tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5631043388743166622024-03-14T03:21:18.658-04:0040 going on 14. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . a blog by Kim BrittinghamKim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-40138590845840302692012-01-27T18:33:00.000-05:002012-01-27T18:33:55.426-05:00Open Letter to a Fat, Suicidal 13-Year-Old.<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="float: left;"><tbody>
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Kim Brittingham, Age 14.</td></tr>
</tbody></table>I recently received an e-mail from a 13-year-old girl. She reached out after reading my memoir, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Read-My-Hips-Learned-Dieting/dp/0307464385/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1327706968&sr=8-1" target="_blank">Read My Hips</a>.<br />
<br />
She wrote:<br />
<br />
<span style="color: blue;">For the longest time i have hated myself so much that i would cry when i got undressed. And i would wish that 'If I can't be skinny, i might as well be dead.' </span><br />
<span style="color: blue;"><br />
</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">I had even tried puking up my food after I ate, starving myself, diets, everything. </span><br />
<span style="color: blue;"><br />
</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">I had even gotten to the point where i was going to commit suicide because i decided that if i was fat that I didn't deserve to live.</span><br />
<br />
Here's part of my response -- to her, and to the world that she and I live in.<br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">You know, I remember being a teenager like it was yesterday. As an adult, I sometimes feel like I have “dual personalities” – in a good way. I remember the point of view I had at 13, but I can see it through the more experienced eyes of a 41-year-old. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">Sometimes my friends and I talk about things we thought when we were in middle school or high school, and we always end up making a similar comment: “When you're a kid, so many things feel like such a HUGE deal. You never realize how COMPLETELY INSIGNIFICANT this stuff will be later." </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">The culture we live in is not kind to fat kids. And I won’t lie and say it’s kinder to fat grown-ups. It’s not.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">But here’s the good news. When you’re an adult, you have contact with LOTS more people than you do when you’re in school. And you WILL find people who see you as a COMPLETE PERSON. Not just a fat girl, or a thin girl, or whatever size girl you may be.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">And there’s even better news. When you’re an adult, your brain changes. And that means the way you experience life can change, too.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">You know how a two-year-old child isn’t capable of understanding WHY she shouldn’t jump around and scream in a quiet room, no matter how many times you explain it to her? Because her brain hasn't developed to a point where she can understand those concepts.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">Teenagers’ brains aren't completely developed, either. This might be one of the reasons why things can seem so drastic and terrible when you’re a teen. Things that we adults sometimes look at and say, “What’s the big deal? It'll pass,” or "So what? What do you care what he/she thinks?"</span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">Once you’re out of your teens, you’ll be better able to separate your own experience from the chatter of stupid people outside of you. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">For example, when I was your age, I used to care SO MUCH how people perceived me, and I put a lot of importance on clothes. The clothes people chose to wear served as a form of social shortcut. You could tell what someone was all about -- or at least what they wanted you to think they were all about -- based on what they wore and how they wore it. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">And I wanted people to come to all kinds of cool conclusions about the kind of person I was, based on the clothes I was wearing. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">Unfortunately, most of the time I couldn’t afford to wear the kind of clothes I really dreamed of wearing, or they didn’t come in my size, or my mom wouldn’t let me wear them, or I thought they didn’t look good on my chubby body. But still, I had this whole self-identity organized in my head, and it was based on a collection of imaginary outfits. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">But now, it all feels so silly to me. I mean, I still appreciate beautiful clothes, don’t get me wrong. But here’s what’s changed: I’m more interested in EXPERIENCING an exciting life. I don't want to merely LOOK like I live a certain kind of life. I don't even care what an exciting life is supposed to look like. I make the rules about what makes a satisfying life for me. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">Nowadays, instead of caring soooooo much about what other people think when they look at me, I care about what *I* think and feel about the things I'm seeing, hearing, tasting, touching. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">Does that make sense?</span><br />
<br />
<br />
<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="float: left; margin-right: 1em; text-align: left;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-XX1331BWtuc/TyM0FX1FmmI/AAAAAAAAALQ/m0_XomPFWZI/s1600/Today12.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-XX1331BWtuc/TyM0FX1FmmI/AAAAAAAAALQ/m0_XomPFWZI/s320/Today12.JPG" width="144" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Kim Brittingham, Age 12.</td></tr>
</tbody></table><span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">Because life is short. It seems long when you’re 13, but it’s not. So I want to see, hear, touch, experience as many wonderful things as I can while I’m here. Including loving other creatures and being loved by them. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">I want to feel happy and excited as often as possible. And there are all kinds of things that make me feel that way. Melodramatic old movies. Propelling myself through the water of a swimming pool. Jumping into frothy waves in the ocean. Traveling to foreign countries. Losing myself in my writing. Teaching writing classes and watching my students thrill to their own achievements. Playing with my sewing machine. Helping my writing friends with their books. Talking about mind-blowing ideas with my friends. Touring old Victorian houses. Scouring flea markets for cool old stuff. Watching the History Channel. Sleeping late in clean flannel sheets. Baking pineapple bread. Petting animals. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">And as I’m doing all these things, sometimes I feel giddy, or proud, or silly, or amazed, or satisfied, or content, or passionate, or curious, or deliciously tired, or I want to cry with happiness or make someone else happy. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">These are all the things that I live for. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">I couldn’t care less what some jerk thinks about my legs, my arms, my belly. That jerk who thinks I’m too fat to live is missing out on a LOT. Because if she looked for and found happiness in as many places as I do, she wouldn’t feel the need to judge or change other people. That jerk doesn't live as richly as I do. Pitiful thing. </span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">So I’m asking you never to consider killing yourself again. Ever. Because life does get better. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">You don’t have much control when you’re a kid, I know. But I want you to hang on, and get to adulthood. Get to a place where you're free to make more decisions for yourself. And when you do, I hope you’ll make the choice to live a good life. Because it *is* a choice. And part of that choice is to refuse to let miserable, empty people make YOU unhappy -- and that includes the people who create TV shows, commercials and magazine articles suggesting that only very slender people deserve the good things in life.</span><br />
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<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">And by the way, you can live a bunch of lives in one life, you know. You can be a business woman and a swimmer in your twenties; a mother and an inventor in your thirties; an archaeologist living in a vintage trailer in your forties; a lady who lives on a cruise ship in your fifties; a surfer and a talk show host in your sixties; a bicycle repair shop owner and a Chinese cooking expert in your seventies; a Peace Corps volunteer teaching English to children in Africa in your eighties. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">You have SO MANY POSSIBILITIES ahead of you. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #38761d;">Promise me you’ll hang in there, because I want to find out what you get into in the next 70, 80, 90 years!</span><br />
<span style="color: #38761d;"><br />
<span style="background-color: white;"></span></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: black;">Love,</span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: black;"></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: black;">Kim Brittingham</span>Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-16114854682848661632011-10-27T14:42:00.000-04:002011-12-10T15:13:36.014-05:004 Seventh-Grade Girls Discovered in Art Teacher's ClosetBy <a href="http://www.kimwrites.com">Kim Brittingham</a><br /><br />When I was in junior high school, I had an art teacher named Mr. Loften. I was thinking about him yesterday and marveling at just how cool this guy was.<br /> <br />What got me reminiscing was a writing exercise. I'm taking a class at Gotham Writer's Workshop, and yesterday our instructor asked us to "remember a place from your childhood that was special to you, and write a description of it."<br /> <br />My fellow students opened their notebooks and immediately began scribbling, but it took me a while to get started. A special place from childhood? We moved so frequently when I was a kid, all over the country. I learned early on not to get too attached to things, not to let places be "special", when you'd only have to leave them again. My attachment was to my books, and to the stories I created in my head. Those were my special places -- portable places.<br /> <br />Still, I wanted to challenge myself to meet the exercise. I groped backwards in my mind from one address to another, my memory flitting like a porous stone skimmed across the surface of a pond, barely touching down before bounding away again.<br /> <br />And then I remembered Mr. Loften's closet.<br /> <br />You know, sometimes I think back to gutsy things I did and I can't believe that was me with all that nerve. Like when I went to high school in Long Island, and I used to play hooky by renting a limousine to take me into Manhattan for the day. I earned the money working at Ponderosa Steakhouse. I did it over and over again. I never got caught. I'd have the driver wait for me while I disappeared into museums and Bloomingdale's. And as an adult, I tried finally to confess all to my mother. She didn't believe me.<br /> <br />I was <em>fifteen years old</em>. I was pulling off a Ferris Bueller before there was a Ferris Bueller.<br /> <br /><em>Where did I get the nerve?</em> Because I'll tell you something -- I was no Ferris Bueller.<br /> <br />And maybe more importantly -- how can I channel that nerve today? Every day?