beauty · body image · faith and spirituality · humor · marriage · miscellaneous · motherhood · preschoolers · sexuality

Is It Wrong… (from the Momplex Blog archives)

…that I can’t have a bite of chocolate in my own house without cowering in the laundry room? I’m really not a so-called emotional eater — unless you consider it an emotion when a grown woman spikes a heart rate of 185 bpm while deep-throating a Hershey bar because her ravenous 5-year-old approaches.

…that I don’t own a single pair of thong underwear? I have tried them, okay? And I will never but never believe women who continue to tell me that G-strings are more comfortable than my giant cotton Hanes tablecloth panties “once you get used to them.” I’d probably get used to poking an uncooked spaghetti noodle repeatedly into my tear duct if I did that on a daily basis, too. And I don’t care how sexy men find thong undies. They’re gross. The day my husband starts using these pretty metal bun cages to make his junk look more attractive is the day I sport panties that need be tweezed out during foreplay.

…that I don’t text? Why would I take 10 minutes to laboriously type out a message that I could just as easily speak in 10 seconds? Please don’t tell me it’s more discrete. So is braille. I don’t see people running out to learn that. Please don’t tell me I’d understand better if I just got a phone gadget with a QWERTY keyboard. QWERTY keyboards were designed to slow people down. Using them for speed-socializing just seems wrong. Also? Texting barely qualifies as conversing. It’s glorified Morse code. I just don’t get it. Like an angry senior disputing Medicare billing practices, I shall continue to shake my little fist at the vulgarity of the vanity-plate dialect that is texting! Blerg!(Maks me wn2 e@ my own gizzard. KWIM?)

…that I have completely lost all sense of style? I don’t know what happened to me. I really don’t. But somewhere between age 25 and stay-at-home motherhood, I got hit by the tacky truck. No matter what I try, I always seem to look like 1986. I think this might be because in 1986, even young girls had a mom look — big hair, shoulder pads, high-waisted jeans. While I don’t sport any of those looks now, I know for a fact that on an empirical level, my hair simply looks better big, a pair of shoulder pads would do wonders for offsetting my butt girth, and high-waisted jeans would preclude my granny panties from sticking two inches over the rim of my Levi’s. (See? Does anyone else even wear Levi’s anymore?) It’s not that I don’t know what’s in style. Well, yes, it actually is that, but what’s in style just never looks stylish draped over my particular body type or under my particular head. When I try on clothing in H&M, for example, the only hip store that has prices I can afford, I always look either (a) pregnant or (b) ridiculous. We’re talking middle-aged-man-in-drag ridiculous. So, over and over, I resort to the same “timeless” look that has carried me for a decade — the one that hasn’t turned a head in as much time.

…that I get nervous around my own child? She’s a bright, imaginative kid with a winning personality who I’m told behaves even when away from home (or I should say especially when away from home). But I have this sense that she’s sort of like Scotch-taped together that way, like she’s always five minutes and one misunderstanding shy of an emotional holocaust. Because she is. It’s a little something I like to call apple not falling far from the tree. See this post for more information.

…that I used to do a bang-on impersonation of Geri Jewell, the Facts of Life character with cerebral palsy? Of course, it’s not wrong that I can do the impersonation. My sister would even argue it’s one of the few things that was so, so right about me as a kid. But that I ever even thought to try doing it, and in mixed company? So wrong.

…that I hate seeing people smiling while by themselves? I look at them and my mind quietly screams, “GRRRR! Apetard!” Why is that? What’s my problem? There used to be a girl in my hometown who had a permagrin that would have been perfectly complemented by a swirl of exclamation points and ampersands around her head. Vacant is the term, I believe. She rode my schoolbus, and an open-mouthed smile was her natural expression. No, she was not slow. But because it was her natural expression, I could often hear her sucking back spittle through her molars. That might sound kind of sad, but believe me, if you listened to someone sucking spittle back through her molars for, oh, five or six years — even if it’s someone you love — you’d get jaded about smiling apetards, too.

…that I explained tampons to my 5-year-old today? It certainly felt wrong. But I tell you, she asked. She asked as she followed me into the bathroom, and well, if her mom isn’t going to answer that question, who is? I felt pressed upon to just dish. Over-dished is more like it. Judging from the look on her face, I bet she’ll think twice about asking Mom about anything else for a while. See? She makes me nervous!

…that I’m blogging instead of packing for our move right now? Or did I forget to mention that we found a house and are moving — in 10 days! Funnily enough, it’s a totally ’80s house that needs some updating but is totally livable without the updating. Kinda like me, no? Kinda like me.

military life

Soldier (from the Momplex Blog archives)

My husband is a soldier.

It’s odd for me to type that out. Frankly, I think it makes him sound like a scuzzball that drives around in a rusty truck wearing a wifebeater t-shirt, listening to Lee Greenwood and Def Leppard. Why is that? I don’t know. Few of the soldiers I’ve personally known in my life fit that stereotype at all. Quite the contrary.

I met my husband at the wedding of one of his teammates when he was in the Special Forces. He was a bit of a wallflower, but I liked his face. Then I liked his personality. Then, once I broke through the surface, I fell in mad love with him. It amazes me to this day that so few had noticed him, really noticed him in a deep way, before I did. With utter confidence but not bravado, I can say he’s a rare breed. The Army is not the only one who noticed that.

