Songs in My Head

{Photo courtesy: Apple}

Since I left my job to stay at home full-time, I have found that music is becoming a bigger part of my day.  And it’s so nice to be able to hear it at times other than during the rush-hour commute.

For the most part, that is.  There are a few distinct problems.

First:  What’s Old is New Again.  But Not in a Good Way.

Can we talk about this phenomenon of adult music being re-purposed for kids?  You know — at the kid gym places, the birthday party domes, etc.  In such places, I’m increasingly finding that they take songs from my past and bubble gum them up into kid-friendly versions that make my spine contract in pain.

Maybe it’s a problem of associative memory, because here’s what happens.  I’ll be at the kiddie gym class with my one year-old, and one of these songs will start playing.  And in my head, I am taken back to its original version and related flashbacks, which inevitably involve a college party, a late night at a bar or other bad behavior of my youth.  It’s like an out of body experience.   This is what I see.

{Song playing}

Present:  My child playfully climbing up a mat.  Or maybe jumping on a trampoline.

Past:  Kegs.  Questionable choices in men.

Present:  Yoga pants, hair in ponytail.  Clapping along to chipper little song with the class.

Past:  Tight jeans, hair firmly intact.  Fumbling for Marlboro Lights with the hand not holding a dollar beer in a plastic cup.

{My kid falls off of trampoline}

These two worlds colliding really screws me up and I’m not sure how I can be expected to parent effectively in this moment.  If I have a mullet or a can of PBR on my mind, how can I keep my kid from taking a header in her gym class?  This is downright unsafe.  So let’s just stick with the Disney soundtrack or any bad Top 40 songs written after I became a responsible adult.  OK?

Second:  The Car Radio — A Place for Life Lessons?

These days, I find myself in the car a lot more to fulfill my domestic goddess responsibilities (note:  I have no affiliation with Charlie Sheen’s goddesses).  This means unprecedented exposure to the car radio.  And some bad music.  Not to sound all AARP with “How do these kids listen to this shit?” — but really — I don’t know how else to ask the question.

So I feel some obligation to expose my kids to better music, since it’s such a big part of what P and I enjoy.  I’m not talking about extremes.  I didn’t play classical music for them in utero, and I’m not looking to begin a formal musical education here but — all things considered — I think I’d rather have them hear some Led Zeppelin over Miley Cyrus or Katy Perry.

This presents some obvious ethical concerns, since I’m not ready to tell them the meaning of Black Dog just yet.

Here’s a brief sampling of songs that, in the past week, I’ve found myself singing along with — loudly — while my 1 and 4 year-old sat in the back:

  • Helter Skelter
  • Personal Jesus
  • Bizarre Love Triangle
  • Whole Lotta Love
  • Son of a Preacher Man
  • Welcome to the Jungle
  • Captain Jack

It’s not really a wholesome collection to build good moral fiber in a child.  Thankfully, nobody in the back seat is asking me what any of them mean — yet.  But, to be honest, it wouldn’t be any easier to explain Miley.  I’m still confused by the whole dual persona Hannah Montana thing and feel she should seek therapy.  But her inevitable descent into hallucinogenic drugs — now there’s a lesson for you kids.  And Katy Perry, you lost me a long time ago.  I just don’t understand you, your boobs, your husband or your paycheck.

 

Third:  The Grocery Store Needs a DJ.  Now.

It’s not that I didn’t go to the grocery store when I was still working.  We did have food in the house.  Somehow, I now notice the grocery store music more, and here is my assessment. 

It’s unfuckingbelievably bad. 

Marketers of America, I implore you to unite and fix this — because I can’t make an informed purchase with this root canal soundtrack in my ears.  Note to Shop Rite:  People under 89 are in your market.  And their ears are melting off of their skulls. 

To illustrate my point, I jotted down every song I heard in the grocery store today along the side of my shopping list.  I swear, this is 100% what I heard:

  • Never Be The Same (Christopher Cross)
  • Time in a Bottle (Jim Croce)
  • Just the Two of Us (Bill Withers)
  • So Far Away (Carole King)
  • For Your Eyes Only (Sheena Easton)
  • Everybody’s Talkin’ (Harry Nilsson — you know, that song from Midnight Cowboy)
  • I Can See Clearly Now (Jimmy Cliff)
  • On My Own (Patti LaBelle & Michael McDonald)

Are we shopping or are we dialed into a suicide hotline?  I could barely choose a yogurt over LaBelle and McDonald moaning at each other about being split apart.  I almost developed lactose intolerance on the spot in aisle nine. 