<br /> <br />But back to that typical junior high school in Tennessee, where I was no more self-confident or popular than I would later be in high school. However, I did cultivate a small circle of friends in junior high. My family stayed longer in Tennessee than in any other state -- twice as long. I was lulled me into a sense of relaxation and belonging, and I dared to become attached to people, and to the place.<br /> <br />My special place within that place was Mr. Loften's art room closet.<br /> <br />Mr. Loften was a tall man whose hair was disappearing from the top of his head, but continued to grow thick and black at the sides. Thinking back, he reminds me of a famous portrait of Edgar Alan Poe I've seen dozens of times since. He wore a long white lab coat for a smock, usually open at the front and largely defeating its purpose. He wore thick, gnarly fishermen's sweaters underneath.<br /> <br />I can't believe a shy kid like me had the guts to ask a grown man, and a <em>teacher</em>, no less:<br /> <br /><strong>"Can we hang out inside your closet at lunchtime?"</strong><br /> <br />Who was "we"?<br /> <br />- my best buddy Simone Shanker, a strangely macabre child with long black hair, alabaster skin, a high rounded forehead, and what my little brother referred to as "upside-down eyes". "Noooo, they're <em>Bette Davis </em>eyes," my mother would kindly correct him. Simone looked just like Carolyn Jones in <em>The Addams Family </em>TV series, and the popular girls would snap their fingers when she walked by and sing "duh-duh-duh-duh (snap, snap), duh-duh-duh-DUH! (Snap, snap.)"<br /> <br />- Amelia Johnson, a tiny, lovely buttercup of a biracial girl who'd been cast out of top society for being difficult to define and wearing clothes from K-mart. She spoke softly, her skin was a soft shade of mocha, and her baby-fine afro framed her head like the softest halo.<br /> <br />- Dani Moore, a tough little trailer park Peppermint Patty with freckles galore, a crusty nose and a favorite pair of boy's overalls.<br /> <br />At lunchtime, there weren't too many places you were permitted to be, and I'm quite sure that was done of purpose. You were either in the cafeteria, in the adjacent teacher-monitored restrooms, or milling around in the small fenced pen of dead grass outside.<br /> <br />I guess none of those options appealed to my 12-year-old cosmopolitan sensibilities.<br /> <br />"Please?" I begged Mr. Loften. "We won't hurt anything. I promise. You know us. We're the good kids. Instead of going to the cafeteria at lunchtime, we'll just come here. To your closet."<br /> <br />"My closet?" repeated Loften. Not so much in disbelief -- more like seeking clarification.<br /> <br />Mr. Loften had a huge classroom, a long, open studio with rows of 1950s wooden work tables whose plain, battered legs bellowed in protest when pushed across the glossy speckled floor. One long wall was lined with a countertop with multiple sinks and cabinets above and below. Student artwork was displayed everywhere. A "diver down" flag hung high above the chalkboard. On one end of the room there was a single entrance from the hallway. On the opposite end, a storage closet.<br /> <br />And here's how I described that closet for yesterday's writing class exercise:<br /> <br /><strong>It was a tall box, a small footprint with a soaring height. An unstained scaffold of shelving lined two cinderblock walls, crowded with jumbo plastic jars of paint, sweet and sour; stacks of colored construction paper, flannel-like against the palm; spattered coffee cans rattling with brushes of every width. There was a window in the closet, licking yellow sunlight down the center of the space. It was warm and close in spring, and cool and close in winter. Its door was heavy and trustworthy -- the room kept our secrets. Ever utterance tucked itself between pads of newsprint, every dream or confession or pop song sung off-key found its place to curl up between tins of turpentine and hand soap. Little slipped under the slender gap between the floor and the door. Only a prim lip of fluorescent light from the outside in.</strong> <br /><br />We must've walked into the closet during art class one day, stayed a while, and decided we liked it. That's all I can figure. And I don't remember, but I can imagine being the ringleader who said, "Hey you guys! Wouldn't this make a great clubhouse?"<br /> <br />And it became one. Because Loften took a moment to consider my request, rapidly stroking his giant palm with a sudsy paintbrush, painting his hand grayish-purple with its excess, and said:<br /> <br />"OK."<br /> <br />He said yes to our plan.<br /> <br />He said <em>yes</em>.<br /> <br />That's <em>right</em>, all you Lacoste-wearing zombies with your bland country club agendas and upturned noses! You melamine-tray-carrying hillbilly bully suckers with your faces turned lamely towards the light of an open door to a grassless <em>nowhere!</em> We've got a place of our <em>own </em>now, and it's hipper than a Lower East Side junior studio -- and <em>twice. as. big.</em> <br /><br />Loften said <em>yes</em>. He said yes to three pre-teen girls disappearing behind a smooth blond door with gap-toothed grins and cans of Hi-C. He said yes to muffled giggles and guffaws, and AM radio sing-alongs.<br /> <br />One day during a particularly lustful rendition of the theme from <em>The Greatest American Hero</em>, the door swung open and a thirty-foot-tall eighth grader stood peering down on us.<br /> <br />"Mr. Loften!" she shouted. "There are seventh graders in your closet!"<br /> <br />Beyond her, an eighth grade art class was in full, messy swing. We'd always known they were out there -- we just never cared.<br /> <br />"I heard them!" she said. Other eighth graders began to look lazily over their shoulders. "I heard singing in here. There are kids <em>singing </em>in your <em>closet</em>, Mr. Loften!"<br /> <br />Another big kid, then an even bigger kid fell in behind her and squinted into the closet.<br /> <br />A girl with an intimidating head of white-blond, shampoo-commercial hair <em>demanded </em>of us, in a voice thick with the disgust of a well-tanned housewife encountering a stink bug in her kitchen, "Why are you guys <em>singing</em>, in a <em>closet?"</em><br /> <br />Mr. Loften and his billowy white smock hustled up behind the growing crowd of glinting orthodontic sneers and stretched out his arms as though conducting an orchestra, or gathering wayward chickens. "Back to work everybody, back to work. Come on."<br /> <br />"But Mr. Loften, these seventh graders are..."<br /> <br />"I know, I know," he said quickly, herding the polo shirts back to their places. "Never mind them. This is class time and you all have a project due."<br /> <br />He leaned into the door and shut us back in again.<br /> <br />How cool was Mr. Loften?<br /> <br />Yeah, we sang sometimes. But never that loudly again.<br /> <br />Mostly, we talked about the lives we wanted to live when we were grown-up. Writer's lives, in New York City. Well, that was Simone and me, anyway -- Dani lived for the day and any opportunity to go barefoot, and Amelia had some lavender crepe-de-chine, Disney-princess vision of getting married someday, and nothing more beyond that. I did not relate.<br /> <br />And Simone made up scary stories that held our unblinking attention. And sometimes we acted out spontaneous skits based on the Tom Hanks and Peter Scolari sitcom <em>Bosom Buddies</em>. We cast ourselves as Kip and Henry's neighbors. The closet was our hip New York apartment. Sometimes we argued over who would date Kip and who would date Henry. I was predictable. I always wanted Henry.<br /> <br />That closet was a special place, and Mr. Loften was a special guy. He took a chance. He let us be. He gave our creativity room. I wonder if he ever snuck over and leaned in close to eavesdrop. I wonder if he ever chuckled at what he heard. I'll bet he smiled at least. Smiled before spinning back around and announcing, "Just fifteen more minutes of magic, people! Fifteen minutes of magic!"<br />Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-1504758538224342452010-12-02T12:49:00.000-05:002011-12-10T13:02:03.040-05:00Girl Enters Roller Rink, Turns 90.<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-3fCNQLwQWPQ/TuOd-UwGdHI/AAAAAAAAADg/ATx1IdJPzVE/s1600/quad-skates-424.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 283px; height: 320px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-3fCNQLwQWPQ/TuOd-UwGdHI/AAAAAAAAADg/ATx1IdJPzVE/s320/quad-skates-424.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5684560848719606898" /></a><br />By <a href="http://www.kimwrites.com">Kim Brittingham</a><br /><br />If you've been following <a href="http://www.kimwrites.com">my home blog</a> for a while, you might remember a while back when <a href="http://kimbrittingham.wordpress.com/video/">NBC Universal offered me my own video series</a>. They called it "Big Life" but we never shot any episodes beyond the pilot. <br /><br />I'll never really know why NBC Universal decided not the move forward with my series, although my theory is that my anti-diet stance was just a little too progressive for them, and probably didn't gel too well alongside their favorite baby, "The Biggest Loser". (You can read more about my experience with NBC Universal in "Video Star", a chapter of my book <a href="pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=center-2&pf_rd_r=0ZATK2W01G5SXVK0N0GD&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=470938631&pf_rd_i=507846">"Read My Hips: How I Learned to Love My Body, Ditch Dieting and Live Large"</a>.) <br /><br />I was supposed to be scripting my own episodes for "Big Life" based on my own convictions, but it didn't take long for NBCU to start nudging me in the direction of things that didn't ring true for me. When it came time to talk about episode #2, I was encouraged to write a script that took me into a Crunch gym for a workout with one of the network's preferred fitness experts -- a personal trainer. <br /><br />I wanted nothing to do with the idea, because there was nothing about it that felt organic or true to me. I never did enjoy going to a gym. Historically, I've found gyms mind-numbingly boring. I'm much more interested in finding engaging activities -- like biking and swimming and fencing and tennis -- that make fitness feel more like fun than drudgery.<br /><br />In fact, one physical activity I've loved since childhood is rollerskating. As a teenager I frequented roller rinks the way oily Hustlers flocked to discos. Rinks were underage nightclubs with cardboard pizza and flat soda, where controversial romances took wing during "slow skates" and where New Wave girls like Dina Adams and me begged Flock of Seagulls requests at the DJ booth. <br /><br />Rollerskating had been easy to learn in those days, and although I was certainly never a skating artist, I was more than capable of holding my own. I could join a racing pack like the best of them. And when the DJ started playing funk after 10 PM, I wasn't some stiff little white girl, ohhhhh no. This is where I could claim maybe a liiiiiittle artistry. Just a tad. But I'll let the Gap Band take most of the credit.<br /><br />Rollerskating went the way of rug-hooking and making potholders on a lap loom, it seems. I'm not sure why. So for most of my adult life, I didn't get on a pair of skates.<br /><br />But when my friend Jeffrey told me about a still-existing roller rink about a half-hour from my home, I got newly enthused. We drove to Jackson, NJ for $2 family skate night.<br /><br />I couldn't wait to get those ratty, clammy rental skates on my feet. As I laced up, I watched as kids of all ages circled the shadowy rink to Lady Gaga, and couldn't wait to get back out there. I marveled at the number of mullets and stiffly sprayed bangs that showed up one night in 1983 and apparently never went home. I was amazed at the chubby little girls in pink legwarmers, jean jackets and side-ponytails and realized, wow, everything really does go 'round in circles.