The Parental Art of Speaking in Code

As my kids get older and increasingly pick up on everything I’m saying, it’s clear that I need to do a better job of speaking in code.  There are a few good reasons for this.

1)  I think it might minimize parent-child conflict.  

For example:  “Spinach” should be “green pudding.”  Or something equally enticing (suggestions welcome).

 

2)  It seems that, on occasion, my everyday vernacular could render me ineligible for Mother of the Year.  

Like when I’m driving:  “That dipshit moron driver in front of me” should be “that nice man who really should just take the bus.”

Or when I’ve had enough of someone:  “That crazy-ass judgmental psycho who won’t mind her own business about where we’re going to pre-school next year should be “that curious mommy who sure does ask a whole lot of  questions.”

 

3)  Then there’s Disney World.  P and I are probably going to take the kids there in March, but it’s not firmed up yet.  As we get the planning underway (I know, I’m behind), I have to stop openly invoking the WDW name in front of the kids.  From across the house, they hear a mention of Disney World, their ears perk up and they come running in, at the speed of light, with a series of questions you might expect:

“Are we going to Disney World?”  Maybe.

“Are we going today?”  No, not today.

“Tomorrow?”  No, not tomorrow.  Mommy and Daddy have to pull up a vast spreadsheet comparing the dizzying amount of WDW cryptic pricing information designed to cause seizures.  We can’t just go in there without a position on whether or not to do the Park Hopper Pass and the meal plan — are you insane?

“How many days until we go?”  Uh, I didn’t say we were going.  But if we do go, it might be in March.  Maybe.  Do you want some green pudding?

“Can we count the days until March?”  Do you want chocolate cake?  For breakfast?

See how this isn’t working?  I need some code words for WDW so two small heads don’t explode with vacation questions for the next month and a half.  I’m  considering the following alternatives as the planning process continues:

“We’ll need to pull out our summer clothes from the attic to pack for our trip to Disney the working farm co-op.”

“How long is the drive from my mom’s place to Disney the Amish Loom Museum?”

“Is it just me, or does the pricing for Disney Restoration Hardware resemble that of an additional mortgage?”

“Is dressing like a princess really happening with two year-olds at Disney the glue factory tour?”

 

Pretty smooth, right?  I think this approach will totally fool them.  As long as they don’t like the idea of vacationing at the working farm co-op, where green pudding is readily available.

Now I just have to stop saying “Florida.”   And “vacation.”  And “I don’t know if we need the damn silly Park Hopper Pass or not.” {We do, right?}

 

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Checking In

It’s funny how my social media addictions document my life.  Between the blog, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram (those fun photos on my home page) and Pinterest, there’s a lot that I put out there about myself.

And then there’s FourSquare.  All this business of checking in somewhere.  I’ve been FourSquaring for about a year and a half.  It’s way more fun when I’m in the city for something or when I’m traveling.  Who doesn’t love being the mayor of an airport terminal, even for a fleeting three minutes?  And that Starbucks mayorship?  I worked super hard for that.  Until I was ousted under the scandalous cloud of Keurig ownership.  Now some dude named AJ took my spot.  But, don’t you worry, I have my eye on him and am secretly mounting a Shock-and-Awe-style Starbucks comeback.

But, day-to-day, FourSquare basically confirms how very lame predictable I am.  In fact, as I looked at the stats, I realized it might be a little depressing.

Case in point:  My top places on FourSquare over the last six months are Starbucks (89 visits), Pure Barre (my crazy workout — 49 visits), the Y (more workouts — 16 visits), Trader Joe’s (16 visits) and a pub up the street  (9 visits, and counting — maybe 12 by the time you read this, depending on how the long weekend goes).

Hm.

Let’s dig a little deeper.

 

So, basically, my life can be reduced to the following cycle:

–Consume food and drinks.  Perhaps in excess.

–Attempt to burn resulting calories.

–Douse body with caffeine to keep going.

–Get dragged to Home Depot for endless basement renovation issues.

–Address Home Depot PTSD via retail therapy.

–{And possibly forget to check FourSquare friend requests — just noticed that.}

 

To boost my FourSquare points — and my lame factor — I could check in at other places I frequent and snag some easy mayorships.  Like the grocery store.  My car.  Pre-school.  The laundromat.  And the hole formerly known as my basement, where I stare at the future site of my laundry reunion — there’s no line of FourSquare rivals competing with me to hang out there.

