Monday, June 15, 2015

The Pen is Mightier

The Pen is Mightier
When I’m not writing books about kitchen tables, I am an eighth grade Language Arts teacher. (Please, hold the applause until the end.) Every teacher knows,the humble kitchen table is a great surface for grading papers. (Many teachers use the dining room table, but I don’t have a dining room, just a big kitchen.Poor me.) The kitchen table affords lots of room for organizing papers and supplies. For me, a typical grading session requires shoving aside all the bags and sunglasses that have been strewn about like unwanted children over the table’s surface. I then spread out and organize all the papers by homeroom, the essays and the projects that need grading.  Also, lined up like soldiers are the calculator, the erasable pen to record in the grade book, and the GREEN pen. Sometimes if I can’t find a green pen, I’ll use blue or purple or whatever I find lying about, but one thing's for sure, I never use a RED pen. Educational experts tell us not to use a red pen because if a student sees lots of red marks all over their paper they could be “scarred for life.” A student could very well become intimidated and withdrawn by all that red ink, thus never really realizing their full potential. Hence, they will not succeed in life; they will live in poverty; become a burden on society and die hungry and alone and be buried in a Potter’s Field. Red ink is to education what crack is to, well,  everything else in life.
    I teach without a red pen in a depressed, urban environment. The kids are living at the poverty level, some a little above and some well below. (Let’s just say I’ve bought my fair share of winter coats and graduation dresses over the years.) I didn’t realize this economic situation at first, and I made some stupid mistakes. I came back to teaching after being away for 16 years raising my three boys. So, trying to get my point accross one day about how, if you praise someone, they try to live up to that praise, I said, “Like, you know when your cleaning girl does an okay job, but you want her to do a better job, you may say, wow! Cleaning girl! Really good job!” Twenty six blank faces stared back at me. Oops.
I never thought I’d go back to teaching, but I was lured back in with the thought of summers off and only working until three every day. “It’s practically a part time job,” I told my husband.  How short is my memory.  It’s a 24-7 job, what with the grading of papers, the worrying about certain students, accountability, report cards, quarterly progress reports for 97 students, paperwork, the extra help I provide to struggling students, the paperwork, the politics, the lack of respect, lying awake night fretting over my evaluations, the paperwork, performance anxiety because of the evaluations and oh yes, shopping for winter coats and fancy dresses. And did I mention the paperwork? As they say in the Army, “It’s not just a job, it’s an adventure.”   
But I do love being a teacher because I feel there is something I can contribute to kids who need someone and if they learn to read a write a little along the way, all the better. But this is reading and writing thing is not a must. The reading and writing are the least of what is accomplished in middle school. I always tell my students that school is not so much about learning how to read and write, but how to LIVE. How we interface with others, what acceptable behavior is, how to make and keep a friend. How to be a friend.
    Of course, I still never give up on the teaching in the hopes that everyday, at least one morsel of knowledge will be ingrained in their resisting brains.  I keep swimming upstream, teaching students who do not want to be taught, most whom are just there to get out of the house and socialize with their friends.
One of the currents I am swimming against is behavior. Behavior comes in two flavors, the boys’ mischievous antics and the girls’ penchant for the  dramatic. The girls love to talk and write on the bathroom walls.  They cry over friendships and boys, or girls if they are experimenting with being gay, and are generally in a constant state of drama the likes of which would rival any Shakespearean play. They cut themselves, post suicide notes on Facebook and let high school boys sexually experiment on them. Lots of times girls cry over their fathers. Either the fathers live at home and are abusive, or they don’t live at home and they never see them, or they are in jail, or touching them “down there.” Some days, I spend more time out in the hallway coaching and counseling and calming the girls than I do teaching.     A typical hallway conversation goes something like this:
Me: Why are you crying, honey? What’s the matter?
She:Shakes her head.
Me: I can’t help you if you don’t tell me what’s going on.
She:More crying. No answer. She looks down at her shoes.
In the meantime, the rest of the class is in a total uproar, laughing, yelling, moving about the room.  I can hear them and I want to go back in there and make a big, LOUD speech, (a layman might call it yelling) but I don’t dare for fear the girl may think she does not have my undivided attention, thus proving to her that I am just another adult who could care less about her and her problems and confirming once and for all that suicide is the only real answer.  But mostly I do not go in to YELL because there is the chance She may  finally come out with some useful information and then I can help her.
Me: Do you want to go to guidance?
She:Still looking down at her shoes. Shakes her head no.
Now I’m looking down at her shoes, because somehow I feel that maybe therein lies the answer.  Like, did someone make fun of her shoes? Are her shoes too tight? I give it a minute. The shoes tell me nothing so I press on.
Me: Is anyone home?
She: Shakes her head no.
Me: Do you want to call your mother (father,grandmother, aunt, guardian, goldfish, whomever takes care of you) at work?
She: (between sobs) N-no.
Me: Do you want to just come back in the classroom and put your head down until you are feeling better?
She: Shoulder shrug. Still looking at her shoes.
    I’m running out of options. Perhaps I should suggest we send the rest of the class home and She and I could have a nice, therapeutic chat over a cup of coffee. I think she would say yes to that.
Me: How about a friend? Do you want to go with one of your friends to the ladies room and wash your face and talk it over?
(I figure I can pry the information out of the friend once things settle down.)
She brightens at this suggestion. She looks up at me and nods her head. Yes! Yes She would like to go with a friend to the ladies room.
This means not just one, but two kids will be out of the room during most of the lesson, but it is better than ME being out of the room during most of  the lesson. So we call the best friend out into the hallway and I watch as they both trot happily down the hall to the ladies room together, arm in arm, ready, no doubt,  to text four other girls, sitting in four other classes to commiserate.
The boys misbehaviors tend to be more creative, like peeing in water bottles, stuffing the toilets with paper, peeing on the walls in the bathroom and generally any abhorrent bathroom behavior where they can wield their penises and wreak havoc. They never cry or look at their shoes, so somehow I find them easier to deal with. I often yell at them good and loud from frustration; they don’t seem to mind at all and it makes me feel gobs better. (One boy said as I was screaming in his face, “You know you’re beautiful when you're angry?” So fear not,  I don’t think I’m inflicting any permanent harm.)
I have to repeat a great deal when disciplining the boys. Apparently at home, and in some particular cultures, the boys are thought to walk on water and they are truly shocked to find that when they come to school, they jump in the pool, so to speak, and sink. Their parents can tell them a hundred times not to do something, and they will ignore it because they know there are no consequences. Mama’s boy can do no wrong. In my classroom, I can’t allow it. I have a big test to get these kids ready for and I don’t let much stand in my way. A typical reprimand for a boy goes something like this:
Me: William, turn your body and face forward.
He: I didn’t do anything.
Me: You are sitting sideways and smirking with Ellis from across the room. You are distracting Ellis and everyone around him. Now turn around and stop it.
He: I didn’t do anything.
Me: Turn around, face front and refocus on the lesson.
He: I didn’t do anything.
I stare at him, waiting
He finally turns and puts his legs under the desk, facing forward. I continue.
Two minutes later:
Me:William, turn your body and face forward.
He: I didn’t do anything.
Me: You are sitting sideways and you continue to smirk with Ellis from across the room.
He: I didn’t do anything.
Me: Turn around, face front and refocus on the lesson.
He: I didn’t do anything.
Repeat. Repeat. Repeat.