<br /><br />Skates on, I leapt up from the carpeted bench and wobbled. Whoa, okay, I laughed. Must remember carpet does funny things under four wheels.<br /><br />But soon enough, it became apparent: it wasn't the carpet. It was me.<br /><br />I'd gotten...older.<br /><br />And my rollerskating muscles were gone.<br /><br />I pushed my legs forward on the polished rink floor and my ankles SCREAMED IN AGONY.<br /><br />...WTF?<br /><br />They were on FIRE.<br /><br />I found myself reaching for the wall. I laughed again, but more of a panting-laugh this time. "You'd...you'd think I'd never skated before," I huffed to Jeffrey. "You...you go on and skate without me. I don't want to...hold you back."<br /><br />Jeffrey did some kind of Olympic pirouet twenty feet into the air and as he landed, angels sang and he glided away in a pink mist.<br /><br />I made it haltingly to the next "off-ramp" and collapsed onto a bench.<br /><br />My knees were crying like orphaned babes. My butt was tensing up like it expected to be punched.<br /><br />I looked at all the skating kids, all the skating grown-ups, my 50-something skating friend Jeffrey, and Methusela flying by in some lagenlook get-up and a cute pair of white low-risers with purple glitter wheels.<br /><br />And I felt painfully frustrated.<br /><br />I watched their bodies moving and I knew how to move like that. The muscle memory remained in my body, but my body just wouldn't go. It was how I imagined it must be to lose one's legs yet still remember how it feels to run -- wanting to propel one's self out of that chair and start pumping forward, but there are no legs to stand on. Just the phantom memory of muscles moving, feet springing away from the earth and landing again.<br /><br />It was the first time in a long time that I felt physically incapable of doing something I wanted to do.<br /><br />With a little practice on the carpet I was able to eventually get back on the skating floor and push myself pathetically around the rink, half a lap at a time before I had to sit and rest again. Every time I tried to push a foot out away from me, the way one would when skating, my leg parts said "uh-UH!" Instead of a fluid leg movement like tracing butterfly wings on the floor, I jerked forward, putting halting little bursts of power behind each foot. <br /><br />"Oh man, and now they're playing Rick James!" I cried out wistfully to absolutely no one, determined to be determined, and not lame. I bit my lip, resolved not to shed a tear over my shocking new limitations, but to keep it positive and fight my way back to 1981-ish skating condition instead.<br /><br />Yes, Jeffrey and I did return to the rink, but our visits aren't frequent enough for me to improve much. So in between, I've started going to the gym.<br /><br />OH my GOD, it's TRUE! Kim Brittingham is going to a salty-smelling, musclehead GYM and doing things on machines that need to be wiped down afterwards, a gymmy-gym gym!<br /><br />And I can scarcely believe I'm saying this myself, but -- I'm NOT HATING IT.<br /><br />I'm not hating it for three very specific reasons.<br /><br />1. It's an '80s theme gym that plays obscure, heavily synthesized music and teen angst movies. Can you say, "Kim's Gym"?<br /><br />2. I'm starting very slow and gentle, on snort-worthy amounts of weight and at speeds that induce merely a "calorie-burning" heart rate (not the beefier "cardio"). Kiss my grits if you don't like it. <br /><br />3. I have a definite PURPOSE. My goal is to SKATE AGAIN. To be able to carry my body around the rink multiple times without stopping, smoothly, gracefully, and with a modicum of style.<br /><br />When Jeffrey jumps up excitedly from the bench and shouts like a seventh-grade girl, "I'm sorry, but I just have to skate to this!", then darts out into the rink away from me, I want to be able to dart right out behind him. Because I always knew I'd be eternally fourteen in spirit -- but with the foolishness of youth, I never believed it when they told me my body would stop keeping up.<br />Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-65654225719129013382010-02-02T09:43:00.000-05:002011-12-11T09:49:48.290-05:00Ghosts at the Merchants House Museum NYC, Somerton SEPTA Station<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-RXCDUobPpp0/TuTCuufd5oI/AAAAAAAAAEo/X7P5ytnqvcY/s1600/tredwellhouse.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em"><img border="0" height="279" width="125" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-RXCDUobPpp0/TuTCuufd5oI/AAAAAAAAAEo/X7P5ytnqvcY/s320/tredwellhouse.jpg" /></a></div><br />
Did someone say ghosts? Ghosts at the Merchants House Museum? Check. Ghosts at the Somerton train station on Philadelphia' SEPTA? Check!<br />
<br />
Someone on Facebook today asked, "Have you ever seen a ghost or experienced a haunting?" What a delicious question.<br />
<br />
Maybe I have.<br />
<br />
I'll let you be the judge.<br />
<br />
<b>The Mystery of the Merchant's House Smoker</b><br />
<br />
First, a story about the Merchant's House Museum in New York, an exemplary antebellum house which has been on television for its alleged paranormal activity, most notably on "Ghost Hunters". I adore this place.<br />
<br />
Some years back, I attended docent training at the Merchant's House Museum. Early on a Sunday morning we were having a docents' meeting, in the hours before the museum was open to the public. For a few minutes before we gathered in the basement kitchen, some of us early-bird volunteers killed time roaming through the house. A couple of women wanted to look at a new exhibit that had been assembled in one of the bedrooms. I wandered into the master bedroom at the front of the house and looked out the windows and into the street below.<br />
<br />
Sniff, sniff.<br />
<br />
Who's smoking?, I thought. There's no smoking allowed in here.<br />
<br />
No paying visitors were in the house yet, so it couldn't be a guest's careless faux pas. And the staff certainly knew better than to light up.<br />
<br />
I moved my face closer to the window pane and peered down to the sidewalk, expecting to see a lone smoker, or perhaps a pair or huddle of them, standing directly below. There was no one.<br />
<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-mq1miNzvkFk/TuTC5mrhV6I/AAAAAAAAAE0/uY9N0PcNj_Q/s1600/tredwellroom.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="139" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-mq1miNzvkFk/TuTC5mrhV6I/AAAAAAAAAE0/uY9N0PcNj_Q/s320/tredwellroom.jpg" /></a></div><br />
It was a strange sort of smoky smell, too. Not quite like cigarettes. More like the sweetish pipe tobacco an elderly relative used to smoke when I was a little girl. I think he was my father's uncle, a red-cheeked man with a model railroad running through a cardboard-and-plastic utopia in his basement. I hadn't seen or smelled anyone smoking a pipe since.<br />
<br />
The smell was crisp and sharp at first, like tobacco just lit and repeatedly puffed to its fullest aroma in a quick sequence of dove-gray clouds. Then it faded, gradually and so gently. It was infuriating. The harder I sniffed, the less of it I smelled. It couldn't be traced, it couldn't be followed.<br />
<br />
I have no explanation for it.<br />
<br />
It's interesting to note, however, that I was standing in what had been the bedroom of Seabury Tredwell, owner of the house from 1835 until his death, after which his daughter Gertrude inhabited it until her death at ninety-something years of age. Might Mr. Tredwell have been a pipe smoker? Was this what they call evidence of a "residual haunting", an olfactory recording of a moment in the distant past, in replay?<br />
<br />
<b>Phantom Girl of Somerton Train Station</b><br />
<br />
It was a bitter cold Saturday night in the late '80s. This time of year, if I'm not mistaken -- January, February. My friend Kurt picked me up at my parents' house to go see a movie.<br />
<br />
In those days, we lived near the Somerton train station on the R3 West Trenton Line of SEPTA, Philadelphia's commuter rail system. There's a short stretch of road that runs parallel to the tracks at one point. Then the road veers off to the left and the tracks disappear into a short tunnel under an overpass.<br />
<br />
Kurt's car sailed around a curve in the road and we briefly rode alongside the tracks before they were out of sight. We came to a red light at Bustleton Avenue. We were silent for a moment when Kurt turned to me and said,<br />
<br />
"Did you just see what I saw?"<br />
<br />
I met his eyes.<br />
<br />
"You mean the girl standing on the train tracks who totally doesn't look like she belongs there?"<br />
<br />
His eyes widened. "Uh-huh."<br />
<br />
"Kurt," I whispered, urgently. "We need to go back around there. Right now. Hurry!"<br />
<br />
The girl we'd both seen had hair hanging below her shoulders, and she was wearing one of those straw boater hats with a red-white-and-blue striped ribbon around it. The cheap kind you might see at a political rally. She was holding a balloon, and standing in the middle of the train tracks. Not on the platform, not on the side of the road. Just standing there, completely serene, with her feet planted firmly between the railroad ties. And despite what had to be temperatures in the teens or twenties at best, she was wearing 1970s-style short-shorts, a sleeveless shirt, and knee socks.<br />
<br />
Kurt glanced quickly into the rear-view mirror and over his left shoulder, then put the car in reverse and turned around.<br />
<br />
We drove past the station again, slowly. He rolled down his window. We craned our necks in every direction looking for her.<br />
<br />
He inched the car alongside the tracks a little further, and we squinted through the darkness. We looked back through the tunnel opening, we studied the shadows around the little train station building that was still standing back then, but has since been demolished.<br />
<br />
The girl, whose appearance didn't make sense in the first place, had vanished.<br />
<br />
<br />
Kurt rolled his window back up, sealing out the unforgiving winter air. "Are you thinking what I'm thinking?" My voice was the only sound above the whoosh of heated air blowing from the dashboard vents. Kurt's eyes were open so wide, his dark brown irises were like two drops of ink at the center of white salad plates. He nodded slowly.<br />
<br />
"Let's get out of here," he said simply, and we did.<br />
<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-VSIFLeXsFQc/TuTC_9WPQ9I/AAAAAAAAAFA/JuKKRAxcFR8/s1600/somertonghost.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="211" width="320" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-VSIFLeXsFQc/TuTC_9WPQ9I/AAAAAAAAAFA/JuKKRAxcFR8/s320/somertonghost.jpg" /></a></div><br />
I always said I would eventually do some digging; try to find out if a girl was killed on those tracks. Maybe you know a librarian or research guru who'll find this mystery irresistible.<br />
<br />
You'll let me know if you learn anything, won't you? Be sure to get in touch if you had a similar paranormal experience or ghost encounter at the Somerton train station or the Merchants House Museum!Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-589602329983810852010-01-13T09:50:00.000-05:002011-12-11T09:50:52.261-05:00Body Odor Etiquette: When Your Friend Smells. BAD.Body odor and etiquette are the topic of the day here at Kim Brittingham's blog, yes indeedy.<br />
<br />
So, you've got a friend with offensive body odor. What are you supposed to do?<br />
<br />
Should you inform them of the situation, gently, so they can do something about it? Or should you keep your trap shut, to avoid hurting their feelings? What's the kindest possible move?<br />
<br />
Well don't ask me. See, I used to have this friend, a woman I'll call Rita. When I first met Rita I noticed a slight unpleasant odor about her person, but I didn't think much about it.<br />
<br />