But I don’t really think this is the purpose of social media.  You don’t need to know when I’m buying diapers or screaming at my contractor.  Just assume that both happen frequently.

Thanks, FourSquare.  As uplifting as this has been, I’m starting to think it’s time for me to check out.  Right after I drink coffee, eat something, work out, pour a glass of wine, eat more and then look at cabinet pulls at Home Depot.  While eating and holding a Starbucks latte.

But you already knew that.

 

 

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A Battle of Wills

You know what’s fun?  Arguing while you’re driving.

Now, I’m used to my kids bickering with each other or with me while I’m invariably driving them somewhere.  It’s not a picnic but it’s just part of the gig.

But the time I spent today fighting with a GPS system was beyond my limits.

I was off to a friend’s baby shower in Brooklyn.  Not a very long drive, mileage-wise.  And I’m very comfortable driving in the city.  But I hadn’t been to her particular neck of the woods before and needed some specific directions.

If only there was a device for such a thing.

Normally, I’d drive my car and use OnStar.  But today I took my husband’s car.  Because it’s 1) older (we’ll care less if I dent it while parallel parking) and 2) smaller and easier to maneuver (I may or may not get my urban road rage on when I cross the New York state line).

But.  His car has no navigation system.  Except for the old portable Garmin.  But hey, I figured, its job is to give directions.

Or not.

Its job, apparently, is to get all passive aggressive and argue with me.

It’s evident that the GPS has a preferred route in its head.  What’s not clear is how this preferred route is established as the front-runner.  But my guess is that it’s the closest way by how the crow flies.  It certainly doesn’t account for likelihood of traffic.  Or the use of major highways above side roads.  Or logic in general.

Fine.  She has her route and I have mine.  But once I deviate from her route, why can’t she accept the socially mandated terms of the client-vendor relationship?  Wherein, I paid for this thing — I’m the client.  I want to go a different route — do your job and stop trying to put me back on your road.

It was like an escalating battle of wills.

“In .5 miles, turn right onto Garden State Parkway.”

“The Garden State Parkway?  Is she actually trying to steer me toward the Holland Tunnel?  No, I’m going through Staten Island.”

I skip her turn.

She huffs.  “Recalculating.  In 2.2 miles, turn right toward the Garden State Parkway.”

“Not doing it.  I’ve made this mistake before.  I’ll sit for an hour out of the tunnel.”

I persist and skip her turn again.  It’s at this point, I feel that — absent my gross miscalculation of heading toward Canada — she should take the hint and give me the directions to the other route.  The better route.

The huffing seems to escalate.  It’s like she’s whining and growing impatient, as if she has somewhere else to be.  Or someone else to misdirect.  “Recalculating.  In 5 miles, turn right toward the Garden State Parkway.”

“Ohmygod, woman.  Seriously?  How did you even get this job?”

Now my two year-old chimes in from the back seat:  “Mommy.  I think she wants you to turn right.”

“Yeah, well, she has no idea that if we take the Holland Tunnel, we will be stuck on Canal Street until your third birthday.”  I then mumble something about this dipshit having no concept of traffic suicide.

“Oh.  Can we hear This Old Man on the CD?”

“We just listened to it 17 times, honey.”

“Again, please — This Old Man,” she pleads.

And then more huffing from the Garmin:  “Recalculating.”  I was pretty convinced, at this point, she was going to try to drive me off the Verrazano Bridge out of spite.

Between the toddler songs and the estrogen navigation standoff, I was never so happy to get to a baby shower in my life.

Until I had to go home.  My bitchy nemesis was waiting for me in the car.  She learned nothing while I was at the party.

Next time, I follow the direction of the sun.

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Holiday Shopping Tangents, Volume I

Good news:  I’ve decided to start my holiday shopping early this year.

Bad news:  I not motivated and, therefore, am easily distracted.  As you’re about to see.

* * *

So.  A few days ago, 17 catalogs — really, 17 — arrived in my mailbox in the hopes of getting my holiday attention and dollars.  Most of them were from places I never shopped at before.  Or even heard of, in some cases (what the hell is a Pajama Gram, anyway?).  But there was the trusty Pottery Barn Kids catalog, just begging me to overpay for something for my kids.

