</em> news is: All my blood tests have come back negative.</p>
<p>The bad news is: I have no idea what the hell is wrong with me.</p>
<p>If you haven&#8217;t been riveted by this story and following along from home, here&#8217;s the sweetened condensed version: I came down with some mystery illness after <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/07/best-and-least-of-the-east/" target="_blank">our East Coast vacation</a>. It started with <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/07/comfortably-numb/" target="_blank">numbness</a>, then achyness, then I threw in some jarring joint pain, just to keep things lively. I&#8217;ve had MRIs (and <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/all-clear/" target="_blank">drugs for MRIs</a>), been poked, prodded, and questioned, and had enough blood taken for a gang of vampires to binge for days.</p>
<p>Somewhere along the line <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/now-hear-this-my-father-is-a-genius/" target="_blank">my dad emailed me</a> a guess at what I had&#8212;to keep those two-bit docs on their toes. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyme_disease" target="_blank">Lyme Disease</a>, he said.</p>
<p>I was giddy. Like, all hand clappy excited. Convinced my lawyer father outwitted the doctors. And they did agree that Dad had something there. (I <em>had</em> forgotten to tell them I got a weird bite in Rhode Island.) But then the Lyme test came back negative.</p>
<p>Which was when my first freak-out about WTF I <em>do</em> have ensued.</p>
<p>Thankfully, my dad isn&#8217;t the only un-qualified yahoo out there who&#8217;s been willing to float a diagnosis my way. Well-meaning friends have wondered (aloud) if what I&#8217;m experiencing is a by-product of bottled up anger, an energy blockage, or everyone&#8217;s favorite malady du jour&#8212;gluten intolerance.</p>
<p>Now, you might say that I&#8217;m asking for this, living in California as I do. But what I want to tell those people is, &#8220;Yes! You are right. I <em>do</em> have pent up rage. I do have energy log jams. But those things aren&#8217;t <em>why</em> I feel like I do. I have them because I feel like I do and no one knows why.&#8221;</p>
<p>As for gluten intolerance? Puh-leez. Gluten is my <em>friend</em>, people. In fact, I&#8217;m going to go and eat a big gooey glob of gluten right now and process it like a champion. Gluten is my wheat grass, California.</p>
<p>And while everyone <em>else</em> has a theory on what&#8217;s plaguing me, my doctors remain utterly baffled. Having a case they can&#8217;t crack  seems bad for business, like unsolved murders in the police department. So in a valiant effort to move down the path to some resolution, my doc started me on antibiotics&#8212;the Lyme Disease treatment&#8212;even though that test came back neg-o.</p>
<p>They say there can be false-negatives in the early stage of infection. It&#8217;s like I filled out one answer on the SAT in the wrong column then got everything totally wrong by accident. So I&#8217;ll take the test again in two weeks, with the happy hopes it&#8217;ll come back positive. &#8220;Lyme Disease! <em>Yay</em>!&#8221; Then the doctors can finally get back to their golf games, and I can assure my veins they&#8217;ll no longer be tapped for blood like a tree for maple sap.</p>
<p>But until all that happens, <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/04/make-new-friends-but-keep-the-old/" target="_blank">my work husband</a> has enthusiastically claimed dibs on performing my eulogy. I have no doubt it&#8217;ll be fabulous. He assures me he can &#8220;fake cry with the best of &#8216;em,&#8221; which I find wonderfully supportive. He&#8217;s gone so far as to make recommendations on good dates for me to expire. His mom passed on 9/9/99, so he fancies himself an expert in this area. I&#8217;m lucky to have style-conscious friends with a flair for event planning who are stepping up at this time.</p>
<p>And, as long as I keep laughing I convince myself that when they do figure out what this weird numb, tingly, achy, joint painy so-you-can&#8217;t-sleep thing is, it&#8217;ll be something itty bitty and easy to eradicate.</p>
<p>But I&#8217;ve gotta say, the longer this lingers and leaves the docs scratching their heads, the intermittent moments when I <em>do</em> worry become more and more mittent. If ya know what I mean.</p>
<p>In the meantime I&#8217;ve managed to make my father sick from all this. It&#8217;s the craziest thing. The man is some supremely empathetic illness conductor. Like, when Paigey was a baby and was lizard-like with eczema, my 80-year-old dad who&#8217;d never had so much as a rash was suddenly covered with the stuff himself. A year later, Paige&#8217;s walking delays required x-rays of her hips. Then Dad called to report <em>his</em> hip was giving out, and he&#8217;d need a new one. And now? Just yesterday I call home and what do I hear? Dad is on antibiotics&#8212;<em>for</em> <em>Lyme Disease</em>.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s madness! The man is nothing short of a copy cat. I mean, when my father says he feels your pain, he&#8217;s serious.</p>
<p>When I was at <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/confessions-of-a-salad-bar-loser/" target="_blank">BlogHer</a> I experienced the bliss of bad hotel TV. I watched crappy shows I never normally watch, on a huge TV at the foot of my bed. Alone. It was a simple but profound indulgence. And I saw that show <em>House</em>, about the ornery-but-lovable doctor who&#8217;s the Sherlock Holmes of sickness. Every patient who comes to his hospital seems to be near death with bizarre symptoms that Dr. House eventually, handily diagnoses&#8212;and cures. Like, the girl who was becoming paralyzed from the legs up? In a creeping, oh-no-it&#8217;s-stopped-her-lungs-now fashion? She eventually gets discharged and heads off to school the next day.</p>
<p>Oh, it&#8217;s good stuff.</p>
<p>As I rubbed my numb feet together under the starchy hotel sheets I considered climbing into the TV and sitting myself down in House&#8217;s office, hopeful that he was in-network. But who knew how long the wait would be without an appointment. And I was tired anyway. So instead I rolled over and snapped off the lamp, put my faith back into my real-world docs, and drifted off to sleep.</p>
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		<title>All Clear</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/all-clear/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/all-clear/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Aug 2011 19:10:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Doctors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Scary Stuff]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3613</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well the results of my brain MRI are in, and I’m thrilled to report that it revealed no pennies, Polly Pockets purses, or other organic free-range scary kindsa things you don’t want growing in your head. And although I had a hunch it’d be okay, I’d still like to release a huge, resounding PHEW. Because [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well the results of <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/07/comfortably-numb/" target="_blank">my brain MRI</a> are in, and I’m thrilled to report that it revealed no pennies, Polly Pockets purses, or other organic free-range scary kindsa things you don’t want growing in your head.</p>
<p>And although I had a hunch it’d be okay, I’d still like to release a huge, resounding <em>PHEW</em>. Because I don’t know about you, but when I see a police car, even when I know I’m not speeding, I slam on the brakes. I somehow have that inner guilty-until-proven-innocent default setting. (Maybe on accounta my Catholic upbringing?)</p>
