Day 3 – Goat Feet Hunting

I found what’s at the rainbow’s end, my friends.

GoatFeet

These things.

These are GOATS’ FEET.

These feet that once frolicked about a craggy meadow can now sit atop your child’s craft station, upcycled into handsome decanters for Magic Markers and craft scissors.

Just imagine the possibilities.

And it all begins at your local JUNK STORE.

(The above are available right now at Past to Present in Niantic, CT if you don’t have time this weekend to fashion your own.)

On this — Day 3 of my Fun/Funny/Funktastic Stuff for Families blogging challenge (#write31Days) — allow me to point your brood toward the nearest Goodwill store or dusty old thrift store.

Here at these havens of curiosities and cost-savings, your children will gain an appreciation for the record albums…

RecordWall

and the typewriters…

Typewriter

and the Pez dispensers of the past.

ChewiePez

You’re welcome, Will.

They’ll learn the value of squeezing a dollar til it begs for mercy (and the thrill of scoring those barely-used UnderArmour sneakers for $5).

And they’ll be imbued with a can-do spirit of DIY-ness — the very same spirit that inspired a man to see a pair of goats’ feet and dream of all the worlds they could hold.

So don’t be a snob. Go junking with your kids. You’ll find something completely random that you just have to have.

And maybe you’ll find a really scary doll that’ll make you laugh ’til you cry – or who will kill you in the night.

Oh sure, there’s risk involved. But it’s still the best Blue Light Special there is.

Day 2 – “The Book With No Pictures”

B.J. Novak smiles more than you think he would.

As the “temp” on The Office all those years, he seemed like a sad little clown. (It was probably just the crushing weight of all of his dying dreams at Dunder-Mifflin.)

But when I dragged the family to B.J. Novak’s book-signing at RJ Julia in Madison last night (props to the local independent bookstore!), and he read his crazy clever new children’s book, The Book With No Pictures – I was knocked out.

SignedBook

He was ADORABLE. I mean, just incredibly engaging and witty and so smart – but not in that sneering way that implies that he reads the New Yorker and I don’t. (Which is true, but he’d never say so. At least not to my face.)

Oh, and B.J. Novak also thinks I’m cool.

Anyway, that’s what he said. (See how I worked in an Office quote?)

In the signing line, I wrangled over what to say. I settled on something pithy but eloquent like, “Thank you.” I thought I might add in a quick — “Loved the book” — just to extend our time together.

Signing1

Will took this picture. (He’s ten, so cut him some slack.) Lucy is the shadowy person B.J. is chatting it up with. I was there too but am — TRAGICALLY — not pictured. 

Instead, when the big moment arrived, I turned flaming red and blurted out:

“I sound like a total dork, but…” (Blurggggg…enter lots of gushy words of stalker fandom.)

He looked me right in the eye, smiled like a cute little hipster angel, and said, “I don’t think that makes you a dork. I think that makes you COOL.”

Consider my day MADE, y’all.

So, on this – DAY 2 of my #write31Days blogging challenge (in which I made grand claims that I’d improve your family life with fun/funny/funktastic stuff this month) – I present to you The Book With No Pictures.

NoPicturesCover

If you have a kid ages 3-7ish, this is high comedy. It’ll make you say buffoonish stuff out loud that will have your kids rolling on the floor – which they were actually doing last night. I saw it.

It also reminds me of The Monster at the End of this Book — one of my all-time favorite books as a kid. (If you haven’t read it, go get that one too.)

Grover

This is my ragtag old copy. You really must get your own.

When you read books like these out loud, you can’t be a drip. You have to work your best Grover impression. You have to say words like “boo boo butt.” You have to sell it. And that’s when reading time with kids is a blast.

BooBooButt

B.J. Novak said he wants kids to see the power in words – that with words, they can make their grown-ups act silly. But that’s just the start. If they understand the power of words, then they can be real rabble-rousers in life.

Ah, that’s the stuff that makes a word nerd like me swoon. And say “globbity-glibbity.”

