Wednesday, November 19, 2008

The No, Thanks Post

And....Thanksgiving, that celebration of gluttony and killing a whole bunch of Native Peoples (sadly without writing down any recipe that doesn't involve dry turkey.) Why do we celebrate this again? And don't even get me started on the two years I watched S. baste his Tofurky, an eating experience that can only be likened to toasting cardboard and dipping in butter. I'm still repulsed by the pleasure he took in woofing down those tasteless brown pieces of vegetarian goo.

But Blogger that I am, I am duly sucked into the blogosphere of The Thankful Post where unknown people offer up a list of unfamiliar items and/or people for which they give thanks. Mothers thank Diaper Genies (and despite my long list of child-bearing friends, I still don't know what a Diaper Genie is), wipeables, and toddlers that finally take to toilet-training, students thank teachers for that easy class, and partners gush about each other. I've always had a problem with those sappy dedications in books to wives and husbands. I happen to know that not every writer has an astounding, completely supportive marriage/relationship so why all the "And finally, to my husband Earl WhippedCream, without whom I would not only not have written this book, I'd have stopped breathing and walked into a river with heavy stones in my pockets." I'll go with "Once Again to Zelda" if only because sweet old F. Scott copped to plagarizing from her.

But I digress.

Anyway, forgive me for grousing, but I thought a list of what I wasn't thankful for might change things up a bit. So here are a few things I'd like to offer my No, Thanks for:
  • Employers that have laid off friends.
  • Employers that haven't hired friends.
  • The s**t Obama is about to have to deal with.
  • Tiny Seattle parking lots.
  • Dog hair explosions.
  • Moths in my best cashmere sweater.
  • People who still believe they get to say who gets to marry.
  • People who don't get that playing an Ipod really loud on a bus means that I get to hear frackin' Justin Timberlake along with them.
  • All those women on the View who seem to think yelling is entertaining.
Ahhhh. Can't we do this at Thanksgiving dinner? I think we'd all feel better to have a day when we're invited to complain. But then I'm Jewish. It's practically a sport in my family.

In all fairness, I do have a lot to be thankful for, particularly this year. I'm grateful that Obama is in office, that Michelle Obama can dress with mad skillz, that my dog(s) are healthy and happy and poop regularly, that I live in this wonderful city with great friends, that I still have work, and that I spent a month in Wyoming. Oh and that I bought a Kara Janx dress for $20 on Ebay.

Of course I'm very thankful for my lovely, sexy Hapa Boy and all his many kindnesses. I'm thankful every day I wake up next to him that he is such a good man, and that I am lucky enough to have such a good man in my life.

I hope he's thankful for me.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

The Ghost of Relationships Past


You know how in Dicken's The Christmas Carol the Ghost of Christmas Past comes down and scares Scrooge straight with what can only be called Pre-1900's Talk Therapy? You remember. Scrooge realizes - with the help of some slightly iffy tactics that would not meet with approval in today's psychiatric community - that if he doesn't shape up, he's going to be the miserable old codger that he is through eternity. Cut to lonely grave, hellfire, damnation, all that sort of thing that Dickens doesn't spell out, but hey, it's the 1800's, right?

But Dickens is an old softie because Scrooge gets a second chance to buy a big ham and some fixings, serve it up and maybe get a good doctor to look at Tiny Tim, who I've read, most likely had rickets. God Bless Us, Everyone. That Tiny Tim is an optimistic little guy, because I've always suspected that Scrooge went back to his old miserable codgerness once the bills came in on his AMEX. Fear, while a great motivator, may not be the most reliable source of generosity.

Now it goes without saying that I do not believe I'm going to burn through eternity. I didn't get that sort of programming from the rabbi at Oneg Shalom when I was a kid because essentially Jews don't believe in hell, or as I like to say, we believe hell is two weeks with your parents in South Florida. (Seriously, that is close enough people. If a Ghost of Hanukah Past threatened me with two weeks at my father's assisted living facility in Boynton Beach, I'd shape up faster than Scrooge.) In fact, we don't really have a rollicking view of heaven either. When my mother was dying (this is a true story), my sister and I asked the rabbi at the hospital if there's heaven in Judiasm. All the poor guy could come up with was that we "all become energy." I'm sure if my sister had already had my nephew the rabbi would have said added something about how my mother would live on through him. (And I do wonder what my mother would have said about how often he skips bedtime. She ran a tight ship, my mother. So there could be truth to the idea she lives on through him.) Still, all of those lovely sentiments don't suggest that she might be peeking down from the clouds smiling beautifically now does it? So I'm not going to debate the theology of heaven and hell, I'm just going to say - I don't buy it. Maybe, like a taste for Vegemite, you have to be raised with it.

But I digress.