<p>At any rate, if you’ve been wondering where that tube of Sephora lip gloss you liked so much has gone, I can tell you with 100% confidence that it’s not in my brain. Check under the seats of your car. Or in your other purse. Or under your kid’s bed, because God knows lots of other stuff that’s gone missing lately is probably there too.</p>
<p>Now that my weird numbness is not accountable to any bad-bad in my brain, the complex migraine diagnosis is the front runner. But “just to be really thorough” my doctor wants to do ANOTHER MRI of my cervical spine. Which is to say, that I will have to go back into that Godforsaken claustrophobic loud clackety-ass machine from hell. And although it may not be apparent, I’m really NOT looking forward to that.</p>
<p>I used nice beachy thoughts to get me through the one last week, but I’m thinking that was a one-off. If there’s any hope of getting me back in there I’m almost certainly going to need drugs.</p>
<p>This, by the way, is nearly identical to my experience with childbirth. Whoever said you forget the pain of childbirth was probably a man. Because by the end of my second pregnancy ALL I could think of was the miserable excruciating world-rocking pain I went through the first time around. That first time I was naively gung-ho to go drug-free (and I did for a <em>loooong </em>while), but by Baby #2 I walked into the hospital bellowing to anyone who would listen for an epidural.</p>
<p>My doctor had given me some kinda Valium-esque pill for my first MRI. But when I read the label (this is a warning to others to NEVER read the label) it said all in big letters “do not drive after taking this medication.”</p>
<p>So like a dope, I didn’t take it. Because I was going to have to drive to work after. And because I’m a rule follower.</p>
<p>But here’s the thing. If you’re not supposed to drive on Valium-like meds, how do you explain the entire city of L.A.? <em>Hmmm</em>??? There’s a reason there’s so much traffic there, people. It&#8217;s all the disoriented drug-induced driving. And I really don’t think all those folks are on their way home from getting MRIs.</p>
<p>Anyway, my left-side numbness has taken a turn. And it’s not a political shift to the right (thank God). Now it’s just in my arms and hands&#8212;but on both sides. Granted, the OCD in me appreciates the symmetry of it, but I&#8217;d have preferred the numbness to just depart my body altogether.</p>
<p>So it turns out the doctor also wants me to have carpal tunnel testing. (Like, maybe I have that, and <em>also </em>had a complex migraine?) She explained the carpal tunnel test involves “a series of needle pricks up and down your arms,” which she confessed &#8220;is not terribly comfortable.”</p>
<p><em>Lovely</em>.</p>
<p>When I went to the front desk to schedule the test, I was informed that it would take 90 minutes. <em>90 minutes</em>?!? Of NEEDLE pricks?</p>
<p>Twenty minutes doped-up in an MRI machine is starting to looking better all the time.</p>
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		<title>[Yawn]</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/09/yawn/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/09/yawn/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Sep 2010 03:24:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[City Livin']]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sleep]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Summer]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=2057</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I am so very tired. It&#8217;d be one thing if it was just on accounta getting up at 6AM day after day, since in some late-night at-my-computer moment of bravado I signed up for the FIVE day-a-week boot camp. (Oy! What was I thinkin&#8217;?) I mean, that alone would be a really excellent reason to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am so very tired.</p>
<p>It&#8217;d be one thing if it was just on accounta getting up at 6AM day after day, since in some late-night at-my-computer moment of bravado I signed up for the FIVE day-a-week boot camp. (<em>Oy!</em> What was I thinkin&#8217;?) I mean, that <em>alone</em> would be a really excellent reason to be tired.</p>
<p>But add to that the fact that my darling dumpling of a two-and-a-half year old has decided to regress to the sleeping habits of a two-and-a-half <em>month</em> old. This from the girl who has always been a star sleeper.</p>
<p>Alas, no more.</p>
<p>Who knows if it&#8217;s her new Big Girl Bed, or a sudden spate of nightmares, or some over-achiever desire to get back at us in advance for all the ways we&#8217;re certain to deny her things, dislike her boyfriends, and piss her off in the course of her life.</p>
<p>Whatever the case, she wails for me from the moment I click her door closed at night. But&#8212;from all we&#8217;ve read&#8212;when I go back in to comfort her I&#8217;m just rewarding her yowls. So now Mark uses his resonant I-used-to-be-a-DJ voice to say through the closed door &#8220;It&#8217;s time to sleep now, Paige.&#8221; It&#8217;s friendly, but firm.</p>
<p>Oddly, this at times has the effect of Paige stopping mid-hysterical-sob, and responding in a sunny tone, &#8220;Alright, Dada!&#8221;</p>
<p>But the relief is only temporary. Once we get into the dark cozy REM hours of the night she rises up with the gusto of a pregnant vampire on the prowl for a midnight snack. She cries. She screams. She beseeches &#8220;MAAAAA-Ma! Dada! I <em>waaaaaaant</em> you!&#8221; And sometimes, just to mix it up, she tramps out of bed and ambles down the hall to our room. (It&#8217;s always creepy to be awakened by a child standing silently by your bed. Even if she&#8217;s yours, and she&#8217;s cute, and she&#8217;s not holding a meat cleaver.)</p>
<p>Mark and I alerted the neighbors that we are not waterboarding Paige, despite what her tortured nighttime vocalizations might infer. And we&#8217;re methodically working our way through different approaches to getting her to freakin&#8217; sleep again. Although she&#8217;s had some intermittent nights of solid sleep&#8212;just to really fuck with us&#8212;for the most part nothing has worked.</p>
<p>So if you&#8217;re interested in coming to babysit for a week and taking a crack at this issue yourself, we&#8217;ll happily vacate the place at a moment&#8217;s notice.</p>
<p>Sudden thought: Is this some Darwinian toddler phase that emerges to remind parents who&#8217;re considering another child about the hellish newborn months of sleep deprivation? Not that we ARE considering another kid&#8230;</p>
<p>At any rate, something to think about.</p>
<p>In the final school-free days of summer, and with me work-free, it&#8217;s actually been somewhat manageable plodding through the days in a sleepy haze. Sometimes it&#8217;s even fun, in a distorted art student life-perspective kinda way.</p>
<p>I mean, have you ever had one of those days that unfolds like a play? Kinda like when you&#8217;re reading a book and you know that the writer was really trying to get a movie deal, just based on how it&#8217;s all laid out? Well, I had a day last week that felt totally like it wasn&#8217;t meant to be a day, but some sort of series of staged events.</p>
<p>For starters, my sleepiness was keeping me more distanced from things way more than I&#8217;m used to. Un-shy gal that I am, I usually feel pretty integrated in whatever&#8217;s happening around me. But it&#8217;s like I was in some weird deaf-mute alternate universe where things were unfolding around me in strictly choreographed little dramatic sequences, and I just happened to be there watching. Like some invisible Ebenezer Scrooge.</p>
<p>It started at boot camp. As most of my days recently do.</p>
<p>Instead of the punishing rounds of weights and bands and medicine balls and lunges/squats/lat blasts, we did our usual punishing frenzied-fast warm-up but were then told we were going to have a break in our routine. We&#8217;d just be running around the lake.</p>
