The Kellerman’s Song, Layers in Bed, Orbach and I/Me?

When it comes to eighties movies, I’m not as solid on Dirty Dancing as I am on Fletch, but I watched it recently with my children, because what I remembered about it as I flipped through OnDemand Family Movies was the Kellerman’s song, and I had definitely forgotten how much of the plot hinges on back alley abortion. I think the rating is only PG-13, whatever that means, but my eight-year-old felt it should have been R. When I asked him why, he explained it was because a boy and a girl were in bed together “totally naked” (though this is implied) and the staff kids are dancing together in a way that suggests “they must be in love with each other.”

In the last scene, when Baby finally nails the lift and regains her father’s approval, I can identify with Jerry Orbach for a moment—in part because I too am a doctor,* but also he decides to admit his huge, cruel mistake only because he’s feeling powerful and energetic, and he’s in a crowded room where no one is paying attention to him. “When I’m wrong, I say I’m wrong,” he tells Johnny, and I bet he actually believes himself when he says it. I’m wrong all the [darn] time–I went ahead and edited my language so Christine won’t have to do it in her Facebook comment—but whenever I realize it, I tend to have these tedious internal conversations about it, more or less on the level of pairing wine with food. Then, as with food and wine, I eventually realize I am either too uninformed or too tired to pursue the matter. I would like to think if I had misjudged Johnny and Robbie, and hadn’t had too much Pinot Noir or Gewürztraminer–depending on the dish–to articulate my mistake, I would have done the same thing.

Once in a while, though, I fixate on something trivial–I may have bored or offended someone at dinner the night before, or blogged ungrammatically. I might start thinking about one of my mistakes on a long drive, and Brad might ask, “Watcha thinking about?” “Nothing,” I might say, since I know husbands like this answer better than anything very complicated. (“What I’m planning to cook later” is also acceptable.) I had a thing like that happen on the way back from the Rochester camp bus drop-off yesterday. Some time ago, in a post about establishing intellectual authority over one’s children—a pursuit I will have to abandon after the Dirty Dancing debacle, I used an abbreviation for the word microphone. I started with “mike” but I didn’t care for its informal, un-capitalized look, so I changed my spelling to “mic.” That looked better and more familiar to me, but I had no idea which spelling was correct. I’m chagrined that this preference puts me at odds with Ben Yagoda, and aligns me with layers in bed who are not blankets, but like me, the “c” spelling is rooted in hip-hop. So maybe there’s no mistake after all.

*pretend

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.

Japanese Vending, Jethro Tull, Special Peanuts

When I was very young and knew more about the world (or however Bob Dylan said it), I decided it would be a good idea to work in the travel agency at UVA, mentoring students who didn’t realize they could play beer pong in Europe or that Japanese vending machines dispensed pornography. One excuse I would like to offer for persuading one of my best friends to come work there with me for what seemed like about a year (do you care, LinkedIn?) sitting in a basement office listening to Jethro Tull, was that I believed we were going to end up doing a lot of jetsetting as soon as our IATA cards were approved by Head Office. I didn’t yet realize that being a travel agent wasn’t anywhere near as good as having an American Express Platinum Card for getting hotel room upgrades or imagining strangers admire you. It was all wasted on John anyway. I think he has always gotten things for free. Why is that?

It seems awfully linear to mention this, but only in the sense that I’m picking up a thread from my last post–it has nothing at all to do with the last paragraph, except insofar as the parties have met: It’s starting to look like I might not make it back to Concord Mall for hats before the weekend, when I have my next two birthday celebrations. If you are Katie or Stevie, and you love a surprise, you might want to stop reading this.
_______
So the good news is, even though, thanks to the snow, I will likely not be able to buy trucker hats for either of the above from Spencer Gifts–and I was kind of wanting to boycott anyway, because last time they were out of “I ❤️ the old Latin mass”–I was able to make each one a cupcake today. They are an homage to Christine’s birthday cupcakes from last week, with the same dark chocolate cake, chocolate ganache center, marshmallow buttercream frosting, and salted caramel drizzle (perfect for those avoiding sugar). I added candied peanuts this time, to commemorate the very special milestone birthdays we’re celebrating this weekend. Can peanuts be said to be wizened? No, no–I’m sure that’s not the word I meant to use.

