beauty · body image · circumcision · friends · intentional happiness

Pretty Wrinkled

When I was in my early 30s and my now ex-husband was working in a dermatology practice, a stacked Russian blonde newly on the clinical staff began making suggestive comments to him during the workday. “You know Jennifer Aniston’s character in Horrible Bosses?” she asked him . “That’s gonna be me, with you.” She was pretty awful.

A few months after she got her sea legs, she hosted a Botox party at the clinic. Such parties were a new fad at the time, but as a young and new mom, I was busily creating wrinkles, not fixing them. What an awkward moment when I swung by the clinic to drop something to my husband days later, and she blocked me in the hall to say, “Why did you not come to my Botox party? You need it!”

Remembering how she scrutinized my face, I suppose I should have punched hers, but her remarks were so misplaced that I couldn’t think straight. It was as though she’d asked why I didn’t come to the bris and wasn’t getting rid of my foreskin. Stunned, I kind of sharply joked to her that she was no billboard for Botox, then went on my merry way, arms cradling my juicy little baby.

Now, at 51, I would not be so stunned if interrogated that way. I’m definitely sporting wrinkles, including one long, deep one that extends away from my left eye almost to my hairline. I tend to think it looks like I’m scarred from a knife fight, but I suppose you wouldn’t really notice it unless I’ve slept with my face smashed on that side. Truth be told, I’ve thrown some Botox at that bitch more than once.

Which is all to say I haven’t fallen in love with my wrinkles like some wrinkled women say they do. These creases make me feel, unsurprisingly, old and sometimes as if I don’t count anymore. Because of them, am I easier to dismiss as some old “Karen” who could at any given moment start screaming about inadequate foam on her Starbucks latte?

Well, that thinking has begun to shift lately, and it started with a lunch invitation from a colleague I was friendly with at my last job. I haven’t seen this woman in more than four years. Close to me in age, she and I used to commiserate about cellulite, menorrhagia, sudden food sensitivies, and other joys of aging. On work breaks, we shared super-plus tampons, keto recipes, and hysterectomy plans. We also compared exercise notes, and I remember vividly the day she walked into the office on crutches: She’d jump-roped so much, for so many weeks, that a bunch of bones in one foot simply shattered.

What a delight to meet up with her after these past four crazy years, our daughters both out of the nest, our lives still tracking a vaguely parallel trajectory. She came into the restaurant glowing in all her 6-foot glory, eyes bright and icy blue, toehead hair cut into a flattering new style around her beaming face. She was wearing a crop top, no eye makeup, and, as it turned out, the pride of training for her first triathlon.

“That’s where you and I part!” I said. “I wouldn’t be caught dead running a triathlon.” (More accurately, that’s exactly how I’d be caught if I tried one.)

She laughed so hard at a story I then shared about me peeing my pants every time I, a former gymnast, try to turn a cartwheel in my living room — which is kind of often.

As we talked, I began to see the extra crinkles and wrinkles she’s accumulated around her eyes and, in a flash of clarity, realized what a truly stunning addition they are to her face. Making them even prettier was the fact that she wasn’t trying to cover them up. Suddenly, they seemed like any other thing we put on our faces to make ourselves look nice: darker, longer eyelashes, a touch of pink on the cheeks, a glimmer under the brow. But her wrinkles were somehow prettier, better, because they are natural. And they made her look like someone good to be around, someone who’s smiled and laughed a lot, an ever-evolving woman who will wear a crop top at any age she freaking feels like it, thank you very much.

It’s been a week since I saw her, and the shift she created in my brain has been interesting: Suddenly, I’m seeing the beauty of wrinkled faces everywhere, including in the mirror. I mean, just look at those lines! Think of the stories they tell — of life lived, of the length and depth of life itself, and of being human and vulnerable and durable. With wrinkles, our faces are quite literally decorated with evidence of our own ability to emote. Could it be that wrinkles themselves now make me smile, which means seeing wrinkles is officially causing me wrinkles?

It appears so. And there’s certainly some strange joy in that.

Making wrinkles

P.S. If you are the one person on earth who’s not yet seen the Barbie movie, go see it if only to watch the scene between Barbie and an old woman on a park bench (a behind-the-scenes star in her own right, by the way). It’ll get you right in the tear ducts and is very much in line with this post.

babies · beauty · humor · mood issues · motherhood · sleep

The Latest Post-Partum Depression Fix: Flamboyant Baby Boy Clothes (from the Momplex Blog archive)

My baby son is dressed like something out of Brokeback Mountain right now. He’s wearing a plaid flannel get-up that runs from head to toe with mother-of-pearl snap-buttons. My husband almost barfed when he saw it this morning. I purposely dressed the baby in something completely horrid-adorable (there is such a hybrid, you know), because I need a good laugh. There’s one to be had somewhere at this stage, isn’t there? I mean, sure, he can’t fall asleep or stay asleep without gobs of hair-raising crying or being bagged. And sure I basically have to wear him on me 10 or so hours every day. But isn’t there a bright side?

