Archive for April, 2012

April 20, 2012

the beauty-thing, part 1

by maria polonchek

Oy. Talk about White People Problems. Beautiful women complaining about how beautiful they are? Actresses, who have chosen to put themselves in the public eye, complaining that the public isn’t always nice? Two healthy, educated women with healthy, chubby girls spending time trying to make sense of it all? Isn’t there a major humanitarian crisis occurring RIGHT NOW that we should be focused on instead?

But that’s not what I really think.

It’s some sort of automatic reflex for me to acknowledge that many of the issues I explore through writing are superficial, in the Grand Scheme of Things. I understand that in The Grand Scheme, I live a privileged life: not many people in the history of the universe realize their full potential by being anti-depressant-taking bloggers who get overwhelmed just by going to a grocery store. Bloggers in the Dark Ages didn’t even have grocery stores.

But all that being said, I’m going to explore this issue. Because I can and I have lots to say.

Kate, as you indicated in your post on our impossible standards for beauty, the judgment a woman faces if she dares attempt to meet those standards,  and how Evie’s chubbiness fits in, it’s pretty impossible to think about your daughter’s self-image without thinking about your own. It’s hard to articulate all the ways having kids changes your life, right? Some are for the better, some are for the worse. Some are just sticky and tangled, the way our lives become once we have tiny beings in our care. That’s part of why this subject is so complicated.

It’s also complicated because we’re talking about Beauty here. It’s like saying we’re gonna do a quick blog post about Love or God.

But, oh yeah. We do that, too.

I remember specifically how this topic came into the forefront for me. Shortly after having Sola, Chris sent me this article, by Lisa Bloom. In “How to Talk to Little Girls,” Ms. Bloom (who is quite easy on the eyes, ironically, in all of the blond, coiffed, made-up ways Americans love) encourages the reader to refrain from the impulse to tell a little girl how pretty her dresses and curls are. She suggests, instead, asking Little Girl about her mind. What’s her favorite book, for example. I liked this for several reasons, the most prevalent being my emotional reaction to growing up feeling valued for my physical appearance. (To be further whined about in Part 2.) The article also opened me up to habits I take for granted as norms and ways I might want to change. And, having just had a newborn, I was all optimistic that a new baby meant a new start for me as a mother: like she’s a fresh lump of clay that I can mold perfectly after all the indents I (and the rest of the world) have been leaving on her brothers. I thought maybe I could raise the first American female who was so secure in her very being that she wouldn’t even know what physical appearance was.

Then reality happened and I was reminded that I can’t control everything. Fast forward two years and I’m sitting next to a little blondie who only wears things that billow when she spins, clomps around in heels I don’t wear anymore, and asks “Do I look beautiful?” (What am I gonna say: No? Of course she looks beautiful.)

We were sad to see her slimming down.

Cultural and gender-studies people could help me out here, but my reaction to that question based on who is asking is little mystifying to me.  I don’t want my daughter to be preoccupied with beauty, but I encourage it in my sons. When the boys were toddlers, they went to a progressive, university preschool where the teachers discouraged stereotypes. Sure, the boys played with trains, got messy, and wrestled, but they also played at the toy kitchen, wore dresses from the dress-up chest, and got pink and purple shirts for Pinkalicious Day. (I still don’t quite understand what was going on with Pinkalicious Day, but you choose your battles, no?) One Halloween, when the boys were dressed as a ghost and witch, both wearing long, flowing cloth, they would twirl and ask, “Am I beautiful?”

“Yes,” I said. I was thrilled.

Maybe it’s because Sola seems to absorb different behaviors than the boys did at her age. She watches more closely when I dress. When I brush my hair. When I look in the mirror, she is watching. She notices if I put on lipstick or earrings. The boys see these things, say “You look like a girl,” and then continue battling with their light-sabers. But Sola is watching.

I’ve often stopped the kids on a bike ride or hike to look at flowers and sunsets. Taj has fallen in love with eggs lately, for their beauty, and walks around holding them and looking at them. (Parenting tip, from experience: make sure all eggs in your child’s reach are hard-boiled if he’s going through an “eggs-are-beautiful” stage.) And we all indulge Sola’s quest for beauty.

So, you’ll know if you’ve seen what Sola wears and talks about, I’ve lightened up on the whole we’re-not-gonna-acknowledge-physical-appeareance-thing. I asked a friend I trust and admire what she thought. I wanted her opinion for a few reasons: she’s an artist and mother of girls and happens to be the kind of drop-dead gorgeous that stops you in your tracks and makes you secretly wonder if she’s ever modeled while suddenly feeling shorter and clumsier yourself.