<p>And can I just say that Lake Merrit is a fascinating place at 6AM? It&#8217;s like when you&#8217;re driving to the airport at some ungodly early hour and you can&#8217;t believe there are other cars on the road. Something that always prompts Kate to ask questions like, &#8220;Are the people in those cars taking a plane to see Grandpa in Rhode Island too?&#8221;</p>
<p>Yeah so there are ALL THESE PEOPLE awake and out and doing exercisey stuff at the lake. As I ran I got totally absorbed in watching them pass by. It was like I was in some Spike Lee movie and was gliding along smoothly on some conveyor belt that let me really stare at each person as they passed by.</p>
<p>There was a trio of old Chinese ladies in foamy trucker-style baseball caps and over-sized fleece jackets. One young woman had on a blue silk scarf babushka-style, and was clutching a cell phone to her ear as she scuttled past. There was even a buff black guy, pitted out in gray sweats, who was bobbing in place and doing little boxing jabs. (People really DO those?) Even the dogs looked like they were from Central Casting&#8212;one small, white, and scruffy, a big dopey Lab, then a vicious looking brindled Pit. An assortment as diverse Oakland&#8217;s human population. Everyone seemed to placed there intentionally to set the tableau of &#8220;the lake at dawn,&#8221; but it was so well-done, I almost couldn&#8217;t buy it.</p>
<p>Do you know what I mean? Like, I was totally anticipating the credits where the scarf-clad woman on the phone would be Babushka Caller #1.</p>
<p>And then later, when I&#8217;d shaken myself loose from the scene, gotten home, showered, and collected the still-on-summer-break kids, we went to the lake. A different, swimming lake. And there it was just more of the same. A series of mothers and kids on blankets under umbrellas lined up along shore. They were too perfectly spaced out to be real.</p>
<p>I saw one Mama I vaguely know and we start chatting, while our kids (her boys, my girls) ignore each other. Then, Mother #1&#8212;at the far end of the beach&#8212;her umbrella get swept up in the wind and tumbles a few times. She catches it, and runs up to my kinda friend. &#8220;Hey, could I borrow your hammer again?&#8221; Uh&#8230; HAMMER? And then Kinda Friend pulls a big rubber mallet from her L.L. Bean bag as if it&#8217;s a bottle of sunscreen.</p>
<p>&#8220;You, have a mallet with you?&#8221; I ask, trying to modulate the shock out of my voice. She carries it, she says, to secure her beach umbrella. Really bang that bottom stake down into the sand.</p>
<p>Hunh.</p>
<p>And this woman is so petite and mild mannered. She&#8217;s a nurse for God&#8217;s sake. In my sleepy haze it struck me as surreal for her to have a sledge hammer in her tote. And to act like it was no big thing.</p>
<p>After she leaves I get to chatting with Mom #3, the one closest to my blanket. She&#8217;s got her own two kids and another in tow who&#8217;s a total terror. He&#8217;s taking buckets of wet sand and running up from the shore to dump them on people&#8217;s blankets. In fact, since I&#8217;m standing a bit away from it, he chooses my blanket for this lovely gift. Mom #3 was mortified. She was virtually pulling his ear to get him to apologize, and clearly wanting to illuminate some NOT MY KID sign over the boy&#8217;s head.</p>
<p>Later in our conversation, Mom #3 and I were swapping school stories and she tells me that Holy Terror Boy goes to none other than Kate&#8217;s soon-to-be new school.</p>
<p><em>LOVE-ly!</em></p>
<p>It was three days before school started. I took this tidbit as any rational mother would&#8212;as a strong premonition to Kate&#8217;s future life of crime.</p>
<p>As the day wore on Mortified Playdate Mom&#8217;s umbrella goes flying. As I run down the beach with her to help grab it, she turns to me and says, &#8220;Ugh. I wish your friend with the hammer was still here.&#8221;</p>
<p>And I just kinda stopped, imagining the morning tableau of mothers and kids arriving lakeside, and&#8212;despite not knowing each other&#8212;all taking turns with the beach-umbrella mallet like some weird &#8220;<a href="http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://archive.ccm.edu/rosie/images/WeCanDoItPoster%255B1%255D.jpg&amp;imgrefurl=http://archive.ccm.edu/rosie/index.htm&amp;h=1115&amp;w=844&amp;sz=139&amp;tbnid=lwfYFF20nwmMrM:&amp;tbnh=258&amp;tbnw=195&amp;prev=/images%3Fq%3Drosie%2Bthe%2Briveter%2Bpictures&amp;zoom=1&amp;q=rosie+the+riveter+pictures&amp;usg=___oYv0ldQISLen8dXGcq8gV8_Sos=&amp;sa=X&amp;ei=ggCHTPLfKo-6sQOii_nQCg&amp;ved=0CB8Q9QEwAA">We Can Do It</a>&#8221; poster come to life.</p>
<p>Later that day, we drove through the car wash. Kate and Paige were with me, and they&#8217;re pretty enthralled with the drama of the whirling brushes, long slappy rubber strips, and squiggly squirts of pink wax. We happened to be listening to our<em> Nutcracker CD</em> at the time. And as I put the car in neutral, I turned the music way up and we sat back. It was as if each new swishing slapping squirting movement came in perfect syncopation with the music.</p>
<p>It was better than fireworks.</p>
<p>If you have never been very very sleepy and gotten your car washed to the soundtrack from <em>The Nutcracker</em>, I highly recommend it.</p>
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		<title>Digging Out</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/08/digging-out/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/08/digging-out/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Aug 2010 23:00:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discoveries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Extended Family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Little Rhody]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Milestones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Moods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sleep]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Summer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=1939</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One night last week my sister walked into her kitchen to find her nine-year-old son in a laundry bag. A bag that he&#8217;d voluntarily put himself in. Because I guess that&#8217;s what you do when you&#8217;re a nine-year-old boy. It was mesh, so it wasn&#8217;t like he was struggling for air or anything. And he [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One night last week my sister walked into her kitchen to find her nine-year-old son in a laundry bag. A bag that he&#8217;d voluntarily put himself in. Because I guess that&#8217;s what you do when you&#8217;re a nine-year-old boy.</p>
<p>It was mesh, so it wasn&#8217;t like he was struggling for air or anything. And he wasn&#8217;t alone. He was hanging out with his best friend. His friend who, for nearly A HALF-HOUR, had been trying unsuccessfully to un-knot the top of the bag.</p>
<p>And here&#8217;s the thing. My sister was upstairs THE WHOLE TIME. Had the boys thought to get her for help? Apparently not. She even asked if they didn&#8217;t find her because they thought she might be mad or something. They said no. Word was, they just hadn&#8217;t <em>thought</em> to get her.</p>
<p>I can&#8217;t help but think this is a boy thing. Like the young male version of not asking for directions.</p>
<p>As my sister was working to free him he tells her, &#8220;I&#8217;m starting to feel kinda weird in here.&#8221;</p>
<p>Uh, <em>YEAH</em>.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d have lasted four seconds in there before screaming and thrashing around like a Tazmanian Devil. Not only would someone upstairs know I needed help, the whole block would.</p>
