Archive for June, 2012

June 28, 2012

it takes the whole damn tri-county area

by maria polonchek

When the twins were born, on Easter Sunday seven years ago, we lived next door to my mom. She lived in a tiny house and we lived in a bigger tiny house. They were both one-bedrooms, but ours had an extra little room that was big enough to be a grow room. We know this because when we moved in, the landlord’s only stipulation (no lease, no deposit, no last month’s rent) was that, if we grow pot, don’t do it in the upstairs room because ”there’s a drainage problem up there.”

Anyway, no pot, but two babies. I would go over to my mom’s house in the middle of the night, after Chris and I had used up all we had of ourselves. (And that was even more than I would’ve ever estimated.) I’d be crying, delirious, and holding bottles of expressed milk. My mom would have already been over several times that day, but I begged her: “Please. Need. Sleep.”

She would grab her robe, slip on sandals, and come over to take a shift. She had recently quit her job, as a beloved teacher’s assistant at a juvenile detention center, in order to go back to grad school and write. She had the summer off that year, thank God, because I don’t know what we would have done otherwise. Chris’s parents lived 6 hours away and they drove up at least one weekend a month, but those middle-of-the-night breastmilk exchanges week after week may be a key reason I have enough mental capacity now to remember and write.

None of our friends had children yet, and though they showed up for us the best they knew how, there’s no way they could have known how desperate we were. We couldn’t afford help. I quit my job because it cost more to have two babies in childcare than I made in a day. Chris increased the hours he worked to pay for medical expenses (hospitals do not give “two for the price of one” discounts) and to save for a bigger place. Neighbors brought food. Family members sent money for diapers, cribs, strollers. A state agency donated car seats. We had love, support, resources. But it was so hard. We were scared and sad and confused because we weren’t supposed to be scared and sad and confused.

(Did I mention this pregnancy wasn’t planned?)

We have a different life now. I survived 18 months of debilitating depression, got help and began to recover. We learned that parenting is a slow, learned experience. We steadily squared away our finances and found a bigger house. I realized I wanted to focus on writing, went back to grad school myself, and after a few years of feeling like a failure as a mother, learned I’m not so bad, after all. Chris and I realized we had partners in one another that were worth fighting for. We had two little boys who blew our minds.

Our family of four healed together. We blossomed. We had another baby without the accompanying lifestyle transition. (I am here to say, going from 2 to 3 is NOTHING like going from 0 to 2.)

But then we moved across the country. Hello!

It’s been about a year since we gave up the luxury of having an established support system. Luckily, we live in a place where many of the families are in the same boat and become families to one another. But my mom just got here for the summer (she is back to teaching and has summers off) and the minute she walked through the door, a deep breath I realized I’d been holding for a year escaped my lungs. My shoulders relaxed by an inch. My stomach let go of knots I didn’t realize were there.

We always hear “it takes a village to raise a child,” but I’m not sure we really understand what that means. Young parents often feel isolated and lonely. This is why my generation writes so much about it: blogs, articles, books. We think the village must only consist of other people in the same stage as us: mothers of young children looking to each other for help and companionship. Young fathers doing the same. We make deals with one another: “I’ll pick up your Johnny from school if you can watch Suzy during my doctor’s appointment.”

But as much as I want to help my friends and siblings with young children and need the help reciprocated, I want to cry out at the constant negotiations. “WE ARE ALL SO TIRED! WE ALL NEED MORE!”

But the rest of the village doesn’t seem to want to hear it. (As an update in response to a comment below: sometimes it’s our own fault they don’t want to hear it…vicious cycles.)

I began a book by John Bowlby on attachment theory. (Not to be confused with William Sears, “attachment parenting,” and having a 3-year-old hanging off of his hot mom’s boob while they stare down the camera.)

In 1980 he said,

I want also to emphasize that, despite voices to the contrary, looking after babies and young children is no job for a single person. If the job is to be well done and the child’s principal caregiver is not to be too exhausted, the caregiver herself (or himself) needs a great deal of assistance…In most societies throughout the world these facts have been, and still are, taken for granted and the society organized accordingly. Paradoxically it has taken the world’s richest societies to ignore these basic facts. Man and woman power devoted to the production of material goods counts a plus in all our economic indices. Man and woman power devoted to the production of happy, healthy, and self-reliant children in their own homes does not count at all. We have created a topsy-turvy world.

I want to thank my village. You are helping our humble little family thrive and fully realize our existence. I am a better mother, as an individual and part of a unit, able to devote myself to the production of happy, healthy, and self-reliant children because of you. I promise to return the favor when I can.

To those of you still looking for your village: find it. Create one for yourselves, if you have to. There’s a chance they won’t come knocking down your door, but my hope for you is that they are out there. You need a great deal of assistance.