The point is that I kind of believe that most people make their heaven and hell right here on earth. I've noticed most women do this via relationships that tend to be hellish more often than heavenly. I've worshipped at that particular church you know. I've cried, I've ranted, I've been supportive. I've helped boyfriends get jobs or get out of jobs, I've rented cabins and made reservations, I've flown across the country to meet them, I've even arranged nebulous meetings at the airports themselves - once missing a flight and spending Christmas eve in Dallas where I was forced to listen to endless renditions of What Child Is This by a group of sadistically tone-deaf carolers.

Yes, it was hell. But upon moving to Seattle, I was - like old Scrooge - scared straight by the Ghost of Relationships Past. It came to me, albeit slightly belatedly, that I was doing all this to myself. I was going to have to change or spend the rest of my days a miserable old codger - and that Dear Readers is possibly a worse fate than eternal damnation, because there is only so much reality television you can watch, and ANTM and Project Runway won't be on forever you know.

I bring all this up because I woke up this morning with a funny feeling and I couldn't place it. It wasn't anxiety or sadness or sleepiness or regret. Oh, I thought when we were sitting at Grateful Bread, sharing a sesame bagel and some tomato soup, I'm happy.

You know, maybe that was what Scrooge felt. Although let's face it, it's hard to be sure because no one had yet invented the Ipod.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

What I Believe: A Reader's Guide

So I've come to terms with the fact that people have the bizarre tendency to *gasp* disagree with me. I know, shocking, since I'm pretty much always right about everything. :) Look, I do have some unshakable beliefs, like nothing is more delicious than a bowl of tomato soup at the Latona Pub, sushi is the perfect food, and Vaseline is the world's best moisturizer. However, these are clearly not all empirically true. But when it comes to the sort of thing that other people are perpetually pondering what side of the issue they fall on, ponder no more. I'm just well, I'm right. That's all. For example:

1. Feminism is good. Why is it good? Because it's valuable to have choices, and taking away choice, while less confusing, is inherently a bad idea. Choice develops critical thinking, which is far more important than opposable thumbs. I respect my friends who want to stay home with their children - and I respect the ones that like to work and give their daughters different role models. I don't think there's anything inherently bad about choosing whatever path works for you. I never saw myself as a mother, in part because my own mother was miserable. It was not a time when she could have put her considerable intelligence and mad skillz to other tasks then say, wiping up our little handprints from the refrigerator. Also, let's consider that women who are appalled at the idea of feminism on their blogs are missing the fact that feminists made it possible for them to HAVE blogs - namely by ensuring that women would learn to read and write. Oh, and the ones extolling Biblical Womanhood and what have you? I salute your right to have a different opinion, but frankly, you're wrong. Because you know why you CAN vote? And read all those Graceful Womanhood books. That's right. Feminism.

Also - if one more woman starts a sentence with "I'm not a Feminist or anything, but..." I'm going to belt her one. It's not like saying you're a child molester, you know. You can own it.

2. Man's Relationship to Man is Far More Important Than His/Her Relationship to God: So be nice. Pick up your dog's poo. Don't yell into your cell phone on the bus. Stop cutting people off in the Trader Joe's parking lot. Oh and when someone says hello, smile. It won't kill you.

3. Dogs Make Everything Better: Except for sex. But really, can you think of any other experiences where having a dog with you doesn't improve it? Win-win, people.

4. It's Useless to Fight With Your Family: You won't get anywhere. I know this for a fact. My sister and I have had the same fight for over 30 years. Neither of us have budged.

5. Clothes Make You Feel Better: The right outfit at the right time on the right person? Priceless.

6. It's Better to Love Fruits and Vegetables: They're here. They're good for you. Get used to it.

7. It's a Waste of Time Trying to Figure Out Why Someone Broke Up With You: You'll never know. It doesn't matter. But believe me ladies, it wasn't because he was intimidated by your strength and purpose and womanliness. If it was, you were not dating a man.

8. Other People's Children are Important, Too: I always vote for school budgets because those children are going to grow up and populate my neighborhood, and if I put a Keep Off the Grass sign up, golly darn it, I'd like them to be able to read it.

9. Gay People Should Have the Right to Marry: Why? I'll tell you why. Because it isn't your business, and I don't care what your [Insert Deity/Belief System] tells you. There is no marriage in the Bible. Marriage began as a way to join property and that's that. If you want to put ribbons around it, then add the Rainbow colored ones, please. And if for some reason you think it is your business, what say we all get to vote on every Patty Ann Klumper and Ralph Nicknack that gets engaged in Ferris Puke, Idaho? Wouldn't that be more fair? I mean, are Patty Ann and Ralph going to be the best parents? Raise them in the [InsertDeity/Belief System] you follow? Homeschool? No? It's a slippery slope, isn't it? My only quibble with gay marriage is that it means I get invited to more weddings with more bridal showers and more gifts to buy and more What to Wear questions, but you know, for less bigotry and hatred all the way around, I guess I can buy one more Williams & Sonoma Silver Plated Toaster Slice Remover Fork Set.

