Enjoying the Moments

11 Nov

In a house with two kids, a dog, a husband, and located about 200 feet off a major avenue in Chicago, quiet moments are few and hard to come by. Well, it depends on what I define as “quiet”- if I meant true literal quiet, then impossible is more accurate. But tonight we had some quiet moments that were more like special moments, especially since they were seemingly uneventful by any other observer:

  • Teddy opened a yogurt and then shared it with Archie. As in, he helped to feed Archie.
  • I was giving the boys a bath and they miraculously refrained for splashing and spilling all the water out of the tub. Teddy even helped to scrub Archie’s hair.
  • Archie gave me the sloppiest, sweetest kiss on my lips, including a robust “mwwwa” to accompany.
  • Teddy, Ian and I hung out in the living room after Archie went down, listening to the Avett Brothers on Pandora, and just did our own thing, respectively. Teddy found a stack of football cards at my parents house and he was playing a game he was making up on the spot. I was sitting in the chair flipping through a catalog, Christmas wish-listing. Ian was on the chair, away from his phone and chatting with Teddy. At one point, Ian and Teddy set up an “office” behind the chair (along with putting the curtain over them for more secure structural roof support) and drew together in making me a card.

I think part of what made this evening so lovely and meaningful is that we’ve come off the heels of Ian being out of the country for work, and more trips in the horizon, so I think we’re trying to embrace when we’re all together. It is so easy to just slip back into a churn and burn routine, but I’m really making an effort to hit pause and take in the moments when I can. Like I said, it’s not often, but tonight was one of those times and I am so happy for it.

Life is hard and busy and it’s easier to let it pass by than not. I’m working to take it in as it happens. To be present. To put the phone away. To open a book. To play music. To help create a setting in where memories aren’t flickers, but are full sensory experiences that I can hold onto and recall more fully and in detail.

A letter to Archie, on his 1st birthday

15 Sep

9.14.13

Dear Archie,

When you were born, you had a head of dark brown hair and your lip reminded me of your great grandmother. The doctor placed you on me and as we locked eyes, I fell in love hard and fast. You were (and are) a big guy, 9lbs. You ate off the bat like a champion. You were (and are) perfect.

We gave you a bold name, Archibald. We love you as Archie, but as you grow, we’re excited to see how you embrace it. Your middle name is for your uncle, Brian. He was very loved and while we miss him, we are happy that you can have part of him as your namesake. Fitzsimmons is your grandpa’s mom’s last name. I never met her, but she sounded like such a special and wonderful and we know that you’ll carry those traits throughout your life. But even with the legacies of your name, you are your own Archie and will make your name its own special importance.

In the past year, you have brought our whole family so much joy. Your smiles are contagious. Your clapping leads to laughter. Your appreciation for delicious food makes your mama proud. Your awe of your big brother makes him want to be closer to you. Your dad sees much wrestling in your futures. You’ve made a friend for life with Monte.

You are always curious; you love to look around and see what’s happening. When you hear your brother, but don’t see him, you keep looking until he’s been spotted. Your dad and I can’t wait to watch the two of you grow up into great friends. You are already such great friends.

You’re so happy. You love to wave to people, give high-five to strangers, you smile and make everyone else around you smile. That is, unless someone doesn’t give you food, or even worse, takes it away, and then you get mad. Your favorites include avocado, banana, cereal, noodles, mango. You’re also generous with your food with the dog. He thanks you for it.

Before you were born, I wasn’t sure how I could love anyone as much as I loved your big brother. And then you arrived and it was true, what they say, our love grew and surpassed all limits imaginable. We love you and your brother so much, equally, loyally, always.

Thank you for the joy you have brought us this past year. It has gone by so fast and you are growing up before our eyes. We can’t wait to continue watching you grow into such a curious, creative, happy, smart, curly-haired boy.

Love you always,

-Mom (and dad, and Teddy, and Monte, and Grandma, and Grandpa, and Grammy, and Squid, and so many more…)

Processing The Tragedy in Boston

18 Apr

In light of the horrific actions in Boston earlier this week, I’ve been struggling with processing it all. Struggling because I’m a mother, wife, daughter, sister, citizen- and all of these roles have been struck and saddened in the wakes of the bombing. I am also trying to find what the silver lining is. It’s not easy. But look closely. It’s there.