With love and compassion,

Maria

June 25, 2012

girls of summer

by maria polonchek

I’ve probably spent more time in a bathing suit than most people. I didn’t grow up near the beach or anything—far from it, actually, in Kansas. But as soon as I could swim, which was early, I spent all day, every day at the local public pool, from the minute it opened Memorial Weekend until the minute it closed on Labor Day.

My sister and I famously (for our small-town, anyway) ate and slept in our bathing suits when we were little. My mom liked this program because it meant less laundry and she just encouraged us to take them off once in a while so that our you-know-whats could breathe.

We wore one-pieces. (Now I call them “tanks.” Classy people call them “maillots.”) My mom didn’t like it when young girls wore bikinis. One summer, when I was getting up there in age, elementary-school-wise, I talked her into letting me get some sort of strange contraption that was technically a one-piece, but with a hole cut out of the stomach and back. This was in the eighties. I can’t remember what those silly things were called.

The next year, I got a real “two piece.” It was a sports-bra-style top and modest-cut bottoms. Lime green and blacks stripes, I remember. By the time I was in high school, I was wearing proper bikinis. Until, that is, I became a lifeguard at 16 and went back to one-pieces for the dress-code.

I was a lifeguard for 3 years, until my certificate expired. Again, I was wearing a bathing suit night and day. I would wear the one-piece to work, and then change into a bikini to “lay out” on my break. (Maybe there is a post about sun-cancer in my future?)

Anyway, since the time I changed my mom’s mind about them in high-school, bikinis have been no-brainers for me, even when I was pregnant with twins. When it’s hot, I find the least amount of fabric the most comfortable, plain and simple. It may sound like I don’t have my share of body-image issues or lack self-consciousness. On the contrary, I have all of that and, like many women, annually reach a point in late Spring where I’m determined to look my best ever in a suit and do away with “problem areas” once and for all. But Spring is just so good for cocktails and grilling and block parties, so I eat and drink and have a blast and put on my old bikinis, stare at my thighs and tummy in the mirror and think, “It is what it is. At least I had fun.”

I might feel a bit embarrassed the first time or two out in my bikini for the season, but I easily slip into a comfortableness that must come from spending so much darn time over the years in a suit. And it dawned on me that our attitudes about swimwear may reveal something about our attitudes in general.

We were recently on the coast in Florida, where the temperature was in the 90′s and the humidity was so high that our towels were NEVER. DRY. Everyone on the island was in a bathing suit everywhere and it got me thinking about style. I know there are suits out there designed to hide or, at least, minimalize “problem areas.” (I like to think of my “problem areas” as “relatively normal areas,” though.) I’ve seen other people wear these styles and I sincerely think they are flattering and, for the most part, do what they promise to do. So, if you are one of those people who wears a suit designed to “flatter your figure,” trust me, if I saw you, I would think you look great and admire your classiness. (And I mean you, too, Andy-in-your-banana-hammock!)

However, if you read this blog, you know that my approach in life (and swimwear) is more, “I’m putting everything out there. People will see my strengths AND weaknesses and maybe they’ll dig it, maybe they won’t. But they’ll certainly know what they’re getting.” I’ve tried several figure-flattering cuts and I feel like a big phony in all of them. Here are a few examples:

  • Underwire Cups

Hello. I have to wear something up top, but please don’t look at my chest. I didn’t want you to look even when I had GREAT tits (Oh, if I had it to do over!) and I especially don’t want you to now. They have been engorged with breastmilk, to the extent that I could touch them with my chin, so many times that I now need a cold, hard, metal support spiking me in the armpit to prop up my boobs so that they don’t graze my belly. Whoops! A piece of wrinkly-loose- elephant-skin just slipped out the top! Let me just tuck that back in. What were we saying?

  • Ruching

I’d rather cover my midsection with three extra layers of synthetic fabric that feels like a girdle when it’s dry and then bunches and sags when it’s wet than let the folds of my belly show when I’m crouching over to get Cheddar Bunnies out of the pool. Oh, I’m not supposed to get this swim suit wet? What was I thinking, planning on getting wet at a pool? Never mind that it’s hot outside and the whole point of swimming is to cool off, I’d rather sit in the shade, constantly tugging and adjusting yards of material over my torso. Hey, Mr. Creepy-Swimming-Pool-Guy-with-the-Mustache. Can I borrow that knife in the back pocket of your cut-off-denim-shorts so I can slice open my bathing suit because I AM SUFFOCATING!!!!!

  • Swim Skirts

Um, hi. I have saddle-bags and cellulite. I have since puberty, so I don’t think they’re going away in my thirties. I’m trying to cover it all in a skirt that makes my hips look even wider than they are after having three babies. At least the cellulite is contained to my ass now, instead of spreading to my wrists, like it did when I was pregnant with my third. You didn’t know someone could develop cellulite on her wrists? Well, she can. And it’s not pretty. There is no bathing suit made today that covers up cellulite on your wrists. Thank God it went away after I had the baby. I’m hardly worried about dimples on my thighs at this point.

