Showing posts with label birthdays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birthdays. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Early Awakenings

It’s been a while since my last post.  Lately my inspiration has come from the darkness of the early morning, before the rest of the world wakes up, to have some QT with my bubbling brain.  Time to think before the blackberry starts buzzing, the way-too-pretty news lady starts touting the day’s tragedies (or Charlie Sheen’s latest tweets) and traffic jams, and before my inbox starts piling up the days’ crises I’ve yet to solve.

I woke up this morning with words on my mind and have settled in with a massive cup of coffee, a big goofy 80-lb dog at my feet, and a happily slumbering BF who is seemingly unstirred by my click-clacking on the computer.  A symphony of snores and hums and early-morning musings from the outdoors are all around me, the loudest source coming from the four-legged princess at my feet who provides a wide range of musical gifts in her sleep, and seems to believe she fits quite comfortably in the bed with us (although she doesn’t, really…but shhh….don’t tell her).  The muted television is darting shiny lights and colors across the mostly dark bedroom and I find myself feeling strangely content and happy.  My little bubble of happiness within the compounds of this queen-sized bed.  Which is a great way to wake up today.  Especially since it’s my birthday.

I’m 28 years old today.  A lot has changed in just the last few months and certainly in the last few years.  Among these changes, a new relationship and some new changes at work on the horizon.  Today, however, I’m thankful to wake up to a new year.  28 is both a wonderful year and a scary one, too.   Two years closer to “thirty-something” and eight-years further away from “twenty-something”, and I’m still wondering why the hell no one talks about how stupid-hard and perplexing and challenging and wonderful and awesome and terrible these years are for us.  How utterly insane these years can make you feel.  It seems like another lifetime ago I was turning 18, living in the mountains of North Carolina, and trying to understand the journey ahead of me.  Thinking I had come through the worst of it, trying to make decisions about college and boys and “what’s next”.   What issues I cared about and what things I felt the need to be passionate about.  Recycling.  Poor people.  And chick-fil-a.  Check. Check. And check.  Flash-forward to now and I barely feel as though I've begun to scratch the surface of what this life is about for me.

And there are days when, despite my self-awareness that I’m not really that old, I start to feel pretty cantankerous and geriatric (working with Baltimore City schoolchildren and college students simultaneously everyday can do this to you, no matter your age).  And not to mention really out of date.  Not only does MTV baffle me now (what happened to the music!?) but I can’t seem to win for losing with technology.  As I was recently reminded by my BF’s son, “You don’t have games OR songs on your cell phone??  You must be SAD!”  And I thought I was a part of the technologically-savvy generation.  I guess I was doodling in my notebook during those classes in elementary school (yeah, a paper notebook…you know, the kind with a spiral?).  Plus I drink water between my glasses of wine.  I guess age has taught me something.

For the last few mornings I’ve been awake too early.  Perhaps it’s my own body’s response to my own private new year’s day celebration or perhaps the bubbling anxiety that seems to be more and more present on my mind and tongue:  “What am I doing with my life and where am I going?  Am I happy?  Am I fulfilled?  When should I have babies?”  The questions we all ask ourselves as we creep into adulthood and fall into silent and beautiful patterns with ourselves and our loved ones.  And, “did I feed the dog last night?"

Some mornings I wake up so early, and with so much purpose, that I wonder—what is my body really trying to tell me?  There’s a reason I’m not sleeping.  Maybe something is wrong.  Maybe I did forget to feed the dog last night and she’s having dreams of different ways to “accidentally” knock me off.  I nervously admit that she drags me towards the steps with a tad too much vigor some mornings.

I’ve always found it mildly flattering that my birthday just happens to coincide with International Women’s Day.  Which is ironic because I’ve spent the bulk of my 28 years on this earth negotiating just exactly what my womanhood is about and where I, as a woman, fit into the world with my ovaries and womb and big, thick hips.

And I’ll freely admit that I’ve spent a lot of years avoiding the word “feminist”.  I was insistent that I didn’t believe myself to be a feminist and that I couldn’t identify at all with the movement.  I associated the word with angry teeth-grinding man-haters who took any opportunity possible to mock women with children or women who didn’t work outside of the home.  And men who identified as feminists?  Yeah, no thank you.  I thought these women (and men) felt the need to demonize domesticity as if it were the enemy.  Domesticity was the anti-Christ of feminism and represented everything that prevented the women’s movement from marching forward.

I believed (and believe) in the power of women.  I thought I had some radical idea to save domesticity (like the endangered species or the trees).  That somehow we were at risk of losing our femininity when we became a part of the "women's movement".  I believe strongly that women have an important role to play: we are healers and nurturers and providers of life and nourishment.  I believe that we’re supposed to have thick hips and natural curves because we’re supposed to give birth and provide warmth and safety to our children and families.  And while many argue that this kind of attitude is SO turn of the century, I guess I don’t find this behavior archaic—I find this behavior critical for survival.  And I didn’t hear the feminists sharing these values with me (which was mainly because I wasn’t really listening).