Four Birthdays, Pfefferbeisser, Concord Mall

I’ve been learning to release my fascia, and I don’t think it’s my imagination that I’m becoming more open in other ways too. I’m finding, for instance, that with the right attitude, you can learn to enjoy other people’s birthdays just as much as your own. Tons of my friends have birthdays right now—what is it about, would it be May? June?–so I’ve been trying to think of creative ways to celebrate with them in this shitty weather. Damn it. I’ve been using too much unladylike language recently. I dropped a jar of whole grain mustard on the floor on Sunday, and what was going to be the perfect post-run avocado toast* ended up going limp while I cleaned up, so I said several of the best HBO words right in a row. “You know those are French words,” I told my children, but they had already learned them from their cousin.

When I was trying to feel Christine out a little bit about how she’d like to celebrate her birthday, she did this gently patronizing thing I’ve watched her do with other people, where she is so clearly not wanting to go along with whatever they’re proposing, but she lets them go ahead and give their whole pitch anyway. Ha! Chumps! Shoot, I didn’t know it could work on me, but I learned several days later that she really did not want to spend her birthday watching me sing karaoke. Anyway–and I’m pretty sure I had nothing to do with this, because if I had, I would have called ahead to order a whole suckling pig for the table–the next thing I knew we were all at Brauhaus Schmitz, drinking large beers and tiny glasses of fennel schnapps, and eating everything on the menu I thought I might enjoy trying to pronounce: Kartoffelpuffer. Apfelmus. Flammkuchen.

Oh, you know, now I’m remembering the non-fennel schnapps at the end of the night that no one else was enough of a German literature major to drink. One of Jay’s friends handed that to me, which reminds me that we were celebrating his birthday too, which is at least one of the reasons a big cool group of P.A.s showed up on their way out to [the discotheque?]. Yes, because I remember Jay was definitely not wearing the birthday hat we bought him at Concord Mall, but he will have plenty of chances. And now that I’ve been there, well beyond the shoeshine place, I’m thinking I might go back to Concord Mall for more hats. Because if you’re counting, you may notice I have two more birthdays to mention. TBC…

*trendy and delicious

Your Microbiome, Yusuf Islam, Not Learning

I try not to worry about all the antibiotics I’ve taken over the years having killed off my microbiome. After all, what can I do about it now, except take lots of probiotics, and, of course, eat very little, because the antibiotics have also killed off my metabolism. Don’t take my word for this–I have a terrible memory, and even if that is exactly what I read, heard or saw somewhere, you probably shouldn’t listen to me, particularly about eating lightly, because the latest recipe I tried for homemade marshmallows—it’s from Epicurious, so you can look it up–is very manageable, and, especially roasted, they melt beautifully in full cream hot chocolate. (¼ c Dutch processed cocoa, ½ c sugar, 1 c cream, 3 c whole milk; then if you have any leftover shards of Callebaut from your Christmas cookies, stir that in, and ¼ c of spirits to make Downton more fun, or a candy cane for Christine).

I was right to review The Accursed when I did. If I had waited until I knew the ending, it might have taken some of the joy out of, well, let’s say the journey of reading the book. If there is a parallel here to life, or to running, or to attempting a croquembouche, I hope you will ignore it. I try not to deal in morals. Do you hear me J.C.O.? In fact, I’m guessing it will be even better if I review the book I’m about to start, before it has been soured for me in any way.

Besides my indifference, at age five, to the Booker Prize, I can only explain never having read Midnight’s Children by admitting that back when I had nothing but time to read, and complain to my parents that I didn’t want to leave the car to look at paintings or state parks, I didn’t realize Salman Rushdie was interesting, and I was confused about whether he wanted to kill Cat Stevens, or was it the other way around? I understood Natalie Merchant had an opinion since she took “Peace Train” off In My Tribe, but my young adult life was full of so many preoccupations* that I didn’t give Salman Rushdie another thought until two of my favorite female role models, Padma Lakshmi and Terry Gross, rediscovered him—each in her own way. Review: I expect a bit of playfulness out of Midnight’s Children, because in his Fresh Air interview, Rushdie admitted an addiction to Angry Birds. Padma can’t have put up with much of that, though, so what was the attraction during their three-year marriage? I can only surmise that I am also in for a richly detailed history of post-colonial India, with a touch of Kaffir lime juice for balance.

*e.g. Garp got a fish hook stuck in his mouth, outside of normal vet hours, and was returned in a cardboard box (alive).