You know me by now, so you know I don’t mean to sound cheesy, old-fashioned, or goody-two-shoes with this next thing, but honestly? The one person I hope to impress with my body on a regular basis is the man who sees me naked every day, anyway. There is no tricking him with flattering styles. So that leaves….my kids I’m trying to impress? Ha. Other women? I’m not too worried about what other women think and here’s why: I have a feeling they are also busy feeling insecure. I realized this after years of getting compliments on my eyebrows. Women like my eyebrows and want to know if I pluck them, where I get them “done,” if they are “natural.” Before these compliments came in, I never even noticed I had eyebrows. Who looks at eyebrows? I would think, as I stared at the perfectly straight, uniform, white teeth of the woman complimenting me on my eyebrows. Why teeth? Because mine are flawed. And I’m self-conscious about them and think everyone must have better teeth than me. And I think we’re doing it all over again to one another in our bathing suits, no matter what the cut or style.

To the self-assured, confident woman who is judging me, thinking “doesn’t she know how she looks?” and never questions her own choices: Can I have the name of your therapist?

I got mine in Radio Red. This is what I look like in it. (In my mind.) (www.jcrew.com)

So, what do I wear? Here is the JCrew suit I ordered this year. No, this post is NOT sponsored by JCrew, but if you are a JCrew rep for Women’s Swimwear and you are interested in advertising on this blog, I can guarantee you….five…yes, FIVE readers a day. Except one of them is Katie’s dad, so I don’t know if he counts as the demographic you’re looking for.

June 22, 2012

Meet My Va-zsa-zsa, The Literary Snob

by maria polonchek

thanks for the image, http://www.thelmagazine.com

I’m going to begin my post on 50 Shades of Grey the same way most bloggers and reviewers have begun: Everyone’s been talking about this book and asking me if I’ve read it and what my thoughts are on it, so I finally picked it up. In my particular case, it was in a bookstore at SFO, right when we were getting ready to board a 5-hour flight to the East Coast. I already had three books with me: one was a Pulitzer winner, one was from a hip-indie-press, and one was a National Book Award finalist.

Not exactly beach-reads. I needed some good, ‘ole-fashioned S&M porn to help me unwind. So I picked up one of the zillion copies the bookstore had on center display and started reading on my flight. (How are you able to read a book on a 5-hour flight with three young children? you ask, to which I respond, Apple products.)

I knew the book had a lot of sex in it, so I wasn’t surprised when I found myself getting tingly feelings down there in the middle of coach somewhere over Colorado. I even glanced over our three children at Chris, who was reading Bicycle Magazine, and gave him some raised eyebrows, but he had no idea what was going on and pressed the call button to get me more ginger ale.

So I wasn’t surprised by the sex. I wasn’t surprised by spanking and whips. I wasn’t even too surprised by the dom-sub contract. (Ha! Someone google that.) Here is what suprised me: why, when all of everyone is talking about the sex scenes and the S&M and the portrayal of women’s wants and needs, etc, etc, etc, WHY didn’t anyone mention to me how BAD THE WRITING IS??? Never-mind the flat setting, contrived characters, and silly plot, I’m talking about the sentence-level, word-by-word writing part, where you know how upset the protagonist is by her use of “crap!” vs. “double-crap!”

Once I started looking around at reviews after I read the book (I always wait until I’m done to read reviews), I realized I’m not the only one to be so utterly disappointed that this quality of writing has somehow become a national best seller. One blogger made up a drinking game based on how many times words and phrases are repeated in the book. Another was able to use a feature on her Kindle to tally up how many times Anastasia “bit her lip” and Christian is “mercurial.”

I don’t know. To be straight with you, I don’t dabble much in porn, literary or otherwise. If you are looking for recommendations for well-written porn, do a google search. I’m sure it’s out there. Maybe someday I’ll get more into it and can link to all kinds of great work. I’m just wondering what in the world this best-seller-thing says about our culture and what we want. Someone, please, enlighten me. Apparently, we want to read about sex. That’s fine. I think we need to. But is it too much to ask that it be well-written?

One of the positive reviews gave this disclaimer: “50 Shades is great if you read it for what it is. If you’re going into it with high expectations, you’re going to be disappointed.”

Um, I’m sorry? That’s the attitude I take when I show up for a nice dental cleaning. It is not the attitude I want to take when reading OR having sex, or getting to sort-of-do-both at the same time.

Yes, I finished the book. Yes, I was slightly curious to know what would happen to Anastasia Steele and Christian Grey in the next two books. (The writing is not known for being subtle, as you can tell by these character’s names.) (And after I thought about it for a few more seconds, I realized I didn’t really care anymore.) Yes, I did understand how the book could get people talking and thinking about things that they usually suppress or otherwise avoid.