Particularly in college, where I found myself deep in a liberal-feminist-recycle-mania, I felt a need to defend the women out there who clung to domesticity for safety.  I felt the need to cling to that domesticity, too.  I felt like I needed to offer support to the women who let their partners open the pickle jar and pick up the heavy things.  Who didn’t want careers but instead wanted babies and mini-vans and houses with finished basements.  Growing up in the south, I found familial structures like these, even though they didn’t necessarily reflect the home I grew up in as a kid, as a source of comfort.  Like a country song.  Or buttered toast.

And what I know now is that what I was clinging to wasn’t so much the hetero-normative domestic bliss of the 1950’s, but an idea that we all have a role to play in raising our children and our neighbor’s children and our neighbor’s neighbor’s children and that a woman's work is truly beautiful.  And I’ve learned, with age, as with most things, that I was largely wrong with my assumptions about feminists.  To have thought that these values didn’t have a home in the word “feminist” was myopic and naïve. 

I look around at a world in crisis, especially for women.  As I get older, I’ve become more aware of the overwhelming pressures we put on ourselves to be a certain kind of woman—to be successful, to be thin, to be pretty, to be likeable—pressures that perhaps are greater than any pressure we get in the classroom, the board room, or the senate floor.  The way we interpret the world as women is just as scary as the way the world has been interpreted for us.

I’ve become keenly aware of the harshness of public spaces—the way we all worry about how we’re dressed and how we share a communal fear of being violated, to the point that we no longer trust strangers to be good people, when offered a choice.

I’ve been working with kids for as long as I can remember.  Sadly, I can no longer keep track of the number of children I’ve met who were missing mothers (and fathers, too, but that’s another post for another time)—either physically or emotionally—and I can’t stomach what it does to a child.

But I also have spent months of my life in places around the world where women are treated quite differently than they are here.  My friends and family in Ghana have taught me so many things about what it means to be a woman—the roles and responsibilities that come with being of this gender, and the joys of this gender, too.  I know everyone wants to hear that in developing West African countries, women are hidden and abused, but I have to argue something quite the opposite.  While, yes, the freedom of women (and men, too) in places like this looks very different from our man-made American ideals on the subject, women are celebrated and revered for their sheer womanhood.  Women rule the roost (although their husband don’t always know it).  

As I sit here in the quiet of the early morning, I can freely admit that I love being a woman.  I love my curves.  And though you may not believe me (or want to know about it), I’ve come to respect my monthly menstruation; a biological reminder of my true femininity and my purpose as a woman.  I love wearing high-heels and feeling pretty.  I love wearing dresses in the summertime and when I know I’m having an awesome hair day.  And I love that I know my kitchen inside and out (and could take on any potluck dinner request with no fear).  I’m a baby whisperer.  It concerns the BF to no end how loudly my womb can talk; how naturally I take to mothering and how organically babies just seem to land on my hip (and how little I protest).

But I also love my work.  I love being respected for my intelligence and my abilities.  I actually prefer to work hard and like being recognized when I know I’ve really contributed something important to a project or a plan.  And I’ve learned that in this place we live, you can’t always have both worlds.  You can’t always blend the two so organically.  And why?  Because we still have a lot of work to do.  Which I might not have said ten years ago.

Yesterday, an article was featured in the Huffington Post, “The Trouble with Bright Girls”.  The article explores what it means to be a girl and what it means to be a smart girl and how this impacts your life as a woman.  Near the end, the author asks: “How often have you found yourself avoiding challenges and playing it safe, sticking to goals you knew would be easy for you to reach? Are there things you decided long ago that you could never be good at? Skills you believed you would never possess?”  I found myself silenced at these questions.  Because the answer for me is yes.  I was a bright girl and I am a bright woman and sometimes these things can be crippling, in the face of the culture we live in right now.

So on this International Women’s Day, and my birthday, I ask you to challenge yourself.  Ask for more.  Stop playing it safe.  Stop forcing yourself to be something (or someone) you’re not.  Stop listening to Dr. Oz and Dr. Phil and all the morning shows about diets and surgeries and exercise and do the things that make you happy (not the things a doctor on television said would make you happy).  Choose hobbies and careers that fulfill you.  Don’t be so afraid to eat butter or bread (believe me no one really cares if you gain five pounds…you’re the only one who noticed).

Don’t be so afraid to take big, giant steps.  Listen more.  Be present in your life.  Choose to be alive.  Laugh more.  Enjoy your children.  Be willing to love yourself.  And your big hips (or small hips, or no hips, or giant hips).  Celebrate yourself. 