CrazyWords

That’s what he said.

P.S. For slightly more grown-up fun, also check out Novak’s book trailer on Amazon for his collection of short stories, One More Thing. It’s a French film parody with Mindy Kaling that KILLS. I have watched it thrice and still die laughing.

31 Days of FUNTASTICNESS

31 Days

I used to be better at withstanding peer pressure.

But my friend Pam (who blogs her hilarious words and doodles at yesilikepaulstanley.blogspot.com) invited me to play in the blog sandbox with her. And I can’t say “no.” (She’d make fun of me – and she’d be good at it.)

Pam told me about this blogging challenge called “31 Days” (write31days.com) where a thousand (or three) other bloggers are posting every day this month on any topic of their choice. Yikes.

I was stumped on what I could possibly write about for 31 long days:

  • 31 recipes for the perfect tuna casserole?
  • 31 Baskin-Robbins flavors and why they’re worthy of inclusion in the ice cream canon?
  • 31 inspired musings worthy of a kitty cat poster?

Nah. I figured I’d talk about what I always talk about — stupid family stuff that makes me laugh, because heaven knows we need to seriously lighten up about this parenting business sometimes.

Every blessed October day, I’ll share my favorite stuff that’s fun/ funny/funktastic and somehow (be it ever so tangentially) related to families. And I’d love to hear from you – because you’ve got tons of fun/funny/funktastic/family-related stuff of your own that I may have somehow missed in life.

I’ll warn you: there’s almost zero chance there’ll be crafts or recipes (that would just be weird coming from me).

But there might be a bonzo thing I found at Goodwill that’ll make you spew your morning coffee. Or a children’s book you just HAVE to own. Or the new line of hilarious Halloween wigs at Target that you absolutely must try on.

It’ll be silly nonsense. But that’s how we roll in our crusty old station wagon with the Bill Cosby album blaring.

By day 31, who knows? I may be scraping the bottom of the fun barrel and saying stuff like, “Eh, who cares anymore. Just go watch cartoons.”

But hey, at least it won’t require a glue gun.

Here are each day’s topics as we go along…

Day 2: B.J. Novak’s new children’s book

Day 3: Goat Feet Hunting

Day 4: Saturday is for DONUTS

Day 5: Wigs.

Day 6: Motherly “Hairoics

Day 7: Undead Family Photos

Day 8: Really “Bad” Cross-stitch

Day 9: Pack a Shoebox…or 12

Day 10: Introduce Your Kids to Jan Hooks

Day 11: Get Your Faerie On

Day 12: Sunday is for Slothing

Day 13: Get Pumped for Fall at Pumpkintown USA

Day 14: Cook like Betty Draper

Day 15: Ummmmm, I skipped.

Day 16: Show the Kids Your Yearbook

Day 17: Chomp on Cheeseburgers

Day 18: Get Tricked out for Halloween

Day 19: Skipped again!

Day 20: Game on

Day 23: SNL Starter Skits for Kids

Day 29: Taunt a Furby (actually, don’t)

Day 31: Allow Me to Introduce…the Jack-O-Lantern

WHEW! We’re done!

Texts from the Crib

Look at this picture carefully and tell me what you see.

TextsFromCribPolaroid

Yes, that IS a cell phone in the hand of a teenage girl.

At a state fair.

IN A BABY STROLLER.

We were just sitting around at the Big E Fair in Massachusetts, waiting on the kids to be done on the bouncy thingee and taking in some world-class people-watching.

Then there was this girl.

Just consider, if you will, the melée going on all around this glowing little phone shroud.

A million and one lights flashing, Guns N’ Roses blaring, rides spinning and dropping people at Mach 10, all that delirious screaming, deep-fat fryers sizzling, the steady thump of mole-whacking. There could not be a more overstimulating, kid-centric, happy-making environment this side of heaven’s glory.

Her parents were such jerks to drag her there.

As if that weren’t enough, check out this kid on the swings.