    Both boys and girls break the cell phone rules. Their phones are to be shut off and stored in their backpacks during school hours, though ’ve never seen it done. The girls wear very tight pants, leggings with pockets actually, and their phones are always sticking halfway out of the back pocket.  I always make the joke, “You’re going to butt-dial Timbuktu those pants are so tight.” (Another stupid joke I make is: Those hoop earrings are so big, you could pick up radio stations. An eighth grader think these jokes are funny.) Kids just can't understand why they can’t have phones in school. They think, as I once did, that this is because if a student is texting or god forbid, talking on a cell phone, it will distract them from learning. Not so. Not to turn this into a Sixty Minutes investigative report, but the real reason is: schools don’t want kids taking pictures of teachers sleeping at their desks or eating a banana from the school breakfast. (Strictly forbidden. The student’s breakfasts and lunches come from state mandated money, and they would rather us throw food out than have a starving, undernourished, underpaid,teacher eat it.) Or, having a phone,  they could share test answers or post bathroom pictures on facebook. More than just looking up answers, kids could record a teacher saying something like, Sit your ass down and shut up or I’ll break your legs, or smash your face or whatever threat is applicable at the time. (And even though most teachers, like myself, would never say such a thing, believe you me, after a long day of repeating sit down, be quiet to 97 pairs of deaf ears, we’re thinking it. You can damn well be sure, we’re thinking it.)
    I am actually jealous of cell phones. I consider them my number one rival in the classroom. It’s me against the phones and I always lose. It often goes like this:
Me: Jeanelle, are you texting?
Jeanelle: No.
Me: Then why is your cell phone out. You know the rules!
Jeanelle: I was just checking the time.
    I point to the clock.
She looks at the clock like she’s never seen it before. Like, when did someone put that there?
Jeanelle:I’ll put it away.
    My chest swells with triumph. l I have won the battle. The lesson continues. I look over at Jeanelle’s seat in the back. She is staring at her lap. I got her now!
    “Janelle, what is so interesting in that lap of yours?”  The class giggles at the possibilities.
    Don't you know, the kid pulls her textbook up from her lap, smug as can be? The class laughs at Jeanells victory. I hate them all.
    “Okay, sorry,” I say a little too boldly to hide my humiliation, “I thought you might be  texting.”
    I move on with the lesson. I wander around the room, checking in with students along the way, planting ideas and giving some much needed praise where none is actually warranted.  
    And then I see it, from across the room. Jeanelle is leaning over, ever-so slightly, texting in her backpack! Aha! Let her try and weasel her way out of this one. Ha!
    I sneak up on her.
    Me: Jeanelle! Hand me that phone this instant!
She: What phone?
Me: Don’t you “what phone” me! You were texting in your bag and you know it! Now let’s have it!
    I extend my hand like the superior being I feel I am at this very moment.
    She shakes her head, and slaps a graphic calculator in my hand. I stare at it. The class roars. I hate them more.
Me: What is this? Why are you playing with a calculator during writing class?
She: I’m sorry, I was doing my math homework.
    In an effort to distract the class’ attention away from my cell phone delusions, I yell,
“Are you supposed to be doing math homework during writing? What about the paragraph I gave you to do?”
    She shows me her notebook. A perfectly written paragraph describing the classroom stares back at me. She has done all I had asked her to do, she has described with all her five senses, and she used similes and metaphors and imagery, the whole nine yards. She then thought to use her time wisely (where did she ever hear that?) and catch up on some homework. I didn’t just have egg on my face, I had the whole omelet.
    Jeanelle seemed forgiving enough. She just smiled and went back to her math. After class I caught her in the hall. “Jeanelle, I’m sorry I accused you of texting during class. I was wrong and I hope I didn’t embarrass you.”
“Oh, don’t feel bad, Mrs. Sherman, I was texting. Just not at those times when you thought I was!”
The little shit.
You may now applaud.



