Posts tagged ‘women’

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.

May 26, 2012

the women we leave behind

by maria polonchek

(image: internetblog.org)

There’s been a lot of Internet chatter in my virtual neck of the woods lately. Much of it regards people who have vaginas. Women attacking women over lifestyle choices in the name of feminism. Women’s reproductive health limited by the votes of men. Women opening up about (and some probably hiding from) the very real fact of post-partum depression.

I’ve been thinking about what I want to add, if anything, to these discussions. And then last night a headline caught my eye that zipped shut the chatter and debates in my mind and left me full of grief, frustration, and an overwhelming sense of compassion. Forgive me for being slow to learn about this case (I get most of my news from clips of Weekend Update with Seth Meyers—online, no less, so even my Saturday Night Live News isn’t even live…) but I finally read about Bei Bei Shuai.

Bei Bei Shuai is a Chinese immigrant who attempted suicide in Indiana when she was 33 weeks pregnant after her boyfriend confessed that he was married to, and had a family with, another woman. He left Ms. Shuai crying and begging on her knees in a parking lot, throwing money at her as he walked away. She wrote a suicide note and took rat poison, attempting to kill herself and end her pregnancy.

Friends intervened (I’m guessing she wished they hadn’t) and took her to a hospital where she was saved and her daughter, who she named Angel, was delivered via C-section. Angel died a few days later, in Ms. Shuai’s arms. After Ms. Shuai received psychiatric treatment for a month, the state charged her with murder and attempted feticide.

Obviously, this is sticky. Your opinions and beliefs about the ethics in this devastating story hold implications for women’s reproductive rights. But I don’t want to get into all that. There are other people out there doing a better job than me at getting attention for their causes and holding up Bei Bei Shuai as a prop, no matter what side of the debate they fall on.

What I want to do is offer a voice of compassion and understanding and encourage our readers to do the same. I haven’t even discussed much about my own (excruciating) experience transitioning into motherhood seven years ago. (Hoping there will be a book coming out about it!) But I have a feeling that there must be a few people who know me who wonder about my openness and honesty on this blog and in the essays I seek to publish. Some may wonder if I’m trying to get attention. Some may be embarrassed for me, or themselves, depending on how close they are to me. But I write what I do for times like this: when a stranger out there acts in a way that has people outraged and buzzing and referring to her as a “fucking selfish asshole” and a “stupid thoughtless bitch,” two things I read in a comment section before I realized I should not be reading any comment sections.

I share my experiences because if a white, privileged, educated woman who has incredible familial and social support can get as depressed as I did during and following my first pregnancy, then I can’t even imagine the struggle and despair someone experiences when she doesn’t have the resources I have. It’s devastating. It’s inhumane, the lack of support and resources we offer the women who stop being women and become incubators for the babies we celebrate, photograph, honor. We love the babies. We buy them strollers that cost as much as it would to feed families living in poverty; we dedicate rooms to them that could harbor a dozen refugees; we run out and purchase vehicles that are safer and bigger than the safe, big ones we already own.

But where are the women? Who are the women? Who was Bei Bei Shuai before she became pregnant and a burden that her boyfriend couldn’t handle? Who was she when she reached such an unfathomable low, one that most people never see, that she wanted to end her life and her pregnancy? Who was she when she held a dying infant in her arms, the result of an action that most probably was beyond her rational control?

I don’t know who Bei Bei Shuai was. Or is. Neither does the state of Indiana. We only care now, not really who she is, but what she’s done.

I’m sorry, Bei Bei Shuai. I’m so sorry to be part of a culture that is obsessed with pregnancy and birth and acquisition of babies to the detriment of the women who are pregnant, birthing, and caring for those babies. We failed you and we fail countless other women every single day.

Where are the women? Who are the women? Once they become mothers, they’re mothers.

The women, we leave behind.

May 4, 2012

that which shall not be named

by maria polonchek

I’m going to go there today. By the end of this post, I’m going to write out a word—which, unfortunately, entails having to think it about it, silently sound it out, and type the letters across this screen—a word that’s one of my “shudder words.” I hate hearing it, I hate saying it, I hate all the it stands for, implicitly and explicitly. But by the end of this post, I’m going to say it, write it, and OWN IT.

