Posts Tagged ‘suburbia’

29 and Feeling Strangely Fine

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

Birthdays have never been big occasions for me.  Growing up there wasn’t much (or any, really) family around. And with a summer birthday? Well that meant that very often few friends were around either. There may have been a pool party one year, but never any big blowouts.  There were no ponies, no clowns, no bouncy castles.  There wasn’t a sweet sixteen, no big celebration for turning legal at eighteen. This is not to say you should all band together and throw a big party for me because, waaaah, poor deprived me; no, this is only to establish my relationship with birthdays—few expectations, very little fanfare.

But this year?  This year felt different.  This year I turned 29. I know, 29 is no milestone. It’s an odd number. It’s not pretty like 20, comfortable and easy like 25. It’s not established like 30. But 29?  It’s kind of like that blaring yellow sign on the freeway, “Last Exit Before…”, a strong and direct warning that you better know where you’re going because if not, you’re going to end up in a place you don’t want to be.

Mike has told me for, well, five years now, that turning 29 is much harder than turning 30. At 30, I guess, you’ve come to terms with your fate.  You’ve gotta accept that you can no longer enter a college bar and assume that you blend in with the students.  Likely, you don’t. I suppose that’s the purpose that 29 serves: a whole year to come to terms with facts such as these.

This year, instead of the usual “I guess we could go out to dinner?” I suggested a BBQ to celebrate my birthday. I’ve met many new friends over the past few months thanks to my wee sidekick and I thought it’d be fun to get these new pals together with friends I’ve known for years in one place to mix and mingle.

The turnout for the soiree was so fitting for 29. There were friends I’ve known since college–friends who were present for (and partners in) some of my most debaucherous moments. At one point we all shook our heads at the realization that we’d known each other for over a decade. There were friends I’ve met only a few months ago, but who already feel like sisters because they are my seatmates on this exhilarating ride called parenthood. They don’t know about the time I fell down drunk in the middle of the street after stumbling out of a frat party (although now, I guess they do). But they know how many hours I slept last night, and my thoughts and fears about the best time to have a second child. There were babies, adorable babies!  On one hand it felt so natural; on the other, so weird.  When did we become the kind of people who throw parties involving children?

So when they brought out the cake–a strawberry flavor I’ve had every year since I was a toddler–and everybody gathered in the dining room (I have a dining room!) to sing happy birthday before my friend’s 2.5-year-old son leaned in to blow out the candles, in one room I saw my past, my present and my future, swirling and mixing into one solid picture: my life at 29.

happy birthday!

First [Play]Date Jitters

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

I’m hosting a playdate at my house today.  Playdate.  Doesn’t that word kind of grate on your nerves?  It sounds a little, I don’t know, pompous? Trite?  Like it’s trying too hard? I think, and I could be wrong, that the term is a relatively new phenomenon. Back when I was growing up (oh here we go) people just went to each other’s houses and brought their kids. Right? When I was very young, although old enough to know how to use the phone, I would call up my friend Emily and say, in my tiny little girl voice, ‘do you want to play?’ And she’d say yes, and then I’d ride my bike over to her house and we’d make up dance routines to Bell Biv Devoe or Janet Jackson (If you know me now, you’d find it HILARIOUS that I ever performed dance routines. Elaine Benes has got nothing on me).

Back to the playdate. I’ve never been to one, let alone hosted. What happens at these things? How long do they go on for? Are we actively trying to get the babies to play together, or do we just want them to stay calm and quiet long enough so that we can bitch and moan about whatever’s on our minds? Is this really an opportunity to find out what other people are doing, what child-rearing secrets they’ve unearthed that we may not know about? “So, how are you, how’s your family? Good? Great! Hey, just curious, is your baby sleeping through the night? What did you do? How did you do it? Tell me more! MORE! MOOOOOORE!”

My friend asked what she could bring to the playdate. I said, ‘just yourselves’ all easy breezy like I’ve got it ALL under control. Then I panicked. What should I make? Should I keep it simple, serve sandwiches? What if they don’t like sandwiches? How many different types of bread should I have on hand? Can we have cocktails? I’d like a cocktail.  Is noon too early for a drink?

What about toys? Do I have enough?  One of the babies is a few months older than Drew. Are my toys age appropriate, or is he gonna be all, ‘pssshhhaw, this toy is SO five months!’ Is Drew going to be upset if one of the other babies hijacks his exersaucer? ‘That’s MY little yellow butterfly you’re spinning!’

Wish me luck.

MY jumpy chair!

MY jumpy chair!

To Kill A Woodpecker

Friday, May 28th, 2010

The woodpecker started showing up about six weeks ago. I heard a sound as though a metal can was rattling around on our roof. Friends of ours had recently had a woodpecker problem, and because I had heard their story I knew right away that the rattling was most likely a woodpecker. He would stay only for a few minutes though, and usually he arrived just as we were waking up. So while he was a nuisance, it was nothing so horrible you’d want to poke your eyes out. In fact, I think we found it to be a bit of a novelty. ‘Oh how quaint, a woodpecker! We really do live in the burbs now, don’t we!’

The novelty wore off very fast. The woodpecker started showing up with a regularity that would awe Dannon Activia. We no longer needed to set our alarms; we could just wait for the woodpecker’s incessant hammering. Except he started showing up earlier. And earlier. Six o’clock wake ups quickly became 5:45, and then 5:30, 5:26. Mike decided he had had enough. The woodpecker needed to be stopped.

Enter the BB gun. Thing looks like a rifle, it even cocks (heh) like one too. The woodpecker would arrive, Mike would fly out of bed, grab his gun and take aim. Mike underestimated the woodpecker. As soon as the door to our deck opened and Woody spotted the gun aiming up towards him, he took off for the next nearest chimney. The war was on. Who would win?

Mike decided to try a different tack. He’d exit the house from a different door, one Woody wouldn’t be expecting. Early one morning Woody showed up and Mike snuck out the door off of our bedroom and onto the roof above our sunroom.

A few days later Mike noted that Woody hadn’t shown up in a while. He felt fairly certain that his tactic had worked. “I opened the door and stuck close to the building,” he said, as if he were a SWAT team member describing a major takedown. “I backed up just a little, pointed right at him and popped one off.” His fingers were making the trigger action, as though he were reliving his most glorious battle scene and not a BB gun encounter with a small brown bird. “Maybe you got him,” I mused.

This morning our wake-up call came at 5:12 a.m. No, it wasn’t the baby; he was sleeping peacefully. Guess who’s back, back again?