   

Thursday, November 21, 2013

A Holiday Surprise



                        A Holiday Surprise

By Chris Sherman

After you’ve been married a number of years, holiday gift-giving changes. In the beginning it’s a covert operation, each partner trying to out-surprise the other.  There are the hiding games, the saving the best gift for last and the squeals of delight.
Now, after 27 years of marriage, it’s more like my husband gets up from the couch on December 23 and says, “Whaddaya want for Christmas…I’m goin’ to the store.” Gee…would that be Walgreen’s or Rite Aid?
And why doesn’t he know what I would like? I know what he likes: briefs and not boxers, Burberry cologne—not Burberry Brit, polo shirts with no logo stitched on the left. (And good luck trying to find them. Polo shirts without logos do not exist.  Status is not a quiet thing.) I want him to know me so well, he should be able to take one look at me across the dinner table and say to himself: That woman needs new black ankle boots.
I never ask what he would like. I am the detective wife, looking for signs and signals. His bike seat is wearing thin, his boar’s hairbrush bristles are falling out, he admires a certain pair of shoes in a store window. (That never really happens, but I wish it would.)  I throw myself out into the fray of holiday shopping; armed with mental notes of things I know he would appreciate receiving. I will return home triumphant, laden with gifts that will be sure to prompt the response, “How did you know?”
But not my guy.  Every year, it’s like he just met me last week and has no idea in the world what I might like.  Each December he starts from scratch, like I’m some new woman he just met through a friend of a friend and he knows he should somehow acknowledge me for the holiday, but he’s not sure if just a card is enough or should he go all out and get me a sweater.
In years past, I would drop hints like anvils over his head, giving him every opportunity to “surprise” me.  “Oh! This bracelet is so outdated!” Or, “Aren’t Uggs just so practical. If I had a pair I could just slip them on… And warm too. My feet are always cold…” And what do I open on Christmas morning after all those hints I’ve been dropping? Well, let’s see; there was the scarf that doubled as a hood, there was the gift certificate to a mozzarella making class, Britney Spears cologne, a fifty color eye shadow kit that came in a miniature suitcase and then there was the year he declared that our love transcended all material things and we gave each other nothing.
Last year, as it came near the holidays, I was not leaving anything to chance. I really wanted a pair of diamond earrings. Now before you give me the speech about how there are people starving on the Upper East Side since Elaine’s closed, let me say that I just wanted little chips.  Nothing too big or expensive. Just a little bling for the holidays.  For heaven’s sake, my son’s girlfriend has a pair and she’s not even 20 years old. I don’t think it’s unreasonable for a woman of my age to have some nice earrings. (All my other earrings come from those costume jewelry stores that are cropping up all over. You know the ones, with walls lined with earrings and necklaces and that waif of a girl that follows you around gripped with fear that you will steal something.)
So around September, I started dropping the hints. “You know, Hubby, I’ve always wanted a small pair of diamond earrings. They go with everything, but oh well.”
Then October rolled in and I’m with him at Home Depot on 23rd  St. (he’s always in a good mood there) and I say,  “Did you see that woman’s diamond earrings? They sure were beautiful… But, oh well.”
November brought a nip to the air as yet another hint floated on the breeze, I was putting on my hat to go outside and I exclaimed to myself for all the world to hear,  “These damn cheap hoop earrings are always catching on everything!”
He says, “Throw them out.”
I say, “But what would I replace them with? I heard that diamond studs don’t catch on anything…But, oh well.”
So now it’s Christmas morning. I have laid the groundwork. I couldn’t have been clearer. Diamond earrings.  I am confident as I condescend to open all the “warm-up” presents. I just know he is saving the best for last.  I play along, opening a French coffee press and a faux alligator eyeglass case, but really, I’m busting. 
Then he finally hands me a very small, beautifully wrapped box. Yes! I think. He’s got it! He understood! No one has to build a house on this smart guy!  I make small exclamations of delight.  “What could this be? Why, I’m completely stymied…”
I tear the paper, preparing my facial muscles for my look of mock surprise. I catch my breath. And there, staring back at me is the utter and complete representation of all I mean to my husband; the symbol of his love and devotion, not just at holiday time, but every day of our married lives.  
A bar of lavender soap.  
 “From France!” he points out proudly.
Ooo. La. La.
But hey, it’s really not about the earring or the Uggs. It’s more about him paying attention and putting some effort in. When we were first married, the gifts were not expensive, but they meant the most to me.  It was knowing that he put time and care into planning and shopping and sneaking through my closet to find my size. The thought, the trouble, and let’s face it, the suffering.  (Yes, I want him to suffer.)   I think this year I’ll get him a Polo shirt. The one with the BIG horse on it. It may not be what he wants, but, oh well.  Think of his surprise!
Happy Holidays!



Sunday, June 3, 2012

Making a Commitment to Exercise


June 3, 2012

I have started to walk in earnest with my good friend Ellen. We decided to go right after school. Get right home, change, and meet down by the river.  NO DETOURS! There are, after all, a million REAL REASONS to skip exercising:
I have to go to the post office/bank/supermarket/library/other outside venue of your choice.            I have to make the bed/unload the dishwasher/fold the laundry/other household chore of your choice. 
I’m hungry; I have to eat.
I’m tired; I have to nap.
I have to move my bowels
I have to—other bodily function of your choice.
I am convinced that all women who exercised regularly have round-the-clock maid service, a cook, a personal assistant, and an ironclad colon. 
Then there are the weather reltated excuses. That's right--blame God. 



It's raining.
It's snowing.
It's too hot.
It's too cold.
It's humid.
It's dry.
It's too sunny.
It's too early. It's still dark.
It's too late. It's already dark.