10. I Own the World's Most Adorable Dog: Fact, people. See below as he cuddles up to Hapa Boy.

In other news, it is cold in Seattle. It is gray. It is dark at 4pm. Thanks for asking. :)

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

We Thought We Could.

Last night I felt I was not only seeing history - I had made it. A perfect storm of underwhelming campaign, ill-advised choices, eight years of limping presidency, an inspired candidate and a fed-up constituency swept a new rule over the land. I mean, even John McCain behaved with dignity, and the crowd in Chicago had me weeping a lot harder than Sarah Palin.

Because we could.

We could elect a smart, educated man.

We could decide that things do not have to continue to get worse.

We could have a First Lady with moxie and fashion sense.

We could be proud of our country and our choices.

But in this great future, you can't forget your past as Bob Marley once eloquently put it. I hope we'll be gracious winners and try not to berate those who disagree with us. Hey, some people think abortion is a sin. Some people have this weird notion that gay marriage is an abomination (although those are not the people that witness the strong and abiding love that J. and J. have for each other, because if they did I'm sure they'd be moved by it.) But surely we're not going to change their minds by calling them idiots. I mean, when has that ever helped anyone's cause?

By moving to Seattle this year, I've learned that I'm more flexible than I thought I was but I've also learned that forgiveness is not my strong suit. I've learned that making a change is not nearly as hard as committing to changing in general. I've learned that a boyfriend doesn't have to be problematic and difficult - he can be cute and kind and funny and supportive without being a pushover (thanks, Hapa Boy.)

Am I staying here? Yes. Because I can.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Other Voices, Other Rooms

Four years ago, my then boyfriend S. and I went out to vote on a cheerful, sunny, cold New Mexico morning. We dropped our ballots for Kerry, and went home to celebrate with a pancake breakfast and fake bacon. As bad luck would have it, Casey (and Kerry) struck out - and the celebration turned into six months of gloom for Then Boyfriend, relieved only by the occasional destruction of the plastic yard chairs when his Fantasy Football team also struck out. He was soon my ex-boyfriend and good riddance, but my point is that he took the whole thing rather personally. Because, you know, we were right (uh, left). He was, in short (and he was that too), your prototypical "I'm shouting you down because I can yell louder than you" liberal, and even a Red Diaper Grandbaby like me had to admit that he could be obnoxious about it all.

This time around I tried - God knows I tried - to consider other viewpoints. I mean, hell - I was a Hilary supporter. Obamatics shouted me down from the beginning when I dared to suggest *gasp* that maybe she was a great woman and maybe a victim of a certain kind of misogynist idea that she should have kicked Clinton out on his keester instead of patching up her marriage and staying with him because of course everyone should get to judge that action, that's not her private life, is it? Really, how dare she decide that she loved her husband, warts and all? That horrible hussy! And if in fact she did stay with him for political reasons, well, no man has ever done that, have they? And if she voted yes on Iraq, my my, didn't Joe Biden do that with no fanfare and gnashing of teeth?

Anyway, the fact that my friends acted as if voting for Hilary was akin to signing a petition that supported W to be named dictator did not make me reconsider Hilary. (Although yes, yes I voted Obama.) It just made me mad. Which is why I spent some of the year reading conservative blogs and hyperchristian websites. I wanted to understand why people disagreed with me, instead of shouting them down like Then Boyfriend S. What I discovered is this:

The separation between Church and State does not exist for some of us. Look here for example. This is a blog from a woman who home-schools, believes that Sarah Palin is not right-wing enough because she has a career (if hiring makeup artists and dressing moose is actually a career, you understand), and feels that the only issue in the presidential race is morality. Namely, hers. She is not alone. Check it out, there's a fascinating group called Ladies Against Feminism - happily ignoring that the fact that they can vote at all as a direct result of uh, feminism. And mind you, these are the Liberals of this group. I disagree with many of their values and beliefs but I defend their right to have them. These are not bad people. I bet they never cut anyone off in traffic. Also, they can make cakes from scratch. I can't.

Whatever happens today, I'm proud to be American. I'm the child of a French woman who recalled taking citizenship in a country where she was never persecuted for being a Jew with tears in her eyes, and my mother was not sentimental. My grandparents on my father's side emigrated from Russia with the clothes on their backs, and saw my father and his siblings all graduate from college. And if the cake bakers and the hawks think Obama is too liberal, too pro-choice, too weak - isn't it great that they can feel that way?

I think it is.