humor · motherhood · sexuality

Where Babies Come From (Hint: It’s Not Your Ear)

My kids are confused about sex.

I can’t blame them. So am I. When you think about the whole shebang, it is kind of a weird thing. But I probably shouldn’t call it a shebang, right? Trust me, that is not how my kids got confused. Their confusion is entirely about the mechanics. Why? Because of me. When women pathologically hardwired to ramble try to explain anything of complexity—how to make a frittata, for example—we pretty much sound like we’re trying to explain the God Particle.

My oldest child, a third-grader, is an inquisitive little cookie often accused of being an old spirit. That she requested the recipe for babies when she was only four was not surprising. I remember how intently she listened as I explained that a woman has an egg, and a man has a seed. When the seed and the egg get together, a baby begins to form. Voila! I also told her where the egg was located and where the seed was stored. Feeling like I’d done a good job of playing it cool, I stopped there and nervously waited for her to ask how the seed got to the egg. She didn’t.

Fast forward five autumns. Out with me on an errands run, my daughter randomly blurted, “How does the male’s seed get to the female’s egg?” At first I gave her a very plain answer—yes, the this goes into that answer—but because I was off guard, I then went on and on about it. At least I did it matter-of-factly and with no hint of my urge to scream and poop my pants. I even explained how the male moves around to make the seed come out and why. Good God. Her expression spoke volumes, indicated she was feeling kind of like this:

When I got home and told my husband how I’d had to SAY THE THING, I’m not sure if I was being a martyr or a braggart. “Aren’t you glad you didn’t get that question?” I said. “Seriously, what would you have said?” Without hesitation, he answered, “I’d have said, ‘It swims.’”

Crap. Me and my God Particle.

“See those two ducks, honey?” During the days that followed, I began pointing out to my daughter random examples of sex in the animal kingdom—you know, to sanitize normalize it? “That’s the male on top of the female,” I’d say. “They’re making a baby!” And then, of course, the female mallard would try to flee as a second mallard would attack, bite at the back of her head and pin her down like a rapist with his stupid webbed orange flapper. Then another would try. Then another. Soon her poor head would be pecked bald from the abuse of horny mallards. It wasn’t quite the Exhibit A I’d wanted.

Thank God my sister has two dogs, Martha and Buddy, who often “play train,” as my daughter long called it. They always look like they’re having a grand old time, grunting and panting with their standard smiley dog mouths agape. They would make a good example! So, I turned to them next, explaining to my daughter that “making a train” was actually sex. In retrospect that was a really bad choice of words. And unfortunately, Martha was always the one riding Buddy, so it kind of confused matters.

You know, I’m not afraid of explaining sex. I just wish I had some control over what my kids envision with it, particularly when it dawns on them that their dad and I do it. Violent head-pecking, growling, tongue-lolling—these are just not what I want them to envision. (Which is why my husband and I lock our bedroom door.) In all seriousness, though, how can I make it not gross? And why the hell is Dad not having to field these questions?

Ha! Well, Daddy finally got his come-uppance this week. Our 4-year-old is like a little engineer. That’s the kind of inquisitive he is. He likes to know how things work, loves to construct and deconstruct. Once I gave him a broken alarm clock and a screwdriver, and his face lit up like Justin Bieber getting his monkey back. So, apparently, my son demanded out of the blue to know how babies are made, and like any good engineer, he wanted specifics. Here’s how my husband said it went down:

“Dad, how are babies made?”

“Oh, you know that. There’s a seed and an egg and—“

“No, I KNOW about the seed and the egg, but how do they get together? How is the baby MADE?”

“Well, only grownups make babies, so you won’t need to make a baby until you’re a grownup.”

“But then DAD, I need to know HOW.”

And so on.

You know what my husband did? He continued to deflect those questions until they stopped. What did he think was going to happen next? I bet he wouldn’t have guessed our son would take the conversation to our daughter, which he did. This conversation took place yesterday after we picked up her new tadpole.

“You know how tadpoles become frogs?” my son offered. “First they get legs. Then they lose their tails. No, wait. First they’re a seed—”

“No, they’re not!” my daughter said. “First they’re an egg.”

“No, no, they’re a seed AND an egg,” my son answered.

Quarreling continued for a few minutes before my daughter said, “Look, this is what happens. First it’s an egg. Then the tadpole is born. Then a frog—hmn, I think it’s a frog—puts seed on the—hmn—wait, on the…um…tadpole.” Her brother listened intently, nodding with an ah-ha look. Yet I could tell his sister was getting confused by her own explanation, and I really didn’t like the idea of letting them think you just ejaculate on things to make them grow.

