September 29, 2008

What’s in a Name?

My grandma’s name was Tom.

Yes, my grandmother’s name, as far as I knew until the age of six, was Tom. Tommy actually, Grandma Tommy. It was when my first grade teacher Mrs. Rivello expressed her skepticism about my grandmother’s masculine name that I finally learned the truth. When my teacher asked me who would be coming to our class Grandparents Day Celebration, I replied:

“Grandma Fanny, Grandpa Kenny and Grandma Tommy.”

Grandma Tommy?” she asked.

“Yup,” I said matter-of-factly. “Grandma Tommy.”

“Are you sure her name is Tommy, Dayna?”

“Yes,” I said, confused as to why she would be asking such a question.

“Can you just check with mommy when you get home to make sure that is your grandma’s name?”

I nodded compliantly, thinking I had done something wrong.

Thinking back now, how dare she doubt the name of the Goldberg family matriarch. Yes, Tommy is primarily a male name but who was she to judge and question what we called family members. She should have questioned why my maternal great-grandmother Rose dubbed my mother’s mother with the unfortunate name Fanny, which I later learned was a synonym for ass, butt, bottom, tush, etc. Sorry to all you Fannys out there.

That afternoon my mother picked me up from the bus stop. As I skipped home from the bus, swinging my Muppet Show lunch box in one hand and holding my mother’s hand in the other, I told her how my teacher didn’t believe me that grandma’s name was Tommy.

“Well actually Dayna, it isn’t,” my mother replied.

I stopped skipping, let go of my mother’s hand and gave her my best “Whatchyou talkin’ ’bout Willis?” face.

“Her real name is Evelyn,” my mother informed me. “When she was younger she used to play sports with the boys and they started calling her a tomboy. Eventually everyone started to call her Tommy and it just stuck.”

What?! Evelyn?! That name did not seem fitting for my rough and tough Bronx-born grandmother who had the mouth of a truck driver. She was, would and will always be Tommy to me.

To continue the name confusion in my family, my father’s name is Phillip, but everyone in the family calls him Genie. When my Grandma Tommy named her first born, she explained how Phillip was a name she adored, but she despised the nickname Phil. She said if people started calling him Phil, she would call him by his middle name, Eugene. Eugene turned into Genie and that was that.

So to recap: Evelyn was called Tommy, Phillip was called Genie and Fanny was still called Fanny.

A few decades later, I was born. After my mother had the naming rights to my sister Heidi (who my brother renamed Heiny) and my brother Michael (who my father called either Michelle or “Wolfgang”, which we still really don’t understand…it’s not like my brother is really hairy or anything), my father got the right to name me. Lucky me.

It was 1977 and my father was a big fan of the hit television show “Charlie’s Angels“. He was especially hot for Jacqueline Smith, whose character was named Kelly. Therefore, my father decided my name was going to be Kelly. A nice Irish name for a nice Jewish girl. But my then 9-year-old sister had other plans.

My grandma Fanny’s neighbor had a baby a few months before I was born. They named her Dana Nicole. When my sister told my mom how much she liked the name, my mother agreed to it. My mom then came up with the ingenious idea to add the “y” to the “normal” spelling of Dana and it was set. I was going to be Dayna (with a Y) Nicole. My father was oblivious to this until my parents had to fill out my birth certificate.

“Hey,” my dad argued, hurt his 9-year-old daughter had more say in naming his new child. “I thought we agreed her name was going to be Kelly.”

A small argument ensued, exposing my virgin, newborn ears to what was to come in our household. It was my great aunt Mimi (whose real name was Minnie) who finally suggested to put ALL the names together. So I am Dayna Nicole Kelly, no hyphen between Nicole and Kelly.

I usually don’t mind my multiple middles, except when filling out forms. They (whomever they are) always leave just one blank for the middle initial. I find that so inconsiderate for those of us whose parents couldn’t decide what the hell to name us. As if I didn’t have enough to handle.

Having two middle names has become a conversation piece and has made me extremely interested in what people’s names are and what significance, if any, the name has. For example, in recent years, I have learned I am not alone. My friend Kandi also has two middle names AND two (now three, since she got married) last names!