PhoneSwingPolaroidHe is literally SITTING ON AN AMUSEMENT PARK RIDE texting. He’s got a whole 30 seconds before getting swung into the rafters. So what better time to post a Yelp review about the elephant ear stand? It’s all about time management.

I’m sorry, but this crap is BANANAS, y’all.

B-A-N-A-N-A-S.

I seriously wanted to jerk those infernal phones out of their hands and launch them straight off the nearest Ferris wheel. Or maybe run them over with the nearest bumper car. Or whack them to smithereens like the nearest mole.

I know I sound totally judgy and ranty, but I am just sick to death of seeing entire families in restaurants, every last one of them nose-deep in a screen. Just last night at the pizza joint, I watched the patriarch of a family ignore his wife and young daughter so he could play Candy Crush. And he’s the grown-up.

We’ve all seen it. Some of us do it. But it can’t be good.

And I’m sorry, but I have to draw the line at FAIRS.

There is life to be lived, people of the phone. There are whirls to tilt. There are giant turkey legs to consume. There are oversized SpongeBobs to win. There are bearded ladies to see (and at the fair, believe me, they’re everywhere).

And thus I must…sort of…quote Lee Ann Womack.

If you get the chance to text it out or dance, oh Lord help us, I hope you dance.

Or at least eat the chocolate-covered bacon and report back to me.

 

 

A Tale of Two Microphones

I don’t write much about my husband. He’s this shadowy figure who makes occasional appearances in my writings, but mostly I’ve kept him on deep background.

I love him to pieces. He’s hilarious. But I think it best not to lump him in with all my shenanigans.

Today, however, is Bill’s birthday.

(Note: Some of you may know him as “James.” This is another part of what makes him a shadowy figure. The man goes by two names like he’s Superman or something.)

And he is THE hardest person on planet Earth to buy for. Let’s just peruse the wish list, shall we? A boat. Another boat. And maybe a different kind of boat.

Sailing2

See? He has a boat already. He made it – another reason he’s kind of like a superhero in my book.

So I usually buy him some dumb action movie to collect dust on the decrepit DVD tower, a stack of plaid J Crew shirts, and call it a day. A sad, sad day, but a day.

Today I’m gonna change all that. Today I’m going to WRITE about him.

Actually, I already wrote about him. I’m just going to put back into circulation the embarrassing stuff I wrote about him before. (How’s that for pulling out ALL the stops?)

Hey, it’s cheaper than a birthday card, plus there’s a whole lot more words. And I mean every one of them still.

Matrimony and the Microphone: A Karaoke Love Story – published in the Lyme Times – June 5, 2008

I have never darkened the door of Chuck E. Cheese’s. And with two little kids, I consider that a major personal achievement.

(Note for 2014 readers: I have since lost that distinction, and I’m not proud of it. Those freaky mechanical puppets haunt my dreams.)

ChuckeeCheese2

Here’s the evidence. Those tongues probably licked every germ throbbing on every surface in the place.

But now I can say I’ve been to the grown-up version.

Along North Carolina’s Outer Banks, where the whole Filiatreault family just vacationed together, we left the kids with their grandparents to hit what could have been the Jimmy Buffet Fan Club headquarters – a touristy dive in Duck that was all garish Key West pastels and fish bowl margaritas.

Where Mr. Cheese offers juice boxes, this place serves hollowed out coconuts carved to resemble a monkey’s head with a bendy straw poking out the top. (Attached is a little gold sticker that reads, “Also a coin bank.” Good to know.)

Where Mr. Cheese offers foosball and a ball pit, this place has Karaoke Night.

Overseeing this operation was a graying man in glasses and a Hawaiian shirt who could have been your office computer guy.

His puffy jester hat must have been calling to us. Before we knew what hit us, Bill and I had grabbed a set of microphones and were belting out the most ear-splitting duet of Islands in the Stream those pink walls had ever endured.

“Tender love is blind, it requires a dedication!” Bill scrunched up his eyes in mock passion, gripping the mic with both hands.