“Look, guys,” I finally said. “Here’s the deal. There’s an egg. The daddy puts sperm on it. The sperm is the seed. Then the seed and the egg grow into a tadpole. The tadpole grows into a frog.”

“When does he put it on the egg?” my son asked. “Where?”

“After the female lays it,” I interrupted, annoyed that the animal kingdom had once again failed me in explaining how HUMAN babies are made. Flustered I started to second-guess myself, as in thinking maybe I don’t actually know for sure how frogs make babies and whether the eggs are fertilized outside the body. (Don’t judge me. I was frazzled.) Self-talking, I muttered, “Wait. Maybe they’re not like chickens.”

“What? Chickens help make frogs?” said my son.

“Have you ever seen a frog penis?” said my daughter.

“Frogs don’t have penises!” laughed my son.

“All animals have penises!” insisted my daughter.

“Want to hear about the God Particle?” said I, or might as well have. Time to volley back to my husband.

humor · sexuality

What Turns You On (from the Momplex Blog archives)

One of my childhood friends—I’ll call her Jane—had a big golden schlong in her parents’ closet. It wasn’t hers, of course. It was theirs, but Jane must have felt some measure of ownership over it, at least enough to figure it was hers to show me one afternoon after school.

“Look at THIS,” she said, her eyes flashing darkly as she cackled and produced the metallic member from one of a seeming zillion boxes stacked willy-nilly in the closet. It was like Mr. Ollivander plucking the perfect wand from his inventory shelves in the world of Harry Potter. “Can you believe THIS!?” The thing is, it wasn’t immediately clear to me just what THIS was. Was her mother a gardener? Was THIS some sort of dazzling county fair award for having grown the biggest cucumber?

“What is it?” I asked.

“It’s a vibrator,” Jane answered matter-of-factly, as if this would clear things up for me. It didn’t.

At my home, my parents had a little vibrating contraption, too, but I’m pretty sure they’d picked it up from the health and beauty aisle at the S&H Green Stamps store. They kept it plugged in right in our living room sometimes, and my sister and I would use it to massage our legs, arms, heads, even the dog. It was a heavy, substantial appliance sort of thing, because it was a back massager. It boasted two fist-sized knobs that would squeeze in and out—and vibrate. So, of course, when I looked at Jane beaming about her parents’ “vibrator,” all I could think was Why would anyone want a leg massage with THAT? When she clarified, I wanted to barf.

Years later, another friend—I’ll call him John—introduced me to porn in the form of a Brazilian film called The Lady on the Bus. It was really a gateway to porn, more of an “erotic genre” film that tells the story of a grieved woman trying to heal herself by way of nymphomania. She spends the whole film soliciting sex from strangers on city buses, doing it in weird places and shouting out terrible lines like, “Beat me senseless!” I knew I shouldn’t have been watching it, but the dialogue and acting were just so ridiculous that it was comical. John had a screening of sorts for me and a handful of other friends, and to this day he can still quote a good deal of it that will still get me rolling with belly laughs. No matter how funny I found the dialogue, though, I distinctly remember wanting to leave the room during the naughty scenes. I simply did not want to watch other people having sex.

Klassy...and so literal.
Klassy…and so literal.

Let’s not drudge up every story that explains why. I’ll just say here that the sex and porn industry aren’t exactly my raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens. That’s why it’s so funny and so wrong that a porn-peddler was the one to co-opt the original blog domain for the Momplex. I can’t tell you how many times I inadvertently type in the old URL and get a startling eyeful. I still cannot get over the fact that my mommy blog turned overnight into an online portal for porn and sex toys. What were those pirates thinking? That I’d pay the ransom that is the ridiculous price they’ve put on the domain’s head? That people who’d grown accustomed to visiting my blog might be interested in some porn instead?

If you’re going to turn a mommy blog’s domain into a porn shop, I suggest you do it differently. Do it right. Show pictures of a week’s worth of meals neatly organized in a freezer. Show full, gorgeous glasses of wine. Show kids doing their own laundry and dishes. Show men’s underwear, in the hamper. Show a toilet with the seat down, no pee on its base. I’d show a lot of things if I were peddling porn on the old Momplex, but none of them would be vibrators or skin flicks or people cupping their naked body parts with their heads tilted back in rapture. You can get that crap anywhere. Tired mommies deserve the good stuff. I’d beat them senseless with pictures of cozy places to nap.

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.