This word begins with “qu,” as in, “queen,” and rhymes with “leaf.” It’s another word for “vaginal flatulence.” Only one who has the great luck to possess a vagina is able to do it. It’s not a pleasant sounding word and the verb—the action being labeled—is not an attractive thing to do. The noun—the label one is assigned once she’s done it in yoga class—is not an attractive thing to be.

A fart in symbol form

It’s funny, right?
(credit: Wikipedia)

But, you know what? I’ve been thinking about this. Farting is funny, right? I can write about farting, joke about farting, laugh about farting. My friends think it’s funny. My husband thinks it’s funny. My 7-yr-olds think its funny. Even Sola—little, dainty, princess-girl—thinks it’s funny. Fart, fart, fart. Ha, ha, ha.

Do you know why I think farting is this big joke that we are comfortable with, relatively speaking? I’ll tell you why. Because, in 2012, we live in a patriarchal society, where a woman STILL EARNS 77 CENTS TO EVERY DOLLAR a man makes and because a woman has one little body part that is able to produce and distribute a funny little noise that MEN DON’T HAVE.

So we are ashamed and act like it’s not even a real thing. Obviously, this phenomenon had not become so relevant for me until I had three human beings emerge from my vagina which, apparently, can now suck in more air than a free-diver emerging off the coast of Oahu, and then I took up a physical group activity that has me twisting and bending in all kinds of crazy ways.

Fotografía hecha en Playa del Carmen, México, ...

Who has two thumbs, a vagina, and can suck in more air than THIS GUY? (credit: Wikipedia)

And now, Internets, from what I can tell, these are the rules of etiquette when it comes to qu***ing in yoga class (and I have been both the culprit and the witness.):

The Culprit:

  • Every time you move into a new position, clench all muscles from the lower abdominal to the upper thigh, even the ones you’ve only heard are there, but can’t actually confirm, as they are numb from being clinched all the time.
  • Move very, very s-l-o-w-l-y and hope that everyone will attribute your pace to the dancer-like grace with which you flow through each pose.
  • If you accidentally begin to relax for once in your life and a little (or a lot) of air escapes from your, ahem, lady parts, move more quickly now, to rustle up some other noise and wish, for the millionth time, that your yoga instructor would just play some music during class. It doesn’t even matter, at this point, if it’s Enya or Kenny G or whoever. JUST TURN ON SOME MUSIC!!!
  • As your face gets hot and turns very red and you try to cover as much of it as possible with your hair and wonder if you should apologize or joke or say something to your fellow yogis, decide not to and write about it on the Internet for complete strangers, instead.

The Witness:

  • Although you have just heard the funniest noise come out of the bottom end of a woman next to you who looks so perfect in her Lululemon pants and headband and supportive-yet-casual tank and you want to burst out laughing, you act like a zippy, airy, blubber-noise did not just interrupt an otherwise quiet, peaceful class and go home and write about it on the Internet for complete strangers, instead.

    Lululemon Athletica

    Lululemon Athletica: Wear our $120 pants and qu*** to your heart’s content. (credit: wikipedia.)

So, anyway. I queef sometimes in yoga. (I should have known. Spell-check doesn’t even recognize this as a word.) And it’s really funny. It’s embarrassing, but it’s also really funny. I don’t know whether to laugh, or apologize, or both. If it were a fart, it wouldn’t be worth a blog post. But it’s a queef, and there is something about the sound…the quickness and dryness of the air, I guess, that makes it so obvious it’s a queef, even for those people who try to claim it’s a fart, as if that is SO MUCH LESS embarrassing.

Petra's Yoga Poses around the world

You can never tell by looking, who will be a culprit. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

We queef, ladies. Say it above a whisper. QUEEF, QUEEF, QUEFF. Let’s say it and own it and hope that this is one more step towards the great equalizer: earning that golden 100 cents.

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.

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