<p>But the fact is, sometimes you get yourself into a tight spot and it&#8217;s kinda hard to know how dig yourself out. I was like that for a short while when I get back from Little Rhody. Not in a super bad place, but just glum. The craptastic Bay Area weather plus a large dose of nothing-much-going-on had me in a vague fog. And seeing as I generally operate like a chihuahua on caffeine (at least, in the words of my dear friend Kevin), this nebulous floating about was distasteful.</p>
<p>So I did what any sane woman would do. I started washing down pillows.</p>
<p>You know, took on an extremely low priority project and threw myself into it as if I was single-handedly redoing the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Oh, did I wash pillows. Then I tossed them in the dryer with tennis balls to dry and fluff &#8216;em all up nice. Once one set was done I&#8217;d nearly yank a pillow from beneath Mark&#8217;s sleeping head to start in on more.</p>
<p>It was a strange yet effective form of therapy. I was making just enough progress on an utterly unnecessary project that my morose mood was replaced by a mild sense of satisfaction. And since I have an addictive personality, I took my usual more-is-more approach. (Note: If anyone in my neighborhood would like their pillows laundered, please leave them on my front porch. I probably won&#8217;t hear the doorbell ring since the tennis balls in the dryer are fairly loud.)</p>
<p>Today, having come near the end of what turns out to be our thrillingly-large pillow inventory, I stumbled across a twin duvet I forgot we had. Perfect for Paige&#8217;s new Big Girl Bed! And an excellent item to, well, <em>wash</em>.</p>
<p>Pillow mites are watching their nightly newscasts and shielding their children&#8217;s eyes from pictures of me. I&#8217;m like the Saddam Hussein of the pillow mite community.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m considering opening a bed and breakfast for severe allergy sufferers. Why hoard all this pristine hypo-allergenic bedding for my family&#8217;s sole use?</p>
<p>Anyway, speaking of Paigey&#8217;s Big Girl Bed&#8212;and believe me, she and I seem to spend half our days discussing its merits&#8212;the other thing I&#8217;ve been doing to occupy myself is re-arranging the furniture in her room. This, it turns out, is also good therapy&#8212;albeit somewhat disorienting to the poor girl. She leaves her room for a five-minute snack, and on her way back in slams into a dresser I&#8217;ve impulsively moved catty-corner in her doorway.</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t help myself. I&#8217;ve explored varying degrees of good and bad <em>feng shui </em>(a bed facing towards the door = a no-no). I&#8217;ve exhausted nearly every configuration of the contents of the room. And finally on this &#8220;project&#8221; I&#8217;m also slapping my hands together with a smug sense of accomplishment. I&#8217;ve settled on one layout I&#8217;ve been willing to keep in place for three days now. This, it seems, is progress.</p>
<p>Other things have helped my disposition get sunnier, despite the thick Bay Area fog. We&#8217;re off to Palm Springs at the end of the week&#8212;a trip I hastily planned in a desperate heat-seeking mission. And one day after our return from there, we set out for our Minnesotan lake vaycay.</p>
<p>And back on the homefront I signed up for a boot camp. You know, I&#8217;m paying some petite drill sargeant to yell at and disparage me as I do wind sprints by Lake Merrit, then fall to the sidewalk for endless rounds of push-ups. At 6:30 in the morning. This started today in fact, and aside from the regular Advil-overdosing I anticipate I&#8217;ll be doing, I think this ass-kickin&#8217; is just what my lazy ass needed.</p>
<p>Though waking up at 5:45 was <em>especially</em> brutal. Miss Paige, ever the ringer for sleep, has been discombobulated of late. For years babysitters have gloated about &#8220;how easily she goes down.&#8221; But in the past few weeks her Sleep Super Power has been out of whack. At bedtime she&#8217;ll appear to have fallen asleep, but 45 minutes later will call out, &#8220;I want MY MAMA!&#8221; in her most desperate and dramatic wail. We&#8217;re popping up two to three times a night to settle her down, like she&#8217;s a newborn again. You&#8217;d think the steady thrum of the tennis balls in the dryer would soothe her back to sleep. But no dice. Much more of this and I&#8217;ll be asking for my money back.</p>
<p>Then in the morning, the poor thing calls out to us as if she&#8217;s shackled to the mattress. This happens to be my favorite non-intelligent behavior in my children: the fact that once they moved into twin beds they didn&#8217;t figure out that they were FREE TO GET OUT on their own.</p>
<p>But really, like I said, sometimes you&#8217;re just feeling stuck&#8212;be it in a laundry bag, a funk, or a bed that you forgot isn&#8217;t your crib any more.</p>
<p>So what&#8217;s been happening most mornings is we send Kate into Paige&#8217;s room to tell her she can get out of bed. Then she pops right out like a trained Cocker Spaniel and shows up in the kitchen, beaming and wild-haired, announcing proudly, &#8220;I got up, Mama!&#8221;</p>
<p>Hopefully by the time she goes away to college we&#8217;ll get her self-prompting to get out of bed. In the meantime, she&#8217;s one member of the family I&#8217;m happy to keep in the fog.</p>
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		<title>Depends on How You Look at It</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/04/depends-on-how-you-look-at-it/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/04/depends-on-how-you-look-at-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2010 05:42:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Discoveries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Doctors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Preg-o]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=1799</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When I was pregnant with Paige&#8212;and with Kate too&#8212;my right eye went on temporary hiatus. I have a strange neurological wiring problem that flares up now and then. My own rare medical malady. Like the fact that I&#8217;ve never seen Star Wars, it&#8217;s one of the few things that set me apart from most of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When I was pregnant with Paige&#8212;and with Kate too&#8212;<a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2007/06/house-of-healing/">my right eye went on temporary hiatus</a>. I have a strange neurological wiring problem that flares up now and then. My own rare medical malady. Like the fact that I&#8217;ve never seen <em>Star Wars</em>, it&#8217;s one of the few things that set me apart from most of humanity.</p>
<p>And desperate as I was to land impossible-to-get appointments with specialists, once I got in to see them they all just patted my hand and told me to wait it out. There ain&#8217;t much you can do about this thing. &#8216;Specially when you&#8217;re pregnant.</p>
<p>But sitting around waiting for something to happen is my personal brand of hell. So I took up with a well-respected mad genius-type Chinese acupuncturist. Or rather, put myself in his care.</p>
<p>The Bay Area&#8217;s alternate-health gurus all claimed this guy was The Best. Despite his ramshackle office, located deep in San Francisco&#8217;s foggy Avenues. almost out out by the beach, I was supposedly in the care of a world-class healer. Plus, tacked to the wall in the waiting room was a picture of Robin Williams mugging with the good doctor. To a long-time <em>People</em> subscriber, there&#8217;s no better testament to a doctor&#8217;s competence than his having a celebrity patient.</p>
<p>During my visits, Dr. Q would look at my tongue, take my pulse, and inform me that my gall bladder was grumpy. Other times he&#8217;d say my liver was woody, or my blood sluggish. At least those were the kinds of things I remember him saying.</p>
