Inside Lane

Dance on Pain of Death


Oops. I’ve forgotten to blog. I’m days behind on my wedding playlist. Sorry about that! BUT, next on the list has a great story behind it.

Clearly, I love Ella Fitzgerald, so I could easily have just made a playlist of her renditions, but this one was a Must Have.

B and I did not have a big wedding. We did not have a big reception. My ideal reception, for as long as I can recall, has been, “Cake, punch, 20-minutes, and I’m out of there.” So, that was pretty much the plan*.

A reception takes longer than 20-minutes, though, so we were in it for the 2 hours that the church would allow us use of the reception hall. All this information was laid out by a woman we lovingly (no) called The Church Nazi.

This woman was about 102-years-old, and very, very serious about us not having the time of our lives. She laid down the law about everything from how we kissed (No Open Mouths), to respectable forms of dress. Since the only music allowed was from the in-house Organ of Doom, we had to choose from a very specific list of songs last popular in 1803. But most important: No Dancing.

Dancing, as you know, is a vertical expression of a horizontal desire, and under the eyes of God is the last place a husband and wife should be thinking late thoughts (because all any woman can think about while she’s wearing Spanx and a full-length compression slip is getting undressed so that her beloved can see the lines left behind by her Spanx and full-length compression slip–shudder.) Dancing makes the Baby Jesus cry, and we all know what happens when the Baby Jesus cries. DO NOT CLICK THAT LINK! YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.

Anyway, The Church Nazi seemed to start and end every conversation with us with a word about NO DANCING. It was like the librarian ghost in Ghostbusters. She was normal normal normal NO DANCING!!! And she would say NO DANCING in a tone that suggested we planned to desecrate the altar.

So, when I was putting together our playlist, I put this song right in the middle. We would not dance. No sir. We would not dance at all. Ever. Uh uh. Merci Beaucoup. Because music leads the way to romance, so dear Church Nazi, no, we will not dance!

*And we planned and put down deposits on everything before announcing we were engaged because I was afraid of ending up having the wedding of someone else’s dreams. There is not enough Xanax in the world.

Also, we planned our wedding in 2 weeks. I am an event planning ninja.

Inside Lane

In Which I Compare Dean Martin to a Drunken Goldfish


I don’t really get Dean Martin. He always sounds like he’s singing from inside a vodka bottle–like a drunken goldfish. That said, when I went looking for a version of Dream a Little Dream, it had to be Martin’s song on the playlist because

I had Sammy Davis, Jr. in there. I love this song. It’s happy. It’s funny. It sounds like something you’d dance to at a wedding. Or something you’d dance to that led to a wedding. Or at least that led to a little crush.

I’ve Got a Crush on You is a huge favorite of mine. The world will pardon my mush, I still have a big crush on my mister.

We went out to the park yesterday, and he and I sat on a bench while the offspring played. Thor noticed how cozy we looked, and he ran over to sit with us. For just a few minutes, we were smooshed up together on the bench. Perfect weather. Perfect day. Me, perfectly happy sandwiched between my favorite boys. I couldn’t have one without the other–I wouldn’t want to.

10 years has flown by. It’s been a blink. I’m looking forward to the next 10.

Inside Lane

Raising Vegetables and Farming Children


In September of 2008, Thor was 3. That is, he was 37 months old. We’d been having a lot of fun for the past year, learning colors, and numbers, and letters, and symbols, and as you can see in the video linked here, we did a lot of Q&A.

That is, Thor would ask, “What is this, Mama?” And I would say, “What do you think it is?” or, “I don’t know. You tell me.” And he would tell me.

In July of 2008, when Thor was 35 months old, or very nearly 3, I enrolled him in a pre-K program. The director of the program explained that they would be doing a little aptitude test to determine class placement, and I said that was great.

I did remember to explain that Thor only talked when he felt like it, and that he did have a propensity for pretending he was yet unable to speak. I did not remember to explain that he was already a mischievous literalist (like his mother), and that he enjoyed watching adult heads explode.

When I got back to the school that afternoon, the director met me at the door. I mean, she was waiting for me to arrive and met me at the front door to usher me into her office. She was concerned. Worried. Afraid. I thought something terrible must have happened.

She thought something terrible had happened.

She produced Thor’s aptitude test with genuine and sincere upset. She knew I had told her he knew his colors, and his numbers, and his letters, but when they had quizzed him…well…she passed the aptitude test over to me.