In the Jewish religion, which is the one my family seems to follow extremely loosely (We call the evergreen tree we decorate with ornaments and lights every December our “Hanukkah bush”), it is tradition to name a child after the deceased. We honor our dead loved ones by using their initials to name our children. My sister Heidi was named after my mother’s father Herbert. (I also honored the grandfather I never met by naming all the fireflies I ever caught in my childhood summers, Herbie.) My brother is named for my father’s grandfather Max Jacob. I am named for my mother’s grandfather Phillip (not to be confused with my father Phillip/Genie).

Yea, I didn’t understand either. Phillip starts with P. Dayna starts with D. How am I named after him exactly? When I was old enough to understand all this naming stuff, I realized I had another name: my Hebrew name, which is Shoshana Yehuda. Apparently, this is the female version of my great-grandfather’s Hebrew name.

To continue this tradition, my sister wanted to honor my grandma Tommy by naming her first born after her. She wanted to use the E from Evelyn, even though nobody really called her that. My sister loved the name Elizabeth, but didn’t really like the nicknames: Liz, Lizzy, Beth, Betsy, Eliza, etc (Similar to Tommy not liking the nickname Phil). So she picked another really pretty name, Emily Elizabeth. The only problem with this was her last name is Emery. Emily Emery? Was she serious? In her delusional pregnant mind, there was not a problem. In the ultimate need to protect my unborn niece from complete ridicule, I had to talk my sister out of it. I had to stop her from creating even more problems for her daughter than she was bound to have just by being in our family.

“Remember how we used to make fun of Mrs. Jones, our social studies teacher?” I reasoned with her. “Joan Jones? Or mom and dad’s friend Rose Rose? Plus, do you want your daughter to have the same name as the owner of Clifford the big red dog? Do you really want to do that to her?”

“Yeah, but those are their married names. They chose to do that to themselves,” she said.

“Yes and when your daughter is old enough to make the decision to have such a ridiculous name, you can let her,” I pleaded. “But please, don’t do it for her!”

Luckily, on November 25, 2006, Leah Elizabeth, not Emily Elizabeth, was born.

Whew, close one.

My brother also decided to honor my grandmother, but in a more obvious and clear way. His son’s name is Thomas.

Having a plethora of names has its benefits. When I first submitted an article to a website and I was afraid it was a piece of crap, I gave myself a pen name: Nicole Kelly. That way, if it was really bad I wouldn’t have to claim it as my own. I could hide behind Nicole Kelly.

When I was a tween and attended a lot of my friend’s birthday parties at United Skates of America, our local roller skating establishment, I told all the cute boy from other schools that my name was Nicole, Nikki for short. My friend’s alter-ego was Samantha, Sammy for short. Neither of us were totally lying. I mean, Nicole was one of my middle names and Sammie was a nickname for Sampson, which was her last name. Plus, who were we really hurting as we skated around in our leg warmers and did the Hokey Pokey with the Skateosaurous, the big, purple dinosaur on skates.

Having a Y in my name and two middle names has made me who I am. If I were Dana instead of Dayna, I might have traveled an entirely different path; one where I played it safe without asking questions or stepping outside of the box. Being a little different, just by having an extra letter in my name and an extra middle name, I feel, I don’t know, special. At least it makes a decent story. And if it doesn’t….this was written by Nicole Kelly.

September 6, 2008

I should have known or Why I don’t do online dating…anymore

I should have known. I should have trusted my first instinct when I realized there was a possibility he was more petite than I am. I don’t like that. I need a man who can cuddle me in his arms–which should be at least two times the size of mine–and be able to pick me up and throw me over his shoulder if he had the urge to do so. But the circumference of his arms was dangerously close to the circumference of mine.

I should have known when he said he too shopped for x-small t-shirts. I should have known when he said American Apparel has changed his life.

I should have known when he met me at the train station and I saw a dark tuft of back hair sticking out of his well-fit x-small American Apparel t-shirt.

OK, my attempt-to-be-less-judgmental voice said. He can’t control his unwanted hair in unfortunate places. Men are allowed to be small, or x-small. It’s in his genes, right? He can’t help it. And people grow hair on their backs. It’s natural.

Being a little too little and a little too hairy are things I could overlook if he treated me right, respected me and made me laugh. And he did. But as time progressed over those three dates the cons began outweighing the pros.