Her response: “What’s wrong with celebrating beauty wherever you find it?”

This reminded me of a post I read, written by another artist-mom. (If you have time for only one link today, let it be this one.) In “The Spiritual Quality of Beauty,” Lauren Kindle encouraged me to find beauty in the places I fear make me superficial or self-absorbed: in my home, in my writing, in myself. And when I say “in myself,” I don’t even mean “inside my being,” I mean, in the mirror. My face, my body. In the mirror. Beauty.

If you were hoping for a great, conclusive wrap-up to all of this, you aren’t getting it here. I’ll stop for today, encourage comments, and take my ruffled daughter to the grocery store. And I think I’m going to put on some make-up, too.

April 19, 2012

how to support a friend with depression (or: how to support a friend with depression?)

by katie savage

Mer,

Until only a few days ago, Miles has been throwing up. For three weeks or so, every time he exerted himself—played too hard, cried too hard, coughed too hard, looked too hard at Evie’s spit-up—he’d hurl. You’ve told me before that your kids hardly ever throw up, so I’m in the midst of forgiving you for that. I felt like I was cleaning up puke for a living.

The first time it happened, we were at Jason’s Deli. Miles had just had mac and cheese (one of the only dishes he’ll eat when we’re out). It was gross. All over him, all over the restaurant floor, all over me and Scott by the time we were finished cleaning everything up. And then it was in the car.

The next week, we were back at Jason’s Deli. We were having dinner with a bunch of people from church, and I was recounting the story. My friend Tim is a total germaphob and could barely listen to the story without going a bit pale-faced. “I don’t care what people say,” he said, “it isn’t different when it’s your own kid. It’s disgusting.” Right after he said that, Miles (once again) hurled up the mac and cheese I was stupid enough to order for him a second time.

Since I’ve been so completely consumed by barf the last three weeks, I’ve had some time to think about it. I agree with Tim—it’s not different when it’s your own kid. It’s disgusting—especially when he’s had milk or anything oddly colored. And yet, I cleaned up all that vomit without hesitation. I did not even do the whole dry-heave-y thing that I usually do when things gross me out. I wondered about why.

Part of it, I’m sure, was that it was my kid. My baby. I didn’t think about anything other than making sure he was okay. (Well, in all honesty, toward the end I may have threatened him with an early bedtime if he threw up again. Not one for the parenting books, I’m afraid.) But part of it was that I knew it needed doing, and I knew he needed me to do it.

Scott preached this Sunday and part of his sermon reminded me of what we’d been going through. The sermon was about the famous “doubting Thomas” passage, and here, Scott is referencing the scars the resurrected Jesus shows when Thomas is having trouble believing:

One of the things I love about the gospel of John is how earthy and messy it is. There is a consistent downward pattern all throughout the gospel. Jesus heals the blind man by spitting on the ground, making clay, and then putting it on the man’s eyes. Or when He bends down to scribble in the sand when they bring before Him the woman accused of adultery. Or when He BBQ’s fish with His disciples on the shores of the sea. Or when He bends down to wash the disciples’ feet. Even when He breathes into them the Holy Spirit we are reminded of a God who got His hands dirty with the creation, shaping and forming us out of the dust of the earth. And of course none of this surprises us about the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. There is this earthy, messy, dirty, compassionate kind of nature to God. It’s compassionate because it’s about solidarity. Joining in the pain and suffering and brokenness of the world in an utterly redemptive way because the scars of Jesus are not only proof His sufferings but proof of His victory over death and all his friends. And it’s not a victory that’s out there somewhere. It’s one we rub up against. Scars that reach out and touch us.

I don’t usually give myself credit for the compassion that I show my kids. But, at the heart of it, I suppose that’s what cleaning up Miles’s puke is. Messy, disgusting compassion.

“But what does this have to do with having a friend who deals with depression?” you may be thinking. If you read the title. Probably not a lot of people care too much about titles, but you might be one of them. All of this was on my mind when I read your last post. I’ve wondered many times if I’ve been the kind of friend you needed when you were going through some rough patches. Chances are, I probably haven’t always. I’ve not had to deal with depression myself (except in high school, when I was so depressed that I missed the sale at Changing Times or when I was so depressed that we had a calculus test or, maybe my most frequent foray into depression, when I was so depressed that that cute guy didn’t like me like I liked him. He only liked me, he didn’t like me like me). I don’t know what it feels like to go through the kinds of emotions you describe. I can’t pretend to. I don’t know what helps and what is a supreme annoyance.