On Monday evening, we had the news on; it was replaying the video of when the bomb detonated. It’s awful. And then, I realized, yes- this is horrific, but also, look at how many people ran RIGHT into the smoke, the danger, the noise, the gore- all to help. Surely people are good. We must be. People were willing to risk their own lives to help those in need.

Today I was watching the Interfaith Service, and the Chair of the New England Interfaith Council and Civil Rights Outreach Director of the American Islamic Congress, Nasser S. Wedaddy, shared some words and thoughts that were especially profound and hopeful. “We’re gathered together to mourn the loss of life in a criminal attack in our community, what happened on Monday has shocked and horrified us but it has also brought us together.” Wedaddy stated that scripture says that whoever kills a soul it is as if he killed mankind entirely. And whoever saves a life, it as if he saved all of mankind. “On Boylston Street on Monday afternoon, we saw souls murdered but also lives saved.”

Carole Robertson

Carole Robertson

I have not been able to stop thinking about another bombing, one that took place decades before I was even alive, but one in Birmingham, Alabama in 1963 when a bomb went off in a church, killing four little girls. One of the girls was Carole Robertson.

Carole Roberston played a strong role within my life as my mom founded and for years ran the Carole Robertson Center for Learning in Chicago. I came to know and love Mrs. Roberston, Carole’s mother. In knowing Mrs. Roberston, I saw the life, the hope, the spirit that perseveres even after a mother loses her child. The sadness is always there, but there is the hope that even in death, there’s a legacy that will help to shape future generations. That was the case with Carole and the three other little girls, and I hope and pray that is the case for those who were injured and lost their lives in Boston this week.

Looking Back on Early Motherhood

17 Apr

There was a great piece in The Atlantic about the early stages of motherhood, and how isolating it can be, even when surrounded by strong community of family and friends. I wanted to share this really thoughtful, accurate reflection on the struggles (and isolation) of new motherhood. It speaks to how difficult it is in the moment and then how quickly we (as mothers) can forget it, which is probably a good thing because if we couldn’t, there’d probably a lot more only-children in the world. I also feel this is how childbirth was. I know it hurt like hell, but our magical endorphins erased it from my memory. Ask Ian? He remembers seeing me in pain, but me? Gone. Nada. Which is why I sometimes think about having one more…but not for a long time!

I was also thinking about this piece because I, like the article’s author, Jody Peltason, tried to document as much as I could leading up to and immediately following Teddy and Archie’s births. I love going back and re-reading it- it truly helps me recall how it was and re-live the good and the bad!

I know that I have written my accounts from Archie on this site, but with Teddy I used a (soon-to-be extinct) Posterous site that I’m trying to migrate over here. Until I figure out the techy back-end of it, here’s my own recollection from when Teddy was born. Enjoy!

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Me and Teddy, March 22, 2010

WHAT A DIFFERENCE A WEEK MAKES… March 29, 2010

It’s hard to believe it’s been a week since Teddy came into our lives. Simultaneously, I can’t believe it’s only been a week that we’ve had Teddy.

In these past seven days, Ian and I have fallen, madly, head over heels for this little babe. He’s amazing. I know that I would have loved my baby no matter what, but Teddy makes it so easy to love. He’s a happy baby, very mellow, a good (and enthusiastic) eater and he’s been sleeping well. Last night he slept in three hour increments and as soon as I finished feeding him, he’d fall back asleep. Needless to say, Ian and I both feel so blessed, so amazingly lucky to have Teddy in our lives.

Last night during a feeding, I realized it was the same time last week that I woke up with contractions. It was fun re-living and remembering everything that happened last Sunday night/Monday morning and afternoon

After going to bed early last Sunday, I woke up with contractions at 1:30 a.m. They were already at five minutes apart lasting up to a minute (which is what the doctor needs in order to send us to the hospital). Even though we got the go from Dr. Barton to head to the hospital around 2:30 a.m., we waiting until 4 a.m. so I could be as comfortable as possible. It was actually pretty great because in that time I Skyped with my sister Maeve, who is in China. That alone was pretty amazing that even being around the world, we were able to experience it with her.