He brought his adorable black lab mix to our first date. I asked him to. After all, that’s what drew me to him in the first place. My online dating profile explained I was “a dog lover without a dog” and he was a new dog owner and lover.

I am not usually one for online dating. It seems unnatural to me, forced even. I know plenty of people who have met their spouses/significant others online, which is probably what kept my mind open…for a little while at least. My friend, who seemed more concerned about my love life–or lack there of-more than me, insisted I sign up for one.

“No Dayna,” he tried to convince me, “this site has cool, artsy types, no freaks.” Ummmmm….right.

Anyway….this guy loved his dog so much, in fact, that after he gave me any sort of compliment, he then proceeded to baby talk to his dog, nuzzling himself against her as she lapped his face continuously with her long pink tongue.

“Wow Dayna, you write? That’s really great! But you are great too? Aren’t you little doggie?” he said grabbing the dog’s face. “YES! YOU! ARE!”

I should have known then.

I should have known on the third date when we went back to his apartment and I saw what I saw. His office consisted of the standard item in one’s office: a desk, computer, printer, file cabinet, a full sized video game, arcade-style. OK, not a standard item, but kinda cool. My brother has a Ms. Pacman arcade game in his basement. He’s a cool guy. Maybe this guy is cool too. That’s when I saw…the shelf; the shelf with large transformer robots on it.

“What are those?” I asked, pointing to the shelf.

“Oh those?” he said. “Those? Those are only…THE…BEST…ROBOTS….EVER!”

I wonder if he has ever seen The 40-year-old virgin, I thought.

“This one right here,” he pointed out, “it took, like, 6 months to put together! It had over 1,000 pieces! And this one here…” he continued.

OK, I thought. He has a hobby. People have hobbies. 31 year old with model robots. No big deal. It could be worse.

As I soon learned, it did get worse.

I should have known.

I should have known when I saw all the octopuses.

“Squids actually,” he corrected.

Ummm, ok whatever, squid, octopus, same difference. You still have chochkees all over your room that look like penises with 8 legs. Care to explain?

“Well,” he began, “it all kinda started out as a joke, but snowballed into something so much more.”

I really had no idea where this was going. Was he into sea creatures? Fascinated by their beauty? By their fallic nature? Is he nautical? A fan of seamen perhaps?

“Well it all started when Disney was closing down 20,000 leagues under the sea,” he explained.

“The ride?” I asked.

“Yeah!” he continued. “It’s like a landmark! It shouldn’t be taken down!”

OK, my non-judgmental side tried to rationalize. He’s passionate about something….albeit, saving Disney rides from permanent expulsion, but he has a passion right? You can’t say that about everyone you meet.

He started a website, he explained, save20Kleagues.com. People started writing to him about his valiant efforts to save the ride and began sending him 20K leagues memorabilia. He received official letters from former ride operators, which he framed and hung in his bathroom, which was a 20,000 leagues under the sea shrine. Tremendous posters, seaweed and gold coins from the actual ride and other nautical items donned the restroom. The matching shower curtain/toilet seat cover/trash can/soap dish/toothbrush holder set was designed with swimming fish. He had a rubber duckie on his sink.

I should have known then.

I definitely should have known when I saw the four foot body pillow squid sprawled out on his bed, tentacles reaching in every direction. I held my breath a little when I noticed it and looked towards to the dog, lying on the bright orange couch, looking for an explanation for the world I had just entered. She sighed and put her head down, as if to say, “Yeah, I know, I have to live with this.”

“Oh! That?! That was THE best birthday present I ever got! It makes me tear up even thinking about it!” he said.

I tear up now thinking of why I was ever there.

“This lady in Florida hand-makes these and they are, like, $400! Feel it. It’s beautiful fabric. Real wool and flannel!”

Dude, you are talking about a life-size squid, I was thinking. But I was speechless. I tried my best to hide the judgmental expression on my face.

“So,” he continued, “like 20 of my friend chipped in and bought it for me for my 30th birthday. When I saw it I nearly screamed!”

After the birthday squid story, I told him I had an early flight to Virginia the next day to visit my friend Karen. He said he would drive me home right after we took his dog for a walk. It was late and I didn’t want to take the subway home, so I agreed.

On our walk, the topic of instruments somehow came up and I asked him if he played an instrument.

“No, but I can play a pretty mean Guitar Hero,” he said.