What I have done is to try and be with you. To never mind if your house was a mess or if you hadn’t showered when I came over to visit. I once helped you cook dinner and put away some toys and laundry. And those things seemed to mean something to you. I didn’t do it enough, I’m sure, but I did it a little bit. Maybe it made up for the times when I said the wrong thing—or a string of wrong things.

And, as I try and figure out what it means for me to be a good friend from a lot of miles away, I think about the sort of compassion that Scott was talking about in his sermon. Messy, earthy, spit-covered. It’s harder to do from farther away. So I hope you feel that I’m on your side, in solidarity with you even though I’ve never gone through what you’re going through, and even though I can’t cook you dinner from Kansas.

Still, you can call whenever you need to, or not call whenever you need to not call, and I will be here. I will not mind if you tell the truth. And I will probably say something dumb, like how depressed I am that there’s not a new episode of New Girl on tonight. Sorry about that.

April 17, 2012

it’s harder to cry when you’re running

by maria polonchek

*WARNING: Heavy, touchy-feely stuff ahead. If you’re just hoping for a laugh, click here or here.

Well, I couldn’t start your week with a post about DEPRESSION, so I decided to wait until Tuesday. It’s a good thing, too, because I’m feeling better anyway. Several people have asked me about this depression-thing since I’ve mentioned it a few times lately, so I will try to clarify.

For those of you who might think depression is just a bunch of hoo-ha or is an example of “White People Problems,” well…the thing is…I get it. When I’m not depressed, I think those things, too. Then, when I am depressed, or even come close, I think, Oh, shit. I forgot this is REAL.

Interesting observation: The people who have either been through depression themselves or been around me when I’m depressed have asked: “Is it coming?” The people who don’t have personal experience with it ask, “Are you sure you’re not just a little down?”

The answer to both of these is: “I don’t know.” First of all, past experience shows me that I don’t really know I’m in a depression until I’m out of it. Second of all, past experience shows me that “a little down” sometimes leads to “can’t get out of bed” and this is what makes me more terrified than other people of feeling “a little down.”

There are all sorts of suspected causes and treatments and preventative measures for depression. I’m interested in learning about them when I’m well. When I’m depressed, I’m only interested in getting better. Either that, or dying. I’m not being sarcastic or lighthearted. While I’ve never considered or attempted suicide, I have thought, many times, “I might be the first person who has died from despair and that would be OK.”

This post would be way too long if I wrote everything I have to say about depression, so I’ll just say this: I have both genetic and environmental factors that contribute to depression. I experienced depression a good ten years before I understood what it was. Being pregnant and having the twins made it significantly worse, yet, ironically, gave me a tangible reason to get better. I firmly believe in a mind-body connection and understand the resistance many people have to medication. I also believe that sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do. Right now I’m taking a small dose of an anti-anxiety/anti-depressant drug (a serotonin and norepinephrine re-uptake inhibitor for those of you who understand this) and working with a therapist on “self-care,” which means sleeping, exercising, meditating, eating, etc…. The sorts of things that seem to come automatically and easily to some people that become debilitating for me when I’m all fucked up. (Pardon me, Mr. and Mrs. W, for the lack of a better description.)

Here is a post I began last week, that I couldn’t finish. For whatever reason, I have woken up the last two days with peace, clarity, and energy and can finish it now.

4-11-12

Katie,

I was hoping I’d feel better by now, but I don’t. Not really. I’m hesitant to say I have sunk, but I do feel like I’m sinking. It makes blogging scarier than usual because I feel like my old companion, Depression, has been rough on our friendship in the past. Depression is rough on all my relationships in such cruel, paradoxical ways. It makes me irritable and then the people I love, who normally don’t irritate me, do. It makes me negative and tells me no one wants to listen to my negativity. I get angry or, more passively, feel anger, which isn’t so normal for me. All of this—the irritability, negativity, and anger—cause me to isolate myself and then I feel dropped (to use a cycling term) and alone. It’s a vicious cycle that gets hard to break.