When I got to the hospital, they checked us into triage but around 9 a.m. they were moving us up to the birthing room. It was really happening. I had no misgivings about what I wanted in terms of a birth plan. Yes, of course I wanted to have a natural childbirth, but I also wanted to be realistic in terms of what I can handle, and I knew early on I would most likely opt for an epidural, which I did. It’s pretty insane how one minute you’re in terrible pain and then they put this thing into your back (which was not nearly as scary, creepy, painful as I was expecting) and voila! No more pain. Although, with a pain-free existence, did come this horrible, insistent itching that lasted for an hour. It felt like being at the dentist with numb cheeks that somehow itch, but you can’t even feel them enough to scratch. Anyway- it was bizarre.

From around 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. we just waited around. My mom, Ian and I watched TV in the delivery room, I even managed to take a little bit of a nap. Then around 4 p.m. I could feel the contractions more and more. The anesthesiologist came in to spike the epidural, but by 4:30 p.m. I was ready to push.In hindsight, I’m so glad that I was able to feel everything. In the moment, not so much.

By 4:30 Dr. Gupta gave me the low down on how pushing was going to go and I was ready. I gave one push, ready to go for another when the doctor abruptly walked out and the nurse told me to stop. I was confused and worried; wasn’t I doing this right? What was wrong? Ian looked at me and said: “the baby’s coming Cath- the doctor’s getting her scrubs on!”

I guess the Whelan birthing genes really kicked in because after four rounds of pushes, or twenty minutes later, Teddy came into the world. It was amazing- truly the most unbelievable moment of my life. When I saw the doctor pull him out, I felt weak with love. There was meconium in the womb (Teddy had, literately, pooped in the womb) so there was a pediatrics team on hand to clear out his lungs and make sure everything was alright. That meant I had to sit for about 20 minutes before they could bring him over to me. It was torture. I was so desperate to hold this baby, to look at him, to kiss him. It was also so worth it once nurse Michelle finally brought him over and I could bask in our new son.

In addition to feeling blessed with having Teddy, I also feel so lucky that the birth went well and was really a beautiful experience. I had Ian on my right and my mom to my left and it was this amazing feeling of love all around. I know this sounds cheesy but to welcome our son into the world with so much love was exactly how I wanted and had imagined it.

In the week since, it’s been a lot of guesswork, trying to figure things out, but also taking it all in. Ian’s parents, Beth and Edd, have been in town and they’ve given us such a gift- the ability to savor our baby and relax! It’s of course wonderful that they get to bond and spend time with Teddy, but I’m eternally grateful for all of their help in supporting me and Ian throughout this time. I know days will go by faster and time is going to fly, but I’m going to try my hardest to take each one that comes and savor the hell out of it. Seven down, a life time to go.

Great first #CareerMomChat

5 Apr

I’m excited. Last night I hosted the #CareerMomChat on Twitter and despite not much promotion, we had some WONDERFUL conversations. As I’ve said before, while I appreciate a bunch of things from Lean In, I feel it is in many ways too remote and removed from where I’m at in my life (family and career) right now. So that’s what I’m looking to do- fill the gap and try to get some other mamas in on this as well.

We had a great chat with some really poignant and spot-on thoughts. I want thank Natalie (@bakeanddestroy), Evelyn (@evelynalauer), Julie (@juliesmolyansky),  and Rain (@Devivo) for taking part. A small but mighty crowd!

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I think that moving forward, I’ll aim to host these a touch later (so I can finish dinner and getting the kids to bed) and on Tuesdays, as Thursdays are often tricky. All in all, off to a good start!

Rest in peace, Roger Ebert

4 Apr

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I am so very sad to have just learned about Roger Ebert’s passing. He was such an instrumental citizen of Chicago, of the arts. And as his health declined, he seemed to grow so much more poignant and thoughtful. One of his essays that I especially loved was about the absence of food in his life following his surgery. I remember the first time I read it, crying at my desk. It was such a beautiful summary of what life is like without food- and what food really means in our life. Yes, it provides nutrients, flavor, but it also sets the stage to best interact with people:

What I miss is the society. Lunch and dinner are the two occasions when we most easily meet with friends and family. They’re the first way we experience places far from home. Where we sit to regard the passing parade. How we learn indirectly of other cultures. When we feel good together. Meals are when we get a lot of our talking done — probably most of our recreational talking. That’s what I miss. Because I can’t speak that’s’s another turn of the blade. I can sit at a table and vicariously enjoy the conversation, which is why I enjoy pals like my friend McHugh so much, because he rarely notices if anyone else isn’t speaking. But to attend a “business dinner” is a species of torture. I’m no good at business anyway, but at least if I’m being bad at it at Joe’s Stone Crab there are consolations.