<p>In fact, I understood nearly nothing about his assessments, and that had little to do with his limited English. His form of healing was just damn different from anything I&#8217;d known before. Despite that, I gave myself over to his needle wielding wholeheartedly and in good faith. I was desperate, helpless, and more than anything, bored. There&#8217;s not much one can do with one eye. Reading is tiring. TV is depressing. And computer work is out of the question.</p>
<p>One <em>can</em> eat. And one can worry. So my visits to his office were in large part a hopefully-helpful distraction. One that my insurance didn&#8217;t cover.</p>
<p>Aside from my bizarre eye issue&#8212;which, granted, most people would trade for several months of gut-churning nausea&#8212;my pregnancies were marked by almost no other symptoms. I never barfed, had swollen feet, or ran from rooms at the smell of broccoli. Much of the time I forgot I was even knocked up.</p>
<p>But a little thing started interrupting my sleep at night. (And sleep, as you may know, is my super power.) It was minor, but just pesky enough to torment me. The inside of my right elbow was&#8212;well it seems silly now to even mention&#8212;but it felt kinda tickly. Like someone was ever so lightly touching it, brushing a feather across it. And of course, there was nothing there.</p>
<p>To make things worse, it was only on the right side. The first rule of hypochondria is if it&#8217;s asymmetrical, it&#8217;s probably cancer.</p>
<p>Okay, so I didn&#8217;t <em>really</em> think it was that. But still, it was maddening.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d wake Mark up over it. &#8220;Honey? I can&#8217;t sleep. My elbow pit. It&#8217;s Driving. Me. Crazy.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was, I decided, the perfect symptom to relay to my acupuncturist. If the leg bone&#8217;s connected to the kidney, and the gall bladder&#8217;s connected to the pinky toe&#8212;or if not quite that, at least I&#8217;d come to trust that there was some interconnectedness between what I&#8217;d previously thought of as unrelated parts&#8212;if that was the case, then this tickly inner elbow thang may be the key to unlocking my eye problem.</p>
<p>And wasn&#8217;t I so clever, so in tune with my body, to make note of it? (I had a lot of time on my hands to be self-congratulatory too.)</p>
<p>At my next appointment, as the doctor was readying my needles, I laid the news of my latest symptom on him. I awaited his chin-rubbing contemplation. The &#8220;aha!&#8221; moment in which he connected my ocular issue with my tickly elbow pit.</p>
<p>Instead, he looked up and said, &#8220;Oh&#8230; Okaaaay.&#8221; The way you might talk to someone who you think is a touch crazy. Someone you may even feel a little bit afraid of. But then, so as not to appear rude, he quickly added, &#8220;Sorry if that bother you.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then he started sticking needles in me. And I never brought it up again.</p>
<p>The other day I drew a hopscotch in front of our house for Kate. Years back, this was the kind of thing I enjoyed harassing our realtor about. I was waddling around to tour houses 8 months pregnant and once-again one-eyed, but whenever I&#8217;d see some cute crap chalked onto the sidewalk I knew not to fall for it. Not to buy into the, &#8220;Oh honey, look! What a nice family neighborhood this must be!&#8221;</p>
<p>No, instead I&#8217;d turn to Charlie, the Bay Area&#8217;s most patient realtor, and ask, &#8220;So what time did you have to get here this morning to draw this?&#8221;</p>
<p>So here I was last week, playing outside with Kate and realizing that my hopscotch skillz have lost some of their bououncy since my youth. Though it might have had to do with the clogs I was wearing.</p>
<p>Anyway, when Paige got up from her nap, she was all fired up about joining the game. I adore that kid-sister fearlessness. That her default setting is to get in on whatever big-kid action is underway. I mean, Kate could have some pals over for a few friendly rounds of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mumblety-peg">mumblety peg</a>, and Paige would be all, &#8220;Cool. I&#8217;m in. Where&#8217;s the knife?&#8221;</p>
<p>But as it turns out, with hopscotch Paige lacks some fundamental know-how. She still hasn&#8217;t mastered the simple act of jumping. But she doesn&#8217;t let on about it. It&#8217;s like the best-kept out-in-the-open secret ever.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s Paige: She sizes up the hopscotch squares, bends her knees, thrusts both arms into the air, and calls out, &#8220;DUMP!&#8221; (This being her closest approximation to the word &#8220;jump.&#8221;) Then she takes a step forward.</p>
<p>This delights her, and she appears to have no reservations about her ability to play being any different than anyone else&#8217;s. If it weren&#8217;t so obvious that she wasn&#8217;t really jumping, you&#8217;d swear that she was.</p>
<p>Recently when we pulled up to the house after getting Kate from school, Paige ran out of the car to the corner where the hopscotch squares had been. Days of rain had washed the chalk away, but that was no deterrent.</p>
<p>Bend knees. Arms up. &#8220;DUMP!&#8221; And a step forward.</p>
<p>There was no hopscotch court there. But hey, Paige also wasn&#8217;t really jumping.</p>
<p>But from her perspective? Miss Paigey Wigs was radiating the fierce confidence of an Olympic long jumper. She sold those not-really jumps. And it was so damn endearing I bought up every last one of them. I mean, sure, I <em>AM</em> her Mama. But it got me thinking that sometimes what ain&#8217;t really there, can sometimes kinda of spring to life, if you pretend hard enough.</p>
<p>And sometimes, what IS there&#8211;what&#8217;s taking up every last drop of your mental energy&#8212;turns out to be of little consequence at all. You don&#8217;t need two workin&#8217; eyeballs to see that some things are just what they are, and nothing more.</p>
<p>And on that note, I think I&#8217;ll turn on the TV.</p>
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		<title>Four is a Magic Number</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/06/four-is-a-magic-number/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/06/four-is-a-magic-number/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Jun 2009 06:00:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Summer]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=916</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today I had to jump in a lake. Because yesterday, the wretched gray-skied June gloom we&#8217;ve been enduring finally skedaddled. If only temporarily. And at last, it seems that summer has arrived. So like some child slave from an episode of Law &#38; Order, I positioned Kate on her stool at the kitchen counter to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today I had to jump in a lake.</p>
<p>Because yesterday, the wretched gray-skied June gloom we&#8217;ve been enduring finally skedaddled. If only temporarily. And at last, it seems that summer has arrived.</p>
<p>So like some child slave from an episode of <em>Law &amp; Order</em>, I positioned Kate on her stool at the kitchen counter to make PB&amp;Js, while I threw towels, swim diapers, and sunscreen in a bag, and lamented Paige&#8217;s famous just-as-we&#8217;re-about-to-leave poop.</p>
<p>Lakeside, my friend, uh, <em>Lulu</em> and I wrangled the kids and attempted to catch up. The topic<em> du jour</em> at every barbeque this summer&#8212;at least for the men at the grill&#8212;seems to be The Big Snip. When they&#8217;re doing it to maximize sports viewing. What they heard about how bad it was from other guys. And jokes about snuggling up with a bag of frozen peas.</p>
<p>Lulu&#8217;s husband and mine are both game to get the job done. And, after years of having our bodies be the setting for baby growing, baby feeding, and the fending off of potential pregnancies, it <em>does</em> seem nice to have the lads take their turn.</p>