“All this love we feel needs no conversation!” I screeched with total commitment. A Russian guy in a cowboy hat with a plastic ball and chain around his ankle looked on from his bachelor party and winced.

It was a terrible duet lovingly dedicated to our ten-year anniversary, and it was one of the most mortifying things I’ve ever done.

Part of me felt ancient. Swaying our coconut monkey heads to Piano Man with a bunch of drunk college kids isn’t exactly our scene anymore.

But that tone-deaf display was a throw-back to the couple we were ten years ago, exemplifying the campy brand of goofiness that brought us together in the first place.

Gov_shower2

My office gave us – what else? – but a karaoke machine for our wedding. With dual mics. Now that’s love.

As I watched him dance “the running man” in front of strangers, I swooned with love for that guy.

And as I watched him scoop up our little girl in the frilly swimsuit and carry her into the surf, I swooned with love for that guy, too.

BillLucyBeach08.2

This is them then.

I love both those guys, and I’m been very blessed to have them in the center of an awfully good life these past ten years.

Bill, James, whoever you are…I will always love you.

Hmmm, that reminds me of a song. I’ll have to save that one for anniversary #20.

 

 

 

A Dirt Hater’s Guide to Gardening and Friendship

I hate dirt.

I’m pretty much adverse to all forms of grunge, sweat, humidity, bugs, and most displays of physical exertion — basically all the things you experience outdoors.

I, like everyone else, love pretty flowers, sunshine and rainbows. And all those things look really nice on my screensaver.

But somehow I have an awesome friend who loves dirt. She loves it so much she could roll around in it – all while reeling off the names of every last plant in her flowerbeds. In Latin.

She even knows what these strange garden implements are called - and how to use them.

She even knows what these strange garden implements are called – and how to use them.

She knows her stuff. Better yet, she loves her stuff. And what my pitiful black thumb has done to almost every plant in my possession makes her want to cry.

After my husband (with delusions of yard makeover grandeur) jerked out every overgrown shrub from our front yard by the roots with a chain and a big straining truck, Jen came over.

It was time for a garden intervention.

This is her sketch, now covered with a dusty sheen and smudged with water from the hose.

This is her sketch, now covered with a dusty sheen and smudged with water from the hose.

She sketched a landscaping plan with weird plant names I’d never heard of and could not, for the life of me, spell.

And if that had been me, that’s where my tap of charity would run dry. (Here’s your nice piece of paper with all my wisdom and guidance scribbled upon it! Good luck with all that! Tra la la!)

But this friend actually came over with a shovel and garden tools and a minivan stuffed to the brim with cuttings and sea grasses and these little green darlings she loved.

This friend shuns the white hot media spotlight of this blog and prefers to remain hatted and anonymous.

My friend shuns the white hot media spotlight of this blog and prefers to remain hatted and anonymous.

And she dug in the dirt for me. She poured sweat for me. She shared what she knew and what she loved with me. She tried to make my corner of the world prettier for me.

Ernie2

Ernie helped too.

I’m pretty sure there’s gonna be a high kill rate. Some of these precious green things will not make it. I’ve been watering, I swear – but it’s been wicked hot out there by New England standards and I have no idea what I’m doing. The brown is creeping.

But she knew it was a gamble going in. And she took that gamble. For me.

That’s a friend.

JenPlants2

There’s risk involved. There’s sacrifice. There’s getting your hands dirty in the mess of other people’s lives.

But in it, there was so much joy. We giggled and we gossiped and I got mulch everywhere. It was as much fun as an inside nerd can have in the Great Outdoors.

She tells me that real gardeners don't wear gloves. I'm sure quiche is okay though.

She tells me that real gardeners don’t wear gloves. I guess this makes me BONAFIDE.

Lord, let me be a friend like that – one with a brimming full station wagon, a solid set list of funny stories, and two really dirty hands.

If not literally dirty, then at least figuratively.

It still counts.

Snooki, Shakespeare and Me

Psst…I’ll let you in on a little secret.

