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Winding Lane


Random Lane:

Do you know what I love to eat?  The chicken and wild rice soup from Panera.  That is some good stuff!

Excellent songs on the Muzak, today.  Can’t ever complain when Annie Lennox and Fiona Apple are featured.

I need to find out how to contact Dianne Brill, and see if she would be willing to participate in the Women Worth Knowing project.  Dianne Brill is my pilot.  Sometimes Paulina Porizkova, my co-pilot, gets to fly the plane, but Dianne and her brazilliant Boobs, Boys and High Heels book is always somewhere in the flight center of my brain.

When I was in jr. high and high school, I kept clippings of my favorite models/outfits/ads in a scrapbook.  Paulina featured heavily.  I luffed her.  She, Yasmeen Ghauri, and Christy Turlington were my top three.  Really, was there anyone more striking than Ghauri working back then?  It’s a rhetorical question.  The answer is no.  That woman was the apex of beauty.

I couldn’t name a model today if you slapped me with her.  Well, Gisele.  Everyone knows Gisele.  And I know Agyness Deyn.  Outside of that?  Nope.  Oh, Crystal Renn.  I know who she is.

I still love fashion, but these days, I like to see what people are wearing to parties.  I look forward to my Town & Country magazine for that reason.  I flip straight to the party pictures.  In fact, when I was deciding whether or not my party dress for last weekend had too much cleavage, I went to a couple of T&C party pages to see what the idle rich were wearing. 

According to the T&C party pages, I had a perfectly acceptable level of laciviousness.  Of course, every other woman there was buttoned up to the collar bone.  Moral of the story:  Do not use NYC party photos to guide your fashion for a Fort Worth party.  NYC skin baring is to Fort Worth skin baring what Catwalk is to Ho Stroll.

I need to start yoga again.  Timing is everything, though.  Sheesh.

Such a beautiful day outside.  2 more hours and I can go enjoy.

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And When I am Bad…


It is a beautiful Spring day.  I have the good fortune of working in a building with plenty of windows and skylights, so I can look out at the professional landscaping and sigh happily from the comfort of air conditioning.  It is always so good when the sun comes back from Winter break.

Spring makes me want to write about love.  Or maybe it is the sudden outcropping of barely-teenaged looking girls in hot pants and tube tops, walking too close to boys with awful hair and skinny jeans as they make their ways down to the brushes behind the playground that puts me in mind of it.  I fully expect to see those same girls waddling up the sidewalk alone in a couple of months, hot pants unbuttoned to let their lineas negras breathe. 

I find myself wanting to shout out the car window as I drive by, “Use birth control!”  So young.  So twitterpated.  So in need of parental intervention.  Boys and girls alike.

I never took walks like that, mainly because all the boys I dated were terrified of my parents.  I would have gotten into a lot more trouble if I had been able to find a willing partner, but all of my dates had excellent senses of self-preservation.  Having a Marine for a father takes the fun out of dating.  The smart ones were more afraid of my mother.  (Also, save for a couple of errors in judgment in college, I dated very nice, respectful boys.  Shout outs to John, Jason, Sam, David and Tommy.  You are great guys!)

But I was going to write about love.  Love and shame.

When I was in second grade, my seventh grade friend, Laurel, shared a book with me.  It was called The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles, and was written by Julie Andrews.  Nifty, huh?  I loved that book so much!  I searched for it for years after losing touch with Laurel.  Unable to remember the author’s name (as it is written under the formidable Ms. Andrews’ married name of Edwards), since it was out of print, I was out of luck.

This was before the days of Amazon.com.  I had that book on lists at several bookstores, and antique stores, and auctions.  I was hunting high and low.  I said to myself, “If I ever meet a man who brings me that book, I am going to marry him.”

I mentioned this to a coworker once, including the bit about marrying the man who brought me the book.  He laughed.  Two months later, he arrived at work with a little package.  In the singlemost romantic gesture ever extended to me, he had gone on a wide-scale search for that book, finding it at a book seller in a flea market.  He wrapped it in a scarf and presented it with this shy, hopeful smile.