So I had a quick look.  And that’s when my level of distraction increased.

It started on page 78, when I noticed the Gourmet Kitchen Collection, pictured here.

{Image Source: Pottery Barn Kids}

Keep in mind that I’m a woman who is allegedly getting a new basement sometime before 2017, so I have spent a lot of time recently looking at cabinetry, appliances, tile and more.  I notice these things.  But I didn’t expect to notice — no, envy — them on a fake kitchen.  For toddlers.

But it’s true.  I found myself mentally complimenting the features of this PBK kitchen.

Here.  Read on for yourselves.  The official product description:

“Gourmet Kitchen:  We’ve given each piece of our compact kitchen interactive elements that encourage creative play in preschool age kids.  You’ll find knobs that spin, a pull-out dishwasher drawer, spinning temperature dials, a soap pump that goes up and down, and an ice machine with four wood ice cubes.”

Niiiice.

I admired its updated features and layout, blocking out the fact that this was for pretend cooking.

And then, it hit me.  This kitchen was bigger and nicer than the one in my first Manhattan apartment.  

 

See?  That’s the kitchen in question.  You can’t see the sides because, well, there was no room stand inside of said room while taking photos of those angles.  There was a small, non-standard sized refrigerator and dishwasher.  Small.  But, unlike the PBK model, I did not have an ice maker.  Or dials that spun reliably.  Or a built-in soap pump.

Hmmm.  Could it be that the PBK toddler set had access to better appointed household items than, say, adult urban dwellers on a fixed budget?

I was on to something, I thought.  And then it was confirmed on page 116.

Behold:  The Cottage Loft Bed.

{Image Source: Pottery Barn Kids}

Areyoufuckingkiddingme?

“…our  magical loft bed has French white paneled siding, French green shutters, decorative window boxes and an attic window.  Inside you’ll find plenty of room for an activity table, play kitchen and toys…”

I had to refill my wine.

Let’s go back to my studio apartment in Manhattan circa 2002, shall we?  No French white paneled siding.  No French green shutters.  No French anything, except a very stinky and creepy dude in his 60s who lived on my floor and occasionally stole my mail.  And we’ve covered the kitchen.

My apartment had plenty of room for — well, let’s see — not much at all.  A bed, a desk, a love seat, a table and a bookcase.  After walking up four floors.  Past the stinky/creepy French dude’s apartment.

So, it’s official:  The PBK Cottage Loft Bed is both nicer and bigger than the entire home I had as a grown adult on my own.

Sad but true.

I feel it’s my duty now to impart some wisdom to young city people with modest budgets:  Find yourselves a spoiled niece or nephew and move into their fucking pimped-out PBK playroom.  Because it will be so much more comfortable than your crappy studio.  And — hey — they can make you a killer vinaigrette reduction sauce while admiring their pre-school reflections in the stainless steel appliances.

Yes, say goodbye to that nasty, overpriced apartment and live large in the playroom.  Do it.  Now.  I know, the local social scene may not be exactly what you’re looking for, but I have no doubt that the next PBK catalog is going to have an amazing play mini bar for your comfort and convenience.

Now, back to my holiday shopping.

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Making Friends With Math

Two things that have never mixed well:  Math and me.

It started with Mrs. DeBlock’s eighth grade Algebra class.  Up until that point in my life, I was always a great student without putting forth any effort.  Then my brain collided with Algebra.  It was the first time I could not understand something being taught in the classroom.  This was a totally foreign feeling.  And I hated it.  Unfortunately, my disdain and fear of math never really went away.  My years of college prep classes included torturous runs in Geometry, Trigonometry and Statistics — I hated each one more than the last.  My mind, it seemed, was not cut out for math.  I convinced myself that was OK — I wouldn’t really need it.  My life’s work would be word and language-driven.

And it has been.  But, still.  Even as an adult, I can’t escape math.  My inadequacy has always haunted me and leaves me easily intimidated at times.  In business settings, going through necessary financial discussions and equations — I always felt like I wasn’t on top of my game.  And forget about it when I have to someday help my kids with their Algebra or Trig.

The point is, I needed math to be my friend more than I ever thought.  And, like many other things, I’m determined not to pass this deficiency or fear on to my kids.