So far, blogging has been part of my “practice,” in the same way running, meditation, and yoga have. I love the idea that meditation is just practice; it takes the pressure off from feeling like you fail if you aren’t getting it right. I practice mediation on a regular basis when things are going well so that the routine feels familiar and safe when things aren’t going so well. I think this is probably why runners are often so methodical and sometimes called “obsessive” about their sport. It’s the same for most people, I think, about whatever their rituals of choice are. It’s so comforting to slip into a state of mind that feels like home. When I went through training to be a flight attendant, one of my instructors told us, if we begin to melt down in times of stress, to stop and brush our teeth. It’s a ritual that has become so automatic, we sometimes do it without even thinking. When the mind is stressed, it needs this sort of automatic, soothing, repetitive motion to bring it a sense of calm. (One time, back when I was single, I got super-stoned at a friend’s house and grabbed the nearest toothbrush. I went to town on my teeth, which helped, but my friend’s roommate, the owner of the toothbrush, was pissed.)

Anyway. So far, blogging has been practice. But when we started this, I knew a time might come when it would be harder to share my thoughts with you and our readers. Most of the time, I feel like I could write all day. But sometimes, the words are slower to come or feel like they aren’t there at all. I promised myself, even during those times, I would try—keep practicing—as hard as I could to be honest and real.

I’ve been going to weekly sessions with my therapist. She mentioned recently that we may want to give the bi-polar diagnosis another look. I said that it’s possible I’m on the spectrum, but I want to be on as little medication as possible. I’ve cut way back on anti-anxiety meds, and am hoping to cut back on my anti-depressants altogether. We came to a mutual agreement that I should have time to re-establish my “self-care,” which has gone by the wayside with the move.

So I pretty much forced myself to the gym at the Y this morning, to get in a run. Outdoors is almost always better for me, but the treadmill lets me put Sola in childcare and work up a sweat. It seemed harder than usual to get there this morning. I didn’t like the way someone had parked their minivan in a “compact car” space. It felt like a slap in the face of humanity. The regular worker at the child center was gone and her sub seemed harsh to me. I didn’t like that she was focused on making a child who is new say “please.” By the time the Russian woman at the towel counter gave me a hard time for asking for two towels, I was ready to burst into tears. I saw my reflection rushing past the mirrored weight room. The woman I saw looked tired. Sad. Unattractive—no—ugly.

I have a routine on the treadmill at the Y. I walk a half-mile at 4.0 mph before settling into a 5k run. I’m not a fast runner: I start at a 6.0 mph pace (about a 10-minute mile) and vary the pace, going up or down when I feel like it. Today, when I got up to 6.0 mph, I still felt like I could cry at any moment. I decided that I would increase the speed by .2 mph (I’m an even-number person, unless I’m hanging pictures) until I didn’t feel like crying. I went to 6.2. I settled in for a bit. I felt like crying. I went to 6.4. I settled in for a bit. I still felt like crying. I kept going, pausing at each increase for a minute or so, until I reached 7.4 mph.

By then, my legs and lungs and arms and mind felt like they were wild and on fire and could tear down the Palo Alto YMCA board by board.

And I didn’t feel like crying.

April 13, 2012

what is it with the tampons?

by maria polonchek

You bet your ass I have something to say about your post on beauty, Katie. I have so much to say that my response has already been divided into two parts. HOWEVER. I don’t trust myself to post about anything too emotionally driven right now (and this topic is), as I am fighting a tough battle with depression. I think I might be winning this one, for once, but I still feel self-conscious about my reactions and opinions when the depression-cloud lingers in my mind. I guess I don’t trust myself right now. Sometimes, that’s gotta be OK.

So, I hope to articulate and post my responses soon, but today is not the day. Today is Friday and a good day for some fun. A few things inspired this post. First, the tampons scattered all over my bedroom floor. I usually have my box of tampons hidden away in a bathroom cabinet (Martha Stewart says, “store things where you use them!”) not because I’m embarrassed for anyone to know I’m a woman who has a regular period, but because if I don’t, this is what happens:


see, we have these raccoons...

Now, I’m not sure what the deal is, but all of my children go through this toddler phase where they love nothing more than to play with an opened box of bright, variety-size tampons.  And, since we’ve moved and things are not yet totally put away, this box of tampons has been making its way all over the house. The reasonable thing to do would be to place the box out of sight and/or reach, like I do when I’m settled into a place, but we all know now that I’m not always reasonable. Chris has finally dealt with it his way, and kicked the mess under the bed. Smart move on his part, because one awkward, waddling trip from the toilet to the bed with my undies around my ankles, and I put away the tampons and decided it’s time to organize the bathroom.

