Baby Hair

At the end of a movie my son was watching there was a montage of nurses from the 1960’s wheeling newborns two-by-two through a hospital maternity ward. The sight of those babies in those bassinets made my heart skip a beat.

(This post is mostly about the fear and vulnerability of being a new mother of twins. My youngest was easy, and I was experienced when he was born. I was alone with him in the hospital and held him every second while my husband was home with the twins. He was just my buddy, and it all made sense).

Nothing made sense when my twins were born. Even now the memories come to me in flashes. I was swaddled up from surgery and loopy on pain medication. A blood vessel in my nose had burst, so my nose was bandaged (along with every other orifice), so I was like a big dumb swollen pustule.

My husband had left (with my blessing) to make the announcement at his cousin’s party that he was a new father, so I was alone. The nurses wheeled these little babies into my room and parked their bassinets just out of my reach.

“Now, no getting out of bed,” the nurse warned me. “If they cry, push the buzzer. We don’t want you ripping stitches and bleeding all over the floor.”

No getting out of bed? Leaving them out of my reach? What did she expect to happen? The second she left, they started squealing. Not crying, just mewing. For me. Their mother. They were hungry. I had to feed them. But I couldn’t reach them. But I had to reach them! I had to protect them, get to them, they were too far away! I couldn’t hold both of them at the same time, what should I do??

I think a word needs to be invented to describe this maternal emotion. Panic, maybe. Not fear, but closer to terror. Not just protectiveness, but closer to abject vigilance. Not just love, but closer to reverence.

Of course I got out of bed. I never listen. I heaved my post-birth girth out of that bed, and step-by-step, made my way to those bassinets. I remember looking into each bassinet and offering one hand to each of them. And that is where I stood, just gazing at them and holding their fingers as they looked up at me. I don’t know how long I stood there, but long enough to bleed all over the floor. Profusely. I didn’t even notice.

(Ew. I’m sorry)

I got in trouble. I got in so much trouble, with everyone, especially the charge nurse, who had to clean the floor.

“Didn’t I ask you to just push the button? I would have helped you. You can’t be any use to them if you don’t heal.”

I heard her speak, but I didn’t understand. Help me? Help me do what? It was like I was in some kind of trance, this love-fueled angst, that I couldn’t wake up from. I watched her handling them, confidently, and I wanted to tell her not to touch them. But I also had to admit that when she was done cleaning them and swaddling them, they always looked happy and content.

I hated when she would take them out of the room. I paced the floor, stared out the window, wild with worry that she wouldn’t bring them back, but also secretly relieved that someone experienced was tending to them. When she would wheel them back into the room and place them near my bed, I would look down at them and they would be staring up at me with these big eyes. Their faces would be clean, and they would be dressed in new onesies and swaddled in clean blankets. Their brand-new little baby hair would be wet and brushed to the side, and something about them just broke my heart.

I still don’t know why. But the sight of them being returned to me clean and calm was the first time I realized that I had to entrust them to the world. That I could entrust them to the world. And that they would come back. Obviously things had happened to them outside my hospital room, things I was not privy to. They were wearing different clothes, and they had their hair brushed a different way. But those things had brought them back. Even at a day old, they had undergone changes that didn’t involve me.

That was the scary part.

In our house, we still call it “baby hair,” and I still have all three of the boys’ baby hairbrushes. Once in a while they will brush their wet hair neatly to the side and then proudly show me.

“Mom, look. Baby hair.”

Kills me every time.

Future Flex

Yesterday was World Health Day. And forgive the already tired cliché, but these be strange times we livin’ in.

I had a meeting with a former colleague on the St. Joseph’s University campus, so on the way home I decided to leave the expressway and pop into this indie bookstore to say hi to the store manager. A friend for years, she and I had been communicating about a volunteer opportunity the store was offering to help young children with their writing skills. I figured since I was in the area, I would say a quick hello. As we excitedly discussed the opportunity, I saw her brow furrow.

“Oh, wait, Mary, did you finish filling out your application?”

“Well, not yet, I figured I’d come in in person.”

She paused. “Wow, that’s so nice, but you have to finish filling out the application first, you know, with your resume and everything.”

“Even if I’m here in person?”

“Yeah, sorry.”

I paused this time. “So you want me to drive an hour home to sit at my computer, upload a resume, then drive an hour back tomorrow? When I could answer questions now, in person?”