And, just when I could take no more…Just when I started robotically purchasing random items as a side effect of auditory abuse — like pimiento loaves, Jello molds, Hostess Snoballs and the religious candles in the Goya section…

Lost in Love (Air Supply).

That was it.  With the vision of those Aussie perms firmly in my head, as well as an unprecedented and melodramatic remorse for cheating on my ninth grade boyfriend, I grabbed my final item of necessity (which may or may not have been the new issue of Us Weekly) with urgency and checked out of the Den of Music Hell Shop Rite.

Look.  I’m not saying you need to be all things to all people with the grocery store music.  We don’t need Bieber Pasta Night.  Or Hip Hop Produce Day.  But, for the love of all that is holy, can’t we find something less nail-in-the-coffin?  It’s not soothing.  Do I seem soothed?  I’m all out of sorts at home now and staring at my wonky groceries.

But my husband will probably like the Snoballs.  He eats like a frat boy.

So.  It seems that the kids’ gym/activity place, the car and the grocery store are the Bermuda Triangle of good music.  Where is my safe place?  

And, more importantly, how can I make sure my kids like good music?  Because if they don’t, we can’t hang out at family weddings together.  We can’t take enjoyable road trips.  This is my parental responsibility.  My mother and father did this for me, and I am eternally grateful.  If I do my job right, one fine day, my kids will ask me to play The White Album for them.

That day will come.  And when it does, my husband will be so happy to page me at my Shop Rite DJ gig to report the good news.

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Four

How can he be four? 

And how can I get upset that he’s already four?  What will I do when he’s five or, say, 18?  I’m going to embarrass the crap out of him with my sappy ways.  Poor kid.

Here he was four days old.

One year.

Two years.

Three years.

What’s he like at four? 

He loves transportation of all kinds, but is beyond obsessed with trains.  If you don’t speak railway, don’t even bother talking to him.  Now that every engine from the Island of Sodor lives here with us, and I can finally distinguish between a steam and diesel train, I can keep up.  Good thing, because Train Rehab is not cheap.

Recently, he has begun to love dinosaurs as well.  This morning, he taught us all about the club-shaped tail of certain carnivores.  In detail.  Before my coffee.  But I love it.  And I’m secretly hoping the dinosaurs will unionize and take over the railway — perhaps eat the trains or just step on them.

He eats like most kids his age, which means an aversion to protein and a distinct pro-dipping/condiment position.  And a love of all nugget items.

He laughs easily and yet also turns on a dime.  He’s sensitive, tentative and studious.  I hope he’ll grow up to the be a solid Reformed Nerd — you know, smart with a geeky-is-cool edge.  I was just geeky, no edge.

Or, he can grow up however he wants.  That’s fine too.  As long as it doesn’t happen too quickly — that’s my only request.

This year, he shared his birthday with Easter Sunday.  That’s hard to explain.  Yes, it’s your birthday and the day we celebrate Jesus’ resurrection.  The streamers are for you.  The church-going is for him.  The bunny with eggs thing is just odd but there’s candy *and* birthday cake.  Got it?

So we had 30 people here for the dual celebration.  I love entertaining as long as everything goes smoothly.  Which it never does.  Then I’m sort of the maniac hostess with the eternally re-filled glass of wine.

But, overall, it went well.  I did a lot to prepare but I forgot one key thing for the egg hunt.

Anything here look amiss to you?

Baskets.  None.  We had a classy egg hunt with plastic Target bags.  I do everything with elegance.

Speaking of which, and as most moms know, it’s not really a holiday until a child vomits.  Luckily my daughter allowed us to keep our family winning streak intact.  Thankfully, it was nothing like the Fordeville Christmas Vomitfest — I think she was just on the swings too long.  She bounced back.  Her pretty new dress, not so much. 

Here she is before.  Don’t worry, I have no after photo. 

My sister-in-law took this picture.  I love it.  My daughter and niece, definitely scheming about how to win the egg hunt.  I think I heard one of them say “Sweep the leg!  Finish him!”

And now, the moment of truth.  Project Stegosaurus Birthday Cake. 

I really struggled with whether or not to post this comically awful result.  But, hey, I owe you guys this much. 

First, the prep.  Which was extensive, and may explain the end product.

Now, a sneak peek with the promised look of confusion on my son’s face (subtitle: “WTF is with my cake?  Is that an armadillo?”)