Anyway, the other inspiration was your post on the grocery store trip, Katie. What is it about the grocery store that’s so conducive to every parent’s Most Embarrassing Moments? Parents could probably write a series of books recounting nightmare grocery store trips. I’ve been thinking about it and I think what it is (for me) is this: when Chris gets dressed in business-casual in the morning and leaves to go to an office for his paying job, in the world of adults, I stay at home to do my job (that pays in other ways besides, um, money) in the world of children and babies. In this world, there are few rules and the schedule is pretty loosey-goosey. We wear what we want. We eat whenever we want. We do whatever we want. There are days I go for eight hours without talking to anyone other than a 2-year-old, a person who, on her good days, is like a cross between a puppy and a mental patient. So when it’s time to go to the grocery store, in the land of adults who are clothed in clothes and have rational thought process and manners and self-awareness, I am really out to impress. Going to the grocery store in this culture is a Big Deal to someone who is living on Mama Island. It says: Look! I am a grown-up! I have things to buy, money to spend! I am legit. I complete whole sentences and adhere to the same social codes as all of you!

But when you bring along a 2-year-old and/or her two 7-year-old brothers, all bets are off. I should know by now not to set out in the world hoping to hold on to silly things like pride and dignity. It seems like anytime I hope to gain an autonomous sense of self, my children sniff out my desire and get scared they’re losing me and do everything in their power to show the world (and me): SHE’S MINE.

Or, maybe they are just kids being kids. I think this is probably more likely.

So, here are my Top Three Most Embarrassing Grocery Store Moments*:

  1. The Tampon.  Ladies, you know that emergency tampon you try to keep in your purse only, because it’s for emergencies, you never use it and the wrapper gets marked on by stray pens and lip liner and eventually rips and the tampon slips out and ends up under everything, worming its way into the hole in the corner of the lining and then you forget it’s there? Well, one time I was checking out at the grocery store and the cashier smiled at Sola, with the look that she was going complement my baby, but then furrowed her brow and pursed her lips and didn’t say anything. I took a look myself. Sola was sitting in the cart chair, happily gnawing away on something, all gums and slobber. She was teething. She had found the emergency tampon.
  2. The Paper Towels. Sola was (and still is) easy. The cosmos knew anything more difficult would break me after the twins’ first two years. She was only a few weeks old, very quiet, and I was still getting used to taking three kids out. We went to Target for the same reasons you always see mothers with young children at Target, and I put her, sleeping in the car-seat, in the shopping cart. The boys and I began by placing things around her car-seat gently. The box of wipes had to go under the cart. Soon, we got to the paper towels. The pack was so big, it would rest perpendicularly across the length of the cart, with Sola underneath. We went on our way. We kept putting things in the cart. I walked around wasting time, because it felt so good to be in an organized, clean, adult-filled environment. Eventually, I heard a whimper. Then some mewing. It sounded like there was a litter of kittens nearby. I can’t remember how long it took until one of the boys said, “Mom! Remember the baby! She’s still in the cart!” Alas, I pawed through the cans and boxes, lifted the pack of paper towels and, indeed, the newborn baby I forgot I had was awake.
  3. The Tomatoes and Corn Mush. My first trip ever to a Whole Foods was not good. It was especially bumming because I had heard about Whole Foods in Kansas and couldn’t believe that moving to California meant I would be within a few miles from TWO of them. In my quest to educate the boys about food, I took them back to the butcher. They saw a pig and I explained. I went to get bacon for my clam chowder recipe and Taj decided right there that he was going to be vegetarian. He would not eat the chowder, he said, if I put bacon in it. Luke wanted bacon in the chowder. They argued. It escalated. It ended with Taj crying as Luke yelled, “BUT BACON TASTE GOOOOOD!” By the time we got to the checkout they had calmed down enough to do their favorite job: placing things from the cart onto the conveyor belt. I stood at the counter, ready to swipe my card, when I noticed the grape tomatoes were traveling up the belt, one-by-one, with a nibble taken out of each. By the time the grocer shrieked in disgust after sticking her hand what corn-on-the-cob turns into if you leave it in your reusable grocery bags in the back of your car for two months while you move across the county, I had sort of stopped being human long enough to get us and our stinky groceries to the car, where I made it as far as the first stoplight before getting rear-ended by a Subaru. This was our first month in Palo Alto. (If you haven’t seen this spoof on the Whole Foods Parking Lot, check it out now. This is me they’re making fun of.)

*All of these occurred after I had my third child. This is either because the more children you have, the more they are able to join forces in their quest to rule your world or because I remember little from the first two years after having twins, including the few times I actually took two babies into a grocery store by myself.

What is your worst grocery store tale? (kids or not…)

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