So I was intrigued last week when I was invited to attend a press preview for the new Math Midway exhibit at the Liberty Science Center in Jersey City.  I took my two year-old (figuring she and I have the same math acumen) and went to check it out.

I was really happy to see the approach this exhibit took with math — which was both highly interactive and rooted in real-world examples that kids of all ages could relate to.

The best part?  The kids don’t really realize they are dealing with math in most of the activities.  Like here.

Do you think she knows she’s creating a tessellation of monkeys?  Nah.  {Neither did I, FYI.} To her, it’s just fun magnets that fit together in a pattern.

Or here.

I can assure you that she doesn’t realize there were 11 steps to creating a Tetraxis with these mats.

I think she was somewhere around step three.  But owning it.

Or here.

Bending mirrors at various angles create different images.  Hey — I like any math that makes my legs look four times longer.  Where was that in high school?

And, my personal, way-over-our-heads favorite.  You start with this.

 

Crank it through the machine with your favorite math attributes.  Cube it, square it — you decide.

It was about here that my anxiety flashbacks started to kick in.  And then we got this.

Obviously.

* * *

One of the exhibit coordinators put it best:  “Math is the science of why.”  And if your kids ask “Why?” half as much as mine do, then the reason to get them into math at a young age is pretty compelling.  That, and they should avoid my math fear hangover at all costs.

So, thanks, Liberty Science Center, for showing this old gal how math can be a friend after all.

 

{I was not compensated for this post.  I received complimentary admission to the exhibit for the purposes of a review.  All opinions, as you would expect, are entirely my own.}

 

 

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The Better Bermuda Triangle

 

Hey, is this thing on?  It seems more time went by than I had realized since my last post.

That’s what happens when you get stuck in The Bermuda Triangle.

“The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil’s Triangle, is a region in the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean where a number of aircraft and surface vessels allegedly disappeared under mysterious circumstances.” {source: Wikipedia}

That’s the traditional, widely-accepted definition.  Or you can use this one:

“The Bermuda Triangle, also known as Getaway Paradise, is a region in the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean where sleep-deprived adults vacationing without their children disappear somewhere between three distinct points:  Drinks, Spa and Reading.” {source:  Fordeville}

 

Regrettably, I’ve returned.  Re-entry to reality was tough.

Where is my drink on the beach that shows up from a mere wave of the hand?

Where is my daily massage?

And, why, for the love of all that is holy, does my room key not work as a form of payment in the real world?  I’ve tried.  Nobody will take it.  This sucks.

But I’m happy to report that My Bermuda Triangle was downright dreamy.  Truly.  For starters, I totally dodged the falling satellite debris.  Add in my husband, great friends, gorgeous weather and you really can’t go wrong.  It’s amazing what you can do in a day with no agenda.  Sleep in.  Eat room service for breakfast, with an ocean view.  Run on a treadmill without a child hanging off your leg.  Get pampered at the spa.  Read magazines to your heart’s content.  Have drinks delivered on the beach.  Repeat.

Now.  Since there has been much trepidation and fear about The Bermuda Triangle over the years, I’m here to tell you that my version — The Better Bermuda Triangle — is worth demystifying.  Here’s a quick look at each point.

Drinks:  This may have been the most stressful decision I had to make over the course of the trip.  Repeatedly, of course.  Because, sometimes, it takes a while to get your tropical palate back.  For me?  It was a combination of wine, pina coladas, and, by night, the ever-fabulous espresso martini. Because a potently smooth cocktail + delicious caffeine boost = my personal version of heaven.  Which may not surprise you.  And this cocktail is an ongoing tradition in Fordeville, particularly with our friends who joined us on this trip.  Try it one day — any season — you’ll thank me.

Spa:  I think I can sum it up by quoting my massage therapist:  “Uh.  You need a lot of work.  What are you carrying around all the time?”  Sort of a loaded question, I thought — but I assumed she didn’t want me to turn this into a psych session.  Two massages later with Let — who was a 95 lb, Asian female version of Chuck Norris in terms of ass-kicking — and my back feels like a million bucks.  Which is almost what it cost me to procure her services.  And with my spine newly intact, I was able to take on arduous tasks like sitting upright for a sunset cruise.