I’m about to have something in common with such luminaries as Bill Shakespeare and Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi of Jersey Shore. (And no, it’s not an unfortunate hairstyle.)

Shakespeare looks pretty on my shelf. I don’t actually read it. Too heavy…

I will soon be joining their ranks as a published author.

There. I said it out loud. I’M GETTING A BOOK PUBLISHED!

(I just broke a major rule from my college journalism classes. The only exclamation point I’m  supposedly allotted in my writing life is for the headline: “WAR!”

Well, college was a long time ago. And I want to exclaim.)

So here’s the skinny:

It’ll be a book of my favorite Tales from the Crib columns from the Lyme Times (which I’ve been writing since Will was three, who’s now ten, so that’s a bunch). It’s being published by a fantastic little publishing house, Skyhorse Publishing in New York.

And it’s probably coming out in spring 2016, so mark your calendars now. Oh, who are we kidding? I’ll remind you. SO MANY TIMES.

One thing’s for sure: it won’t look anything like this book.

 

This EXISTS. I cannot unsee it.

This EXISTS. I cannot unsee it.

Getting a book published is equal parts wildly exciting and hard-core ulcer-inducing.

As someone who writes for a life and a living, it’s been my personal Everest to have my very own words in my very own book on my very own coffee table.

And to be able to stare at it sitting there and to love it and to make my family proud (after they get over being horrified by what I wrote about them…)? Swoon.

Unless..I don’t love it and nobody’s proud and it’s a huge flop and it’s nowhere near as good as Tina Fey or even Bob Saget and there’s a hideous picture me on the back.

Oh, it could happen.

 

In the grand tradition of Tina Fey and Mindy Kaling, I’d prefer to use an embarrassing adolescent photo on the back cover, preferably with hand puppet &/or weird hair issues.

In the grand tradition of Tina Fey and Mindy Kaling, I’d prefer to use an embarrassing adolescent photo of myself for the back cover, preferably with hand puppet &/or weird hair issues.

 

Perhaps this perm from my first drivers' license?

Like this, maybe? My 16-year-old driver’s license — complete with poodle perm.

 

So many fears and insecurities and needling doubts will be along for this ride, but so will lots of you – as my crazy hollering cheerleaders always there to help drown them out.

It was one such lovely loud-mouthed friend who kept talking me up to an editor…and then this happened.

This is happening.

Boom.  Or at least, yahooooo.

So for all of you who have been faithfully reading my nonsense all these years —

Who have stopped me in the produce aisle to tell me nice things about my latest column…

Who have read my columns out loud to your poor long-suffering husbands…

Who have clipped my writings and sent them to friends…

Who have never once sent me hate mail…

Who have been sweet enough to ask with some frequency, “When are going to write a book?” –

For you, I am so so grateful. A writer’s words are worth a hill of beans if nobody reads them. And you actually read them. Better yet, you don’t line the turtle box with them. (If you do, don’t tell me).

Now, if you really love me, you’ll buy a copy for every friend on your Christmas list. But we can cross that bridge when we come to it.

For now, just THANK YOU. THANK YOU. THANK YOU.

And yeeeeehaw.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Middle Schooler and The Leaning Tower of Binders

I have a kid just starting middle school, so of course, my primary concern in all of life has become binders.

From the moment I got Will’s school supply list in the mail, I have been slavish to its every whim. I filled the cart with notebooks (spiral and non), packs of new pencils (colored and non – though we have a forest of them already), and a huge towering stack of binders.

In case you’re out of the school loop, these ringed wonders have apparently replaced the ancient relics we once knew as books.

They are also the black holes into which a boy’s daily shuffle of papers are sucked and never heard from again.

And let me assure you: there is a zero percent chance of all those gargantuan, pointy notebooks fitting into my 10-year-old’s backpack – at least on the days he wants to eat.

The lunchbox clearly has to go.

Look at that sad sad lunchbox. He wants to go too. But that nasty blue 2" binder -- he is the bully of all school supplies. I have zero tolerance for that blue binder.