This was when Guitar Hero first came out and, not really being a video game aficionado, I didn’t know what it was.

“Oh I will have to show you quickly before you leave!”

“It’s a video game?” I asked as he was setting it up.

“Oh yeah! It’s great! Watch!” he said a little too excitedly.

I sat and watched as he frantically pushed the different colored buttons, playing Boston’s “More Than a Feeling“, his eyes never leaving the screen, my jaw dropping to the floor.

Looking back, I have to admit, the game looked fun. However, watching a grown man be so into it disturbed me a bit. He showed me how you can could get more points if you dance around with the guitar and make Pete Townshend-like movements (ie: making windmill-esque turns with your arm, jumping up and then doing a split, etc.). I declined when he offered me a try, saying, “Ummm, maybe next time”, knowing there would never be a next time.

The next day, when I got to Virginia, I told Karen all about him. She dubbed him Squid Boy, we had a nice laugh and went to bed.

The next morning I received an email from Squid Boy. It went a little something like this:

Dearest Dayna,

I hope you have made it to Virginia safely and are having a good time with your friend. I have been having a really great time with you and you are one of the best girls I’ve met online. But I just got out of a 10 month relationship and I don’t think I’m ready to be dating again. It’s not fair to either of us to keep seeing each other if I am feeling like this. You are really a great girl and I hope one day we can be friends, but right now I just don’t think its a good idea. Be well.

I immediately called Karen into the room to read it. After reading it and gasping almost every other sentence she said, “HE is dumping YOU?! The guy who loves robots, squids and overplays Guitar Hero is dumping YOU?! The guy who makes out with his dog is breaking up with YOU?! HA!”

I should have known.

September 6, 2008

Size isn’t everything

Boobs, boobies, tits, titties, breasts, ta-tas. Whatever you may call them, I think they are overrated. At least that’s what a flat chested gal like me tells herself to boost the ‘ol confidence. Chocolate chips on a cookie sheet, a 10-year-old boy’s chest, bumps on a log…I’ve heard them all. I’ve accepted my itty-bitty-titties though, for better or worse.

The better to wear backless shirts, sans annoying strapless bras, a back without pain due to boobie boulders, no permanent strap marks on my shoulders. These little babies of mine will never be able to sag to my belly button even if they tried.

I was recently sitting at dinner with a table of my buxom buds when they began discussing how difficult it is to find a size 32 bra. For those unaware of what that means—either men or women who have decided to bring braless back—the number on the bra size refers to the circumference around one’s torso, not the actual breast size. That’s the letter part.

I was about to commiserate with my fellow females, agreeing what a bitch it is trying to find a 32, when one said, “Yeah, 32 C is SO hard to find. It’s rare to see anything below a 34 anywhere!”

They went on to discuss the various places where their bra shopping adventures have been successes or busts (pun intended), but I tuned out. I felt defeated. To be able to be part of the conversation, I would have sounded like a girl trying to describe getting kicked in the nuts. I couldn’t relate. If they had a hard time trying to find a 32 C, imagine how hard it must be for me to find a 32 A, which isn’t even really my size.

About 5 years ago, I was measured by Georgette, the bra-sizing specialist my mother brought me to when she insisted I wear a bra to my sister’s wedding.

“Who doesn’t wear a bra to a wedding?!” she said in her thick, Long Island, Jewish mother accent, sounding absolutely appalled.

Appalled was I when I was told by Georgette, a little Italian meatball of a woman, to go into the tiny dressing room and take off my shirt and bra. She came in before I can even unhook my sad, pilled bra-lette and she took charge. She did the one-handed unhook with her thick sausage-like fingers, like an experienced teenage boy and my bra fell pathetically to the dressing room floor. It seemed like she was initiating a torrid love affair I wanted no part of.

Then there they were, perked up before her in all their glory. She took the measuring tape around me and cupped her hands underneath my breasts, slightly lifting them. I felt the embarrassment rise up through my neck to my face. I don’t know if I was more embarrassed that a 50-something, 4 foot woman with a mustache was feeling me up or the fact it was the most action I had seen in months. I looked up, avoiding eye contact with her and contracted my body so she wouldn’t touch any other body parts I didn’t want her to touch.