0

Thor had made a 0 on his test.

She said, “He couldn’t tell us any of the answers, Mrs. B. He didn’t know any of them. And he kept asking the teacher to tell him the answer.”

I laughed. And I laughed. And I laughed. And she drew back and eyeballed me.

I asked, “How did you administer the test?”

“We ask him the questions, and he provides the answer.”

“How did you ask him the questions?”

“What?”

“How did you word the questions?”

The director called the teacher into conference with us. The teacher said, “I would say to him, ‘Thor, do you know what this is.’ He would say, ‘Yes,’ and I would say, ‘What is it?’ And he would say, ‘I don’t know. You tell me.’ He couldn’t get any of them right.”

Then, I laughed some more and explained how that particular boy’s brain worked. “He’s playing with you,” I said. “You have to word it differently. Say, ‘Tell me what color this is,’ or ‘Let’s play a game–pretend I don’t know, and you are teaching me.'”

They were skeptical, but brought the boy back around and when I asked, “Thor, tell me what color this is,” he complied. They agreed to retest him. He made a perfect score.

A huge chunk of my identity has always been tied up in the label Talented and Gifted. I was special because I was Talented and Gifted. I got to do better and more because I was Talented and Gifted. A huge chunk of my neuroses have also always been tied up in that label, and my stresses, and my fears. Without that label, how would people know I was worthwhile? How would they know I was smart? Or good at anything?

I know, duh. But when you’re six, and you’re being told This Is What You Are, you think that thing which you are is what defines you. Six isn’t really old enough to grasp nuance.

Of course I wanted a smart child. I wanted an interesting child. I wanted a curious, busy, interesting child, who could reason and learn without problem. I wanted a Talented and Gifted child.

I got Thor, who turned out to be everything I asked and more, in ways that I cannot even describe.

I got a smart, funny, curious, busy, intense, compassionate, dramatic, rational, delightful, sardonic, merry little man, who reasons and learns without problem. He transcends labels. If you’re around him for five minutes–no, if you look at his face, you can see it in his eyes. He is sparkling with brilliance.

I was afraid that when he got into school, I was going to panic over Talented and Gifted labels. I didn’t want to put that on him. I didn’t want to burden him with my desire for branded, approved, stamped on confirmation of intellect. I didn’t want him to ever feel like he was competing with another child for my approval. I wanted him to be defined by what he thought and made of himself, not what others observed, or standardized tests said about him.

When he took the T&G test in Kindergarten, he got bored and just started coloring in dots on the scantron. He told me this after the fact. His scores came back with a sad note telling us our child was possibly a turnip.

It was hard for me. I mean, clearly, my child is not a turnip. But I wanted a label that would tell the world, “My child is not only not a turnip, but he is also better than a good segment of the population.” *I* think he is better than a good segment of the population, but I am his mother. That’s my job. I’m supposed to think he’s the best. I wanted a scantron to agree with me!

But, I let it go. The kid does very well in school, he has friends, he is pretty much universally loved and adored, or at least appreciated, and he’d get another chance at the T&G in 3rd grade.

About a month ago (after a school conference wherein his intellectual praises were sung to high heaven, and his placement in T&G all but guaranteed, pending the scores of his standardized test) Thor announced that he had taken the T&G and that it was awesome, easy, and a lot of fun to take. “Oh, but I messed it up,” he said.

“How?” I asked.

“I didn’t fill in the bubble for the practice answer, so my answers were all off.”

“Did you get to retake it?”

“No, the teacher who gave us the test said we couldn’t redo it, so I just left it.”

“Oh…”

And we got his scores in this week.

“Dear Thor’s Parents, How lovingly you have disguised your turnip as a boy. You dress him in boy clothing, you comb his little greens down like hair, you pack him away with a lunch daily. However, your child is, in all actuality, a turnip. We highly suggest you get him some special help because his test scores indicate that he is entirely unable to communicate, understand, or learn. Sincerely, The Standardized Test People Who Are Not At All Turnips”

Oh well. That’s why we have a membership to the Perot Museum.

Inside Lane

The Things You Love About The One You Love


The next three songs from our wedding playlist (and we’re working backwards to #1) bring out my three favorite female recording artists. Ella Fitzgerald, Etta James, and Billie Holiday. If you’d like to make that number round out to five, add in Fiona Apple and Lorena McKennitt–they just aren’t exactly wedding material.