<p>Their willingness to step up for the snip is both noble and kinda cute.</p>
<p>But still, Lulu and I agreed. We&#8217;re just not ready.</p>
<p>&#8220;I tell Mark he&#8217;s got to think about his second wife,&#8221;  I tell her, ankle-deep in the lake, and watching that the kids don&#8217;t go out too far or sneak off for ciggies. &#8220;I mean, she&#8217;s younger. She doesn&#8217;t have kids yet. What about <em>her</em>?!&#8221;</p>
<p>But seriously, Mark knows I&#8217;d kill anyone who he ever tried to leave me for, so that&#8217;s not much of an issue. What has been though, has been my lingering baby lust. My lack of conviction that I&#8217;m altogether done with the baby-makin&#8217;.</p>
<p>Though, driving home later it dawned on me that my hunger for another cherub seems to have subsided a bit. I mean, I saw a 6-week-old napping angelically in one of those beach tents today, and didn&#8217;t feel at all compelled to crawl in there with it. A few months back, Lulu would&#8217;ve been holding me back by my ponytail.</p>
<p>And other little things. Instead of waiting for them to rot and fall out, I decided to go all out and buy Paige her first toothbrush. She&#8217;s got six and a half teeth now, so it seems as good a time as any. So yesterday, while Kate and I brushed our morning breath away, Paige for the first time fervidly got in on the action.</p>
<p>And after prying the thing from Paige&#8217;s steely baby grip, I plopped the toothbrushes back in their little stand.</p>
<p>&#8220;Here&#8217;s Mommy&#8217;s, Daddy&#8217;s, Kate&#8217;s and Paige&#8217;s!&#8221; I singsonged, in a vain attempt to quell Paige&#8217;s give-that-damn-thing-back-to-me hysterics. And, ignoring her wailing screams, and Kate&#8217;s ensuing, &#8220;She&#8217;s TOO LOUD, Mommy!&#8221; laments, I went into my own little housewife daydream&#8230; Four places in the toothbrush holder. Four of us. <em>Why</em>&#8230;. it&#8217;s perfect!</p>
<p>Of course, not everything on the domestic family-of-four front has fit like a glove.</p>
<p>Sometimes I need a hit upside the head when change is required. And Mark recently pointed out that I have to start making more food for us. Usedta be that one kielbasa fed he and I perfectly, sometimes with a bit leftover. Well, turns out our little Polish princesses can hork down some serious sausage. Seems we&#8217;re no longer a one-link family. One pound of ground beef just wasn&#8217;t cutting it for our taco nights any more either.</p>
<p>But thankfully, I&#8217;m a fast learner.</p>
<p>Not enough food you say? Some intense Italian Need to Feed surged up through me like a tsunami, and the next night I&#8217;m setting out a dinner that&#8217;d put a midnight cruise ship buffet to shame. (Though sadly, I offered no melons carved as swans.)</p>
<p>And once again, order is restored. Two more eaters? Need more food. Check.</p>
<p>But what if we were to add a fifth? Eventually would <em>two</em> kielbasa links not be enough? Would the implausible two-and-a-half links be what we required? And what of pre-weighed pounds of ground beef? Boxed rice pilaf? Packaged chicken breasts? I mean, two two-breast packs are reasonable enough to purchase and prepare, but <em>five</em> breasts? There&#8217;s no situation in which five breasts ever make sense.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s not the cost of the food that concerns me, it&#8217;s the likelihood that we&#8217;d find ourselves in the OCD-unfriendly need for half of this, a third of that. Would we be trapped in the untidy position of always having too much or too little?</p>
<p>To say nothing of the toothbrush dilemma. Does one buy another holder then simply leave the three extra spaces vacant? And worse, do those three voids then loom, challenging you, your aging body, and mounting college tuition fees to produce even <em>more</em> children? How would I be able to face down those taunts twice a day&#8212;or even more if I&#8217;d eaten something garlicky?</p>
<p>On the walk back from the lake, we came to a dark patch on the sidewalk that was soft and gummy in the sun. We&#8217;d passed over it on the way in, and Lulu was smart enough to direct her kids to walk around it this time. Me? Kate and I just tramped through it again. Leaving, what I noticed later, was a thick coat of tar on the bottom of our flip flops. (Paige, the non-walker, smiled at us smug and clean from her stroller.)</p>
<p>At home, Kate stomped across our overpriced Crate and Barrel porch rug, leaving a trail of black shoe prints like those Arthur Murray dance class footsteps. I kicked off my flip flops just in time to not make the same mistake. And setting Princess Paigey on the living room floor, felt grateful that there wasn&#8217;t another little McClusky tearing through the house, leaving a mark of her own.</p>
<p>For us it seems, for now at least, four is a magic number.</p>
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		<title>Chinks in the Armour</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/05/chinks-in-the-armour/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/05/chinks-in-the-armour/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2009 18:26:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=570</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I just got back from the chiropractor where I got the unsettling news that my seemingly bottomless wellspring of postpartum body issues&#8212;aches and imbalances which just months ago taunted me from the moment I&#8217;d swing my legs off the bed in the morning&#8212;appear to have rectified themselves. That I&#8217;m in good shape, all in alignment [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I just got back from the chiropractor where I got the unsettling news that my seemingly bottomless wellspring of postpartum body issues&#8212;aches and imbalances which just months ago taunted me from the moment I&#8217;d swing my legs off the bed in the morning&#8212;appear to have rectified themselves. That I&#8217;m in good shape, all in alignment and shit, and getting stronger.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s so totally weird.</p>
<p>I mean, aren&#8217;t chiropractors programmed to tell you to come back next week? Isn&#8217;t that part of the Chirocratic Oath they swear to upon graduating from those New Age-ily named schools like Life University that they go to?</p>
<p>I feel like I&#8217;ve been in years of complex therapy and suddenly my shrink gave me a playful sock in the arm and said, &#8220;Cool, well, looks like you&#8217;re cured. Take care!&#8221;</p>
<p>But really, blessedly, I&#8217;m surrounded by subtle comforting reminders that my life&#8217;s not perfect. Like, every night when I go to take off my contact lenses and reach for the case, which currently has two green Right Eye caps on it. A couple of the white Left Eye caps apparently ran off together to a better life beyond my medicine cabinet.</p>
<p>Makes me feel like Eugene Levy&#8217;s character in the pants-pisser <a href="http://bestinshowonline.warnerbros.com/flash/intro.html"><em>Best in Show</em></a>, who had, literally, two left feet.</p>
<p>And then last night I&#8217;m rocking the responsible solo parent act with Mark away for a one-nighter work trip. I had the neighbor kid across the street&#8212;who I&#8217;m trying to sway away from going to college next year in lieu of occasional babysitting stints for us&#8212;come over for a couple hours while I went to my book group.</p>
<p>He&#8217;d just watched the kids at his house during our party on Saturday, which allowed for my drunk wig-bedecked friends to get into Paige&#8217;s crib and dance the Mashed Potato if they so desired. Far be it for me to repress one&#8217;s desire to make use of an innovative dance floor. Especially if they&#8217;re paying for a sitter.</p>