The measurement felt like an eternity as I awaited my fate. Then, very matter-of-factly, she said, “30A. Get dressed and I will show you what I’ve got.” Then she walked out, swishing the thin cloth door behind her, leaving me half-naked, feeling a completely violated and utterly shocked.

30 A?! 30 A?! I knew I was small but that’s really small. I knew men whose bra size would be bigger than that….lots of men. I have taught 3rd graders who are bigger than that. 30 A?! That’s unnatural! A deformity even! Did wearing sports bras for so long squish them? Was it from years of sleeping on my stomach? Did I lack estrogen? Is that why I was an alto in the 6th grade chorus when all the other girls were sopranos? How could I have a family of Cs and I was an A?! A 30 A!

Georgette proceeded to give me a bra transforming me from fla-fla-fla-flat to va-va-va-voom in a matter of seconds. This bra wasn’t just padded. It practically had mattresses in each cup. I felt like I had balloons in my shirt rather than deflated ones; like baseballs rather than pin balls. I held up my head high, proudly looked at myself out in the mirror and said, “Check out the rack on that chick!”

Yet I felt like an imposter. These weren’t mine. They were Georgette’s and as soon as I removed her miracle bra, I would be morphed back to Punky Brewster before she hit puberty.

Thirty five dollars and a proud smile on mom later, we left Georgette, who patted me on the back (was it a pity pat?) and said, “Wear it well!”

And I did…once, to the one event I promised to wear it to, my sister’s wedding. I look back at those pictures and laugh at my alter ego, Double D Dayna.

These days, my mega strapless bra sits among the other strapped contraptions in my unmentionables drawer raising its eyebrows at me every once in a while, wondering if I am going to wear it. “Not today,” I say, and I choose the regular 34 A (because 32 is SO hard to find). It is kind of loose, very raggity, but comfortably uncomfortable. My favorite part of the day is taking it off and letting my girls breathe, apologizing to them for having them cooped up all day.

OK, so people laugh at my pathetic bras. A family member once put my bra on top of her head saying one of the cups looked like a yarmulke. I just sat back, laughed at her and said, at least I can’t mop the floor with mine.

The point is I’m happy with what I have, for better or for worse.

*Since I wrote this, I made a trek to Bloomingdales for another official bra fitting. It has been 4 years since my Georgette experience and I felt perhaps I needed another opinion on my “official size”. I was surprisingly shocked when the petite lady sizing me said she would go look for some 32 Bs for me. YES, I SAID B! B as in boy. I guess my growth spurt just came a little too late in life. Hey, better late than never!

August 23, 2008

Oldies but goodies

At age 6, I wrote a letter to the tooth fairy. Here is what it said:

Deer Tooth Ferry,

I am writing this letter to tell you I lost my tooth…no realy, I LOST IT. I CAN NOT FIND IT! I was wundering if you culd still give me the muney without the tooth being under my pillow. If you can keep a seecret I will tell you why. My famalee is saving for a new cumputer (Commadore 64) and I need the muney. So tooth ferry please be nice and giv me the muney for my lost tooth and I promiss i will try not to loose my lost tooth agen.

Yours Truely,

Dayna

Needs improvement on the spelling and grammar, I know, but a lot of effort and imagination was put into that letter. Plus, I used my good stationary; the Strawberry Shortcake one that smelled like actual strawberries.

By the way, that bitch gave me a dollar; and in 1983 that was golden!

About a year or so later, I wrote the tooth fairy again. This time I was a little more brazen…and a better speller.

Dear tooth fairy,

Yesterday I put my tooth under my pillow for you to take and you did not take the tooth. Now let’s get something straight…if you don’t take it today, Bye Bye tooth fairy!

Love Sincerly,

Dayna

I’m not sure if my intention was to actually kill or do harm to the tooth fairy, but who the hell did I think I was I talking to her like that?! Nevertheless, I got TWO bucks under my pillow the next morning.

I found these little notes among the many goodies my mom had saved over the years. One rainy day during my recuperation period at the Goldberg home, we decided to do some much needed Feng Shuiing. With my mom being a self-described hoarder, I knew this would not be an easy task. I am sure her hoarding tendencies come from being the daughter of parents who grew up during the Depression…you should have seen how many cans of tuna fish and rolls of toilet paper my grandmother had in her basement.