Now, Chris was a most excellent fellow.  We had met in our training class, and he had introduced himself immediately.  I wasn’t sure about him at first.  He looked like Jesus, declared there was no god, wore Birkenstocks unironically, and listened to Bob Marley on the regular.  I was having a Gothic Lolita phase, teaching Sunday School in a Baptist church, wearing patent leather maryjanes, and listening to the Spice Girls. 

As it turned out, he was friendly and funny, wicked smart, and genuinely nice.  He was also living with a woman, and I was seeing someone long-distance, so when he showed up with the book I was agog and aghast.  Did I have to marry him?!

He was in the process of extracting himself from the relationship with the other woman, and my long-distance thing was going badly.  He suggested that maybe we could pre-date.  I was…okay with that?  I liked him.  I could see myself having a lot of fun with him.  I didn’t particularly want to kiss him, but I am practical about that sort of thing, and I wasn’t at all repulsed by him–it could have gone either way.  I was intrigued.  I agreed.

I had a very tight knit group of girlfriends, and one in particular whose opinion I weighed out like it was solid gold.  My girlfriends, without the luxury of having gotten to know him like I had, did not think he was boyfriend material.  At. All.

Now, I hadn’t told them that the group event we were attending was a pre-date, so they didn’t know I was considering taking a walk to remember with this hippy.  All they knew was that this was Athiest Jesus-Man from the office, and that he was nice, wore socks with sandals, was in a very strange relationship, and that he liked cats.  We were all dog people, so we were suspicious of a man who liked cats.  I’m still suspicious of men who prefer cats.

When it became apparent that he was flirting with me, my girlfriends (who believed I thought of him only as Atheist Jesus Man) balked.  Here’s where the shame part comes in:  Because of their reaction, I blew him off entirely.  Worse, I played into my girlfriends’ reactions in front of him.  I mean girled him because I was afraid of what my girlfriends would think of me considering him for a date.  

You know what is worse than that?  If I had told my girlfriends that I was thinking of going out with him, they would not have hesitated to encourage me because he was a nice guy.  They would have raised concerns about our difference in faith and litter boxes, but they would have been happy someone thought enough of me to go to all the trouble of finding my marrying book.  I didn’t even give them the chance to like him.  I let them think I wasn’t interested, and then clothes-lined him based on their reactions to my supposed disinterest.  Confusing?  Yeah.  I know.

It was awful of me, and I didn’t even have the courage to apologize after.  I was an utter jackass.  I should have just told him the truth, that I am allergic to cats and ugly shoes, and that I was having a horribly, horribly shallow year.  Instead, I embarrassed him out of having interest in me.  Or shamed him out, like I thought I was too good for him.  Tacky.  Nasty.  Awful.

A couple of years ago, I saw him in a bookstore.  I hid behind stacks so he wouldn’t see me, and watched him as he walked around with a pretty, fresh-faced hippy-chick, carrying an infant in a sling.  They went together like peas and carrots and he looked absolutely serene.  Warmed my heart.  He was a good man, and he deserved absolute serenity.

I wouldn’t change not dating him.  Our religious beliefs alone would have been too much of a sticking point, and it would be another year before I worked out my Daddy Issues to the point that I was even halfway useful as a girlfriend.  It would never have been a good match.  I just wish I had treated him with more respect in backing down from anything more than friendship.

I also wish I had treated my girlfriends with more respect than to have used them like a Greek chorus to my Medusa.  It is a good thing to present potential love interests to those who know and love you best, but you should let them know what you are doing.

Three years later, I met B.  My friends knew I liked him from the get-go.  They liked him, too.

And we all lived happily ever after.

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Twu Wove


“Mawwage. Mawwage is what bwings us together today.”  –Impressive Clergyman, The Princess Bride
I waited a long time to get married.  Prior to meeting B, I had one near miss.  I am thankful every day for having dodged that bullet.  As far as I am concerned, that two other poor women married that sucker is proof that God does have favorites, and I am one of them.  But, I waited a long time.
While I was single and hoping, I heard a lot of advice about dating.  There were the advocates of online matchmaking (dating websites, web forums, chat groups), group dating, blind dating, and not dating at all (and trusting God to drop the man of your dreams on your doorstep.)  I think I got a lecture from and about every one of them.
There were also those who advocated making a list of what you wanted in a man, and trusting the Universe, or God, or The Secret, to bring him to you, right down to the part in his hair.  I made a list, but I could never decide what he should look like.  My list kept getting longer and longer, and I was feeling more and more ridiculous.  I mean, the list isn’t a bad idea because it helps you figure out what is important to you in a relationship, but hair color just isn’t a big deal, and I didn’t care what he did for a living, so long as I didn’t have to support him.
I was finally exasperated with my list and narrowed it down to this:  I want to marry a man with whom I can be 100% myself, without feeling shy or embarrassed, or like I should change.  He should feel the same way around me.
After all, what is better than that friend who loves you exactly as you are, and who doesn’t mind if you forget where Singapore is once and a while?  Nothing.
B, Andy, Scott, and Mark, somewhere between 2001--2002