Look at that sad sad lunchbox. He wants to go too. But that nasty blue 2″ binder — he is the bully of all school supplies. I have zero tolerance for that blue binder.

I’m pretty sure I’ve screwed this up somehow. (This is where my mind goes – of course). I probably didn’t get the right binders. Or the right number, the right size, the right style.

I have become obsessed with binder perfection – for them all to fit nice and neat, for the corners not to be too sharp, to get the kind the cool kids have, for the weight not to stoop his bird-like shoulders and doom him to a back-braced adolescence.

I want everything to be perfect.

(Ummm, hold on, are we still talking about binders?)

There just might be bigger issues at work under this shiny Trapper Keeper surface – like how I know (and he doesn’t yet) that middle school is hard, and I’m scared for him.

Kindergarten was supposedly the ultimate childhood transition – and it is. But it’s also the sweetest, cuddliest teddy bear of a place to send one’s beloved babies.

Middle school is a different animal – a much gnarlier one. I vividly remember it sucking. I remember looking the dorkiest I’ve ever looked. I remember sticking out and not being cool and doing things all gangly and wrong.

Exhibit A : Sexy middle school nightgown selfie.

Exhibit A : Sexy middle school nightgown selfie.

So if I could just get the binders right for him, maybe all of this humiliation could be avoided.

That’s how a mom thinks anyway.

We know it doesn’t work really that way. Somewhere inside we know.

But still we try to fix the things we can – by sending our children off with just the right stuff, or the cutest back-to-school ensemble, or something (anything) that says Hollister on it – knowing that all the rest of it is utterly, miserably beyond our control.

Most of it’s even beyond our knowing about (like when you have a male child whose standard answer is “not much” to the “What’d you do today” question).

So my kid will come home from middle school each day, and I will ask about his day. He won’t tell me a fat lot.

I will then dig through that towering pile of binders and search for clues. (Gotta make that investment work for me somehow…)

Because this is a whole new journey we’re embarking on – him with the ten pounds of supplies strapped to his tiny back, me with the shoulders heaped with motherly concern watching him go.

Y'all, look at how TINY he is next to the rest of these kids. (He's the tiny one with the red bulging backpack.) I'm pretty sure this is the college bus. And LOOK, the kid behind mine can't fit in his lunchbox either. See??

Y’all, look at how TINY he is next to the rest of these kids. (He’s the tiny one with the red bulging backpack.) I’m pretty sure this is the college bus. And LOOK, the kid behind mine can’t fit in his lunchbox either. See??

What I’m sending him off with may not be perfect, it may not fit quite right, it may not be the coolest ever.

But all the love and prayers I’ve crammed into the square inches that remain ought to count for something…maybe almost everything.

But yeah, I did keep the receipt on those binders.

Just in case.

 

 

 

Welcome to the Breakfast Club

Everybody but everybody is talking about Robin Williams – and rightly so. I say we all get our rainbow suspenders out of the attic and wear them in solidarity.

His passing may be news, but it’s a story as old as Behind the Music. We saw before us someone funny and brilliant, rich and beloved. And we assumed his life was inherently awesome – or at least more awesome than ours.

But there was much, much more to his story. There always is.

Hate to be there when the laughter stops...

Hate to be there when the laughter stops…

Some of you may know that this spring, I drove to North Carolina to sit by my mother’s bedside during her last days.

There was nothing to do but sit with my siblings and my dad and watch it happen, maybe nibble on cheese and crackers, make awkward chit-chat with visitors, sometimes try to tell her things you think she should know. It was grueling.

I nearly wrecked taking this picture. But it was so moody and spooky, I felt like I was in my own really unfun road trip movie.

I nearly wrecked taking this picture. But all that fog felt like the most depressing road trip movie of all time.

But when we’d step outside those nursing home doors, nobody knew our mother was dying. Especially not the girl at the Popeye’s drive-thru.