It's easy for me to dismiss and forgive these smallish, smelly social infractions because I have a paranoid belief in my own stinkyness, the seeds of which were planted in the 8th grade when a mean little girl named Dana told me I had B.O. Back then, I probably did. No one taught me how to use deodorant; I had to figure it out for myself (it was the next thing I did after asking my mother what "B.O." stood for). But since that day, I've asked many an intimate companion to "smell me, just smell me. Tell me honestly, do I smell?" I try very hard to keep personal odor in check.<br />
<br />
So anyway, my unfortunate 8th grade incident and that resulting hypervigilence have made me more readily forgiving of others who do stink a little. I always think, "that could just as easily be me!"<br />
<br />
But eventually, Rita's odor required no hypervigilence. It got a little worse each time I saw her, until it was a bold, sour cloud traveling with and around her. And I wasn't the only one noticing anymore.<br />
<br />
One day Rita and I decided to scare up some cash by sharing a table at a local flea market. She asked if she could sleep on my sofa bed the night before, so we could get an earlier start together in the morning. I told her no. I lied. I made a lame excuse, and felt like a jerk about it. I'm just not that kind of lie-teller, game-player, y'know? I'd rather just shoot straight. But I didn't want to hurt Rita's feelings, and I didn't want my one decent piece of living room furniture contaminated with that awful smell -- and it was awful. It made me think of rotting vegetables, and the smell of certain varieties of baby food my mom used to serve to my siblings when they were infants -- peas, maybe. Like peas and milk that's turned. No, not inside my sofa bed. I just didn't have the confidence Febreze could handle it.<br />
<br />
The morning of the flea market, I loaded my sellables into the back of Rita's van and took the co-pilot's seat beside her up front. I'd never been inside Rita's vehicle before.<br />
<br />
The stench was nauseating. And I mean this literally. Rita's bad smell filled the space of the van, in concentrate. The second I sat down, I could feel it crowding around me like a lecherous ghost, clinging and stifling, licking at me, laying upon my skin. I wondered if I'd carry it with me into the flea market, wondered if people would smell it and think it was me. I felt the urge to vomit rising from those deep pink trenches under my tongue, and I swallowed hard. The market was only three minutes away -- I could hold it.<br />
<br />
At the market, I tried not to sit too near Rita, without seeming to be avoiding her. I took walks to "exercise my legs", went to the bathroom often, browsed at nearby tables. Every time someone came to our table and just casually touched a finger to something Rita was selling, she shot up from her chair and hustled over to them to be of saleswomanly service, and each time she stood, the stench wafted anew into the air -- a knock-out bullhorn of odor. I watched with a heavy heart as some people made contorted, sickened faces as they walked away from her.<br />
<br />
At this rate, I didn't think I could tolerate being around Rita again. She suggested subsequent get-togethers, meeting for coffee. I made more dishonest excuses, and couldn't bear doing it.<br />
<br />
I talked the situation over with others.<br />
<br />
"If I tell her she smells bad, her feelings are going to be hurt. There's just no way they won't be," I said. "But if I don't tell her, and she continues to go around smelling like that, it could be really bad for her. She hasn't made a lot of friends in this area yet, she's only lived here a few months. She wants to make more connections, she wants a job. But is she turning people off and she's not aware of it?"<br />
<br />
"You have to tell her," everyone agreed. "It won't be pleasant for her to hear, but she has to know."<br />
<br />
"I'm kinda worried about her too," I said. "I've heard some diseases can cause foul body odors. She's had a lot of health issues in the past. What if something's wrong internally?"<br />
<br />
"Even more reason to tell her," they told me.<br />
<br />
Besides the fact that almost nobody likes to smell bad, I thought Rita might be especially sensitive to the issue, because she's a very fat woman. She was already self-conscious about the size and shape of her body -- I didn't want to add another layer of shame. And it's hard enough to win acceptance when you're obese; almost impossible when you're obese and have an alienating issue like body odor.<br />
<br />
"But if anybody can tell her in a kind and gentle way, Kim, it's you," my friend Stephanie said. "Who better?"<br />
<br />
So I did. It took me several weeks to get up the nerve, but what finally pushed me to act was the picture of Rita in my mind, wondering what she'd said or done to make me upset, wondering why I was ignoring her. That was unacceptable to me. I didn't want to be responsible for making her feel so unceremoniously rejected, and besides, I wanted Rita for a friend. It was the smell alone I couldn't stand.<br />
<br />
I was too big a coward to call her on the phone. I didn't want to hear any hurt that might be in her voice. If she cried, I didn't want to hear it.<br />
<br />
So I sent the kindest, most diplomatic e-mail my heart could compose. I told her I couldn't stand the thought of hurting her feelings, and how hard it had been for me to broach the subject. I told her I was worried that the odor might be a symptom of something internal gone awry. I reminded her that as a fellow fat woman, I was mindful of keeping certain fleshy places clean and dry, powdering under breasts and bellies and such, and that I understood how some places on the body might be difficult to reach if you were apple-shaped like she was. I offered her links to web sites that offered extra-long back brushes and other grooming products for large people . I reminded her that I wanted her for my friend. I told her I wanted her to have every opportunity for friendship and employment in her new community, and that I would hate to imagine anyone being distracted from her wonderful qualities by a mere odor that might be easy to take care of.<br />
<br />
Rita did not take it well. She said she felt humiliated. She even remarked that it was ironic I should say these things to her, considering I did so much fat-positive writing. That comment, I didn't quite understand. Fat or thin, if you smell unbearably unpleasant, I'm going to tell you so I don't have to lie about why I'm not hanging around with you anymore. I guess it was the hurt talking.<br />
<br />
"You couldn't possibly have said it better," friends told me. "She'll come around some day."<br />
<br />
But she hasn't, and I don't think she ever will.<br />
<br />
Several months later, I posted a Facebook status update for the singular amusement of my friend Stephanie. She was coming over to write with me, and I warned her I was a mess and I didn't plan on showering for her, either, so she'd better be prepared to take me as I was. I think the Facebook status read, "A true friend will come over and tolerate your unshowered STANK." Rita, whom I hadn't heard from since the "you smell" e-mail, saw it, and simply commented:<br />
<br />
"Nice."<br />
<br />
That made Stephanie angry. "Unfriend her now! Unfriend her!" she raged from my dining room table. "I felt sorry for her before, but not anymore. Okay, so the news was hard for her to take at first. But now she's giving you 'TUDE? Look bitch, we're all fat around here, but I'd sure as hell want to know if I was choking people everywhere I went, so I could DO something about it. Unfriend her, Kim, unfriend her today!"<br />
<br />
I did unfriend Rita, mainly so she wouldn't have to see any future comments that might be hurtful to her. And frankly, I felt I could live without her sarcastic comments, too. And Stephanie's tirade made me think maybe Rita was being ungrateful after all. Sure, I might be really embarrassed if someone told me I smelled. But if they delivered the message as kindly as I had, I imagine I'd eventually get over it and be able to face my friend again. I hope I'd at least refrain from being snippy.<br />
<br />
Is this one of those things that can never be taken well? Are we damned if we do, damned if we don't, no matter who we're dealing with? If you don't tell a person they smell, then they're left to think poorly of you when you suddenly stop spending time with them. If you do tell them, they're left to think poorly of you for embarrassing them.<br />
<br />
It seems like a no-win situation, but there is one potential positive outcome. If the message was heard, and Rita has started doing things to eliminate her odor problem, then she wins in the long run. Unfortunately for me, the messenger gets demonized either way.<br />
<br />
Welcoming feedback and other anecdotes on dealing with a friend who has body odor. What's your advice on body odor etiquette? Do you deal differently with a friend who has body odor and also happens to be fat?Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-66442716845333351172009-11-04T09:38:00.000-05:002011-12-11T09:42:56.493-05:00What's Gourd-geous: Life Lessons from the Pumpkin PatchEvery autumn I make a visit to my favorite farm in Colt's Neck, New Jersey. I am never alone. The company changes from year to year, always some joyful, chaotic combination of friends; some with children, from wobbly, chubby-cheeked toddlers to aloof college freshmen who'll gladly sacrifice their cool for the irresistible innocence of this ritual.<br />
<br />
The farm is popping with pumpkins of every variety, butternut and acorn squash, rows of apple trees dropping their cheerful fruit onto the lush carpet of grass below. In spite of muddy fields, sunburnt noses, and poopy diapers, everyone enjoys themselves here. And everyone gets to take a little of the day's magic home with them, to carve and set proudly alight on Halloween night, or to cook up for dinner.<br />
<br />
Pumpkins and produce aside, however, it seems everyone gets a special kick out of choosing their very own gourd.<br />
<br />
Gourd selection is big fun, at any age. I know, I've witnessed this. Grown-ups and children alike know exactly what they want when they see it -- thee gourd to grace the ledge of their cubicle, or to set in the center of the kitchen table and vocally distinguish to anyone who'll listen, "That one's mine! No, not those two, those are my brothers'. That one right there, I picked out that one, it's mine!"<br />
<br />
This past Sunday was my annual pumpkin farm n' orchard day. The weather was brilliant, crisp and sunny, the fields smelled like heaven. I strolled slowly around the perimeter of the farm, noticed an old white clapboard farmhouse I'd overlooked in years past, and picked three varieities of apples I'd never tasted before.<br />
<br />
And as we were leaving, I paused with my girlfriend beside an old wooden flat-bed wagon resplendent with little gourds. Adults and children were crowded around its perimeter, pawing enthusiastically through the pile of greens, golds, and shades of fire.<br />
<br />
There were gourds shaped like geese with long, curling necks and beak-like stems. Some gourds looked uncannily like oranges and eggs. Some took smooth shapes, pleasing to the hand, like droplets with tapered handles, like maracas; others had flanges like hardened wings or fins, like a child had pinched their flesh like Play-Doh and pulled it outward. Some looked like spaceships; others like cauldrons burping foam. Some gourds were pinstriped. There were gourds that were hilariously phallic, balls-and-all. Other gourds looked like they were so happy to be gourds that their joy was erupting from beneath their skin in knobby, popcorn-like clusters, as though the meat of the gourd itself were giggling. I wanted them all.<br />
<br />
On the opposite side of the wagon, a little boy of about six had found his gourd. "Mom, I want this one!" he declared with complete confidence. I smiled to myself.<br />
<br />