Reading:  I’m happy to report that my vacation allowed me to get fully up to speed on important global issues.  Like the Kardashian wedding.  And the top picks for the fall TV line-up.  Once my mind was sufficiently challenged by these pressing matters, I made the questionable decision to tackle my backlog of home/life/parenting magazines.  Feeling a false sense of DIY confidence that was surely fueled by my twelfth-teenth pina colada, I dog-eared the ridiculous:

  • How to make realistic Halloween bats to hang from my front porch (screw you, Martha).
  • How to organize that junk drawer “once and for all” (further underscoring my ongoing love/hate relationship withReal Simple).
  • And, of course, how to stop those toddler temper tantrums before they start (Parenting).
  • Not to mention the countless overly-ambitious recipes that I’ll never really cook, despite their promises to make my life easier.

Because, under the harsh and sober light of New Jersey, without the reflection of the Atlantic Ocean bouncing off the pages, I can see that I’ve probably set myself up for failure.  That’s OK.  I’ve been looking to increase my recycling contributions — so perhaps we’ll just forget all about those magazine-driven ambitions and literally kick them to the curb.

 

That said, everything wasn’t all palm trees and sunshine.  I did have to contend with some mishaps.  There was, after all, a total wi-fi failure at the resort.  As in, I had no connectivity for 24 hours.  You may think that’s the very definition of vacation.  Not me.  I get all twitchy if I have to completely unplug.  And how the hell was I supposed to track the falling satellite debris without an Internet connection?  How was I to tweet enviable photos of my beach views?

So there was that.  And also this.

In a rare moment of connectivity, I pulled up my Starbucks app.  You know, just out of curiosity.  And this crazy message appeared that I’ve never seen before.  What do you mean, no stores were found in my area?  You’re Starbucks.  I’m on Earth.  How is this possible?

Thankfully, this crisis was fixed by the swift delivery of an espresso martini.  You use what coping skills you have, right?  Now I know what it’s like to be on Survivor.

Those were the only tragedies of the trip.  So I’d say we fared well, on the whole.  And nobody threw up — setting a new Fordeville record.

* * *

I hope you can now see that The Bermuda Triangle doesn’t have to be a scary place.  I’m glad I was able to take this trip as a public service — so that millions of prospective travelers know not to fear this much-maligned region.

Take it from me.  You’ll be fine.  Just be careful re-assimilating to reality — take baby steps.

Now I’m off to see if I can use my room key at the pub down the street.


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1 in 3,200

In 48 hours, I will be landing in Bermuda for a lovely three-night getaway.  No kids.  Just my husband, me and some very close friends.

There will be a lot of relaxation.  And wine.

Am I excited?  Not just yet.  The truth is that I have to wonder if the trip will actually happen.

Because, let’s be honest, the residents of Fordeville have not had the best luck recently with the Travel Gods.  Lest we forget (I know I never will) — in July and August alone, someone in our family vomited in every state along the Eastern Seaboard from Rhode Island to North Carolina.

So far, I have seen no signs of stomach issues in the house to thwart our travels.  And, to be safe, I’ve made the executive decision that nobody is having any ground turkey in the next two days, as the recall continues.  Sorry, Taco Night — you’re on hiatus for now.

Next, I feared that a post-Irene September might bring more hurricanes and tropical storms — and that surely one would end up squarely at our resort.  Mercifully, that appears to be a non-issue.  The forecast looks dreamy.

So.  Dare I say, I have finally begun to allow myself to relax and look forward to this trip — which will be a nice break from the basement renovation chaos and just life in general.  I even began to browse the spa brochure — because that’s something I won’t be missing.

But then, I noticed something on the news.  Just a funny little headline about a satellite barreling towards Earth.

Seriously? That sucker is going to fall to the Earth in a fiery ball?

Sometime “between Thursday and Saturday.”

Somewhere “between Canada and South America.”

Somewhere “more than very likely over the ocean.”

Yeah.

Somewhere on my head, methinks.  In Bermuda.

The odds are 1 in 3,200 that someone will “suffer an injury from the debris.”

I mean, call me a skeptic but I think the chances of an “injury” from the debris are more like slim to none.  Unless by “injury” they actually mean “certain fiery death.”  Because you’re not going to get a little flesh wound from something falling on you from space.

Also, 1 in 3,200 wasn’t particularly comforting to me.  Especially after seeing this table of one’s odds of death by various means {source:  www.livescience.com}.