<p>So anyway last night he comes over and I have the kids fed, PJed, and both happily, safely a-snooze in their beds. I jaunt off, book in hand, reminding him my cell number&#8217;s on the fridge and the monitor&#8217;s on the coffee table.</p>
<p>When I get back he&#8217;s deep into one of Mark&#8217;s rape-and-pillage type video games. Such good clean educational fun. (Hey, whatever keeps him coming back at $8 an hour&#8230;) And he tells me at one point he&#8217;d turned the monitor on to check on Paigey, make sure she was quiet and all.</p>
<p>&#8220;But I hear this voice talking,&#8221; he says, &#8220;and I&#8217;m all thinking, what IS that? I mean, I know there&#8217;s not, like, anyone in there with her.&#8221;</p>
<p>And of course my mind goes to the Irrational Fear Mama Place of &#8220;everyone wants to steal my baby&#8212;someone broke into the house to take the baby.&#8221;</p>
<p>But I&#8217;m trying to mask my abject terror and feign relaxed light interest in his little story. While blocking out the blare of machine gun fire and screaming women from the TV.</p>
<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;m like, wait, I know that voice!&#8221; he continues.</p>
<p>And at this point I&#8217;m in a full-bore flop sweat. I&#8217;m holding myself back from running into Paige&#8217;s room to see signs of a struggle and a stark empty crib. Just waiting for him to say the voice he recognized was the leader of some violent gang from his school who was on some baby-stealing spree as part of a nothing-better-to-do-on-an-unseasonably-rainy-Monday-night antic.</p>
<p>&#8220;And then I listen again and I&#8217;m like, WAIT! It&#8217;s my <em>mother</em>! She&#8217;s all on the phone! And it&#8217;s like, wait, <em>what</em>?! And then I&#8217;m all, oh I got it. You guys forgot to take the other part of the monitor from our house Saturday night when you came to get the girls. So here I am all here and stuff, but I&#8217;m listening to what&#8217;s going on over at my house. How rad is that?&#8221;</p>
<p>And as my stomach unclenches I reach for the arm of the couch to steady myself, and emit a little sweet laugh.</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh, ha! Silly us. I guess we did forget to get it, didn&#8217;t we?&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Of Yoga, Yurts, and Republicans that Get You Thinking</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/04/of-yoga-yurts-and-republicans-that-get-you-thinking/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/04/of-yoga-yurts-and-republicans-that-get-you-thinking/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2009 19:07:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discoveries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=468</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mark and his friend Christian often do this thing when they&#8217;re relaying events in the recent past. They continue rambling on about what happened beyond the point of, well, interest, until they finally wrap up by saying, &#8220;And now we&#8217;re back to the present.&#8221; I&#8217;m not really sure what the genesis of this is&#8212;some decaying [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mark and his friend Christian often do this thing when they&#8217;re relaying events in the recent past. They continue rambling on about what happened beyond the point of, well, <em>interest</em>, until they finally wrap up by saying, &#8220;And now we&#8217;re back to the present.&#8221;</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not really sure what the genesis of this is&#8212;some decaying collegiate joke, no doubt&#8212;but like many things between those two I just nod and smile. I mean, aside from these little in-joke foibles, there&#8217;s little I can complain about with my husband&#8217;s husband. (This being a JOKE, Dad, since Mark and Christian are known to carry on like an old married couple.)</p>
<p>As for <em>my</em> present world, the book I&#8217;ve been obsessively reading whenever I have 30-plus seconds to myself (which averages to a 3-minute reading window) is Curtis Sittenfeld&#8217;s excellent <a href="http://www.curtissittenfeld.com/"><em>American Wife</em></a>. Of all random things, it&#8217;s the quasi-fictionalized account of Laura Bush&#8217;s childhood, running up through her utterly unanticipated stint as our very own First Lady. And believe it or not, she&#8217;s quite a sympathetic character. There&#8217;s friendship, tragic death, literary references, and even sex scenes! All in all, it&#8217;s good reading.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s the second selection for my new book club&#8212;a group I&#8217;m thrilled to report that with my girls at the ages they are now, I can solidly make the time commitment to be part of.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not aware that I read book club books terribly differently knowing I&#8217;ll be talking about them later. But I guess there<em> is</em> a small part of me that underscores in my mind whatever weensy insights I&#8217;ve managed to muster along the page-turning way. And the one thing that I can&#8217;t help but come back to with <em>American Wife</em>, is this concept of how utterly surprising it was for Laura&#8212;or rather, Alice, the character who&#8217;s based on Laura B.&#8212;to one day call the White House home. At age 9, or 20, or even 41, she&#8217;d have never believed it to be her fate. (And really, married to <em>HIM</em> as she was, you can&#8217;t deny it&#8217;d come off as a fairly big shocker.)</p>
<p>On Friday I found myself at the dazzling nature-groovy gorgeous <a href="http://www.sfzc.org/ggf/">Green Gulch Farm Zen Center</a> in Muir Beach. In a small yurt. In a downward dog. Or alternatively, chanting, &#8220;Ommmmmm.&#8221;</p>
<p>It having been a day-long yoga retreat which my friend and neighbor, Jennifer, told me about, and for which Mark graciously jumped through a fair amount of childcare hoopery in order to allow me to attend.</p>
<p>And despite the yogic practice of attempting to clear the mind, live in the present, and focus on one&#8217;s breathing, ommmming, or corpse-posing, I did find my mind wandering at times, thinking once during the morning session that this was a setting that not too far back I&#8217;d have never imagined myself in. Back when, at age 11 in Rhode Island, I was most concerned with how many layers I could don to perfect my turbo preppiness (a base of two turtlenecks of complimentary pastel hues being my secret weapon of success). Or at my Midwestern college at age 18, when acquiring a hand delivered invitation to a Deke party seemed to have equaled attainment of nirvana.</p>
<p>Even in my mid-twenties when I&#8217;d migrated to San Francisco like a big girl, my hummingbird-paced temperament was still so much the essential core of my me-ness. The thought of sitting in a room (nevermind a <em>yurt</em>) of strangers, eyes closed and in a cross-legged position for even three minutes would seem like some form of brutal custom-made Kristen torture.</p>
<p>Sure, my &#8220;and now we&#8217;re back to the present&#8221; moment is hardly on par with holding court in the White House or anything. It&#8217;s just that on Friday, as I reveled in hearing birds singing outside and strove to attain a perfect chest-opening Side Angle Pose&#8212;and wondered intermittently how Kate and Paige were faring without me all day&#8212;I also couldn&#8217;t help but think that my being in that setting seemed very, well I&#8217;m hesitant to even say it, but so very <em>California</em>. You know, for me to be chanting, and singing in Sanskrit, and partnering with unknown kindly long-haired men to enact prone spine-lengthening poses.</p>
<p>Really. Who&#8217;d a thought?</p>