Aaaand, the close up.  Go easy on me.  I tried.  Hard.

That’s right — you can call me Cake Boss. 

Or Unpaid Cake Intern.  Or just Crazy Person Who Will Purchase Cupcakes Next Year. 

And yes, I’m available for weddings and anniversaries too.

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A Cake, A Guest and A List

Happy Friday, everyone!

I am knee-deep in preparations for this Sunday, which is both Easter and my son’s fourth birthday.  For this combination of  events, I will be hosting 30 people at my house.  In full disclosure, this stresses me out and makes me an unlikeable, certifiable maniac for the other poor souls who live with me here in Fordeville. 

Adding to my stress is the seemingly minor request made by the birthday boy.  Ever attentive to specifics, he has asked for not just a dinosaur cake, but a green stegosaurus cake with red plates on its back.  Righto.  Good thing I happen to have that exact configuration handy. 

As if. 

I can cook — but I’m not what I’d call a stellar baker or cake decorator.  So, amidst the various other preparations for Sunday, I’ll be somewhere between laughing at myself and throwing a cake pan against the wall within the next 48 hours.  My money is on the latter. 

I can’t promise any photos of the final product, but let me take a moment to share two photos of what my cake will not remotely resemble.  I will also go through this exercise with my son tomorrow, just to manage his expectations.

Cake I Can’t Make #1:  This is way out of my league on so many levels.  Cole is a lucky boy to have someone create this for him.  Cole does not live here. {photo:  www.cakecentral.com}

 

Cake I Can’t Make #2:  A tad more realistic but still — repeat after me — not going to happen.  See that priceless look of joy on this child’s face?  How sweet.  If you get a final cake photo from me, it will likely include a look on my son’s face of utter confusion and resentment because his cake looks like a chihuahua.  Or a generic orb.  {photo:  www.themeparty.com}

 

This might be a good segue to tell you about my guest post today over at Theta Mom, where I discuss my leap from corporate minion to stay at home mom.  It occurs to me that, had I made this transition years ago, I may not be in this specific state of panic over said stegosaurus cake.  Anyway.  I’m really grateful to have contributed this guest post — and if you’ve been around for a while, you know I think so highly of the Theta Mom community.  So, please, check it out.

And I can’t leave you for the weekend without updating you on the intense town pool wait list scenario.  Thanks to everyone for all of the support during this trying time (and also for the additional conniving suggestions on how to climb the list — you guys are a crafty bunch).  I’m pleased to report that I did not have to resort to many of my proposed, borderline unethical tactics to secure a spot.  It appears that enough people died, went bankrupt, moved away or suffered from abject social alienation to relinquish their memberships to my advantage.  Score.

Here’s how the big news went down.

My husband showed up in the family room waving an envelope in his hands the other night.  I was on glass number two or three of red wine after a long day of chasing down the stegosaurus cake pan.  The envelope, with its return address from the town’s Recreation Office, produced total anxiety; I swear, we both felt like it was a college admissions flashback.

Me:  “It’s so soon.  I don’t know if that’s good or bad.  I’m thinking good, especially after the Caddyshack Baby Ruth story I told at the pre-school bake sale to scare them off.  I had a prime audience.”

Him:  “Yeah, but the envelope is not fat.  Remember with college admissions, the fatter the envelope, the better.”

Me:  “Crap.  You might be right.  But do colleges even send letters by mail now?  It’s probably all electronic.  Did you know there’s a writing section on the SATs and now and the scoring system is different?”

Him:  “What are you talking about?”

Me:  “Why couldn’t they have the writing section when I was in high school?  I would have fared so much better.  My whole life could have been different.”

Him:  “How many glasses of wine did you have?  Open the fucking envelope.”

And then.

I love that they are so aware of the bullshit tension they’ve created, they actually positioned the letter to open exactly as I photographed it above — leading with a big, dorky Congratulations.  Like I passed some character screen (we all know that would have been dicey at best) or a written exam. 

But whatever.  I’m in.  I’m #251 no more.

Let the summer begin!  As soon as I figure out how to make this stegosaurus cake.

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Spaghetti Western

I called my father last night for his birthday.  He’s not a big phone talker, so we had our usual 5-7 minute catch-up.  As we were wrapping up, I asked him about making plans for his annual visit to our house.  We both agreed that we’d aim for late August, and then he qualified it with this casual, throwaway detail:

“That should work, but I have to check and see when I might be helping my buddy do some digging for gold.”