 

Cause of Death Lifetime Odds
Heart Disease 1-in-5
Cancer 1-in-7
Stroke 1-in-23
Accidental Injury 1-in-36
Motor Vehicle Accident 1-in-100
Intentional Self-harm (suicide) 1-in-121
Falling Down 1-in-246
Assault by Firearm 1-in-325
Fire or Smoke 1-in-1,116
Natural Forces (heat, cold, storms, quakes, etc.) 1-in-3,357
Electrocution 1-in-5,000
Drowning 1-in-8,942
Air Travel Accident 1-in-20,000
Flood (included also in Natural Forces above) 1-in-30,000
Legal Execution 1-in-58,618
Tornado (included also in Natural Forces above) 1-in-60,000
Lightning Strike (included also in Natural Forces above) 1-in-83,930
Snake, Bee or other Venomous Bite or Sting 1-in-100,000
Earthquake (included also in Natural Forces above) 1-in-131,890
Dog Attack 1-in-147,717
Asteroid Impact 1-in-200,000
Tsunami 1-in-500,000
Fireworks Discharge 1-in-615,488

Am I a one-woman party, or what?

And can we refer to some of the examples in bold type for a second?  So NASA is telling me that the falling fireball of satellite debris is more likely to kill me than electrocution, or a snake/bee/other venomous bite/sting?  Seriously?  I mean, science is not a strength of mine, but I have to wonder if NASA might consider a different approach to satellite re-entry in the future, other than The Cosmic Crapshoot.

{Also, just for kicks, I find it odd that there’s a likelihood of death associated with legal execution.  I’m no statistician, but I would think one could significantly lower one’s odds by not committing a crime worthy of Death Row.}

Just when I started to raise an eyebrow toward outer space, I then came across this headline:

FEMA Ready With “Just in Case” Scenarios For Satellite Crash {source: CBS News}

Which sounds an awful lot to me like “Brace yourselves.  Especially people and tourists of Bermuda.”

So, while all of you take solace in the prevailing theory that this thing will make impact in the ocean — picture me sitting on a lovely beach, drink in hand, thumbing through the spa brochure again.  And looking upwards with a  nervous eye.

Come on Travel Gods — throw me a bone this time.  Spare my family from any vomiting, natural disaster and falling satellite debris.  Thanks a million.

 

 

 

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Remembrance

Everyone says “Never forget.”

It’s impossible to forget what I heard and saw and felt that September morning, when I lived and worked in Manhattan.  I’ve never written it down before.  But I know what I remember, though some of it has gaps in between, and the sequence may not be intact.  Some parts are crystal clear and others inexplicably muddled.  But I know what I remember.

I remember the sky — the clearest, bluest morning sky.  It was gorgeous and warm, but also crisp — one of those first mornings each year when you realize that soon it won’t feel like summer anymore.

I remember watching The Today Show and getting ready for work.  Just like every morning.  On that day, P was with me — we were just dating back then — and we were watching a segment about a Howard Hughes biography.  It was interrupted to tell us a plane had hit the WTC.  We thought it was a small plane.  We thought it was an unfortunate accident.  And we thought it was incredibly odd that one couldn’t avoid hitting a building that prominent on such a clear morning.  But, strangely, we didn’t think much more about it.

I remember the second tower being hit.  We were still in my apartment, about to leave for work (we worked in the same office).  And, for some reason that I can’t explain, P and I — still not realizing the enormity of what was happening — got on the subway to head to midtown for work.  It seems ridiculous now, but we didn’t know what else to do.  We’d later find out that we were among the last folks on the subway before the system was shut down.

I remember people on the subway talking about it.  Some had boarded the train before anything had happened, and had no idea.  Others, like us, knew about both WTC hits.  There still wasn’t much panic.  I think, because, again, there wasn’t yet a full grasp of what was happening.

I remember arriving to my office building and hearing that, while I was underground on the subway, the Pentagon had been hit.  I then saw on the lobby’s television the downfall of the first tower.

I remember thinking how sad it was that there would only be one left.  There would only be one tower left. It’s strange how your brain works in the midst of disaster.  I don’t know why it didn’t occur to me that the other would also fall.  I went up 40 floors in the elevator to my office.  Again, because I didn’t know what else I was supposed to do.   And I didn’t know what was next.  I wanted to be around the people I knew.  Around my routine.