One of those grim mornings, my sister and I had the bright idea to pick up some chicken biscuits – you know, to help gird our loins. We were pretty sure this would be Mom’s last day. We’d need protein and something deep-fried to get through it.

But I promise you have never sat in a drive-thru so long in all your livelong days. And you have never met a slower, spacier drive-thru worker in the history of drive-thru workers (and that’s saying something). I’m talking glacial.

While we waited on her to go pluck the chicken bald, the most awful gallows humor kicked in.

ChickenHunt2

Lucy is kindly re-enacting the scene for you.

We started making up the cheeriest, most horrifying things to say to this poor woman– all in our sweetest, most sing-song Southern way, of course.

Things like, “No, really…it’s okayyyyy! We’ve got nothing better to do. Our mother is only on her deathbed. In fact, she could very well be knocking on the pearly gates by the time we get our biscuits. But really and truly, you just take your sweet, sweet time! We’ll wait right here!”

We went on and on like that until the tears were streaming and our fists were hammering the dashboard. It’s safe to say we were a little unhinged.

That drive-thru girl had no idea who she was dealing with that day – or what we were dealing with. You just never know.

And I think nowadays it’s harder to know.

We only know what we see from photos online — usually filtered, scenic, and all smiles. Most of us tend to put the good stuff out there and hold the bad stuff close to the chest.

Anotherfakesmile2

Look at those PAINED expressions. You just know there’s more to this story.

I don’t have a problem with that exactly. I mean, I love the good stuff — like cute pictures of your kids (and I hope you can tolerate mine.)

At the same time, I can’t stand the danglers of mysterious Facebook bad-stuff like, “Can’t sleep from worry!” or “Just spent the morning in the ER!” Good grief, tell us or don’t.

But since we’re all putting our prettiest selves out there for public consumption – and since little nibbles of electronic conversation often suffice for “connection” – we don’t always know what’s behind the curtain of each beautiful life. And there’s a lot.

If we hadn’t actually talked about this stuff in real life, I would never know that the smiling young couple traipsing across Europe had just lost their first baby. I would never know that the lovely college girl with the impeccable wardrobe battles a painful mystery illness. I would never know that the happy family at the beach had just clawed their way back from adultery.

Way down in the depths that Instagram can’t see, you just never know what’s really going on with people. Down there, everyone is a mess. EVERYONE. And the parts that aren’t a mess are only the handiwork of God’s merciful mending kit.

This is how I feel much of the time. Fall down on your face UNDER THE BED tired.

This is how I feel much of the time. Fall down on your face UNDER THE BED done. We are all a mess.

We are the Breakfast Club – each of us a brain, an athlete (maybe not so much), a basket case, a princess and a criminal.

No matter what we look like to the world outside, we are all a confounding mess. Every last one of us. And we all need grace – and each other.

And that woman you see doubled over laughing at the drive-thru? She could be on her way to a loved one’s deathbed. Probably not, and if she is, that would be really weird. But it could happen. And she’d want you to give her a bag full of biscuits.

Just make it snappy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Frankly, My Dear, I Can’t Watch Any More Cartoon Network

I just showed my kids all three hours and 53 minutes of Gone with the Wind.

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All the other pictures appearing in this blog are blurry snapshots of my TV. Only the best for you…

I may have jumped the cultural gun a bit (they’re only 8 and 10), but it was a rainy Saturday. I’d finished my bi-monthly dusting (translation: every other month). And I was feeling like a good long cinematic hunker-down.

After all the Cartoon Network crap they’ve gorged on this summer, I felt we could all use a nice Oscar-winning palate cleanser — all the while getting these New Englandy children in touch with their tea-sippin’ Southern roots.

Guess I sort of glossed over in my mind all the adultery, slavery, warring, amputations, dying children and ponies, and general suffering that is Gone with the Wind.

There ain’t a song and dance number anywhere to be found on the red earth of Tara. About twenty tragedies in, Lucy asked with great Disney-inspired hope, “Is there at least a happy ending?”

No way, sister. Just sit back and enjoy the soul-crushing ride.