His mother took a quick look at her son's gourd and in two seconds, determined it was not the right gourd for him; that it wasn't the kind of gourd he should want.<br />
<br />
"Ew, no honey, it's warty. These here," she waved a hand over a small section of giggling gourds, "These are all too warty. You want to pick one with pretty colors, see." Prid-dee CULL-lerrrrs, she emphasized.<br />
<br />
"See, like maybe this one," Mommy said, picking up a style of gourd she deemed acceptable. She showed it to the little boy, made sure he saw it and understood which aesthetic should please him. "Yes, this one is -- oh, wait, no..." she stopped and threw the gourd back into the pile. "Not that one. That gourd had an imperfection," she said sourly. Let's keep looking."<br />
<br />
The woman's teenage daughter chose a gourd and sought her mother's approval. "Ma, Ma, how 'bout this one?"<br />
<br />
"Yes, see Jonathan?" The mother took her daughter's approved gourd in-hand and showed it to the boy. "Prid-dee CULL-lerrrrs."<br />
<br />
As they drew away from the wagon, the father and husband of the group, who'd been hanging back, leaned in for a lazy look over the gourds. Like a beaten, exhausted man, in zombie-like monotone, he droned, "The perfect gourd. The perfect gourd." Then he too withdrew.<br />
<br />
And the boy, who would one day be a man, perhaps a man capable of love, perhaps a man with the potential to choose a partner based on the mysterious urgings of his heart, walked away from the pumpkin farm with the gourd his mother chose for him.<br />
<br />
The gourd he truly wanted, a gourd "too warty", less than "perfect", was left behind.Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-35032931476621800352009-01-26T09:37:00.000-05:002011-12-11T09:38:06.735-05:00The Only Thing I've Ever Stolen.When I was in eighth grade, my friends and I went to the mall almost every weekend. There wasn't much else for a thirteen-year-old girl to do in Bristol, Tennessee, at least not in the early '80s.<br />
<br />
We had a nice big Rite Aid in our mall, and it was a required stop on the teen mall train. There was a rack of magazines right inside the door, and each week a portion of my five-dollar allowance went towards one of those bubbly teen celebrity magazines, like Bop, Superteen, 16, Seventeen, etc. (I was a "Duranie", you see -- that's pop culture slang for "Duran Duran fanatic" -- and I couldn't miss a single issue of any of the aforementioned publications. Because Duran Duran was in all of them in those days. How else could I keep up with John's favorite colors [red and black] and Simon's nickname [Charlie] and Nick's favorite kind of weather [gray and rainy]?)<br />
<br />
Boy, y'know, it's amazing. I could stretch a five-dollar bill from one end of the mall to the other in those days. I remember paying $1.25 to get into the movies. Then maybe $1.25 for the magazine. That still left half my money for hair styling products, a treat from Orange Julius, or a couple of 45 records.<br />
<br />
Anyway, so one day my friend Charlene and I were walking through the Rite Aid, and suddenly a rack of mascara packets fell on top of me. It was one of those spinning racks, and some genius had placed it perilously high atop a tall display case. Bubble packets of pink-and-green mascara tubes on cardboard backs rained down on my head as the rack tipped over. A Rite Aid sales associate rushed over to put the rack upright and slide the packages back on their skinny aluminum display rods. Charlene bought herself a flatulent can of fluffy hair mousse. We went back to my house and played with our hair.<br />
<br />
As I was about to remove my white blazer with the big patch pockets (almost identical to the one Duran Duran's John Taylor wore in their famous all-white photo session), I noticed one of the pockets was weightier than it should have been. I put my hand in, and pulled out a brand new package of mascara.<br />
<br />
"Oh my god!" I shreiked. "Charlene, look! This must've fallen into my pocket when that rack fell over!"<br />
<br />
"Woo-hoo!" she cheered. "Free mascara for you!"<br />
<br />
But I was horrified. I held it tentatively in my hand, out away from my body, like it was a gun.<br />
<br />
"I can't believe I walked out of Rite Aid with this in my pocket. What if somebody had stopped me! They could've arrested me for shoplifting! And I didn't even notice it was there!"<br />
<br />
As odd as it may sound, I felt something akin to survivor's guilt. Or like a woman who'd murdered for the joy of it and who remained twenty years unsuspected and unpunished.<br />
<br />
I couldn't even bring myself to use the thing.<br />
<br />
"Here, take this," I said to Charlene. "You use it. Take it home with you."<br />
<br />
As if by keeping it I'd be cursing myself to a peculiar sort of transparency that only the employees of Rite Aid could detect. I'd innocently step inside the doorway for a look at the latest Bop and a girl in the signature blue apron would point and scream,<br />
<br />
"Thief! Mascara thief! I see it written on her brain!"Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-61789468789790850352008-03-31T09:36:00.000-04:002011-12-11T09:36:54.458-05:00Jealousy-ProofI just don't get jealous.<br />
<br />
Seriously. And I know it’s a perfectly normal human reaction. I also know jealousy and envy can be destructive.<br />
<br />
So I was wondering what it is that makes me so different in this regard, so in case anyone wants to become jealousy-proof, maybe I can lend a hand and share my secret.<br />
<br />
All I can tell you is this:<br />
<br />
If I see that somebody has something I want, two things happen.<br />
<br />
One, I feel elated for that person. And it’s an elation in two parts.<br />
<br />
In the first part, I’m living vicariously through that person’s gain; I feel their thrill. In the second part, I recognize that if Wonderful Thing X can happen to them, it could also happen to me. This other person’s good fortune has proven to me that the dream is possible. And I love possibility.<br />
<br />
Two: the inevitable. I acknowledge that this person now possesses that which I wish to possess. But this is a purely intellectual observation. I don’t "feel" anything black or stormy or sickening. I know what jealousy and envy feel like; I have memories of those sensations in my body. But these emotions haven’t been a part of my life since I was a teenager. My reaction these days is pretty bland and practical. I just shrug and think,<br />
<br />
"Well, if I’d wanted Wonderful Thing X badly enough, I could’ve given it higher priority, could’ve worked harder. But I didn’t. I guess my focus has been elsewhere."<br />
<br />
If I don’t have what you have, I only have myself to blame.<br />
<br />
And I believe anything’s possible. I believe I can make anything possible.<br />
<br />
So can you.<br />
<br />
But it’s up to you where you choose to apply your energy. You’re the captain of your life. You can go anywhere you want, or you can stay in port and go nowhere. But if you are going to lift anchor, you need to pick a destination and map your route. I don’t know about you, but I absolutely thrive on plotting adventures.<br />
<br />
I guess on some level, deep beneath the day-to-day frenzy of getting things done, beyond the wild whirring of my imagination, there’s a quiet, steadfast faith that my day will come. That all my many days will come, as I make each dream happen in time. It just takes effort. Movement. Purposeful movement, one step at a time.<br />
<br />
And if you give up along the way, one thing is guaranteed: you’ll never get where you were going. But if you keep moving, eventually, you’ll find yourself someplace new.<br />
<br />
My ships do come in, and they’ll continue to. Sometimes they’re brightly-painted rowboats I’ve been watching from the shore since they were distant specks on the seas of my imagination.<br />
<br />
Sometimes they’re puttering little bathtub boats that arrive unexpectedly and make me giddy for a day.<br />
<br />
Sometimes they’re messages in bottles I almost miss in the froth if I’m not watching closely.<br />
<br />
Other times they’re bigger vessels I’ve had to tow into shore myself, with a rope thrown over one shoulder -- heave, ho! Heave, ho! Heave, ho! -- laborious, exhausting tugs on rope that leaves my skin raw. And the sweat is always worth it.<br />
<br />
And every now and then, the Queen Mary appears on the horizon -- I can just barely see her! -- and I look forward to the day when she finally responds to my winking signals from shore, and rolls on in.<br />
<br />
I can’t be jealous of anyone else. I can only be frustrated with myself. And even that’s wasted energy. I’m workin’ on it.Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-52835060020567664112008-01-02T09:35:00.000-05:002011-12-11T09:36:04.324-05:00Playing Hooky<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-GYjcrrmWiZo/TuS_xOD79pI/AAAAAAAAAEc/kPt9qROq39U/s1600/CMH%2BHooky.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em"><img border="0" height="320" width="210" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-GYjcrrmWiZo/TuS_xOD79pI/AAAAAAAAAEc/kPt9qROq39U/s320/CMH%2BHooky.jpg" /></a></div><br />
When I was sixteen, I lived in an uninspired 'burb about two hours outside of New York City. I was getting panic attacks in Biology class, plotting a future in which I dressed like a rock star, and working nights and weekends at the Ponderosa Steakhouse where I scooped chocolate pudding out of huge institutional vats and into parfait glasses. I also played hooky from high school as often as possible.<br />
<br />
But I wasn't a bad kid. I wasn't banging the entire football team or sitting in the open lot under the transformer tower smoking weed. No. When I played hooky, I went to M_A_N_H_A_T_T_A_N -- for me, The Emerald City – and wandered through the medieval wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I dipped my eager hands into the "British Imports" bin at Tower Records to see if they had any Nik Kershaw 12-inch extended remixes. (Our local mall was too provincial for that.) I sauntered down Madison Avenue in my dad's vintage houndstooth trench coat and a pair of "Risky Business" sunglasses, pretending I belonged. And I was doing it in style – with a chauffeur-driven limousine at my beck and call. That's right. I spent my crusty-brown-apron-wearing wages on a private phone line for my bedroom and the occasional car and driver from the White Star Limousine Service.<br />
<br />
I managed to pull off an excursion into The Big City three or four times a month. Each trip cost me everything I'd earned the previous week, but to my mind, nothing could have been more worth it. Even those nights at the old Ponderosa when I got stuck with the universally-dreaded tedium of disassembling the frozen yogurt machine – a task which kept its victim extra late into the night, meticulously washing dozens of miniscule silvery parts and nestling them into their corresponding niches in a slab of white Styrofoam. To me, it just meant more glamour time.<br />
<br />
My parents weren't big on taking advantage of our proximity to New York City. They didn't use the commuter rail line like other Long Islanders did, going into the city for shows and museum exhibitions on a regular basis. My mother seemed to think New York was a place where crafty Hispanic men waited around every corner for a chance to slip a hand up your skirt. The whole thing frustrated me. Why did every weekend in our family include a visit to a strip mall, or some home improvement project that was only being done for the benefit of the people who'd eventually buy the house when we moved again anyway? I decided to take charge of my own cultural education.<br />
<br />
In the morning, I had to walk to the school bus stop, which was inside a nearby housing development called University Heights. It was impossible to see the bus stop from the front door of our house, so after I disappeared around the corner, my mother could only assume I'd gone off the school as usual.<br />