“The way you wear your hat. The way you sip your tea. The memory of all that. They can’t take that away from me.” If I were to change the lyrics to sing this to B, it would go, “The way your head defies every hat. The way you love your Whataburger #2 combo whatasized with Dr. Pepper, not tea. The memory of all that. If they tried to take that away from me, I’d punch them in the mouth.” True love, when it comes to really knowing someone, is harder to rhyme.

Because love–especially in that early Eros phase–is about that feeling. When something’s got a hold on you. Where you go to sing about it, and it gets a little ugly because rowrrrr! It changes how you walk. It changes how you talk. Your confidence skyrockets. Your enthusiasm is boundless. And only Etta James will do to express it.

But once you get that feeling of “unk! yeah!” out of your system, love becomes a daily thing. It’s just part of life, but it’s the best part of life. Ira Gershwin said it best:

It’s very clear
Our love is here to stay;
Not for a year
But ever and a day.
The radio and the telephone and the movies that we know
May just be passing fancies,
And in time may go.
But, oh my dear,
Our love is here to stay;
Together we’re going a long, long way.
In time the rockies may crumble, gibraltar may tumble,
They’re only made of clay,
But our love is here to stay

Billie Holiday sang it best.

Inside Lane

Plenty of Money and Meat


I had never heard this song before I started hunting for wedding playlist fodder, but from the opening bars, I was in love. And oh, what anyone could do with plenty of money and…whomever. This is track 16 on our playlist.

If I had an unlimited source of funds, I would hire a cook. Or, at least I would hire someone to do all the scut work for me. Someone to do the grocery shopping, and the chopping, and the cutting up of the chicken, and the washing up of the dishes after.

I want someone to cook healthy, hearty meals for me, and prepare snacks and send them to work with me. In effect, I want to be a giant toddler and hire myself a kitchen nanny. How long would it be before I wanted Kitchen Nanny to come put the food into my mouth for me?

See, I was thinking about this because I was thinking about how it is Hollywood’s job to look good. Again. I think about this frequently.

Hollywood gets paid to look good. In order to look good, Hollywood must take care with its diet, with its exercise, and with its upkeep. It must have a Kitchen Nanny. It must have a Fitness Nanny. It must have a Stylist Nanny.

I say to myself, “If I had a Kitchen Nanny, a Fitness Nanny, and a Stylist Nanny, I could look like [name redacted].” Then I think, “Oprah has all these Nannies. Oprah does not look like [name redacted].” Neither does Jessica Simpson.

Which makes me wonder if maybe what’s required is an Adderall Nanny? [Now you see why I redacted the name!]

At any rate, I’d like to have all those nannies. And maybe I could get a Foreign Language Nanny to come tutor me back into a working fluency of French, Russian, and Spanish while Fitness Nanny makes me do crunches.

I cooked chili for New Year’s Day, using a recipe my aunt posted on Facebook. I mixed it up a little to suit familial tastes, but it boils down to this:

  • 1lb sausage (I used a 50/50 mix of ground lamb and pork chorizo)
  • 1 cup diced onion
  • 1/4 cup diced celery
  • 4 cans black-eyed peas
  • 1 can diced tomatoes
  • 1 can diced tomatoes with green chilis
  • 2 tbs chili powder (I used 3)

You brown your sausage/meat in a Dutch oven, then remove it to drain off the fat, reserving about a tbs. Cook your onions and celery in that reserve, until translucent. Add in all your canned goods without draining, put your meat back in, stir in the chili powder. Bring it to a boil, then cover, reduce heat and simmer for 30 minutes.

Delicious.

Problematic for me because of the sausage content, but delicious.

I can rarely bring myself to eat sausage, thanks to Upton Sinclair. When I went to buy ingredients for the chili, I was only going to use the lamb (why I can eat this, but not sausage, I cannot tell you. why am I afraid of sharks in public swimming pools?) but thought that might not give it enough flavor. That’s where the chorizo came in.

I’d never worked with chorizo before. Let me tell you, it looked vile. I was really disgusted. It took forever to drain the grease and fat off the meat, and I never got the color/texture I really wanted. I was afraid to eat it.

I ate it. It was amazing. But, it makes me sad to eat it because I can’t get past what I saw when I was cooking it. I cannot enjoy this amazing chili because it looked so disgusting when the meat was raw.

The only thing keeping me from becoming a vegetarian is my ability to overcome my own disgust. If I had a Kitchen Nanny, she could just make me a vegetarian by not cooking meat for me.