I remember the hysteria really building in my office when the second tower fell.  And when there were reports of Flight 93 off the radar.  It was unclear how many more planes would come down.  Or what else would happen.  People were coming undone.

I remember the phone lines going dead in our building.  And the cell phone networks quickly getting overloaded.

I remember a senior leader in our company, with tears streaming down her face, gathering all of us together and telling us to go.  Anywhere.

I remember walking with colleagues through Central Park because we felt we should stay away from tall buildings.  We gathered around a parked car to listen to its radio — hundreds of us, standing around this guy’s car.  Moving but paralyzed.  Streets began to close to make room for the steady stream of police and ambulances, sirens blazing, speeding downtown.  One after the other.

I remember sitting in my friend’s apartment watching the coverage all afternoon.  Because we all felt my building was too tall, too exposed.

I remember the ongoing spotty cell phone coverage.  Trying to reach my parents, my sisters, my friends.  And the people I knew were downtown.

I remember feeling both trapped in Manhattan and not wanting to leave my beloved city.

I remember people everywhere in the streets.  The images of the doctors lined up at hospitals, waiting to treat the rescued.  Who never came.

It was the longest day I’d ever known.  And when it was over, we awoke to a different world that wouldn’t begin to feel normal again for so, so long.

One where quiet replaced the hum of the city.  When I went back to work some days later, there were no working phones for quite a while.  There were no planes flying over my 40th floor office.  Just silence — except for patrolling military aircraft.

One where, for weeks, months and years later, every conversation in New York started with “Where were you?”

One where I received an email about a month later, asking people in midtown — anyone — to stop by St Patrick’s Cathedral as often as they could.  Because each day, there was at least one funeral for a fallen firefighter.  The bagpipes echoed through the streets every afternoon.

One where the “Missing” fliers draped walls and fences downtown.  Most of them in vain.

One where I no longer had a southern compass on that island.

One where we read the “Portraits of Grief” section in the New York Times for months, and often realized we knew some of these people through mutual friends.

One where we couldn’t quite see straight for a long, long time. Where we took a deep breath for months going through tunnels in and out of the city, and certainly getting on planes.

One where, every year, right after Labor Day, there is an odd space between summer’s end and the 9/11 anniversary.

***

Though I was in Manhattan and close to the attacks in many respects, I know that I was worlds away compared to those downtown.  Their reality and their memories are ones I can’t imagine holding onto.

I was incredibly fortunate not to lose anyone I knew personally that day.  For the many others who can’t say the same, I hold them in my heart.

I was physically unharmed on 9/11. But my soul was irreversibly scarred.  And a city that I will always call home was forever changed.

 

{photo credit: Bob DeAmbra}

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We’ll Just Stay Here

MEMO

Date: August 7, 2011

To: Travel Gods

CC: Karma Masters

From: Fordeville Vacation Planning Headquarters

Subject: Vacation Illnesses

 

I’d like to take this opportunity to inquire about the apparent Fordeville Vacation Vomit Policy that has been implemented without my knowledge.  As a key planner in all Fordeville vacation destinations, timing and itineraries, I would very much appreciate a copy of this policy so that I can prepare accordingly.

You see, at first I thought it was a fluke when my daughter came down with a stomach bug during our drive to North Carolina last month.  But after the events of this past weekend, I began to take a good look at things and feel an explanation is in order.

It started Thursday afternoon, the day before we were to depart for a much-anticipated weekend trip with good friends.  Not only were we looking forward to everything about this — the resort, the time with friends, the ocean — but I also found it to be an excellent distraction from missing the BlogHer conference out in San Diego.

Anyway, Thursday afternoon, my daughter — the same child who puked her way to North Carolina a mere month ago and who, I swear, had not been sick for a year prior to that point — had a definite fever  and stomach issue on Thursday.

And Friday morning.

By lunchtime, she seemed decidedly better, so we pressed our luck and got in the car.  Yes, that was a little risky.  But by the time we finished cursing out the I-95 North corridor and arrived in Rhode Island, she seemed totally fine.  All was well.  There were clambakes to attend.  And spa appointments to savor.  And cocktails aplenty to consume.  And unmatched ocean views to take in.