"In Her Own Words: In Celebration of International Women's Day 2011" was created to share and celebrate the experiences of women from many walks of life. All day Tuesday, March 8th Any Other Wedding and One Cat Per Person will feature posts written by a collective of intelligent, passionate and opinionated women bloggers from the United States and the United Kingdom. We encourage you to comment and create dialouge as well as visit their respective blogs. The conversation starts here, but it does not need to end here. Be sure to stop by Any Other Wedding and One Cat Per Person throughout the day to read all of the posts in the series. For more information about International Women's Day, visit www.internationalwomensday.com.




Banner: Joshua Gomby

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Working Class Chic

It’s 9 o’clock at night, I’m eating a grilled cheese sandwich off of a paper towel and drinking lukewarm San Pellegrino straight from the bottle.  As an appetizer, I housed a stale glazed donut and washed it down with a swig of V8 Splash, you know, so that I can get an 1/8 of a serving of vegetables without even chewing.  I’m the epitome of class. I’m what they call: “working class” chic. 

Or at least that’s what I’m telling myself.  I need the word “chic” to be used when describing my current state of life.  Because otherwise I’d call it “hot mess with dark circles.”  Or "painfully pale and breaking out, despite departure from adolescence."

And I have no one but myself to blame for this madness—I’m the one who says yes to everything.  I’m the one who brilliantly decided NOW was the time to go back to school.  And work a full time job (that’s really like two full time jobs glued together and pretending to be one).  I’m the one who joins committees for a living.  And volunteers constantly.  You know, in my head it seems so logical.  And before all the meetings and events start, I always think I'll have so much free time.  Then bam!  I find myself sneaking cheese danishes out of morning meetings to ensure that I have something to eat for lunch, readjusting my spanx in the middle of parking lots (because I don't care who sees me anymore), and running perpetually 20 minutes late to life (okay, maybe 30).  I live on coffee, which translates to 24-7 coffee breath (and asking everyone, even strangers, for gum).  I have tote bags that could hold toddlers.  Like seriously.  And a hell of a tough right shoulder (from hauling my entire office around in said tote bag).   

It's G-L-A-M-O-R-OUS.  

I have these memories of tagging along with my dad to all of his committees and meetings and boards (I come by this lifestyle naturally, you know), thinking to myself how much fun it all was.  Everyone seemed so pleasant and it seemed like such a fun way to spend time—hanging out around a big table (like a dinner party!) with all your best friends.  I thought meetings were awesome.  And that everyone around these tables actually liked each other (I guess I couldn't smell bullshit when I was a kid).  And some of these meetings even had snacks.  Which was an ultimate plus for someone like me who lives for snack food (mmm, cheese & crackers).  Oh how important meetings made me feel when I was eighteen and got to—say something!  Or better yet, provide a HANDOUT!

And, oh, how my feelings have changed.  I mean, the meetings aren't so bad, but I'm starting to wonder how anything ever gets done.  These meetings pretty much require that we take work home so that we can do the work we should have done at our desk (but got stuck in meetings).  It's a tough life in the big city.  

Yesterday was my 27th birthday.  It seems that not so long ago I was navigating how to diplomatically accept the Barbie I didn’t really want from the person I really, really didn’t want to come to my birthday party while my dad played happy birthday on the accordion.  Back then, it was okay to ask everyone to make you the center of attention—it was expected, even.  But once you hit –oh, say twenty or twenty-five?—it suddenly becomes a bit unsavory to expect everything and everyone to bend to your every whim on your birthday. 

Plus, I can’t ever find the option on my time card that gives me paid leave on my birthday…without getting what the French call “le let go”.  So, alas, I’ve accepted my role as an adult (bitterly) and feel that I did the right thing yesterday: I worked a full eight-hour day.  And then I went to class for five hours.  And wrote a paper.  And studied for an exam.  And have been feeling mighty sorry for myself ever since.

I spent the morning with some of my favorite kids under ten.  Even though we were busy doing important things like taking the MSA (the wretched Maryland state exams that these poor kids spend the whole year preparing for and only a few miserable hours taking), I still had a nice chance to chat with them while we waited for it all to start.  We talked about football, Monique and the Oscars, chocolate chip cookies and cats—just the kind of conversation everyone should have before 9 am with kids who still think an opportunity to play "7-Up" is the bomb-diggity (and who would roll their eyes to hear me say "bomb-diggity"). 

In the middle of our talk about cats and dogs I had one of those Billy Madison moments where I wanted to shake their faces and warn them about the perils of adulthood; to hold fast to the joy and lightness of childhood.  And to enjoy the shit out of their next birthday party.  But, people get arrested for shaking kids faces these days, so I guess they’ll just have to figure it out for themselves.