Right. 

Of course. 

Because, why wouldn’t you have to check your gold digging schedule?

Here’s the thing.  My dad is a transplanted cowboy.  Without a lasso or a horse.  He’ s a guy from Brooklyn and New Jersey who, in his 30s, began a love affair with the State of Montana. It started with fly fishing trips.  Then hunting and skiing.  It was him and some other mid-life-crisis pals (remember the movie City Slickers?).  Then he brought my mom a few times (not really her thing).  After a few years, he knew the lay of the land well enough that it was just him and the locals on his return trips.  He sort of became an honorary citizen — Fake Cowboy in one part of his life, New York City General Contractor in another. 

This went on for the better part of two decades, with increasing frequency.  He made it clear that he’d retire there.  And, true to his word, off he went about eight years ago.  Now, he fishes some of the most beautiful and revered rivers whenever he wants.  He’s a licensed river guide, which means he’s now the local who brings the visiting City Slickers fly fishing.  He has come full circle. 

The last time I was there was about six years ago with P, and my father took us on a day trip out on the Madison River.  In my mind, a river is, well, a narrow little body of water.  But this — this — was majestic.  I’m no nature gal — I prefer sidewalks and cities — but it was abundantly clear why they call it Big Sky Country. 

He knew exactly where to spot the wildlife.  He knew all the best spots to catch the fish — depending on the direction of the wind.   He tried to teach us.  Let me tell you, fly fishing is incredibly difficult — and he made it look effortless.  I was watching him, standing alone, waist-high in the river, weaving that fishing line like a gorgeous ribbon in the air.  And I thought about how these were the same hands that parallel parked a truck in Manhattan every day. The same hands that pointedly made deal after deal to run a business that stayed in his family for many years. 

These hands had moved on to fishing.  And pointing at mountain lions.  And to driving open, gravel roads.

As I was thinking about this, out in the middle of the river, two guys float by on another boat, see my dad, and address him by name.  As if they expected just to see him there, ribbon and all.  We were a good 40 miles from his house.  The man is a fixture on the river. 

When he took us to Yellowstone, he knew every bend in the road, every fire-swept part of the park, every body of water — all of them had a story from his many visits there over the years. 

When he needed six arteries bypassed urgently about four years ago, he opted to do it in Montana.  I couldn’t understand, could not fathom, why he wouldn’t go to Denver or Seattle — somewhere close enough to travel safely and yet slightly more renowned for such a complex surgery.  Thinking back on it, I think he wanted to face any potential mortality issues right there, near the place he now calls home (he’s fine now, don’t worry). 

His life back here in New York and New Jersey is all but unrecognizable at this point — apart from his family, he no longer relates to it.  Yes, he misses The New York Post, the good Chinese food and having something other than Wal Mart open 24 hours.  But the pace, the lifestyle, the attitude and possibly the house pet (who may or may not be a now-domesticated bobcat of sorts) — he’s all Montana now.  Even if he looks more than a little like an Italian gangster out of central casting.

He golfs.  He takes part-time delivery jobs.  He tells you that the traffic on the Madison River moves faster than that on Madison Avenue.  And, apparently, he digs for gold. 

It’s funny.  I’ve never had a place like that in my soul — a place I visited and knew I had to live in at some point, had to make part of me.  I’ve lived my entire life in the Northeast, and most of it in the NYC vicinity.  I’ve traveled far and wide, and I’ve had places speak to me and loudly beg me to return.  But not to return permanently. 

I envy him in this respect — taking action to re-invent himself and lay new roots.  I swear, it has added years — if not decades — to  his life.  And, while I wish he lived closer and I wish my kids knew him better, I admire the loyalty he’s had to a place that has become so much a part of who he is.  It’s easy not to do what he did — we’re all busy getting through each day.  But for those people like him, who step back and say “I want to live my life somewhere else,” I tip my (non-cowboy) hat.

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Dial D for Desperate

 

Here’s something I may not have noticed if I hadn’t recently left my full-time job.  But you can’t get away from it around town.  It’s all the talk. 

The Annual Calls for The Town Pool Wait List.

Sadly, I’m not kidding.

There are wait lists for many things in my town.  At first, this made me feel right at home after years of living in Manhattan, where people have been known to call day care centers and secure a future spot for a child not yet conceived.  

But now this is sort of annoying here in suburbia.  Can’t there be plenty of room for all of us?