Life was good.  We had dodged a bullet.  So we naively thought.

Until Saturday morning.  When my husband could not get out of bed.  Could not.  All day.  All evening.  Not until Sunday.

In between keeping my kids occupied/out of the room all day and wondering if we should get the man a doctor, I started to get visits from the Ghost of Fordeville Vacations Past.

First, the time we went to Turks & Caicos a few years ago.  Our son, then age 1, and me, then four months pregnant, came down with food poisoning.  Oh yes, those calls to my OB back home about potential Caribbean hospitalization were great.

Then, memories of another trip to the Caribbean, when just P and I went on our own about a year before.  That had been our first getaway since our son was born.  And we spent it with my husband sick in bed.

Then North Carolina.

Now this.

The poor guy.  He was. So. Sick.  It’s a good thing we had a beautiful room, because it’s the only thing he saw for 24 hours.

Are you thinking what I was thinking?  Could the spin of the Salmonella Roulette Wheel on Taco Night have been his downfall?  Or was it the bug my daughter had?  Or a rogue mussel from the clam bake?  I don’t know.  My money is on option #3 right now but it doesn’t really matter.  Well, it will matter if the rest of us get sick.

But here’s the point.

You may not believe this, but we rarely get sick.  At least not at home.  So this is getting sort of bananas.

I’m starting to think it’s karma.  For all the times I cut class in high school.  For cursing like a sailor on a regular basis.  For being snotty about the suburbs when I lived in the city.  Yeah, I think it’s small-scale karma.

Or a family allergy to leaving the tri-state area.

I can’t even speak out loud about the travel plans P and I have in September.  I can’t.  Because then I’ll get Bubonic Plague.

So, until I get a copy of the policy — including the cause, timeline and potential remediation — we’ll just stay here.

 

 

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Carolina In My Mind

The residents of Fordeville are back from the Outer Banks.  And, I’m happy to report, the Roadtrip and Vomit Gods were much better to us on the way home than on the drive down.  Thankfully.  Otherwise I might be living in a motel somewhere along I-95 right now. 

It will take a while — say, seven or eight years — before the I-95 Vomitfest leaves my memory.  So you’ll forgive me if I tend to mention it now and then as part of the related Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. 

But.

Once we were there, the place was beautiful and the vacation was really nice.

Mainly because of the ocean view, which was abundant and beautiful.  We were never more than a window’s peek away from the water.  Which I find so peaceful.

Yes, I just said peaceful in reference to a place that housed six kids, four adults and two dogs for a week.

Because from any point inside, you could see this.

And then there were the decks.  Plural.  Which I loved.  And which also served some very special purposes.

Like man and dog reading hour.  I think the book in question involved the history of bacon.

Like critical business tasks.  Obviously.

Like cousins standing guard.  Probably over the Chips Ahoy stash.

Like watching the moon rise over the ocean every night.  {See also: “The blender held up beautifully” and “We recycled enough cans and bottles to generate power for a small country.”}

And when we weren’t on the deck, we were faced with the difficult burden of choosing between the beach and the pool for the day.  I know, I know — but someone has to do it.

The North Carolina beach was beautiful.  And the water was warm — something you don’t find in the Northeast.  Unless you inadvertently swim through some medical waste.  Or some pee.

But the sun was incredibly strong, and made the sand way too hot to really walk on.  Which blew any plans I had for sandcastles, or for jogging barefoot in a bikini.  {To be clear, the existence of the latter plan was slim to none, with slim leaving town fast.}

And so, the water, sand and sun really wore the kids out.  Score.

Back at the pool, life couldn’t get much better. 

It really was taxing, all of this pool and beach and nightime cocktailing ocean moon watching.  We really needed a break.  If only we could find something cold and delicious to eat nearby.

Doesn’t Jerry look cute these days?

Anyway.  It really was a very low-key, low maintenance type of week.  You know, apart from the ride down.  {Sorry, I mentioned it again.  PTSD, I tell you.}

And I would be remiss if I didn’t mention The Christmas Miracle in July.  Something that happens only a handful of times every few decades. 

A. Family. Photo. Where. Everyone. Is. Looking. At. The. Camera.

Crazy, right?  Whatever we did, you can be sure it can never be replicated.  Pure vacation magic.

And speaking of magic, we made it home without incident. 

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