But, my vagina wants it all: good sex and good writing. She cannot be distracted by weak character development, stereotypes,  judgments, plot holes, and unimaginative language. It’s too confusing that her arousal is interrupted by thoughts like, doesn’t this contribute to an unfair generalization that all S&M fans are victims of child-abuse or that all victims of child-abuse will be S&M fans?

Mind you, I want to add that I don’t mean to entirely knock the author. She’s an English woman who initially published this as “fan fiction” of Twilight and it’s not her fault Americans have made it a national best seller. Anyone who has written book-length work (or three) has done what many people just talk about.

However, for anyone out there who is looking for new perspectives on sex and gender, doesn’t need explicit eroticism in the writing, and wants something well-written, let me recommend In One Person, by John Irving. Inadvertently and coincidentally, I picked this one up after 50 Shades. (I just couldn’t jump right back into the Pulitzer-stuff. My brain needed a bridge back to the land of good writing.) I am only 2/3 of the way through, but am totally delighted with this one. A coming-of-age, memoir-style novel about a bisexual male who finds himself attracted to transsexuals. Don’t even try to pigeon-hole him.

And those are my thoughts on 50 Shades of Grey. Don’t hold your breath for reviews on the rest of the trilogy.

June 21, 2012

creating a creative practice?

by maria polonchek

Yes, it was Katy Perry, and those are some boobs, but the dress is more of a chartreuse than an eggplant. My bad. I probably have the lyrics wrong, too. (image: babble.com)

Uhg. How quickly I let my routines fall to the wayside. Is everyone like this or is it just some of us? It’s like that pop-singer’s song that was turned into a Sesame-Street version that got banned, that I’ll never get out of my head. I think it was Katy Perry, because I remember boobs. Lots of boobs. In purple. She sang to Elmo, with her purple-clad boobs, and a pouty face: “You’re up, then you’re down. You’re hot, then you’re cold.”

I don’t mean to be like this, despite claims to the contrary. (My aunt once said something along the lines of, “I think you like being such a mess.” No, I don’t.)

We left for vacation in early June. I was going to tell you readers, and warn you not to expect to hear from me but not to worry that I was checked into a mental hospital or had run off to join PETA. But it was all I could do to get myself and three kids packed for 10 days in ONE carry-on. (I may not be as weirdly cheap as you, Katie, (seriously, the ketchup-thing was just over the top. Look what happens to you when I move away.) but I’ll be damned if I’m going to pay an airline to CHECK MY BAG.)

So, yes, the Poloncheks went on vacation. We needed it to be a true vacation from pretty much everything: the usual house, the usual weather, the usual routine. So we went away to a place that was super-hot with humidity that made my hair curl into the old tendrils you knew and loved in Kansas, watched TV a LOT, used air-conditioning, rotated between pajamas and swim suits, and slept in and stayed up even later than usual. And NO BLOGGING. Blogging makes me see the world so differently and, honestly, not feel like I can be 100% present because I’m always making notes for a post in my head. I didn’t want to do that to my family on vacation.

But we’re back now, we have been for almost a week, and I can’t seem to sit down and write the million posts I feel backed-up on. (It’s like blogging constipation.)

But our host (is that what it’s called, techies?), wordpress, features new, well-written blogs everyday on “freshly pressed” and I check in with them when I’m feeling like a loser-blogger. One caught my eye for my particular sense of loser-ness. It was on creating more and worrying less. One point in particular, #3, spoke to me. (Some of the others I’ve already mastered, like getting used to rejection.) It was on establishing a regular creative practice, or, the much feared concept of a routine. I was getting there with this blog, before we moved to a new house a few months ago, and then I was getting there again, before we went on vacation. But as soon as I miss a few days, that’s it until I just FORCE myself to type SOMETHING, which is why you are getting this ramble instead of the new topics I’ve wanted to post on. They are, as follows:

  • My long-awaited and much-anticipated thoughts on 50 Shades of Grey.
  • What your swimwear choice says about you.
  • Why I blaim the advertising staff at Honda for all that’s wrong with my generation’s understanding of parenting.
  • A tribute to my mum, who is here, helping with domestic duties, and encouraging me to write every day.
  • What a broken swiffer has taught me about mindfulness and house-cleaning.

And, of course, the other things I’ve brought up in previous posts that I’ve promised to extrapolate on and have yet to do so.

But, here is my first post “back” and my re-commitment to maintaining a routine for creative practice. (Although I do fear it’s like the many times I kept re-dedicating my virginity to the church until one of the young-person group-leaders said, “Maria, maybe you should stop setting yourself up for failure.”)

That’s what I’ve got today folks. Talk soon.

xxoo, maria

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