Other fun Feng Shui findings included all the report cards of my siblings and myself–from a time when “a pleasure to have in class” or “not working to his potential” was enough of a comment–, many issues of “People’s 50 Most Beautiful People”, circa 1991, where “Intellectual Beauty” Jodie Foster graced the cover, as well as innumerable cards, letters and notes from various important and not-so-important-anymore people.

Most of the little scraps of paper saved were things I wrote; notes to someone in my family, a silly little thank you, a copy of my letter to Kirk Cameron he never answered, etc.

Another notable rambling I scrolled was found on an index card written in crayon. It was written when I was about 12. I remember because that was the summer my mother and I attempted to grow a garden on a tiny patch of lawn on the side of our house. It was ode. An ode to a tomato. An ode to a cherry tomato. A beautifully tender little cherry tomato I gleefully found one morning while I was checking on the status of our vegetation. Thus began the days I started writing to inanimate objects:

Hello little tomato. I am so happy to see you. What a glorious day it is to find you in our tiny garden. We have been waiting for you to pop out of the stem which sprouted from the seed we planted so long ago. Your shiny orange skin is glistening in the sunlight and widening my smile. Oh you little orb! I can’t wait to pick you and hold you close. It makes me so happy to think of all the places you can go. You can be the finishing, juicy touch to the top of a salad or the burst of color to a pasta dish or maybe you are meant to be enjoyed on your own. Oh little tomato. Thank you. Thank you for being our little accomplishment. Thank you for making my day.

If you have read this far, and you don’t already know this: a. I’m odd and #2 it’s the little things in life which cause me joy. Yes, even a tomato.

The last note I am going to share with you is actually a back and forth poem my father and I wrote to each other in 1997. I was trying to convince him how important it was for me to bring my car up to college. He was trying to convince me how ridiculous and incapable I was of this type of responsibility.

Looking back, he was probably right. See, I am not exactly the best driver. It’s an unfortunate inherited trait. My grandmother was a sucky driver, my mom’s driving blows and my brother isn’t much better. I have been cursed with a lead foot, probably wouldn’t know how to change a tire if my life depended on it, and a majority of the time I would forget to turn the headlights off, often resulting in a dead battery. Hey, this was the time before they had the annoying, yet useful, beeping sound reminding careless people like me to turn the lights off. In addition to all the disadvantages stacked against me, the town of the college I went to averages over 100 feet of snow each winter, give or take.

But back then, all I cared about was how comfy my overalls were, which mixed tape I was listening to next and being the cool kid on campus with the rockin’ ‘92 Baby Blue 2-door Chevy Cavalier.

Here is the father/daughter banter:

Dad, oh dad, please come here,

And bring the car that I can steer.

No more buses for me to ride.

These feelings of anger I just can’t hide.

Dad, oh dad I want my car,

Riding on a bus is just too far.

I would be home in 5 hours driving in my car(f),

But 8 hours on the bus will only make me barf.

Please, oh please, think it out,

If you say no I will scream and pout.

Because this burden is just too heavy,

All I want is my little blue Chevy!

Dad’s response

Dayna, Dayna I actually think,

The idea of having your car really does stink.

First of all there are too many hills,

And there might be too many repair bills.

Another reason we all know,

For 3 months, it could be under snow.

And if Mother Nature has her way,

You might not see it until May.

Besides, walking keeps you from getting fat,

And since when do you know how to change a flat?

And when the engine becomes soiled,

It is time to get it oiled.

And when you constantly leave the lights on,

Then you know your battery will be gone.

Writing down these reasons just goes to show,

My final answer is still NO!

Strong guy. Stuck to his guns. I especially like the argument “walking keeps you from getting fat.” Didn’t work though. Those freshman 15 found me with or without the car.

I hope you enjoyed the trip with me down disturbing memories lane. ‘Til next time…….

**Disclaimer: All of the above writings are from the original pieces of paper and have only been slightly altered. Seriously, I had my mom read them all over the phone to me last night!