Through my husband I met a number of other SF men. Some of them were brawn; all of them were brains. Save a few exceptions, I found all these men, like my husband, to be Renaissance men: each of them possessing some fascinating combination of musicality, compassion, humility, confidence, prowess, stamina, brilliance, sensitivity, bravery, resilience, wit, humor, and genius, as well as some X Factor I can’t quite explain. When an old family friend of ours, one who served in Vietnam and is quite the man’s man, learned that my husband was a Green Beret, he actually kissed my husband on the lips and told my parents, “She’s got a special one there.” He was right. As if to illustrate, my husband kissed him right back. He’s a goof like that.

After I married my husband, he decided to go back to school and leave active duty. He has remained in the National Guard, some of his service there being in SF units, some not. He didn’t want the SF life, the active-duty life, for his kids or wife. He wanted more stability than those paths have to offer. I have always been grateful that he made that choice, knowing how much he invested in training to become a Green Beret. It was a sacrifice. The result, of course, was that he was deployed to the Middle East when our daughter was not quite two. It was horrible.

Soon after my husband deployed, before he even left stateside, I received a phone call from the wife of another SF Guardsmen we’d known from our old stomping grounds. They’d lived down the street from us, with their loopy dog who always ran to our door and tried to scratch it in the early a.m. when they were jogging down our road. We’d spent many a night playing Scrabble with them, drinking Chilean wine, and discussing everything from literature to fly fishing. She was smart, and he was genius. He was also irrepairably haunted by years spent working to rebuild infrastructure in wartorn Sierra Leone. He carried a backpack everywhere, and we always joked about what we thought might be in it: a gun, some water, a good read, and a rain poncho maybe. One of those guesses was confirmed one day when we were walking with him home from a parade. Noticing a homeless man looking disoriented and sweaty on that hot afternoon, slouched on the stoop of a local business, our friend lagged behind us. We turned around at some point and realized he’d stopped to check on the man, was reaching into his backpack to give him his water canteen for a drink. That was my friend. That was my friend’s husband. He was a complicated, ill-tempered, but ultimately good man.

I have the fondest memory of walking out one late afternoon to see my husband and this guy on our porch, tilted back in Adirondack chairs, feet on the banister, smoking cigars for the first time that I’d ever seen either smoking cigars. They were laughing and looking up some obscure word in my ten-ton American Heritage dictionary, verifying my friend’s husband had used it correctly. Of course he had. He was a walking ten-ton dictionary himself. I’m an editor and writer, but he always had me beat in even my own area of expertise. The guy was something to behold.

“Jenny?” my friend’s voice said over the phone. I was so excited to hear it. Motherhood and relocation had put too much time and space between us for the past two years. Before I could say so, she continued: “Noah was killed.” Words can’t describe what I felt. The absence of my own husband made the news that much harder to bear. He would be away for 15 months; how could we grieve together? I called my dad and cried.

Our friend was gone, my first experience losing a friend to war. He was the victim of a suicide attack in the Middle East, where he’d gone voluntarily — not on deployment but on contract. In the weeks that followed, I arranged for extended childcare for my daughter, bought tickets to fly out for the funeral, and spent some of the strangest, most difficult days of my life with my widowed and grieved friend. They sent her husband home piece-meal, literally, a fact she didn’t want to know. It was as though he died several times over. She grieved with each phone call, with each question, with each formality, with each form. At the funeral, I looked at the drawn faces of all those SF guys, and my legs shook. My imagination ran to bad places. Afterward, when night fell and the formalities were done, I held my friend in the dark like a mother; she held me like a lover. She grieved in strange ways that made perfect and horrible sense to me, that might have offended some, that I know confused others, that were a testament to how catastrophic it all was.

During that grieving time with my friend, I went through a change in my heart that I still hold close to me. It’s hard to write about it, to risk any misunderstanding about the man, his wife, myself, the military, and least important, my place in the matter. So, I don’t know that I’ll ever really write about it in detail. But on days like this, I think of it. I think of him. I think of her. I never imagined that all the training I got through motherhood would lead me where it did in that time: That I’d find myself entwined under covers with a grown woman, holding her sweaty and tear-streaked hair against my heart like a mom would, as I rocked her to the mental rhythm with which I rocked my daughter, loving her unconditionally and yet fearfully, worrying my refuge wouldn’t be enough. Knowing it could not be enough.

Before I go to bed tonight, I just want to say thank you to those who serve. I do not know the full extent of your sacrifice, but I know a small piece of it. Thank you.

holidays · miscellaneous

LOVE (from the Momplex Blog archives)




Yeah, that’s us spelling out our LOVE, in snapshots from our everyday lives. One of the best things about my Mother’s Day today? Flowers from my daughter, including one purple iris, the flower my grandma loved most. My grandma died the year before I got pregnant, and I miss her. “I know your grandma liked that kind of flower,” my daughter said. “And I know you liked her a lot, so I thought it would make you happy if I put one in there.” It did.

It’s good to be a mom, isn’t it?