But now, no more excuses, no more unforeseen circumstances. I AM GOING TO WALK EVERYDAY. With Ellen.


Ellen a great friend and a good listener. She is one of my few New York friends. I have two sets of friends, New York friends and school friends. I enjoy the warmth and personality of my school friends.  They love to laugh.  They curse like stand-up comics, watch TV all night and never read anything more than the local paper. They talk about things like how the teacher’s union isn’t doing enough or how their children are dating dead-beat guys or over controlling women. They are often found in the malls of New Jersey and they all carry Coach bags.
The New York crowd speak well, are up on all the latest exhibits in the museums and galleries and they read the New York times cover to cover,  EVEN  THE BIG ONE ON SUNDAY.  They talk about things like the fiscal crisis, what’s new at Lincoln Center and are always recommending the latest book they’ve read or a book they are dying to read after reading the review in The Times. I have never seen them laugh, but I’m sure they have at some point. When I say something funny, the most I get is a tight smile and an acknowledgement that that remark was, indeed, funny. They all have tasteful bags, and usually there is no company or designer marking on them.
I find myself somewhere in the middle of these two groups.  I laugh out loud, but my bags seldom have someone else's name on them.
Ellen, along with myself, is one of the few friends of either set that is married. In fact, quite conveniently, her husband is friends with mine. The men actually met first at the gym and we met later at a book club. Such a small island, Manhattan. Even though she is a New York friend and capable of so much more, we talked about our arms for most of our walk.
“I’m looking for a dress for my niece’s wedding,” said Ellen. “I’m having a hard time finding something with sleeves.”
“Well,” I replied, “You could buy a sleeveless dress and add a shrug.”
She shrugged. “I don’t know, I always feel like when you wear a shrug everyone knows why you are wearing it—to hide your arms.”
(This sleeve business is maddening. I don’t know anyone in real life, that is not either a 14 year old girl or a famous TV personality, that looks great in sleeveless. Let’s face it. You have to have THE ARMS. Those beautiful, well sculpted arms—tight and smooth—no sign of moles, vaccination scars or flab. Just beautiful, toned arms, arms that say, “I am in shape, I work out, I care about myself.” Unlike my arms which say, “I like to eat and I don’t like to exercise.”)
“When is the wedding?”
“November.”
“No problem then. It will be cold and they’ll be plenty of sleeves around.”
“Yeah, I hadn’t thought of that. I’ll look again in September.”
I didn’t have the heart to break it to her that when I was looking for a dress last New Years eve, I couldn’t find any sleeves then, either. And some dresses were missing even more than sleeves. Some had no sleeves and no back. Some had no sleeves and a slit so high it made me wonder if the seamstress who sewed the damn thing went on break and when she came back, forgot where she left off. But by far, the most amusing dress actually had NO FRONT!  The V-neck went all the way down to the navel. I thought I was looking at it backwards. One false move to the right or the left, and some lucky guy would be getting an eyeful. I pictured myself in this frontless frock, sitting at the table with New Year’s cake lodged in my bellybutton. And this dress had the nerve to come in SIZES! As if a size 16 could actually pull this off without offending everyone in the room. I mean, a frontless dress like that should only come in sizes zero, two, four and six. And that’s it. Anything else would be a criminal offense.
I must confess, out of desperation, I did try a black sleeveless dress on. It was made of silk crepe and had a draped front, also good for catching crumbs. It went all the way to the floor and had a bit of a train, or more like a sweep at the back, which I hadn’t noticed on the hanger. I looked like an aging silent movie star trying to make a comeback, ala Norma Desmond. All I needed was some penciled in eyebrows and a long cigarette holder.
I tried to appeal to the salesgirl giving out numbers in the dressing room.
“What do you think of this dress? I mean, no sleeves in January. My arms look so white.”
“Well, with the black dress it makes a nice contrast. Black and white is really in this year.”
I ignore this sorry attempt to make my fat, white arms into a trend.
“But I’m freezing.”
Suddenly, a revelation: “You could wear a sweater!”
Clearly, after clawing her way up from the stockroom to the dressing room, this gal had reached her full potential in retail.