August 17, 2008

Beyond the breaking point

I begrudgingly agreed to stay at my mother’s house this summer while I was recuperating from knee surgery. I say begrudgingly because there is usually a point I reach after spending an extended amount of time with my family; the point I start hearing enough of the same petty arguments or about how my mother’s co-worker’s daughter found her fiancee on imasingleloserover30.com and how I should get “out there” to find a man too. It is then when I feel the urge to drop kick my mother’s precious shit-zu across the street and suddenly blurt out everything that has bothered me for the last 31 years of my life. It might go a little something like this:

I KNOW “HAPPY ACCIDENT” IS A NICE WAY OF SAYING I WAS MISTAKE. DID MY BEDROOM REALLY NEED TO BE THE LAUNDRY ROOM? IF YOU HAVE ANOTHER CHILD AND THERE ARE 4 CHAIRS AT THE KITCHEN TABLE, YOU GET A BIGGER TABLE! YOU DON’T MAKE THE YOUNGEST SIT SEPARATELY AT THE BREAKFAST BAR!

Instead I check to see when the next train to Penn Station is.

A very wise friend with lots of medical knowledge told me staying at mom’s would be the best thing to do, knowing the extent of my surgery.

“I know your mom is overbearing and your dad can get a bit irritating as well, but you will be too kicked up on pain meds to know the difference anyway,” she convinced me.

Ahhhh….pain meds. She was right….for the first 3 weeks. I was oblivious to the world. When I started to become aware of the slightest bit of pain or a pang of nagging or too many questions: “Do you need anything? What did you eat today? Did you make a bowel movement yet?” I would just pop another pill. I know all of these questions were asked out of love, but I don’t need my family knowing my BM schedule thanks.

Knowing I eventually wanted to be able to manage life on my own, I heavily cut back on the pain killers. That’s when I realized it was time to go home. Here is the perfect example of why:

At the beginning of week 4 at the parental compound, my mom decided I was spending too much time in the house and needed to get out…and go shopping.

(P.S. I fucking hate shopping. I have always hated shopping. I hate shopping because I was dragged to go each weekend of my childhood by my mother and sister who both actually love shopping. I hated shopping so much as a child I would crawl around on all fours collecting straight pins from the carpeted floors of department store. My therapist recently told me crawling under rack upon rack of shoulder-padded silk shirts and stirrup leggings was my means of escape.)

To appease my mother who, for over 4 weeks now, had been at my beck and call, attending to my every need, making special trips to Dunkin’ Donuts each morning to get me my medium iced french vanilla coffee very light with skim milk no sugar please, I went shopping. It was the least I could do for this saint of a woman who drove me into the city twice a week for physical therapy, woke up a night to feed me pain pills or get me more water and had her significant other give up his side of the bed so I would be more comfortable. (yep….that meant I slept in the same bed as mom while recuperating. What? You never heard of a 31-year-old sleeping in the same bed as her mother? Bill, her domestic partner, has been sleeping on the pull-out couch. Thanks Bill!)

Anyway….after struggling to get the wheelchair out of the car (yes, wheelchair…she insisted I have one. “Insurance pays for it! Why not?!”), my mother and I made our way to the first store. Suddenly, her phone rang. She opened the door to the teeny bopper clothing store we were visiting and told me she would meet me inside the store. I then proceeded to wheel myself around the store for about 20 minutes, sans mom, finding nothing but stirrup leggings, lace sleeved shirts and sweatpants saying “sassy” or “sweet thang” on the ass. Yes folks, the ’80s are back and sluttier than ever.

I made my way out of the store, found mom and we proceeded to the Teacher Warehouse next door. By the way, she was still on the phone at this point. I twisted and turned myself through the treasury of teacher supplies while my mom chatted and laughed away on her cell, meandering throughout the store. Meanwhile, fellow educators, store workers and even children in the store picked up the items I continued to bump into and knock over by the montrosity of a vehicle I was riding in. I finally found my mother.

I’m ready to leave, I told her, my jaw locked in frustration, eyes widened saying, Are you seriously still on the phone?

I got a thumbs up, a wink and a smile in response as she grabbed the handles of my wheelchair while doing the hold-up-the-phone-with-shoulder maneuver.

“Howard, let me go,” she explained to the man on the other side of the phone. “I’m shopping with my daughter and have to get her wheelchair back into the car.”

Howard? Who the hell is Howard? Why did you need to talk to him for the 2 hours while I struggled through the aisles while reams of construction paper fell on my head? I thought.

“What’s the matter?” she asked me, out of breath after putting the 8 ton wheelchair back into the car.