When I met B, I liked him instantly.  He seemed very comfortable in his own skin, wasn’t putting on airs or trying to be anything he wasn’t, and he had a group of friends to be envied.  We met at Mark’s NYE party on December 31, 2001.  We had our first date 23 days later on January 24, 2002.  Exactly two years later, we married each other.

Today, B and I spent the day with Thor, sitting in the middle of a creek.  We had to hike out to a low point first, then we waded out hip deep to find a rock, and we sat down in a tangle of legs and wet clothes, leaning against each others backs, and we listened to the world go by.  It was one of those perfect days.  Just the three of us together, doing something silly.  Days like today make me love him even more.

I used to be afraid that if anyone ever really got to know me, it would be impossible for them to like me, much less love me.  I used to be afraid that when B had lived with me long enough, and found out enough about me, he would leave.  Somewhere in the last year, he made magic happen.  I’m not afraid of that anymore.  I’m not afraid of myself anymore.  It’s a lot bigger than it sounds in print.  I found out that at my worst, I’m really not so bad.  And in striving to be my most livable best, I’ve become better.

I married a man who let me be 100% myself, and in doing so, I’ve grown 100% comfortable in my own skin.  Frankly, I think that’s the best you can get out of marriage.

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Saturday Style


We’re considering an outdoorsy day tomorrow, so I am planning what to wear.  I have a complicated relationship with outside, preferring to look at it from inside, where there are controlled temperatures, toilets, and windows through which to smile upon nature from a safe distance.  No bees, no snakes, no mosquitoes.  Just me and my cup of coffee.  And my internet connection.

Last summer season, I was shopping at Target and bought a couple of adorable gauzey tops to wear over shorts and jeans.  It wasn’t until I got them home that I realized they weren’t tops at all, but were skirts.  The mother in me protested, “Those are not skirts!  Those wouldn’t cover the tops of a girls’ thighs!”

It was a sign of the times.  I was officially out of the ingenue stage and into soccer mom territory.  Although, I don’t know many soccer moms who pick up little skirts and think, “Oh!  Cute top!”

I wear my $15 skirttops, as I call them, with anything (pictured, the midriff is bare–I don’t wear mine that way.)  Other skirts, shorts, jeans, capris, yoga pants.  They are comfortable and cool in the hot, Texas summer.  In case I get cold in the car/restaurant/theater, I carry a cropped cardigan that matches whichever skirttop I choose.  That will keep me warm enough, and worn unbuttoned it doesn’t interfere with the drape of the skirttop.  It’s a great idea, really.  The look will work for women of varying cup size, too.  I’m a D.  I wear a thick bandeau style bra underneath and life is good.  If you need more support, wear the real thing and hide your bra straps with the sweater.  Do not wear exposed bra straps unless you’re planning on picking up a case of Pabst Blue Ribbon later on in the evening.

Pictured are a pair of JAG jeans cropped flares.  I just bought these recently from Nordstrom Rack for $29.  If you can find a pair of these, they are like butter!  So soft!  It’s a good weight of twill that is like velvet on your skin.  They also seem to be cut to fit a woman with a 10 or more inch difference between waist and hip, like mine.

I also bought a new pair of sandals recently, at Ross.  I love a good Roman sandal.  I paid $14 for mine, decorated with little gold and bronze discs.  I will accessorize the outfit with a shell necklace/earring combo I bought at the Dollar General for $2.  Dollar General, Family Dollar and Big Lots have some really cute costume jewelry in unusual colors.  Check them out.