<p>And my chaser thought that I <em>really</em> shouldn&#8217;t have had since by that point I definitely should&#8217;ve gotten back to focusing on the silent intention I&#8217;d set for myself that day or at least my Ojai breathing, was how very grateful I was to have somehow found my way there.</p>
<p>And so, as I gently pushed my chest upward into Cobra while drawing the tops of my legs down flat into the earth, I decided that years from now, when I find myself skulking around the White House kitchen for midnight snacks like it&#8217;s no big thing, I&#8217;ll have to make certain one of my agenda items is to clear out a section of, say, the Situation Room, and build a yoga studio there.</p>
<p>Or maybe I can just set up a little yurt in the rose garden.</p>
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		<title>Not Quite Ready to Be Set Free</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/01/not-quite-ready-to-be-set-free/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/01/not-quite-ready-to-be-set-free/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jan 2009 15:23:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Housewife Superhero]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Body, My Temple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://motherloadblog.com/wordpress/?p=273</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yesterday was Kate&#8217;s first visit to a dentist. And as we sat in the cheesy Hawaiian-themed waiting room, another mother came in with two older kids. Her daughter immediately flounced to the floor to engage with Paigey. And the mom pulled up a tiny surfboard shaped chair, sat, and smiled down at them.</p>
<p>After a few minutes she looked up at me and said, &#8220;Please pardon the loud rumblings from my uterus.&#8221; A comment which took me a beat to grock, but then totally slayed me.</p>
<p>Me: &#8220;Oh God, I hear you. She&#8217;s my baby and she has the same effect on me.&#8221;</p>
<p>Her: &#8220;Here I am, I&#8217;m 43, and I already have three kids. When&#8217;m I going to get over this?&#8221;</p>
<p>Which brings me to the rhetorical question, just how supremely do women rock?</p>
<p>I love that within three minutes of being in each others&#8217; orbits this total stranger and I are revealing our deep down irrational-but-real want-another-baby cravings. It&#8217;s the kind of intimacy that some men who were college roommates and have been playing tennis together every Saturday since the first Bush administration still haven&#8217;t achieved.</p>
<p>And her remark is timed perfectly to my just-the-other-night musings. Paige refused to nurse, which had me convinced she was harboring a devastating rife-with-hearing-loss ear infection. (I&#8217;ve never understood when mother&#8217;s say their kids just stopped wanting to nurse one day, since that&#8217;s <i>so</i> not been how my boob-junkie kids roll.)</p>
<p>Paigey was back to her old milk-chugging self a few hours later, but the experience got me thinking as I was a-sway on the ugly Dutalier glider. If I were to suddenly stop breastfeeding, it seems like I&#8217;d need to put my body to another practical use. Truly. In much of the past four-and-a-half years I&#8217;ve either been gestating or breastfeeding, and odd as it is even for me to realize, it&#8217;s set me in a kind of groove I&#8217;m not sure how to get out of.</p>
<p>Doing neither of those things seems so, uh, kinda <i>lazy</i>. Or maybe it&#8217;s not that so much as just not productive enough. </p>
<p>Years ago when Mark (then I) started seriously obsessing over cooking, we read Michael Ruhlman&#8217;s excellent <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Making-Chef-Mastering-Culinary-Institute/dp/0805061738"><i>The Making of a Chef</i></a>&#8211;a great first person account of a foodie journalist being thrown into the mix at the hardcore Culinary Institute of America. Aside from food chemistry and knife skills, clean-as-you-go, and never serve anything that you know ain&#8217;t right, one of the critical things you learn at cooking school is how to be crazy efficient. If the walk-in&#8217;s at the end of the kitchen, you think of all the things you&#8217;ll need from there so you can make just one trip. And on the way back to your station you grab the Chinoise or mixing bowls or grater that you&#8217;ll need from the drying racks. It&#8217;s all piled up in front of you so your arms are breaking and you can barely see, but the other thing that you learn in cooking school is cooking is hard work. That is, it&#8217;s physically taxing. </p>
<p>In cramped, fast-paced, and (proverbially and literally) hot restaurant kitchens, running around in circles is for rookies. It&#8217;s just not done. It confuses your mind, expends unnecessary energy and ultimately puts you in the weeds. In other words, a quick way to find yourself out on the sidewalk, considering getting an office temp job to pay the rent.</p>
<p>So Ruhlman. He describes how this hyper-efficient planning and intense economy of movement unsurprisingly slipped over into his out-of-the-kitchen time. (Kind of like when I played so much backgammon in college I&#8217;d look at a pub booth packed with people as a cluster of pieces&#8211;all safe since there wasn&#8217;t one sitting out alone. For my brain at least, that was the result of excessive backgammon. Imagine if I&#8217;d used that time to <i>study</i>!) So Ruhlman described how one day he realized he was getting ready in the morning in turbo efficient mode. Get socks and shoes and grab car keys and knife case all in one quick sweep of his apartment. Socks and shoes on mechanically fast, grab keys and knife case, and up and off you go. Or something like that.</p>
<p>And so here I am, just three days away from Paige&#8217;s first birthday and realizing how this mother thing has managed to wire me in a similar way. Efficient? Yes. Getting kids bathed, diapered, dressed, fed, snacks packed, car toys grabbed, hats, sweaters, shoes that have been already pulled off put back on. All that glamor that you know every mother&#8211;including your <i>own</i> back in the day (call her right now and thank her, please) goes through.<br />&nbsp;<br />But aside from the machinations of kid tendin&#8217;, there&#8217;s of course the physical connection us mothers have. And whether we&#8217;re precious about it and read non-stop about how it all works or not, it just happens. We&#8217;re using our bodies to the fullest of their capabilities, like old-school VCRs that&#8211;though baffling and unused to their max by most folks&#8211;without even reading the manual we&#8217;re instinctively able to do the trickiest things to like updating the clocks, and setting them to advance record. </p>
<p>It&#8217;s actually weird how mindlessly one can grow a healthy baby.</p>
<p>There are the glossy hair &#8216;I am woman hear me roar&#8217; pregnancy highs, and the all-my-friends-are-dumb-when-they&#8217;re-drunk-and-I&#8217;m-sober resentment. Stuff even outsiders can cotton to. But more discreet, and ultimately more powerful, is the latent accustomedness your body seems to develop for being put to these practical maternal uses. So from where I&#8217;m standing, at the precipice of not having such a physical Mama task ever again, one might be left feeling somewhat un-tethered. A bit lost. </p>
<p>It&#8217;s the place where some woman, no doubt, feel liberated, set free. Back to one&#8217;s skinny jeans for good.</p>
<p>But for me, and it seems for the dental office Mama too, it&#8217;s a much harder transition. Bittersweet in all the love and intimacy and care that was associated with all those bodily demands, despite how grueling they could sometimes be. There&#8217;s an unaddressed expectation, a void that some of us reckon with, when our bodies are suddenly not called into service any more. </p>
<p>Perhaps I&#8217;ll have to take up tennis. My mother always played a wicked doubles game. Maybe I can just try to make that do. </p>
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