Right after we closed on our house last year, at the direction of our realtor, I promptly drove over to the Town Hall to put our name on two critical wait lists:  1) parking for the train (which I no longer need, but my husband does) and 2) membership for the town pool.

I asked the municipal employees which list I would succeed in climbing before my kids (remember, ages 3 and 1) went off to college.  They just laughed, but not in a “You’re so witty” way; it was more of a “Your guess is as good as mine” reaction.  It wasn’t encouraging. 

I have since been told that, for train parking, the average wait to get a spot in the “secondary” lot (read “highly undesirable and inconvenient”) is three years.  And then — then — maybe another year until you get to roll into Parking Nirvana every morning for the privilege of boarding NJ Transit. 

Then there’s the pool.

I knew we wouldn’t get in last summer because we got on the list too late, and I was OK with that.  I thought.  Then the temperatures soared.  Still, I figured I wasn’t missing too much — it’s just a pool, after all.

But then I noticed the military precision with which the playgrounds emptied on the weekends at the stroke of 11am — the time the pool opened.  I also started to get insider information.  Members told me all about the gorgeous renovations, the perfectly planned kid area and the  mindset of “I just couldn’t live without it all summer.” 

So I decided I needed to see this for myself.  A stake-out was in order.

I showed up one Sunday last August.  I brought the baby with me so that nobody thought I was just some pool stalker (which, of course, I totally was).  I really wasn’t even sure if they’d let me in “just to take a look.” 

But they did.  And it was sort of like the Gates of Heaven. 

Where I grew up, we didn’t have a town pool and I wasn’t expecting anything really nice — I figured it would be some kind of utilitarian-looking and dated facility with a distinct municipal decor.  Not so.  Everyone looked like they were on vacation.  At a nice resort.  That my tax dollars are subsidizing. 

This may be a slight exaggeration

I never should have gone there.  I wish I could un-see the whole thing my mind — because now I really want my damn spot.

As a natural progression, I decided to casually stalk the Recreation Office at the Town Hall to determine what, in fact, my spot was.  This strategy was met by laughter when I told my friends and neighbors.  They assured me that nobody gives out the list placement numbers.  There’s a Cone of Silence. 

Have you met me?  This wasn’t going to do.

At first, nothing.  No dice.  Nobody was talking.  It was like an Aquatics Witness Protection Program.

Then, finally, a crack in the foundation.  Either I got a newbie or someone who was experiencing a mid-afternoon sugar low that resulted in clouded judgement.  Whether she continues to be a government employee after the following breach of security remains unknown.  In fact, I don’t think she’s been heard from since.

“Uh, let’s see here.  Ah, yes, there you are.  Number 251.”

“251?  Are you kidding me?  Is that individuals or families?”

“Families.” 

Then I really pushed my luck.

“OK.  Well, what are my chances for 2011?  I mean, how many families did you turn over last year?”

“About 300, actually.”

“Seriously?  So there’s hope?”

“I’d say so.  Now I need to get going.”

I assume that her abrupt end to our chat meant that she had been discovered by the wiretaps and was about to be confronted for her inappropriate divulgence of information.  I hope that wherever she is, she’s OK.

But back to me.

251.

And here’s the really crappy part.  We were victims of a new system implemented last year.  In years past, there was one night a year when hopeful new members would line up at the Town Hall and it was first come, first served for a spot at the pool.  It became the stuff of legends.  Guys  — grown men with children — were out there at 1 or 2 in the morning with folding chairs, lining up for the 9am start time.  A woman I know told me her husband got there at 3am and still didn’t get a spot.  She told him not to come home.

The town has now put an end to this practice and instead instituted a straightforward, come-and-get-your-name-on-a-list-policy instead. 

See, we would have rocked the old model.  P and I, for better or worse, are well-trained tailgaters.  This gig was made for us.  Or him, I should say, because why should both of us suffer when he could go out there while I slept in our comfy bed cared for our children?  Anyway, he would have come home with a bright and shiny pool pass.

Not now. 

Now, I’m stuck at 251 and here’s how it works:  The current members have until April 15 to renew or forfeit their spot.  And then, the phone calls start going down the wait list for whatever space is left.  Always a student of process, I am dying to know if it’s one part-time senior citizen named Fran who makes 2-3 calls a day for weeks — or is it a well-oiled machine of filling that list in a day or two?  Basically, I want to know when I’m going to know.