<br />
I timed it so the limousine arrived for me at least five minutes before the school bus came shuddering along. I didn't want to chance having the bus driver see me getting into a long dark car and report it to somebody. The other kids at the stop – well, I wasn't worried about them. They didn't even know my name, and I'm not so sure anyone in a position of authority would have listened to them anyway. The kids from University Heights always struck me as a tad rough. They knew what the inside of the Assistant Principal's office looked like. They were always just a half-step behind the fashion trends, but belligerently so, still flying Farrah Fawcett and Shaun Cassidy wings rebelliously in the face of progress and carrying curvaceous oversized combs in their back pockets like some sort of identifying badge.<br />
<br />
They looked on, slack-jawed, as George (my regular driver), a towering, aging black man with sharp knees and elbows and a gentle face with sleepy brown eyelids, swept me into the velvety shadows of the limo's back seat with a tip of his cap. Me -- the quiet, no-name girl with the strawberry-blond bob and liquid black eyeliner, swimming in a quarterback's overcoat.<br />
<br />
I used to love making the car reservations from the pink plastic telephone on my nightstand: "Ms. Brittingham, hello!" the White Star lady would sing. "Will you be needing George this week?" God, I loved the way she asked that. I felt like I was on Dynasty on something.<br />
<br />
The limousines all had those brick-like car phones (such a glam novelty back then) and I placed a call to school on my way to NYC, affecting my mother's nasal Philadelphia drawl and smoker's hack, telling them that my daughter was throwing up or going to "a specialist" or blah-blah-blah. See, the school had a very clear policy: they would only call your parents to report your absence if your parents didn't call them by 10:00 AM. I simply headed them off.<br />
<br />
It was a huge school, and someone like me who hardly said boo, didn't bother to make waves or put forth special effort to be recognized or remembered, was easily lost in their pokey, paper-laden system.<br />
<br />
In spite of the dreary landscape of Long Island highway, my limousine rides into the city were alive with a dancing electricity of anticipation, of liberty, of all that was possible, of victory against all odds. And as the smoky angles of the skyline first emerged in the distance, as overpasses and highway signage first began to flaunt their scrawls of graffiti like nothing we'd ever see out in historic Stony Brook, my heart would leap. We were getting close now! We were passing through the outermost rings of the big, grand, golden aura that enveloped this magical place.<br />
<br />
On those days when George arrived behind the wheel of a sedan, I would roll down my tinted back window as we approached the city, and craning my head into the wind, I threw all my giddiness forward from my fevered brow. The speed of things happening, of minds churning and millions of lives thundering forward in a collective, wanton spirit of progression roared past my ears and whipped my hair about in wild locks like a bacchanalia of dancers.<br />
<br />
On those special days when George showed up in a stretch limousine (which sometimes happened, because a stretch might be the last car available), I'd open the car's sun roof to the raw air, and stand with my head and shoulders rising out of the rectangular hatch. Those beacons of steel – the twin towers of the World Trade Center like benevolent guardians, the triumphant torch of the Empire State Building, the swank point of the Chrysler Building -- beckoned to me. Sailing ahead with the car galloping beneath me, I felt like Boudica leading her charge of seventy thousand men. I felt like the Statue of Liberty herself. I felt like the diminutive but determined Fanny Brice at the helm of her tugboat:<br />
<br />
Don't tell me not to live, just sit and putter<br />
<br />
Life's candy and the sun's a ball of butter<br />
<br />
Don't bring around a cloud, don't rain on my parade…<br />
<br />
Only once, early in our relationship, did George ask me where I was going in Manhattan and why. I brushed some cockamamie story off my cuff about being an artist and going into the city to "have my portfolio reviewed". Damned if I know what that was supposed to mean, but I often carried my real art class portfolio with me, my oversized sketch pad tucked within. I always hoped to do some casual urban charcoal sketches, posing as a local bohemian, hoping tourists would find me fascinating and that locals would recognize themselves in me and nod in cool, knowing artiness. But that only happened once or twice. Usually, I just carried the portfolio around for effect – and for short intervals. When it got cumbersome, I left it in the back seat of the car.<br />
<br />
George waited for me everywhere I went. If I planned to go walking around for a while, he'd find a legal place to park and reassure me he'd be right there, napping when I returned. "Take your time, young lady," he'd say. And he was always right where I left him.<br />
<br />
I often went to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on these trips. The Met is a huge, daunting but glorious place. You could easily spend a year of days seeing and appreciating everything inside, so one visit was never enough. The entrance fee, if you look closely at the sign, is a "suggested donation", which means they may ask you for eight bucks, but you can literally pay them a penny if you want and still get your little metal "M" entrance badge. I always paid a dime for my admission, because I spent so much on the limo that I had very little left over. Exactly one dime. It was what I paid on my very first visit, and afterwards I just made it a tradition.<br />
<br />
I especially loved the Costume Institute in the basement of the museum. I could stand before a faceless, minimalist mannequin in a sumptuous 18th century gown and get lost in my own stupefaction. It blew my mind to realize someone actually wore this thing in the time of Marie Antoinette! It was actually worn against the warm, living, breathing body of someone who existed in that time. And I couldn't believe something of such detail and beauty, more beautiful even than the things we could manufacture in our times, with the benefits of our technology, could exist and be owned and enjoyed by someone back then. I think I assumed that everyone before 1895 walked around in animal skins with faces smeared in their own filth, and then, with the turn of a calendar page, they all suddenly jerked themselves upright and started waltzing, constructing bustles, whittling marionettes and waxing their moustaches.<br />
<br />
There were rooms in the Met where I simply liked to sit and ponder where I was, smack-dab in the middle of New York on a school day. The cavernous room of the Temple of Dendur, the reconstructed Japanese garden, the Frank Lloyd Wright room -- all superb for maximum dramatic impact. I'd think about all the suckers back at school, and all the confining classrooms I was free of for the moment. Classrooms, those boxy little traps, the worst of them without windows. Teachers and their lectures, as nice as those teachers might be, still terrifying because they were the wardens and I was at their mercy. There were hallways where I'd panicked once, so now they seemed too long, it might take forever to get to the end of them. I avoided places where I'd felt scared before. The list of places in the school building where I felt safe grew shorter all the time.<br />
<br />
Sometimes, in my favorite rooms of the museum, I'd imagine myself traveling back in time, to ancient Egypt or feudal Japan. I wondered if there was a formula one could follow, a specific set of steps, like thoughts combined with counting or breathing and performed in certain places, while smelling certain smells, that would transport a person back to another time and place. I wondered how many pointless attempts had been made at building time machines, when all we probably needed were our own minds – but no one had discovered the magic steps yet. I imagined a second-hand book shop in some shadowy corner of London where a musty diary with crumbling, tissue-like pages sat at the bottom of a pile, holding the secret to time travel, if only someone would bother to dig it out and read it. I just knew the world was full of wondrous things to be discovered.<br />
<br />
The future was my favorite thing to think about – the inevitable SuperLife that awaited me at the end of this teenage thing. The future was here in New York, in a house that still had its old servant's bells in the kitchen, with a pink sectional sofa in the living room, ferns like green fireworks in the windows, and a room for my wardrobe with a motorized remote-controlled rack and a fainting couch like Faye Dunaway's in "Mommie Dearest" where I could recline for hours, perversely admiring the longer, slimmer legs I would definitely have by then. In the future I'd be a famous writer and artist, too good at both things to choose just one. Life would be a social whirlwind. British pop idols Duran Duran would be steeped in scandal, for two of its founding members would fight one another viciously for the privilege of marrying me. I liked contemplating their confessions of love, over and over again. Sometimes I made myself weep.<br />
<br />
Outside the museums and department stores were the streets of New York themselves. The cheapest ride in the amusement park is often the best. Merely walking around New York made me feel like hot shit. I could be content to do nothing else. In fact, sometimes having too many destinations and keeping myself holed up inside places left me feeling dissatisfied. I needed to know I really had been in New York, and to do that, spending a certain minimum of time out in it was crucial.<br />
<br />
What I wore to New York was an important consideration. I didn't want to look like some suburban rube in tell-tale snow white mall-walking sneakers and equally white socks, or some ski jacket or windbreaker or worse than that, anything in a pastel that screamed "cul-de-sac". I'd discovered my dad's vintage ankle-length coat in the back of his closet and thought it was really hip. It was absurdly voluminous on me, and I had to roll up the sleeves (which I thought was all the more cool, because it revealed the coat's black satin lining). I wore that coat everywhere, not only to New York but to school, every day, all day, to every class. Never left it behind in my locker no matter how warm the weather. I lived in it. I pinned a cluster of rhinestone broaches on one lapel, and the blunt, angled haircut I maintained completed my overall look. I fancied myself like one of those cool kids Amy Miles and I had seen in Bloomingdale's that one Saturday afternoon in 9th grade. <P>/>Amy and I both wanted to live in New York City when we grew up. Maybe we'd even share an apartment together! There was no cooler place on earth, except maybe London. The best of everything was in the city. And it warmed the cockles of my heart to be with someone who deeply, sincerely understood and shared my feelings about the place. So when Amy's dad suggested a Saturday pilgrimage by train, just the three of us, Amy and I were beside ourselves. It was the first time I'd actually been to Manhattan.<br />
<br />
It was late autumn of 1984, and the New York I remember from that day is one of edgy autumn air, pink and blue neon, red pumps and red fingerless gloves; respectable women in fishnet stockings; people standing in line for things: celebrity appearances, book signings, tickets, tables. Scarves with piano keyboards knitted into them for sale on every corner, Z-100 on the radio in every store; a glaring window display filled with television monitors framing the faces of "Apollonia 6", and the thumping, naughty whimsy of their one-hit wonder "Sex Shooter". Piss and saxophone music steamed up through subway gratings. Big Brown Bags bobbed from cold pink hands. Every now and then, we'd pass a whiff of a Calvin Klein fragrance and The Definitive New York Smell…is it roasted chestnuts, burnt pretzels, or a combination of the two? I'm still not sure, but it emanates from vendor carts and says, "You're in New York, for real!" I always wanted to bottle that smell and bring it back to suburbia with me.<br />