So as we walked on, I pictured Ellen in a sleeveless black dress with a black Talbot’s cardigan sweater over it.  This should not happen to a New York Friend.
“I’ll help you look again in September,” I offered as I picked up the pace. “Let’s swing our arms more.”
“Yeah,” she said, “let’s swing our arms more!”
The walk felt good in the end and Ellen and I vowed to walk again tomorrow night—barring any unforeseen circumstances.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Menopause Diaries


This morning, a gynecologist-slash-menopause doctor on the Today show said it’s good to document menopause phase of your life with a diary—“Chart any changes, emotional or physical, to help you better understand yourself and keep it all in perspective.” And you must BE HONEST she said. A diary can act as a confidant, she said. “Pour out all your fears, complaints and maladies in the diary and spare your husband!” Matt Lauer laughed at this in a Hey, I know what you mean, women can be such pain in the asses, sort of way.
            I’d like to start with the crying. I have been crying for no explicable reason these days.  I thought this crying was just over-exaggerated manifestation of my usual neurosis, but after being enlightened by the Today Show, I understand I am not alone. Apparently, lots of 52 plus year old women are wading through the same swamp of unidentifiable despair, but somehow, that does not make ME feel any better.   No one is going through menopause, as I AM GOING THROUGH IT. I am special.           
            (When I used to cry, in my twenties, over men, it did not comfort me that there were possibly thousands, no, millions of women out there who did not have a boyfriend. I only cared that I did not have one. My mother used to sit next to me on my tissue-laden bed and say, “Lots of girls are single at 27 years old. You are so BEA-U-TI-FUL, think of the poor ugly ones. They may NEVER find anyone. I assure you, you will find someone, and then the real crying will start! (Ha, ha) Now dry your eyes and drive me to the supermarket.”)
  Last night, again, I burst out crying for no reason. This should definitely be documented. Oh, sure, I MADE UP a reason so Husband would not think I was loosing my mind, but there was NO REAL REASON. 
So as not to be hauled off to an expensive, New York therapist, here are some stock reasons I use as an excuse for my crying bouts:
1.  My mother is getting older, 75, and it’s sad to see her this way. (She has a boyfriend with whom she spends every weekend and is never home what with all the clubs and the dances and the luncheons. This is the weakest of reasons.)
2.  Anything job related. (The 8th graders this year are so awful. They have no respect and they don’t do their homework. (surprise, surprise) OR—I am overwhelmed with paperwork and can’t even find time to teach effective lessons. OR—The male teachers I work with do not pull their weight. And on and on and on. This school related reason is often real.)
3. My favorite: I FEEL UGLY. (This one actually does makes me feel better, because Husband will sit next to me on the bed and put his arm around me and tell me that I’m all wrong and that I am BEA-U-TI-FUL and if I dry my eyes he will take me to Home Depot and allow me to wile away an hour or so oogling window treatments and lighting fixtures he has no intention of ever buying while he discusses the joys and disappointments of spackle with an “associate”.
4. I miss our three boys. (One, Jon, away at college, twelve blocks away at NYU. One, Alex, just graduated NYU and in his own apartment near Washington Square, eight blocks away, and one, Nick, passed away at 21 from Leukemia a year and a half ago—very legitimate reason to cry-- but usually not the reason. (I tend to save up crying over Nick for certain, compartmentalized times, usually in his room or when I see a picture. Even then, it’s not the real boo-hoo type crying one would expect or even want to see from a mother under these circumstances. It’s just a whole lot of head talk, like, think of something else, think of something else, shit, shit, shit, think of something else.  I am not totally proud of this and sometimes I wonder why I don’t cry harder and more often, instead of just sitting on the edge of his bed, glazed over, and forcing myself to look around and remember things that hurt, like tubes and pill bottles and the way he would shuffle into his room from the bathroom like a 90 year old man, skinny and pale. It’s like that accident cliché where you can’t stand to look, but you can’t look away. )
Shit, shit, shit! I’m going to cry. Let me change the subject. I’m getting very good at that.