Because, in the meantime, I’ve been thinking about what I can do to increase my odds.  In doing so, I’ve considered the key factors that would cause one to forfeit one’s spot. 

  • The kids moved away (and you now want to spend the cash on a cruise)
  • Moving out of town (to a utopia where everyone can use the damn pool and park at the train station; see “Europe”)
  • Boredom/Social Alienation (you have no friends at the pool, possibly from pissing everyone off when you lined up at midnight under the old model)
  • Financial windfall (“Fuck this, I’m putting in my own pool.”)
  • Forgetfulness
  • Financial hardship
  • Death

The last three require no further explanation.  And, to be clear, I don’t wish death, injury or poverty on anyone.  But let’s consider the folks in the “I forgot to renew category” for a moment.  This is the sweet spot, I think.  If I can mount a coordinated, covert campaign of distraction over the next few days around town, I can capitalize on the forgetful souls who still have not sent in their renewals. 

I’m considering the following:

  • Starting a rumor that the Bronx Zoo Cobra is on the loose once again, last seen in our town.
  • Implementing a “tax returns only” line at the Post Office to prevent pool checks from getting in the mail.
  • Talking loudly in public about the regrettable Caddyshack-like pool incident (“This time, it wasn’t a Baby Ruth”) last summer and the resulting sanitary concerns.

And you guys worried that I wouldn’t keep busy enough after leaving Corporate America.  As if.

I mean — if you haven’t gotten your check in yet, it must not be that important to you.  And, people, I need a place to hang out with my kids this summer.  Remember, I’m a woman without a country here.  I left my job.  I need adult interaction.  And town gossip. 

But I’m not buying my bathing suit just yet.  I have to wait by the phone first and see what happens once April 15 comes and goes.

I’ll keep you posted.  In the meantime, I’ll be at the Post Office.  You know, just hanging out.

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Day One

 

So.  I did it.  Friday was the big day and I walked out of my job — my career — for the forseeable future. 

And it was hard.

For all of the excitement that I had leading up to this change, it hit me like a ton of bricks around 4:30 pm that day.

I had been running on adrenaline up until that point.  On Thursday, all of the celebrations took place.  First, I had the office hours party (very civilized and sweet, complete with cupcakes), then an after-work happy hour (slightly less civilized, with cocktails flowing), and, finally, a dinner with some of my best work pals (decidedly less civilized, filed under Epic Fun).  When I arrived to my office for the last time Friday morning, despite said celebratory libation intake, I was still feeling great because of the excitement around my feature on Theta Mom.  It was all so lovely.  And so many of you stopped by to offer your amazing words of support, congratulations and — importantly —  advice and caution about this transition.  Thank you for that.

Ever the procrastinator, I had not packed up one stitch of my office until this point.  The point at which I harbored a hangover.  The point at which I was happily responding to the lovely ladies of the Theta Mom community.  The point at which this transition all became very real.

As I packed, I was able to lighten things up by sharing some of the office artifacts I unearthed with my colleagues over the course of the day.  Photos.  Old files(because nothing says nostalgia more than “Hey, remember this shitshow of a project?”).  Business cards from people I could no longer place. 

And my shoes.  Eight pairs of shoes.  Because I could never do that glamorous Manhattan commute in heels.  I left my good work shoes in a file drawer to wear during business hours, and went to and fro in far more comfortable and less attractive footwear.  Function over fashion, people. 

I also found what I affectionately called the technology time capsule. 

Why did I feel compelled to save not one, but two flip phones?  I’ll never know.  And the vintage Blackberry.  You know, pre-track ball — the one with the wheel.  The one I couldn’t talk or text on.

I held it together pretty well until late in the afternoon, when my original boss — the woman who hired me — came by to bid me farewell.  With a card and a gift.  Then I sort of lost it.

I bounced back just in time for another long-time colleague and friend to come over and say her goodbye.  Then another.  And another.  This was starting to sting.  This place, as much as I was ready to leave it, was still dear to me.  And it hit me that the next time I would be there, in whatever capacity — social or work-related — it would never be as I left it.  I would not be in the inner circle, in the know.  It would no longer be mine, but just a piece of my history.

And when I had packed the last shoe and purged the last outdated file, I was left with this.

I was feeling it then. 

I walked out for the last time with two of my work friends, went home sort of numb and pretty much went to bed.  Call me dramatic, but the week had taken a lot out of me. 