<br />
Inside Bloomingdale's, Amy and I marveled at how much hipper the girls' clothes were there than in our local mall on Long Island. I remember taking in the people around me, trying to fix the details of them in my mind so I could emulate the look of them later on. There was one threesome of girls I'll never forget: they went skipping and giggling arm-in-arm through the teen section of Bloomie's, like the muses of '80s style, and Amy and I stood back and watched them in hick-like wonder. They wore ankle-length black wool coats and extra long scarves in solid neon colors – garish lime, screaming fuchsia, blinding danger yellow. One girl wore a length of her scarf tossed glamorously over one shoulder; the others had their scarves bunched around their necks in funky ascot variations I knew I could never copy. They wore scrunchy suede boots with decorative buckles, or patent leather jazz shoes with neon socks that matched their scarves. Most notable and impressive were their haircuts – all of them smooth and sleek and geometric. One side shorter than the other, ends flipped expertly under, swooping lengths obscuring one eye, tidy buzzed sections over an ear or at the nape of a neck.<br />
<br />
The three of us – Amy, her father and I, actually froze in place to watch them gallop by, and they were so arresting that even Amy's father felt moved to comment:<br />
<br />
"Their fathers probably own the store."<br />
<br />
* * *<br />
<br />
Bloomingdale's would ever-after remain a favorite destination on hooky days. Its heady aroma of perfumes and retail newness, the chic black deco facade of its Lexington Avenue entrance, were iconic to me. On as many trips as possible, I tried to squeeze in at least a promenade across the cosmetics floor.<br />
<br />
"Hey George, I want to go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Bloomingdale's. Do you think we have time for both? You know we absolutely have to be back on the road by one o' clock."<br />
<br />
Time was always of the essence. My school day was only about seven hours long. It took two hours to get to Manhattan and two hours back. That meant I needed a clear agenda in order to get the most out of my time. And I always did.<br />
<br />
George had my trust and confidence. In my naivete, I actually believed the guy gave a shit about my truancy, so I tipped him well to "keep him quiet". And I felt my worldly gesture was working, because trip after trip went off without a hitch. The hammer never came down -- George never called my parents or the school; and in fact, I sensed he was getting a kick out of the whole thing. I'd like to think he went home to his wife (Amelia) and told her about this pip of a kid who dove into his backseat from the cracked curb of a weedy subdivision and kept him circling midtown blocks while she looked for the townhouse where Holly Golightly was supposed to have lived. After a while I'm sure he felt like more of a participant than a hired hand. I think I sensed it when, during our routine stops at the drive-thru window of a Long Island McDonald's, he ordered lunch for himself too. I always ate on the road going home, because I didn't want to waste one of my short and precious New York City hours merely eating.<br />
<br />
Coming home required a different routine from the morning's pick-up. Unlike the morning school bus, which picked me up away from home, the afternoon bus dropped me off directly in front of our house. I had to get on the homeward-bound bus at school, because my mother would be watching from the living room window, waiting for me to climb off.<br />
<br />
George and I always timed things with delicious precision. That very first time, as we turned into the driveway of school, I made a point of laying out the plan.<br />
<br />
"George?" I said, curling a hand around the opening in the privacy partition between the front and back seats and poking my face through, "I'm kind of in a hurry. If you just pull up behind that row of school buses on the side there, I'll jump right out and you can be on your way. Oh! In fact, here."<br />
<br />
I pulled a wad of bills out of my coat pocket – his tip, forty dollars, stashed away so I wouldn't spend it – and handed it to him through the partition. He glanced quickly at my hand hovering near his ear and smiled as he took the money from my hand.<br />
<br />
"Thank you very much, miss. Now where are we going – here?"<br />
<br />
I looked nervously up at the school's facade, at the second story classrooms where some windows hung open a crack. I felt like the whole world was watching. Some liberal-minded history teacher was letting his seniors sit casually on the radiator covers next to the windows, and I glimpsed a bent blue-jean-covered leg, a shaggy mullet and an exposed t-shirt tag, too close to the windowpane for my comfort. A sway, a shifting, a turning head, just on the other side of that thin, transparent glass. Oh God, don't let anybody look this way and see a big black limousine in the parking lot. I had to turn away. I feared they'd feel my eyes on them and turn around.<br />
<br />
"Yes George, right behind the buses. Just where that little brown door is on the side of the building. Do you see it?"<br />
<br />
George pulled up to the sidewalk near the entrance closest to the girl's bathroom. I was ready to disembark, bottom two coat buttons securely fastened, canvas tote bag strapped across my chest, and the black plastic handle of my art portfolio squirming in my sweaty hand. I checked my watch. The car finally stopped.<br />
<br />
I clicked instantly into a necessary headspace where I was convinced of my own invisibility. It wasn't so much a mantra I used, not audible, visual, imaginable words across my mind, like, "please don't see me, please don't see me, please don't see me"; not like that. Instinctively, I knew there was something about thinking "don't see me" that would jinx me, make the entire disciplinary staff of the school do just that. The principal, the assistant principal, the gruff gym teacher who presided over detention, all would stride right out of that inconspicuous side door at the exact inopportune moment and the game would be all over.<br />
<br />
Instead, I "willed" myself invisible. I imagined myself being completely unnoticeable, as familiar and bland and unworthy of note as the grayish-green spits of grass between the school building and the curb of its vast parking lot, or the dulled asphalt itself.<br />
<br />
I opened the car door and bailed out, swiftly, but being careful not to slam it shut behind me. I moved with quick, robotic purpose toward the windowless steel door, shoulders and neck bent forward, head down, trusting, trusting that I was invisible, that the world was not looking right here, right now, at this precise moment. I pulled the door open. A glimpse of a glinting, empty hallway. The girl's bathroom was inches away. I didn't hesitate, just kept moving, a train, ever forward, directly into the lavatory and then into a stall where I spun around and closed the door and pushed the latch into place. I waited and breathed. From somewhere, everywhere, a sphere of noises around me -- the echo of a shrill didactic voice, the creaking of metal desks beneath the weight of restless bodies. Air whined through a pipe. A ribbon of controlled laughter pulled low across a buffed floor.<br />
<br />
There was just enough time to pee, flush with the dismissal bell, and sail back out that side door along with everyone else. I let myself get lost in the cattle drive where I'm sure nobody noticed the slow smile of triumph spreading across my face.<br />
<br />
When I stepped off the bus, my mother, ironing my father's work shirts in the family room, looked out the picture window and watched me be-bopping across the lawn like nothing unusual happened. It was beautiful.<br />
<br />
From that day on, I was emboldened. I hired George as often as I could for those final three months of my last year of high school. I was never caught – my secret remained safe.<br />
<br />
I got pretty good at keeping secrets. I was born into a family of experts, so it's no wonder.<br />
<br />
I told my mother about my adventures in limousine hooky years later, when I was in my 20s. I thought she'd get a kick out of it. But she just wouldn't believe me.<br />
<br />
I thought about pulling out my high school scrapbook, and opening to the page where I pasted a souvenir napkin from one of George's stretch limos, one with a bar in the back. It was a square white cocktail napkin, with "White Star Limousine" embossed in metallic blue. But I left the scrapbook alone. After all, what point was there in owning up to the truth now? My mother could look at a nickel and still swear it was a dime, as long as it served her.<br />
<br />
Besides. For me to know the truth was enough.<br />
<br />
- Kim BrittinghamKim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-55777293001941696972007-10-20T09:34:00.000-04:002011-12-11T09:34:58.628-05:00Lust, Kindergarten, and Davy JonesI was having lunch with Kate recently, and she was concerned that she might be a sexual freak.<br />
<br />
"There's something wrong with me," she insisted. "I am just way too sexual. It's not normal." Then leaning forward, she added softly, "I can remember having sexual feelings as a kid! I'm talking, like, a little kid!"<br />
<br />
I turned my head and gave her a squinting, sidelong glance.<br />
<br />
"I'm pretty sure that's normal," I told her, nodding slowly. "Human beings do experience sexual sensations long before puberty."<br />
<br />
She bit her lip. "Really?"<br />
<br />
"Oh, hell yeah," I said, hoisting myself atop my soapbox. "Although there are plenty of people who'd deny it, because the idea of a sexual child disturbs them. But it's totally natural, and it has nothing to do with abuse or exploitation. Children are sexual beings and they're capable of having feelings of arousal all by themselves. I hate that society wants to make it so shameful. That's what leads to perversion and abuse. Like priests and stuff. All that denial. Demonizing the urge."<br />
<br />
She gnawed through two french fries, one after another, then asked:<br />
<br />
"So…how young is normal?"<br />
<br />
I shrugged. "Well, I don't know. I'm not a child psychologist." Then I thought for a moment. "But I do have a story that might make you feel better. About me, when I was a kid."<br />
<br />
Her face brightened, a signal to continue.<br />
<br />
"O.K., well, I was just thinking about this recently. I was trying to decide if my sexual experiences have any place in my memoir because, you know, it's one of those major themes of human life – sex. So I brainstormed a list of major sexual moments and realizations and stuff, and I actually remembered my earliest experience of arousal. I was four years old."<br />
<br />
Every day when I came home from kindergarten, I watched a line-up of after-school TV that went exactly like this:<br />
<br />
The Flintstones<br />
<br />
Gilligan's Island<br />
<br />
The Brady Bunch<br />
The Monkees<br />
<br />
My favorite Monkee was Davy Jones. He was so impish and seemingly harmless, and he had the dreamiest deep brown eyes and a perpetually glossy lower lip made for kissin'. And I knew every Monkees song by heart, even if I didn't understand the romantic sentiments and light socio-political jabs I was parroting.<br />
<br />
When the TV station started advertising a Monkees double album, I begged my mother to order it for me. (You get not one, but TWO volumes of the Monkees' greatest hits, all for just $4.99! Call now!)<br />