The first time this crying thing happened, I was in Miami, about few years ago. Husband and I took a little vacation with the 3 boys. The first morning we woke up, husband goes out for his usual triathlon of exercise and I planned to take a shower.
Funny, the things you discover about yourself when you are away on vacation and out of your normal element. I had no idea I was so persnickety about my showers, but apparently I am. At home, I have a showerhead that can be removed and held in-hand to wash all those HARD TO REACH PLACES. Places where the sun doesn’t usually shine, unless you bend over to pick up your sunglasses on a nude beach, which let’s face it, doesn’t happen all that often. I like things immaculately clean in those shady places because all the TV advertisements have made me acutely aware of how important it is to start the day “fresh”, therefore, “more confident.”
            So I got in the shower, down there in Miami, and I started the water. AND THEN I looked up and saw it. A stationary showerhead!! STATIONARY. And there was no water pressure to speak of.  The water was coming out in a dribble—like the drinking fountains in Central Park.
            I tried to play along. I lifted one leg and angled my pelvis skyward.  Dribble, dribble. Nothing got wet except my knees.
            Feelings of frustration and upsetment quickly started to well up in my chest and my throat and suddenly and without warning, I BURST OUT CRYING. Just like that. Burst right out in hysterics. Then, even more suddenly, and with even less warning, I burst into a hysterical laughter—IN THE SHOWER. I was laughing and crying hysterically in the shower in the middle of Miami Beach because the water could not, would not, reach my private parts.
            The boys were now pressed to the others side of the bathroom door.
            “Mom! Mom! Are you okay in there? Mom! What’s the matter?”
            “Nothing. Sob, sob. “Nothing.” Ha-ha. “Don’t worry. It’s—sob, my hormones.” Big, long sob, followed by burst of hysterical laughter. Yes, laughter. That's when I became alarmed.
            And that, dear reader, was the beginning. The start of the peri-menopausal nightmare I currently find myself in today—a constant state of indecision, hysteria, anxiety, and an overwhelming sense of being overwhelmingly overwhelmed all the time. I went from being a fairly together, emotionally stable wife, mother, and 8th grade teacher to the indecisive, psychotic, and let’s face it, annoying wreck that I am today.
So here's my question. Am I alone here?
          

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Sweethearts for Soldiers

I have an idea I would like to bounce off all of you. As my son lies here in the hospital, I can clearly see what a positive effect his girlfriend has on his progress. When she calls, writes letters or comes to visit, he looks better, feels better and has less icky feelings in general. I would bet the same goes for the soldiers in Iraq. The ones with a sweetheart at home, probably get a boost in moral when they receive a letter or package from their honey-pie. But what about the service men and women who don't have anyone? I was thinking of a program where non-soldiers here at home who are looking for someone start writing to the soldiers who want someone. Sort of flirting and getting to know each other by letter writing. Even if it doesn't become the love of their life, at least they would have made a friend and have some letters to look forward to.
What do you think about this idea?

Monday, August 6, 2007

Success Spelling Error

Sorry. Pushed "Publish" too fast without checking spelling.

A Metro Card Could Be the Key to Your Finacial Success

I did not know until I moved back to New York, that one could actually get on a subway car, call for every one's attention and get your bills paid!  This is true.  I saw it myself while riding the F train one day.  A man got on my car, cleared his throat rather loudly, expectorated and once we all settled down in polite silence, proceeded to tell us that he could not pay for his electric bill and how he had an 18 month old baby and could we please help out. He seemed like such a nice guy,too. He had what looked like very sensible blue jeans and a faded red tee-shirt that said simply, "Jordash". He gave an emotional speech about how ConEd refused to take into consideration that he was out of work and he was out of work because his last job refused to take into consideration that he was not aware that the term "coffee break" really was meant for just coffee and sometimes tea, but never, ever beverages drunk out of brown paper bags. One just got the feeling as we were sitting there that the whole world was against this guy and if we, the passengers of the F train, were not part of the solution, we were, in reality, part of the problem. He then proceeded to come around to each person with a Styrofoam take out container asking us all to "do our best."  And most of us did.  I'm sure he had enough to pay that inconsiderate ConEd bill with enough left over to hit up Grey's Papaya on the way home.  Then he exited our car and went on to the next, presumably to fund his cell phone bill. I imagine he then went on to the next car for his rent, the next for grocery money and so on. I was so glad for him that it was such a very long train.

I am very tempted after witnessing this brilliant display of entrepreneurialism, to get on a subway car, clear my throat and announce to the passengers, "AHEM! Kind ladies and Gentleman, I have two strapping young boys enrolled in NYU! I am so proud of them, but it is so expensive..."