Rest in peace, Mr. Ebert. You are so very missed.

Nil By Mouth, By Roger Ebert, January 56, 2010

I mentioned that I can no longer eat or drink. A reader wrote: “That sounds so sad. Do you miss it?” Not so much really. Not anymore. Understand that I was never told that after surgery I might lose the ability to eat, drink and speak. Eating and drinking were not mentioned, and it was said that after surgery I might actually be able to go back to work on television.

Success in such surgery is not unheard of. It didn’t happen that way. The second surgery was also intended to restore my speaking ability. It seemed to hold together for awhile, but then, in surgeon-speak, also “fell apart.”

A third surgery was attempted, using a different approach. It seemed to work, and in a mirror I saw myself looking familiar again. But after a little more than a week, that surgery failed, too. Blood vessels intended to attach the transplanted tissue lost function, probably because they had been weakened by radiation. A fourth surgery has been proposed, but I flatly reject the idea. To paraphrase a line from “Adaptation’s” orchid collector: “Done with surgery.”

During that whole period I was Nil by Mouth. Nobody said as much in so many words, but it gradually became clear that it wouldn’t ever be right again. There wasn’t some soul-dropping moment for that realization. It just…developed. I never felt hungry, I never felt thirsty, I wasn’t angry because the doctors had done their best. But I went through a period of obsession about food and drink. I came up with the crazy idea of getting some Coke through my g-tube. My doctors said, sure, a little, why not? For once the sugar and a little sodium wouldn’t hurt. I even got some tea, and a little coffee, before deciding that caffeine addiction was something I didn’t need.

I dreamed. I was reading Cormac McCarthy’s Suttree, and there’s a passage where the hero, lazing on his river boat on a hot summer day, pulls up a string from the water with a bottle of orange soda attached to it and drinks. I tasted that pop so clearly I can taste it today. Later he’s served a beer in a frosted mug. I don’t drink beer, but the frosted mug evoked for me a long-buried memory of my father and I driving in his old Plymouth to the A&W Root Beer stand (gravel driveways, carhop service, window trays) and his voice saying “…and a five-cent beer for the boy.” The smoke from his Lucky Strike in the car. The heavy summer heat.

For nights I would wake up already focused on that small but heavy glass mug with the ice sliding from it, and the first sip of root beer. I took that sip over and over. The ice slid down across my fingers again and again. But never again.

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One day in the hospital my brother-in-law Johnny Hammel and his wife Eunice came to visit. They are two of my favorite people. They’re Jehovah’s Witnesses, and know I’m not. I mention that because they interpreted my story in terms of their faith. I described my fantasies about root beer. I could smell it, taste it, feel it. I desired it. I said I’d remembered so clearly that day with my father for the first time in 60 years.

“You never thought about it before?” Johnny asked.

“Not once.”

“Could be, when the Lord took away your drinking, he gave you back that memory.”

Whether my higher power was the Lord or Cormac McCarthy, those were the words I needed to hear. And from that time I began to replace what I had lost with what I remembered. If I think I want an orange soda right now, it is after all only a desire. People have those all the time. For that matter, when I had the chance, when was the last time I held one of those tall Nehi glass bottles? I doubt I ever had one from a can.

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I’ve found memories now come welling up almost alarmingly. It’s all still in there, every bit. I saw “Leap Year,” with its scenes in Dublin, and recognized the street where I stayed in the Shelbourne Hotel, even though the hotel wasn’t shown. That started me on Trinity College nearby, where I remembered that McHugh and I saw the Book of Kells in its glass case. And then I remembered us walking out the back gate of Trinity and finding a pub where we were to join two of his brothers. And meeting Kitty Kelly sitting inside the pub, who became famous in our stories as the only whore in Dublin with her own coach.

“Are you two students?” McHugh’s younger brother Eugene asked them innocently.

“I’m a working girl meself,” the first said.