With raised eyebrows, holding tears back, through clenched teeth I replied, “Just drive!”

After about 5 minutes, the anger had been boiling inside me, she asked again, “Is there something wrong?”

“If you don’t know, it makes it even worse!” I said, tears ready to overflow, arms crossed, 3-year-old temper tantrum style.

Silence.

About 30 seconds later, I exploded.

“FINE! YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT’S WRONG? I’M RIDING AROUND IN A WHEELCHAIR TRYING TO MAKE MY WAY THROUGH THESE STUPID STORES I DIDN’T EVEN WANT TO GO TO AND YOU ARE ON THE PHONE THE WHOLE TIME WITH HOWARD….AND WHO THE FUCK IS HOWARD? DO YOU THINK I WANT TO BE IN THIS WHEELCHAIR? DO YOU THINK I WANT TO BE HELPED AND RELY ON PEOPLE, PUT PEOPLE OUT ALL THE TIME? NO! BUT I HAVE TO RIGHT NOW. SO IF YOU WANT TO DRAG ME OUT TO PLACES I DON’T WANT TO GO TO, I WOULD APPRECIATE A LITTLE HELP. ALL YOU HAD TO SAY TO YOUR GOOD ‘OL FRIEND HOWARD WAS “HEY HOWARD, BUDDY, I NEED TO GET OFF THE PHONE BECAUSE MY DAUGHTER IS IN A WHEELCHAIR AND I HAVE TO HELP HER AROUND THE STORE, CAN I CALL YOU BACK?” AND I AM SURE SWEET, CARING HOWARD, WHOEVER THE HELL HE IS, WOULD HAVE UNDERSTOOD! NOW DO YOU KNOW WHY I AM UPSET. THAT FREAKIN’ PHONE IS ATTACHED TO YOUR EAR AT ALL TIMES AND IT IS BOTH RUDE AND ANNOYING!”

I took a breath. She squeaked out a sorry and nothing else. We rode home in silence as I stared out the window, sniffling back any left over tears.

Was I a little dramatic? Maybe. But it got my point across. My mom came to me later in the day and apologized and said she would make more of an effort to not be on the phone so much.

I feel bad for yelling at my mom who goes above and beyond to help me, but sometimes she just drives me insane. But I love her.

It has been quite an experience staying here. There are plenty more stories that brought me to the breaking point (ie: my dad coming over at close to midnight to help him order sneakers online….twice, my mom putting on her blinker 1/2 mile before she needs to make a turn, etc.), so I think it is time to check out the time for the next train to Penn Station.

August 14, 2008

Blogalicious

So here I am. Officially in the blogging world. I have been encouraged to join this cult years ago, but have been avoiding it, perhaps for fear of putting myself out there, here I mean. People, you people, reading my thoughts, my actions, what happens in my life and those who are lucky enough to be in it. Why the hell should you care what I have to say, what I do, who I do it or don’t do it with?? Why would you want to read the inner babblings of my neurotic mind? Why should you care about stories of my crazy family?–like when I had to convince my sister that naming her daughter Emily would be a bad idea since her last name is Emery? Come on, Emily Emery? Really? I mean, I am sure you have a crazy family for your own. Maybe you want to hear from a voice of a teacher in the trenches–a teacher who has been called a TILF by a 6th grader.

So why should you read my blog?  Because, dammit! I can write, I can even be entertaining at times. I can write with emotion, with energy, with wit and humor and even a dash of sarcasm here and there.

Writing is my slap in the face. When I am feeling blah, not happy or sad or up or down, just kinda in a place where I couldn’t care less what the hell is happening—even if there was a 90210 weekend marathon (the old school show not the new CW knockoff) and would rather take a nap than anything else (this is often by the way…I love naps!), writing does something to me only a few people in my life (and some prescription drugs) can do; it wakes me up, it enlivens me, it makes me the person I want to be each and every day. So I figured if I had a blog, I would force myself to have less of the blah 18 hour nap days and more bopping down the street to the eclectic mix of music my ipod presents to me and picking up guys in subway cars kinda days.

So here I am world. DaynawithaY. Come and visit. See what I have to say. Write me and tell me what you think. Or don’t. I am doing this for me, not you. Or at least that is what I am trying to convince myself. Can’t hurt to try.

Welcome to my journey.