Civilization, Regretting Chocolate, Brain Fatigue

Children don’t understand what it means for your brain to be tired, so they ask complicated questions at bedtime, or when you are trying to daydream while driving. What is the next number in this series? Why is it important to be civilized? This is the point in the test at which I want to start bubbling in C for everything. Or is it B? I think it’s just important that you fill in all the bubbles, or was it one bubble per row? Will I be expected to show my work?

Usually I cool off at some point and give them the correct answers—both are logarithms—then remind them of the child’s mandate to read everyday, even better if you read something besides the names of Minecraft video clips on Youtube. My own parents must have felt just as strongly about reading, which is why they set limits by having only one TV and no TV reception. The house was full of books, and while my friends who had cable were out to dinner or on vacation with their families, I read several of them.

My dad must have noticed that I didn’t pack Die Odyssee when I left for college—I had discovered it was a translation, not a vampire book—and I think that’s when he started sending me clippings from The New York Times to encourage me to keep up my vocabulary and critical thinking skills. In fairness to UVA, Physics for Non-Majors, e.g., might have provided either of these, but I didn’t sink my teeth into it as I might have if I hadn’t had mono so much. After school I tested out a non-linear series of jobs and then got married, and he continued to send the clippings. I wonder if they still come now and then–I rarely open my paper mail. Come to think of it, when I was in my twenties, there were times I was in Las Vegas or Cuba or living with a mouse and a catalog model and a Swedish recluse in Gramercy and generally difficult to pin down. I might have missed some letters then too. I bet that’s when my dad sent the epic letter containing all his “life advice.” If I had read it, I might have had a better answer for my son to his question why be civilized? As it is, it sounds like what he has learned from me is to regret eating chocolate, a behavior I hope I have neither modeled nor promoted.

Every so often, I try to read one book to the two children. Recently it has been Rebecca. More than a page about the rose bushes of Manderley is enough to convince my daughter she wants to read something current, in solitude. Her brother falls asleep. When my brain is tired from making up answers all day, this works pretty well.

Happy Birthday Billy!

My friend Billy is celebrating a milestone birthday today, and I can’t be there to help, darn it. I could bake some lemon squares, and we could drink some tequila—I guess it could be Cuervo Gold for old time’s sake, but why be ceremonious. Speaking of tequila, sometimes I might be trying to enjoy mine, and I look around and realize no one is really challenging me (are you? you could!) or that Billy is pouring out every other shot, because he’s smart, and he still doesn’t weigh that much. But then, I’m not forty yet. I wonder if I will start to be more like Billy as I age. I hope so. In the year ahead, I am going to try to be freer with my hugs and emotions, buy a bar, watch baseball*, and let my back hair grow out again. Whoot!

*weather permitting

Role models, Smut, The Rebel Army

I watched Gone With the Wind some embarrassing number of times around the year of its 50th anniversary release, and then I read the book twice. I wouldn’t say I identified with Scarlett O’Hara though. I would never have married Charles Hamilton. Her self-preservation instinct was just so much stronger than I can ever imagine mine being, probably because I grew up with air conditioning and very little exposure to war.

When I was 14, we moved to Connecticut where I had two friends, some whole wheat croissants, and a copy of Vivien Leigh’s biography, which turned out to be mildly smutty. There was a fun role model! I don’t have it anymore, so I can’t go back and check on these things, but this is my impression of that book: Vivien Leigh hated to leave a party early but got up early to make everyone breakfast and never had or at least never complained of a hangover. At some point, she married Lawrence Olivier, who was a virgin until age 24. I wonder if he was insecure about that. Vivien didn’t like her hands. Maybe they commiserated. Actors.

When I took a film class in college, I was surprised to learn Blaxploitation had nothing to do with Butterfly McQueen. I guess I was less surprised my film professor didn’t share my enthusiasm for Gone With the Wind. I think that was exactly how he put it, though he let me get away with one of those papers that must be so tedious to read, where every casual detail is meaningful. I remember, for instance, making something of the one black and one white puppy (or was there also a kitten?—interspecies would have been even better) spooning on the front porch while the Tarleton twins explained why they needed to join the Rebel Army. That paper was so boring, I think it cured me.

Summer Camp, Pop Tarts, Fascial Memory

I spent many an enchanted summer at a receding-bluff, no-regulations-capture-the-flag, co-ed, Christian, make-out camp named after a made-up(?) American Indian, but one summer a few years into my overnight camping years I decided to tack on a session at Camp [redacted] for Girls, my mother’s alma mater. I wore her color, blue, and learned her Blue Team songs about dying blue or dyeing blue—I never read the lyrics—and sewed and danced for the Blue Team. I must also have eaten Pop Tarts for the Blue Team, unfortunately, because I gained eleven pounds, unless that was also the summer I went to visit the Livingstons for a Jeep trip around Iceland and ate all that fatty fish with decadent cream sauces. That was what my mother would like to blame for the weight gain anyway, though something like Pop Tarts were the probable culprits there too, because the Livingstons had proper snack food, unlike anything we were ever allowed at home. Also I don’t think it was eleven pounds. I think I was eleven years old, and that eleven was also a quantity I’m remembering of snack foods, perhaps of Pop Tarts–perhaps a daily quantity.

I rarely eat Pop Tarts anymore, and if I do, they are likely the wonky homemade kind, because I’m so uptight. I can’t imagine I was uptight back when I was running through the woods in the dark on my way to a camp [redacted] Indian Raid, or digging through damp laundry and melted remnants of my grandmother’s Scotcheroos from a care package for my Powhatan (not camp name) feather, and certainly not when we were older and on staff night and [redacted (;] How did none of that laid back stick? I also managed never quite to pick up smoking or playing the guitar. Yet it took only four weeks at Camp [redacted] for Girls to cement, at least in my fascia, all the habits my mother and grandmother had been gently browbeating into us at home with raised eyebrows across the Sunday table or shoulders squared unsubtly along a church pew. Every day for a month I woke up with the bugle and, I think, immediately put on a uniform, only to make my bed with hospital corners so that it could pass pre-breakfast inspection by–I’m going to say Betsy, because it’s a believable camp counselor name. This one went to Sidwell Friends which, adorably, meant nothing to me at the time. It was everything to her. She wore her maroon and grey Sidwell Friends shorts anytime she didn’t have to be in some sort of official camp dress. She didn’t have her own song.

Ever since then, my hips have been locked, which is probably why I had to stop pursuing ballet around that time–unless it was the all the Pop Tarts–but it is definitely, according to my myofascial therapist, the reason I have developed this current debilitating pain in my left quadriceps. Christine insists at a certain point we must all take responsibility for our own problems, but I’m going to blame the hip thing–and by extension, the quad thing, which really ends up affecting the whole leg if I’m running up a hill, or anywhere fast–and then, you know, because of the effort, just affects the whole cardiovascular system, and also affects anyone nearby of course, because I have to talk about it—I’m going to blame all that on hospital corners. It turns out it made me very, very tense when I realized people besides my mother and grandmother did that, and that I would always need certain things to be a certain way before I could relax. I know, Mother (capital M)–something here has been punctuated incorrectly. And I know it’s killing you! I promise not to sleep well.