“Her name is Kitty Kelly,” her friend volunteered. “I’m her coach.”

I walked into that movie with the Book of Kells and Kitty Kelly’s coach and Eugene McHugh far from my mind. The story itself had long since fallen from our repertoire. But it’s all in there.

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When it comes to food, I don’t have a gourmet’s memory. I remember the kinds of foods I was raised to love. Chaz and I stayed once at Les Pres d’Eugenie, the inn of the famous Michel Guerard in Eugénie-les-Bains. We had certainly the best meal I have ever been served. I remember that, the room, the people at the other tables and our view in the photo, but I can no longer remember what I ate. It isn’t hard-wired into my memory.

Yet I could if I wanted to right now close my eyes and re-experience an entire meal at Steak ‘n Shake, bite by bite in proper sequence, because I always ordered the same items and ate them according to the same ritual. It is there for me.

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Another surprising area for sharp memory is the taste and texture of cheap candy. Not imported chocolates, but Red Hots, Good and Plenty, Milk Duds, Paydays, Chuckles. I dreamed I got a box of Chuckles with five licorice squares, and in my dream I exalted: “Finally!” With Necco wafers, there again, the licorice were the best. The peculiar off-purple wafers were space-wasters. As a general rule in candy, if anything is black, red or green, in that order, I like it.

This got carried so far one day I found myself googling White Hen-style candy with the mad idea of writing an entire blog entry on the subject. During visits to a Cracker Barrel I would buy paper bags filled with licorice, root beer, horehound and cinnamon drops. Searching for Black Jack gum, I found whole web sites devoted licorice in its many forms. I even discovered and downloaded a photo of a basket that seemed assembled from my memory, and it is below.

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But the last thing I want to start here is a discussion of such age old-old practices of pouring Kool-Aid into a bottle of RC Cola to turn it into a weapon. Let me return to the original question: Isn’t it sad to be unable eat or drink? Not as sad as you might imagine. I save an enormous amount of time. I have control of my weight. Everything agrees with me. And so on.

What I miss is the society. Lunch and dinner are the two occasions when we most easily meet with friends and family. They’re the first way we experience places far from home. Where we sit to regard the passing parade. How we learn indirectly of other cultures. When we feel good together. Meals are when we get a lot of our talking done — probably most of our recreational talking. That’s what I miss. Because I can’t speak that’s’s another turn of the blade. I can sit at a table and vicariously enjoy the conversation, which is why I enjoy pals like my friend McHugh so much, because he rarely notices if anyone else isn’t speaking. But to attend a “business dinner” is a species of torture. I’m no good at business anyway, but at least if I’m being bad at it at Joe’s Stone Crab there are consolations.

When we drive around town I never look at a trendy new restaurant and wish I could eat there. I peer into little storefront places, diners, ethnic places, and then I feel envy. After a movie we’ll drive past a formica restaurant with only two tables occupied, and I’ll wish I could be at one of them, having ordered something familiar and and reading a book. I never felt alone in a situation like that. I was a soloist.

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When I moved north to Lincoln Park and the Dudak’s’s house, Glenna Syse, the Sun-Times drama critic, told me about Frances Deli on Clark Street. “They make you eat your vegetables,” she told me. There were maybe a dozen tables inside, and you selected from the day’s dishes like roast chicken, lamb stew, lake perch and, yes, the veggies, although one of them was rice pudding. You want roast chicken, here’s your roast chicken. It was so simple it almost made you grin. You didn’t even have to ask for the bed of dressing on which it slumbered.

Frances has moved into a bigger space across the street but nothing much else has changed. Nobody will look at you funny if you bring in the Sunday paper and spread it out. And breakfast? Talk about the breakfast. If a place doesn’t advertise “Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner” and serve tuna melts, right away you figure they’re covering up for something.

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There’s a place called the Old-Timer’s Restaurant across the street from the Lake Street screening room in Chicago. I love that place. No fuss, no muss, friendly, the owner stands behind the cash register and chats with everybody going in and out. I’ve ordered breakfast at lunch time there. “You’re still serving breakfast? I asked. “Hey, an egg’s an egg.”