Heck, yeah! It’s the fact that little 12-pound baby boys look downright hilarious in flannel coveralls with mother-of-pearl buttons. They also look pretty funny in fake antennae from Gymboree, particularly when they’re crying. Oh, and a miniaturized huntsman cap with earflaps, like something out of the movie Fargo, is an excellent outfit for babies with colic, too.

He’s crying right now in his swing. He’s been up since 6 a.m. It’s almost 9 a.m., and I’ve been trying to get him to sleep since 7 a.m. His brow, as usual, is all knitted up . (I think the kid’s going to need Botox before he’s four.) His little stiff John McCain arms are shaking, and his mouth is in the shape of a big O, wailing. My nerves are completely frazzled, and I’m so tired and jittery that I’d probably fail a roadside sobriety test. I’ve had the reprise of this song, which I blasted on the radio to lull him to sleep in the car yesterday, running like a broken record through my head for about 18 hours now. I stink like spit-up.

But, man, I still don’t think it’s an emotional breakdown that a size 0-3 fuschia leopard-print unitard with a miniature clip-on bowtie couldn’t remedy. And, after all, it’s not couthe to start pouring martinis this early in the morning…

Is it?

advice · beauty · motherhood

Not as Old as My Caftan Implies (from the Momplex Blog archives)

I’ve been feeling old lately. I don’t need a Boy Scout to help me cross roads or anything. And I don’t sport giant, black fit-over sunglasses while navigating my town car to Jo-Ann Fabric. In truth, I’m 20+ years from Social Security, and women much older than I am compete in marathons. So, it’s not that I actually am old. It’s just that I’m not young either. I know this to be true because I own a leopard-print caftan, use a pill box, and resent all my tattoos. Take heed, young folks. These are the signs.

Last month I had my husband and the doctor he works with repair my earring holes. By repair, I mean carve with a scalpel and stitch shut.

earrings

You could have stuck a pencil in those holes before the repair. Kids these days call them gauged ears, but my contemporaries and I blazed that particular fashion trail. I call them ‘80s ears: stretched-out lobes from wearing giant earrings to complement giant perms. Those holes are ugly, whatever your age, and they look particularly bad on a 41-year-old woman. They had to go.

As if that wasn’t enough, I then tried to have my ankle tattoo lased. I got part one of this tattoo (the flower) while avoiding studying for my final exams in college. I got part two of the tattoo (my signature) during the presidential debate between Clinton and George H.W. Bush. It was inked by an artist who did some of Billy Baldwin’s tattoos. I know this because, while she was giving me the tattoo, I was staring at pics of her with Billy and the tattoos she’d given him. She, on the other hand, was staring at the debate on her portable TV. I think my sloppy tattoo bears evidence of that.

Before laser treatment:
tatt

After laser treatment:
tatt

So much for that little enterprise.

And then I realized: This is something old ladies do. Try to fix wee little aesthetic details on parts of their bodies to counteract the giant hoof-print Father Time is leaving over every inch of them. Oh, my ass has dropped five inches and I’m developing a chin wattle. Better get that mole on my arm removed and buy a new pair of earrings! When I was 22 and could walk around wearing wooden stilettos like Bad Sandy from Grease, any given Friday night, I didn’t even notice that mole. For sure nobody was looking at my earring holes.

Last weekend I went to Denver to visit my aunt, a woman who may or may not have giant earring holes. I don’t know, because she’s got giant boobs, and those magically turn everything else into minutiae. While I was there, she and I drove out to SkyVenture Colorado. This is an indoor skydiving facility, and since I’m writing a book about the guy who engineered the thing, I wanted to give it a whirl. I thought it would be scary for me, since I’m afraid of heights. But no heights were involved. In fact, it was deliriously fun. You pretty much step into a column of wind and fly, with the floor not all that far beneath you. You learn how to master the wind with tiny movements of your body and the help of a skydiving guru.

When I stepped out onto the wind column, I felt young. I wanted to yell some happy expletives. Because even though my pastor doesn’t know it, even though my kids don’t know it, I do that. I like to do that. I’m a tattooed girl who used to wear Bad Sandy heels and rock a perm Felix Baumgartner could’ve spotted from his space dive. I felt alive, happy, wild, even sexy. And then I got home and watched the video of my flight:

Yes, that’s me sporting a pink, nylon fat-suit, my arms palsy-shaking like Katharine Hepburn in On Golden Pond. That’s me not looking nearly as vivacious as I felt. I think I even have a mullet.

What’s that thing Forrest Gump says? Stupid is as stupid does? I’m wondering if maybe sexy is as sexy does, too. Youthful is as youthful does. Fun is as fun does. Happy is as happy does. It’s not about the big earring holes or the faded tattoo or the pregnancy stretch-marks. (Did I fail to mention those?) It’s about joy, which has no age. And in a funny way, that means it is about the earring holes, the tattoo, the stretch marks, for all of them are talismans from great times in my life. And reminders of more to come. I’m not sorry I closed up those earring holes. I’m not sorry about the stretch marks. I’ll make new talismans. There’s more to come. Until I’m dead, I’ll keep making them.

Old is as old does.
(But I’m still going to color my roots.)