She smiled patiently, well-acquainted with my bullshit. “I know, it seems counter-productive. But that’s the way the boss wants it.”

Talk about cancel culture. In-person ain’t no thing. The only way people want to meet is through the computer and through the fucking phone. Strange.

After I bid her goodbye and promised to finish my paperwork online, I grabbed a coffee and perused her book wall. My eyes glossed over the titles, and as I moved perambulatorily from left to right in a java-infused book trance, my brain sent me a signal…

Wait.

I froze. There’s something

I backed up. Something was strange. Amiss. What was it? I moved back and started again. Ah, yes, I thought.. There it is.

Here are the titles of the current best-selling non-fiction books on sale across the country and I am not making any of these up:

  • The New Normal- A Roadmap to Resilience
  • What Can I Do?
  • Superman’s Not Coming
  • How to Avoid a Climate Disaster
  • Gory Details
  • The Disordered Cosmos
  • The Plague Cycle
  • The End of Everything
  • The New Climate War
  • The Apocalypse Factory
  • What is Life?
  • Make America Healthy Again
  • How to Argue with a Racist
  • The Fragile Earth
  • COVID
  • Post-Corona
  • 2030
  • Never Enough
  • The Price You Pay for College
  • Die with Zero
  • The New Great Depression
  • Fear is a Choice

I flipped a few over to see if they came with a prescription for Zoloft. A straight-edged razor. Maybe a bundled deal of therapy appointments. Perhaps a cameo on Dr. Phil. What would be the name of the show?

Wednesday:  Former Reader Who Entered Bookstore in a Happy Place Leaves in an Existential Panic

Watch her in today’s episode as she angrily confronts doomsday authors:

“Tell you the truth, Phil, I’m thinking of suing! They ruined my whole day!”

I’m not a psychologist or a sociologist, so I wouldn’t presume to analyze the current culture of fear that seems to hover over our country. I say “our country” because since I don’t live in other countries, I can’t speak for other countries. I live only here. Maybe fearmongering isn’t as prevalent in say, Greece, as it is here. Or maybe it’s worse, what do I know? I speak only as an American when I say:

What. The. Actual. Fuck. How long have I been asleep? What is everyone so afraid of?

People taking bike rides in the beautiful spring fresh air while wearing masks? People driving alone in their cars while wearing masks? People afraid to send their children to school? People afraid to voice a dissenting opinion at work for fear of castigation? People afraid of doorknobs, airplanes, family gatherings? People afraid of living? People afraid of each other?  

And now we’re expected to be afraid of the year two-thousand fucking thirty? Seriously? 2030? We’re not promised year 2030. When were we ever promised 2030? We’re not promised tomorrow. We’re not even promised ten minutes from now. How egotistical it is to assume we will ever have any knowledge at all of 2030. I don’t even know what I am having for dinner. DJ hasn’t even teed off yet at Augusta (although he may have by the time you read this).

Now I’m supposed to be worried about year 2030? Yeah, fuck that.

Take my advice. Or ignore it, if you like. I am just here to say that you can save yourself a lot of time and agony by ignoring all of those titles above and reading just one: Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl. It will provide all the answers you seek about the meaning of life, the concept of fear and the lack of control we feel in an uncontrolled environment. I will discuss his book and its theories in tomorrow’s post. Here’s an early quote by Frankl:

Forces beyond your control can take away everything you possess except one thing, your freedom to choose how you will respond to the situation. You cannot control what happens to you in life, but you can always control what you will feel and do about what happens to you.

Here are my responses to some of the titles above:

  • What is going on will never, ever, ever, not in a million lifetimes, be my “new normal.” The media can write it, print it, publish it, splash it across t-shirts, put it in commercials and have political pundits utter it over and over and over, but it will never be my “new normal.” If it’s yours, great. I respect that. But it’s not mine.
  • What can you do, the author of that book asks? Well, you can wake up. Take a deep breath. Count your blessings. Feel the sun on your face. Kiss your dog, your kids and your grandkids. Be present in the moment. That’s the most any of us can do.
  • Post-Corona is me, passed out on my patio after drinking three beers on the boat on a 90- degree day.
  • The author of Fear is a Choice is right. Fear is a choice. So is happiness. That’s what I choose.

you…you…you…Whore!

The scale is a jealous lying whore who misses bread.