I came across this sentence in its web review, and it perfectly describes the kind of place I like: ” A Greek-style chow joint replete with ’70s wood paneling, periwinkle padded booths, a chatty wait staff and the warble of regulars at the bar. Basically, if you’ve ever had it at any place that starts with Grandma’s, Uncle’s or any sort of Greek place name, you can find it here.” Yes. If a restaurant doesn’t serve tuna melts, right away you have to make allowances.

So that’s what’s sad about not eating. The loss of dining, not the loss of food. It may be personal, but for, unless I’m alone, it doesn’t involve dinner if it doesn’t involve talking. The food and drink I can do without easily. The jokes, gossip, laughs, arguments and shared memories I miss. Sentences beginning with the words, “Remember that time?” I ran in crowds where anyone was likely to break out in a poetry recitation at any time. Me too. But not me anymore. So yes, it’s sad. Maybe that’s why I enjoy this blog. You don’t realize it, but we’re at dinner right now.

Join the #CareerMomChat 4/4 @ 7pm CT

30 Mar

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It’s probably painfully obvious what the thought is behind the name of this blog… but I feel like the spinning plates metaphor really personfies what it is like to be a full-time working, career-minded mom. Even as I am typing, I’m using my foot to rock Archie to sleep in his carseat, while keeping an ear out for Teddy to make sure he doesn’t start juggling knives.

I’ve been reading Lean In, and while I really enjoy much of it, and I appreciate where Sheryl is coming from, it feels a little to distant to where I am now. It reads too much from the top down, versus a lateral discussion that relates more to where I am at right now. I haven’t reached the high-point of my career, but I’m getting there.
So with that said, I’m going to make something happen. I want to host a Twitter chat, THIS Thursday, April 4 at 7 p.m. CT with the #CareerMomChat hashtag, to talk with other career-driven moms. Would love to share ideas, commiserate, encourage, and seek and doll advice. Please join- please pass it on. I am very much looking forward to it!

Another wife, mom, member of society in favor of EQUALITY

27 Mar

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The topic of same-sex marriage is gaining more and more momentum by the hour, as it should be. The Supreme Court continues weighing the issue of gay marriage, hearing arguments on a law that denies federal benefits to married same-sex couples, I can’t help but feel a number of things. This is important. And it means a lot to me.

It means a lot to me because I am a wife. And I love being a wife. I love my husband. I love what we were able to do, more than five years ago in front of those we love, on a hill in Vermont. Even though Ian and I had been together for years leading up to our wedding, the significance of it was never lost on me. It felt so important, so wonderful, so heavy- but in the best possible way. I can’t imagine loving someone so fully and not being able to experience that.

This means a lot to me because I am a mother. I have these two wonderful boys, who I love more than I thought was ever possible to love. And it breaks my heart to think of all the other mothers and fathers in the world, who see their children madly in love with someone that they aren’t legally allowed to marry. I can only assume (hope!) that by the time Teddy and Archie are old enough to marry, our flawed society will have corrected itself on this issue, making same-sex marriage equal for all but there are so many mothers right now who have to watch their children excluded from the sanctity of marriage. It pains me.

I think of all my friends and family, who are in serious relationships, or hope to be one day, and I want to be at their weddings. They were at mine and I want to bear witness to what I was able to experience. I want to dance, toast, sing, hug and celebrate each and every one of my friends’ and family members weddings to whomever they damn well please.

And lastly, as an overall member of society, this conversation around marriage equally, is especially profound. How can we, as a country, whose foundation and architecture is based on: “We the people”… and promotes “certain unalienable rights” of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”, have denied so many people those rights for so long? While I am happy this conversation is happy, I am also incredibly ashamed it didn’t happen, years, decades, centuries ago.

I’ll end this with a lovely thought from my friend, Peter Shankman, who shared this on his Facebook page:

It’s 2013. Are we really so less than where we should be as a society, as a race, that we care about who other people marry? WHO GIVES A SHIT? If you love someone, if the two of you are adults who together help make the world a better place for other people, YOU SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO MARRY. It frustrates me that every time I think we’re doing so well, we have to debate stupid shit like this which SHOULDN’T EVEN BE UP FOR DEBATE. Love someone? That person love you? You both adults who can make your own decisions? You should be allowed to marry. I HATE that there are still some people in our society who are so small-minded that they’re still trying to prevent this.