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Women Worth Knowing: Meet Chey


I met Chey a few years ago through my Homeowners Association web group.  I noticed that she was a lightning rod for conversation, likely because she was fearless about stating her well-considered, well-researched, well-written opinions.  Chey has been a very important part of what makes our neighborhood a great place to live.  She has what I call a Founding Father spirit.  That is, she understands what it takes to get the grass roots moving. She is a Patrick Henry type, able to light a fire in the group and get things moving.

She has been very charitable with her time in our neighborhood, involved with various aspects of different events, always willing to help.  Recently, I learned that she worked and lived in Moscow during the Cold War, and that raised her to an entirely new level of esteem.  Neighborhoods need a Chey, and I just like running into her at the WalMart.

Meet Chey.

Name: Chey Dustin
Age Range: 50s
Preferred Job Title: Currently domestic goddess, book reviewer, beading queen and project manager for family.
Industry: Currently in the “belief in family and home” industry

I’m the proud mom of 2 adult(ish) daughters and partner/spouse of their father, my life mate, for 33 years now.

The first hour of my day is spent in “slow mo”. I like to wake quietly, drink some caffiene, read the paper, watch the sunrise, hear the birds awake and do a little writing, then shift into high gear and “get ‘er done.”

The last hour of my over-filled days are spent checking the next day’s schedules, doing the lockdown and then a bit of reading before bed.

I’m at the age now that I can objectively view my life in more of an arc than the short bursts I saw it as when younger. Because of this I am better able to have a realistic perspective on how my definition of success has changed. Success: I have healthy children who think independently, are pretty self-sufficient and who have, so far, avoided some of the major pitfalls to which some of peers have succumbed. Success: My relationship with my life-partner has steadily become stronger over the long years together. Success: I know that the work I did early on, over a 20 year period, had a permanent, positive impact on the world and helped form who I have become. But most importantly, I feel I’ve found success because I don’t need/crave or pander to the judgements of others like I did when I was young. I am what I am…and I’m okay with that…because I know my own heart.

More and more I find joy in the simplest pleasures. After a hectic period of time working, raising kiddos, etc. I have the time now to stop and look and listen better than I ever have before. So I notice the beauty in things that I passed by too quickly before. Also, one thing in particular that brings me great joy is having long discussions with my daughters in which they truly share their own opinions and ideas on lots of subjects with no hesitation. After their stormy, closeted teen years, it is so nice to find out what kind of people they’ve become…and it is a joy to me that they feel free to share themselves with me.

Women I admire? First on the list would be the strong women in my family who preceded me. My mother, my grandmothers….they all endured hardships and sorrows with a grace that humbles me. They stood for what was right. Their loyalty was unshakeable. Other women I admire include writers, artists and “trailblazers”. I was the first generation that benefitted from the “women’s movement” of the 60’s/70’s. While some of those leaders were abrasive and unpopular, they made great strides both in the workplace and home for those of us who followed. The greatest achievement they gave us was a choice to be what we wanted to be…not stay within any tight stereotype defined by society.

My closest friend offers me absolute honesty…even at times when I may feel it is not what I want, I know it is what I need.

My best trait is that abhor injustice. Also I have loyalty and being forthright, all things I consider positive traits. Some interpret my forthright behavior as being abrasive. That’s their choice. While I’m guilty of being blunt and frank, I do not ever intend to be rude or mean-spirited. My personal belief is that we all waste too much time in talking around an issue, padding it with cotton, when we should just be direct and frank.

Advise I would give boys about girls? Be clear, be honest, be reliable. Say what you mean and then truly mean what you say. If you don’t mean it, don’t say it. Oh, and learn to cook and do laundry…no thinking woman wants to be your personal maid or substitute mother. When looking for a girlfriend, always look for substance over style. We all love style but style can fade with time, but substance is forever! Find someone with both!

I overcome adversity through committed persistence and an unwillingness to be cowed down by those who try to bully me through their words, actions or judgments. On personal adversities I draw on the strength and example of the strong women who came before me.

How do I want to be remembered? As someone who was never afraid to speak up for those who had no voice. As someone who, when choosing between career and family, made the hard choice and at the end of the day, it proved to be the best choice for me. As someone who never loved lightly but always loved deeply.