But I’m A-OK, don’t you worry!  You know why?  Because you SAHMs have been keeping secrets from me that I uncovered today.  You sneaky gals didn’t tell me that, after everyone goes to work, it becomes 80 degrees outside on a Monday in April here in New Jersey (for those of you unfamiliar with our climate, see “Endless Winter of 2010-2011”). 

Wait, what?  Just today we get the 80 degrees?  Oh.  OK.  Still.  I’ll take it.  It was a nice way to kick off my new gig. 

Overall, I have no major developments to report in Weekday Household Management — but I did learn a few things.  For example, from the desk of Captain Obvious, the whole town screeches to a halt when the schools are dismissed.  My kids are too young for real school, so I hadn’t thought about this.  But damn.  Driving around at 2:45 for a few errands is a mistake you don’t make twice.

Also, the Easter decorators are out in full force.  I think I need a door wreath, at a minimum, before I’m kicked out of town.  The woman up the street pulled out the big guns and has multi-colored faux Easter eggs, the size of an eight year-old, strewn about.  Where do you even buy these?  You know, if I wanted to.  See, this is the stuff I never noticed before.

But most importantly, I uncovered the afternoon route of my new BFF, pictured here.

And yeah, I’ll admit that I reached for my now non-existent work Blackberry more than a dozen times.  What was I missing — a meeting, a call, an email?  Nope.  For once, I wasn’t missing a thing.  But what can I say?  Old habits die hard.

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A Day of Yay

{photo: www.surfersvillage.com}

 

Big days and great days don’t always go hand in hand.  But today, they do.

A lot is happening this week.  Yesterday, I wrote about this being my last week of work and making the decision, after many years and countless conference calls, to stay at home with my kids.  So, in order to avoid the awkward sentimentality of goodbye workplace tears, I am procrastinating and packing up my office into boxes as you read this.  Hopefully, my fabulous brown heels will appear somewhere in the mess and make it home with me.  Along with my favorite pen — which magically makes my handwriting not resemble that of a serial killer.  Oh, and I need to find the Post It notes that say “You’re not the boss of me…Oh wait, yes you are.”

They can keep the rest.

And, at the risk of sounding like a Ginsu Knives infomercial…Wait, there’s more!

Today, in addition to packing in corporate life, I’m the Featured Blogger over at Theta Mom, which is a huge honor.

When I first started blogging about seven months ago, Theta Mom was one of the first sites I came across to find a fabulous cross-section of women writing about their lives.  It’s an amazing resource and community, and one where I continue to learn new tricks of the trade on a regular basis.  If you’ve never checked it out, please do – stat!

Heather, the Head Theta Mom, really tapped into something tremendously valuable and continues to evolve and build it every day.  I’m so grateful to her for the tools she has provided, and for featuring my blog today.  So, if you’re new here via Theta Mom, welcome!  And thanks so much for stopping by. 

That’s a lot of excitement for one day.  You can see how it’s like my birthday and Christmas, all at once.  And maybe Arbor Day too, because that has always been underappreciated.

So grab a coffee, a cocktail, a fizzy water (maybe even with lemon) – pick your poison – and toast a Day of Yay over in Fordeville.

And if you have any extra packing tape, send it my way.

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The End & The Beginning

{photo: www.teachone2one.com}

In the category of Life-Changing News, I have this for you:  Tomorrow is my last day of work.  

What some of my friends and family already know is that I recently decided to leave my job.  And I didn’t take another one — at least not one that pays. 

However, my new full-time responsibilities are pretty big, complete with two new bosses.  Here is their most recent management headshot.  

And, just like that, I’m out of full time Corporate America. 

I lie.  It’s not “just like that.”  I’m not crazy enough to do this on a whim.  This took a lot of consideration, mental wrestling, soul searching and, at times, wine.  Because, for almost 20 years, I have gotten up and gone to work every single day.  I had great jobs.  Some may even say I was pretty good at what I did.  And I thrived on my work.

For a long while, anyway.

After my son was born in 2007, I knew I was going back to work.  It wasn’t even a question in my mind.  And I sorted it out pretty well, overall.  There were many moments of stress, but the pros outweighed the cons of the whole balancing act.  I felt accomplished, both at home and in the office.

My daughter came along in 2009.  Things got harder to balance.  I’m not sure if it was a sheer incremental equation (two kids > one kid) but certainly other factors were at play.  My husband took a new job at that time and could not be around as much to help out.  I had been promoted, which was great, but also meant more responsibility.  Then we moved out of the city for more space, and that meant a longer commute — which resulted in seeing our kids even less. 