Music for your Monday

4 Mar

A beautiful way to start off your Monday… Yo-Yo Ma and Andrew Bird jamming through their respective virtuosic instruments… This isn’t new, but I just came across it from Reddit. Amazing to see what two people, arguably some of the best of their trade, can do together on the fly. Enjoy!

An Ode to Mary Sue

1 Mar

I recently found out my very first boss, Mary Sue, passed away. I’ve been thinking about her all week and in doing so, it’s become clearer and clearer what a role she played in my career and approach to work. The lessons I learned from Mary Sue are still ingrained within me and are things I try to teach to others I work with and supervise. She was patient, but firm, loving but had high expectations. I wish that I had spent more time thinking about her before she passed away so I could tell her that she made such an impact on my life, all these years later.

Mary Sue was one of my mom’s first friends when she moved to Chicago and the owner of Mary Sue’s Hair Design, an unassuming salon next to a laundry mat and White Hen Pantry, with a tiny parking lot in front. You walked in and the first thing you noticed was “Lola”, the paper machete life-size cabaret dancer that Mary Sue had made. There was also a haze of cigarette smoke from the clientele and employees. Those ladies loved their Capri Ultra-Light 100s, Virginia Slims, and the likes. One of the first memories I have of Mary Sue was when I was in fourth grade. I wanted to cut my hair short, and she was totally on board, giving me a funky asymmetrical due and what is still one of my favorite haircuts. In seventh grade, I thought putting Sun-In in my hair would turn is bombshell blond. It came out Dorito Orange. Mary Sue once again to the rescue.

It was long after the Sun-In debacle that I was offered a job to work on Saturdays as the shampoo girl (or ‘aqua-tician’ as it appeared on my first ever resume- true story!). I made a base of $5-an-hour and then collected tips on top of it. At the end of a good day, I’d have made $75-80…not too shabby for an eighth-grader.

All throughout eighth grade and high school I’d work each Saturday, arriving at 7:50 a.m. and work through 4:30 p.m. It kept me in early (or earlier) on Friday nights and put money in my pocket for Saturday nights. In addition to the shampoo duties, I would do all the laundry, make sure everything was refilled, answer the phones, book appointments, sweep, dust, set up in the morning and clean up before closing.

I came to know the women who would come in each weekend and I loved them as much as they seemingly loved me. Dorothy was always in right at 8 a.m. and she was one of the more generous tippers ($2). Blanche would come in later during the day, with her doting Seymour driving her and sitting patiently in the patent chair in the waiting section. There was Marilyn who had been friends with my aunt Marilyn when they attended grammar school together. There was Carol, who was pretty snarky, but had a loyal and loving heart. There was Janelle who came to see me in my senior year musical.

And of course there was Mary Sue. She has this laugh that could stop a room full of talking people in their tracks. Her hair was always in a bouffant of sorts and she had amazing style. She later did some jewelry designing and had a fun flair to her. It amaze me how she could be styling someone’s hair with a long, skinny cigarette dangling out of her mouth. It doesn’t sound it, but it was pretty glamourous. In addition to Mary Sue, there was also Laura. I loved Laura! She had this amazingly positive attitude and I don’t think I ever once saw her mad. She’d say things like: “Okey-dokey karaoke”. And Bic, who was originally from Vietnam, and did manicures and pedicures. Bic was so sweet and to this day gave the greatest manicures I’ve ever had.

All of these women helped me grow so much. As a successful career-minded woman, I feel so grateful to have known them and been exposed to them when I was so young as their lessons have helped me grow into who I am today. And now, for your own career development purposes, here are the best (and most lasting) lessons from Mary Sue:

Don’t sit

  • There’s always something that can be done  and if you don’t see what needs to be done, then ask someone if they need your help

Keep the plates spinning

  • Stay on top of the tasks you’re working on, be organized

Smile

  • Everyone loves to be around people who are friendly, fun to work with, and have a positive outlook and approach to what they do

Work hard

  • Work hard 🙂

Never be too good to take out the trash

  • No matter what level you’re at, never have the approach that something is too far beneath you

Don’t smoke a cigarette too close to a can of aerosol hair spray

  • Words to live by. Literately.

Thank you, Mary Sue. You did so much for me and I only wish I could have shared these thoughts with you sooner. You won’t ever be forgotten.