Whenever any woman steps on the scale while on a diet, there should be a list of positive affirmations taped above her head. Picture it: You had a perfect week. You didn’t eat too little or too much. You cut out excess sugar and salt. You have tons of energy, your clothes feel looser, your face looks thinner. You got to the gym, guzzled water, got plenty of sleep. You wake up on weigh-in day not wondering if you lost, but how much you lost. One pound? Two? Three? Is it possible you lost three pounds? You strip, take out your earrings, remove your rings and your fingernail polish, step on the scale, anticipating that number…

…only to see that you gained a half-pound. How. The. Fuck. Can. That. Be.

A list of positive affirmations could come in very handy on a disappointing weigh-in day, because then one could look away from the scale, scan the affirmations and choose one of the following:

  • Muscle weighs more than fat! (I have literally never understood wtf that means)
  • Weight fluctuates! (Yeah, no shit, Sherlock)
  • Bowels!
  • Too much water! (The human body is already 70% water, how is this a thing?)
  • Not enough water! (Again)
  • Salt! (If the human body already has 40 teaspoons of salt in it, isn’t low sodium broth just an afterthought? Can it really throw off that delicate balance?)
  • It has to be the medication! (Hair gummies weigh eight ounces?)
  • You ate in front of the tv again! (Is the salad one consumes while watching the news more calorically loaded than the salad one consumes while staring into space?)
  • I told you not to eat those five extra almonds! (   )
  • You must be getting your period! (That ship has sailed, fren)
  • Your diet is too low-fat! (Well, hell then, looks like it’s time to bake a homemade mascarpone cake)

Fuck all of that. If I’m following the diet perfectly, what does it matter what the scale says? I’m judging these next three weeks by my complexion. My hair. My mood. My clothes. My energy, my vibrancy, my lifeforce. I’m feeling pretty darn fantastic right now. And if that ain’t good enough for the dieting goddesses, then screw ‘em. As far as I’m concerned, they’re whores, too.

Check in with me tomorrow, if you want a good laugh.

The Time for Abandonment

The biggest mistake any blogger can make is to be unclear on her content, or to leave the reader unsure as to what message the content is trying to deliver. Is it about yoga? Makeup? Travel in the mid-West? The psychological benefits of knitting sock puppets? Be clear with your message, bloggers are warned, or the readers will ditch you. Now for me, with the exception of a few close friends, I don’t have readers yet. I’m aware of it, and I’m working on it (it’s harder than it sounds). So for now this blog merely serves as a creative outlet for me.

Franz Kafka (fellow introvert) once said that a non-writing writer is a monster courting insanity. Aptly said. And after only a week, I can say with a clear heart that this blog is preventing me from turning green and smashing up my neighborhood. I want readers. I need readers. But until I get them, I am simply grateful for the venue.

So let’s return to content. As I click from post-to-post, the message seems clear to me. But I wonder if it will be clear to readers. What is your blog about, Mary?

Well. Ahem.

I suppose it’s about abandonment. Not abandonment of values, principles or children, but of restraint. Moderation. Self-control. Even of the invisible shackles of geography.

It’s about giving into one’s natural impulses.

It’s about a widow moving towards love once again. An introvert moving away from self-imposed privacy. A daughter, mother, teacher, professor, moving away from solitude and stereotypes and wanting to know how her intelligence, sense of humor, beauty and sense of self translates to the rest of the world. It’s about a spoiled self-indulgent little girl discovering gratitude. It’s about travel, and culture, and fluidity, and men, and sex, and conversation and laughter.

It’s about happiness.

Uh-oh. Major journalistic faux-pas. I buried the lede.

You know now. I’m happy. Really really happy. Not the over-bearing bubbling-over, small-talk chatty kind. Not the Facebook post “Look how happy and perfect my life is!” kind. No. My happiness is the slow-burning, color-changing kind. The quiet kind, the kind that finds me huddled in dark corners, protective of it and afraid someone will ask me to try and explain it. Happiness that simmers like an ember, deep-down in that place where the self sits, content and grateful. Happiness that is not dependent on other’s opinions of me, or what the weather is doing, or what the scale says, or how much money I have, or if I have a date on Saturday night.

Pure happiness. The kind that scares others, because they don’t understand it. It is unfamiliar because of its rarity.

I will share more on happiness as I go, but future readers, know this: the content of this blog may seem to veer from subject to subject, but the message should be clear:

I’m so happy to be here for the journey.