They did. Mainly because if there’s a screen playing something, anything, even a commercial with two people sitting in bathtubs on a hilltop – my children will watch enraptured.

Oh, and I also provided popcorn and Sour Patch Kids.

But this wasn’t exactly a quiet ride. There were many questions to be asked. Oh my sweet Lord, so MANY MANY questions.

Will fired the first shot: “Why were women’s butts so big back then?”

You could serve mint juleps off that shelf.

A. It’s called a bustle. And you could serve mint juleps off that shelf.

Questions continued in rapid-fire succession. And they were really, really annoying.

  • Q: What is she eating?
The only radish left in the entire burning South.

A. The only radish left in the entire burning South.

  •  Q. Why is she eating that? Why is she falling down?
Umm, she’s starving or whatever.

A. Umm, she’s starving or whatever.

  • Q. What’s wrong with that horse’s mouth?
A. It’s turning into glue. Geez, Will, it’s thirsty, it’s been walking a hundred miles or so without stopping. Just hush and watch the stupid movie.

A. He’s turning into glue, Will. Geez, he’s thirsty. He’s only been walking for days without stopping. Just hush and watch the stupid movie.

  • Why does Scarlett hit people so much?
A. Oh, something to do with Irishness, maybe? Is that racist?

A. Oh, something to do with Irishness, maybe? Is that racist?

A: She bites too.

(She bites too.)

  • “Why are rich people so lazy and make other people do their work for them?” Also, “Why is that little girl fanning those girls with peacock feathers?”
Shhh! No time for an analysis of the class system or the history of slavery…Scarlett’s about to hit somebody.

A. Shhh! No time to analyze the culture of slavery and the plantation system of the Antebellum South…Scarlett’s about to hit somebody.

Then there were observations that deeply disturbed me as a Southerner, like:

  • “I thought the Union soldiers were the good guys.”
A. Clearly, you are the product of Connecticut public school indoctrination.

Clearly, my child, you are the product of Connecticut public school indoctrination.

And of course, there are always those pesky, uncomfortable “adult situations.” Like when a drunken Rhett whisks Scarlett upstairs to, ahem, have his way with her.

  • “What is he doing with her?”
A. Ummm, raping her? Oh, I mean, tucking her into bed?

A. Ummm, tucking her into bed?

Thankfully no one asked why she was so weirdly cheerful the next day.

Thankfully no one asked why she was so weirdly cheerful the next day.

Maybe they were too young to get Gone with the Wind. Okay, not maybe…probably.

But it was worth it. And seriously, we’ve been good so long.

As doting parents, we’ve slogged through a decade of loopy Baby Einstein videos and happy clappy puppets and god-awful Lego Ninjago cartoons – and we just want to watch Seinfeld already.

We want to share with our kids the things we love. And oh, how we love Seinfeld.

Sometimes our well-meaning attempts to share turn out just like we’d imagined. It thrills my dorky heart to hear my children bellow at each other, “Inconceivable!”

I do not think that word means what you think it means.

I do not think that word means what you think it means.

But sometimes it leads us to do fool things like cue up Grease for family movie night (or fill in the blank with any PG movie from the ‘80s that we remembered as perfectly harmless) before we realize exactly what they’re singing about while waxing that car and we lunge for the eject button.

We’re just in a weird cultural limbo. The kids aren’t yet teenagers (amen to that), but no longer babies. So with varying levels of success, we start introducing them to E.T. and Duran Duran and Hitchcock movies a little bit at a time – and sometimes to all of The Avengers at once (because Mom had book club and Dad was in charge).

Because honestly, it’s one of the fun privileges of parenting. We get to fill our kids up with the stuff that we love in the hopes that they’ll love it too. And I want my kids to love Rhett Butler. (They aren’t convinced. But tomorrow is another day.)

They definitely love Kramer. And one day, I’m sure they’ll love Danny and Sandy.

But not quite yet.

I’m not even near ready for all the questions about that skin-tight catsuit.