Hmmmm.

Gradually, things started to feel less rewarding and more like a situation hanging on by a thread.  But I had always done this – I had always made this work — so why wouldn’t I continue?  This is what I do.  This is who I am.

Or maybe it’s not anymore.  The voice of doubt started to slowly creep in.

There were increasing moments of questioning how my life was playing out.  I felt like I wasn’t doing any one thing exceedingly well anymore.  I felt like I was missing out too much at home.  I felt like the sense of reward and accomplishment from my career was no longer nearly as self-defining.

I waffled about this for a long time.  Waffling is exhausting, let me tell you.  It’s also not my strong suit.  And then, one day, I just stopped waffling and took a leap of faith.

Am I scared?  Yes.  Scared of losing that piece of myself from the professional world (can you really “always go back?”).  Scared of scaling back our income. But, most of all – and I hate to write this because it sounds horrible —  I’m scared, after being out of the house for 50+ hours each week, that I won’t be a good full-time mother. 

But, despite these things, I know in my heart it was the right decision. 

I don’t want to miss everything.  I don’t want my son to accidentally call me by the nanny’s name a couple of times a week.  I don’t want to feel like I’m about to have a stroke whenever trying to balance both sides of this equation. And to the many women who juggle this balancing act, I wholeheartedly salute you.  Likewise, to the women who stay home with their children, I am so utterly impressed by what you do.  I hope I can do it just as well.  Oh, and please say hi to me in Starbucks or at pre-school, even though I have always been that mother who was never around much during the week.  I swear, I was doing my best.

Just because it’s the right thing for me to leave, it doesn’t make it easy.  I’ve been working for a long time, but my current job is one where I really feel like I grew up and got a real career.  Where I learned amazing things from super-talented people. 

When I started there in 2004, there was a gaping hole in the Earth across the street at Ground Zero.  Today, progress takes its place.

Then, I had a boyfriend.  Today, that man is my husband and the father of our children.

Then, I lived in Manhattan and went out to dinner at 10pm.  Today, I gladly call the suburbs home and pass out on my couch at 10pm.

Then, I knew I was joining a fabulous company with a great group of people.  Today, I am proud to call many of them my very good friends who I will miss seeing every day.  Some of them, I will always, always know.

A lot has changed in those seven years, but maybe what has changed the most is me.

So, goodbye suits.  Goodbye, office. Goodbye (and good riddance), NJ Transit and PATH Train. Goodbye, Blackberry. 

Most of all, goodbye to that part of my identity.   The part I always thought played a big role in defining me, but no longer will.  The part for which I’m so grateful but I just don’t need as much anymore.

Hello to new adventures and to making up for lost time.

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False Advertising

I did a little costume change here on the site — what do you think?

I was ready for a new design and something more customizable.  Something more me.  I thought.  Until my husband pointed out the following, upon seeing the new look.

“It’s really nice, but it doesn’t reflect your writing style.”

“It’s muted and elegant — so what the hell are you talking ab–   Oh.”

{silence}

“See what I mean?”

“@@$%^^**&^@!$#!!”

“Don’t get me wrong.  I like it — it looks nice.”

“Whatever.  It’s going to have to represent irony or something.  Because an impatient and salty looking site is not going to be easy on the eyes.”

“Uh, OK.  Do you want red or white with dinner?”

***************************************************

I hate to say this — and I don’t often do it in writing, aka on permanent record — but he’s kind of right.  I guess my eyes go after things much prettier than my mouth expresses. 

Now it’s like false advertising.  Bait and switch.  A sucker punch.

New visitor:  “Oh, look at the pretty Fordeville site.  I bet she talks about good manners, sunshine and folding napkins into swans.”

{Crickets, followed by site exit}

So maybe it’s not entirely reflective of my writing, but that’s OK.  Too much me might be overkill.  And I love the makeover.  Hats off to Cynthia at NW Designs for sticking with me while I tortured her with questions about shades of blue, degrees of damask and social media plug-ins. 

I have some fun up my sleeve this week — so this was a good way to kick things off.  Hope you like the elegant and muted side of Fordeville as much as I do.

But no promises to make it seep over into my writing.  That will likely stay in the salty and impatient camp.

{Oh, and if you’re still seeing the old site for some reason, refresh your page.  If that doesn’t work, please tell me.  And then forget everything I just said in this post.}

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