<br />
Beginning the very next afternoon, and on a daily basis for weeks, I asked my mother if my Monkees records had come in the mail yet. And she'd tell me, "They say it takes 4-6 weeks, sweetie," or "But there's no mail today, it's Sunday."<br />
<br />
Then one day the mailman left a slip of paper in our mailbox to tell us we had a package waiting at the post office.<br />
<br />
"I think that's somebody's Monkees album!" my mother sang. "We'll have Daddy pick it up on the way home from work!"<br />
<br />
I remember being irked that it took him three long and torturous days to get his butt to the post office. But 32 years later, I still have a perfect picture in my mind of my dad as a young man with a Burt Reynolds moustache pulling open the screen door and stepping into the tiny front foyer of our Northeast Philadelphia row house, holding a square, flat brown paper package under one arm. Obviously, a moment of significant emotional impact to have stuck with me like that in Technicolor. Davy Jones had come home to me, wearing nothing but a thin wrapping of tree pulp.<br />
<br />
In my bedroom, I played "Cuddly Toy" on the plastic record player again and again, until the disk bore a pale, circular ribbon where the needle had worn down the vinyl of that one track by two shades of gray.<br />
<br />
I kept the album cover propped up where I could see it. It was white with the red Monkees logo in one corner, and scattered pencil sketches of the Monkees' faces, each about the size of my little palm. The artist had captured Davy's angelic good looks to swoon-worthy perfection.<br />
<br />
I was also a big fan of The Brady Bunch, so when Davy Jones made his guest appearance on that now-famous episode, I was positively riveted to the console TV in our living room. Transfixed, not by the television's own Pledge-polished gleam or the stylish faux-ironwork insets flanking its watery screen – no. It was all about Davy.<br />
<br />
As he crooned somewhat cross-eyed into the recording studio microphone dangling above him, I thought he looked even cuter than he did on The Monkees. There was something different about him. Longer hair, perhaps. That, coupled with a quiet, roguish sophistication that could only come from having shed the dead weight of the (in my little girl's opinion) three inferior Monkees. Gone was the bowl haircut, gone the goofy faces made at the camera to zany, rubbery sound effects. This new Davy was subtle, and spoke straight to the loins.<br />
<br />
The episode was nearly over and Marsha had tried everything to reach Davy Jones and convince him to sing at the school dance. She sat, dejected, as a nattily-dressed Davy appeared at the door behind her and was escorted quietly into the living room to Mrs. Brady's obvious delight.<br />
<br />
"Marsha, there's someone here to see you."<br />
<br />
Oh my god! Davy Jones – he'd come to see Marsha!<br />
<br />
Left alone together on the couch, Davy coyly suggested to Marsha that he needed a date for the dance – and did she know anyone who wanted to go with him?<br />
<br />
"Do I!" Marsha cried, and she leaned her body forward and kissed Davy Jones on the cheek. <br />
<br />
Do you hear me? She threw all caution and decorum to the wind! She lifted her body closer to his, brought her face to Davy's own sweet hairless face, and placed her moist and eager lips upon his cheek. On his flesh. She put her mouth on his face. Not that far away from his mouth. <br />
<br />
The four-year-old me found this incredibly hot.<br />
<br />
But it wasn't over.<br />
<br />
Davy received this bold kiss without complaint. Accepted it, see, as though he wanted it. And his eyes locked onto her face and followed it as she drew her head away from his, post-kiss, and sat down again. Yes, he watched her withdraw, eyes twinkling with a touch of the devil. Wow. And then, parting those plump, moist lips, he spoke.<br />
<br />
"Well! How 'bout the flip side?"<br />
<br />
….did you catch that? Davy Jones asked for MORE!!!<br />
<br />
Davy Jones wanted her to do it….AGAIN!!!<br />
<br />
And he just plain ASKED FOR IT!!!<br />
<br />
Ohhhhhhhh. Oh, holyMarymotherofGod.<br />
<br />
That moment of his asking – that seemingly innocuous, lightly-delivered "How 'bout the flip side" was the single most erotic moment of my half-day kindergarten pencil box-toting life.<br />
<br />
To the extent that a four-year-old kid can be hot n' horny, my friends – I was.<br />
<br />
A deep longing, like a length of rope tugged between the depths of my belly and my someday-womb -- there it was. Arousal. Because Marsha Brady took the initiative -- whoa! Baby! No holding back! And because Davy Jones wanted more, and wasn't afraid to say so.<br />
<br />
Whhhhhhhhhhhhhhhew. Damn.<br />
<br />
So don't tell me little kids don't feel the urge.<br />
<br />
Or maybe, like Kate, I'm just way too sexual. Like, abnormally so.<br />
<br />
Nah, I don't think so.<br />
<br />
Hey, thanks for hanging on through the end of the story. But did you really think you were in for the sordid details of Kate's inflamed libido?<br />
<br />
Hah! Cheeky monkey, you.Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-59655499324048383322007-09-02T09:33:00.001-04:002011-12-11T09:34:02.275-05:00Clueless in Philadelphia<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Jum-7f1e2hk/TuS_Vtd9WwI/AAAAAAAAAEQ/j8iLCSKMhGY/s1600/CMH%2BClueless.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em"><img border="0" height="320" width="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Jum-7f1e2hk/TuS_Vtd9WwI/AAAAAAAAAEQ/j8iLCSKMhGY/s320/CMH%2BClueless.jpg" /></a></div><br />
When you're thinking backwards in time to write a memoir, it's amazing some of the stuff you remember. And some of the insights you get from that proverbial 20/20 hindsight can be downright shocking.<br />
<br />
Here's one I'll file under the forehead-slapping, "My God, I was such an idiot!" category.<br />
<br />
When I was in my early 20s, I was living with my parents in a neighborhood in Philadelphia where Tudor-style mansions, early 19th century farmhouses and a long-abandoned, foreboding red stone insane asylum stood like awkward stepchildren among cardboard condo developments and strip malls.<br />
<br />
I didn't know too many of my neighbors, aside from the cop across the street whose kids I'd occasionally babysit, but begrudgingly, because they liked to sit on my lap and twist my nose.<br />
<br />
But my mother knew people. She even knew the people with that house on Worthington Road with the farm animals in the yard. We used to slow down when we drove past and admire the horse standing by the fence, tail swinging. It was the only house on the block with some decent land around it. Everyone else lived in identical white suburban boxes on tiny spits of grass. But the house with the animals – that was neat. A true neighborhood novelty.<br />
<br />
I guess maybe my mother knew the married couple who lived there, and somehow she got us both invited to meet with one of their sons, Paul, and his friend, Jack, who were planning to write a children's TV pilot. They were looking to form some sort of think tank, and I guess my mom and I got enrolled through word-of-mouth and our reps for being "those creative Brittinghams".<br />
<br />
We walked into the living room of Jack's cardboard condo and there stood one of the most handsome men I've ever met in person in all my 36 years: Paul Cartin. Wow. Tall, lanky, with capable-looking hands, the jaw line and cheekbones of an Adonis, the kind of beautiful deep auburn hair that women around the world spend thousands of dollars in salon fees to achieve, and intense brown eyes I would've pledged myself to like a religion, given the chance. And the weird thing is, right from the start, I sensed he had no idea how handsome he was. (Ladies, how rare is that, I ask you?)<br />
<br />
As for me, I felt and looked frumpy. My sister had recently developed some pictures and showed me an unflattering shot of myself, remarking, "You know, I don't know what happened to you, Kim. You used to wear the coolest clothes and you always looked good. You wore make-up and always styled your hair really cute. You look all grungy now, like you just don't care anymore. I miss the way you used to be."<br />
<br />
We were in crisis at home, and I wore my palpitating heart literally on my grungy sleeves. We didn't have heat or hot water in our house, even food was scarce, and rats overran the lopsided and sinking 1800s former general store that we called home. I hated my job and felt anxious all the time. I guess my exterior reflected my interior.<br />
<br />
But what my sister said really resonated with me and made me uneasy – enough to go to Lane Bryant and put some wages into a long, beatniky black sweater and matching sweater pants. Still frumpy, but crossing a toe over the line into darkly hip – and it was the nicest thing I then owned. I wore it to our first meeting with Paul and Jack.<br />
<br />
I liked Paul Cartin. I liked his creativity and his unassuming manner. I liked the effortless rapport we had when we brainstormed ideas for the TV pilot. And he looked all the more perfect in constant contrast to Jack, whom I didn't like from the start. Loud, obnoxious. Reminded me of a future sleazeball movie exec, or someone who'd produce porn. And he worked as a bill collector. *Shiver.* I always wanted to ask Paul, "What's a nice guy like you doing with a guy like…that?"<br />
<br />
I remember wanting to sit someplace with Paul, alone, without Jack, and get to know everything about him. I wanted to know what it was like to be kissed by his mouth, to have those handy-looking hands pressing into my waist. I wanted to swap stories with him; I wanted swap spit with him. I wanted to talk about ideas with him, contemplate the universe. I wanted to touch his hair and run my hand along that heartbreakingly perfect jaw. I wanted to know what it was like to pick up the phone and hear his voice say, "Kim? It's me."<br />
<br />
I remember showing up one night to one of our creative meetings and being introduced to Jack's girlfriend. She wasn't the type of woman I'd naturally befriend, because a) she chose to be with Jack, and in my mind that lowered her respectability, and b) she just seemed kind of dopey. Nevertheless, when she asked me to ride to the store with her to buy snacks and beverages, I went along to be polite.<br />
<br />
I remember feeling a little edgy because I'd had to listen to Jack being jerky for a half hour already and struggled to hold my tongue for peace-keeping's sake. So as his girlfriend and I walked out the door and Jack called, "Now that they're leaving, we can talk about them!" I didn't turn around and make some sort of cute face as he might have expected. I purposely didn't give him what he wanted. I didn't react. Well, except for closing the door behind me perhaps a little more firmly than usual.<br />
<br />
In the car, Jack's girlfriend launched into a speech about how lonely Paul was. Out of the blue, unprovoked. I hadn't asked.<br />
<br />
"He doesn't have a girlfriend right now, so I think he's a little lonely. He really needs someone to take care of him. I try to be extra-nice to him when he's over because I know he doesn't have anyone. But he really needs a girl of his own to take care of him."<br />
<br />
While I was secretly happy to hear that Paul was unattached, I was a little freaked out by his need to be "taken care of". The clueless 22-year-old me automatically assumed there must be something terribly wrong with him if he needed a woman as babysitter and/or mother. It never once occurred to me that this whole "caretaker" spin was the creation of Jack's submissive, "whatever you say, honey" girlfriend and potentially had nothing to do with Paul.<br />
<br />
I didn't say much to her – just some "uh-huh"s and "oh"s, listening courteously. And I certainly didn't bounce up and down in the car seat, twist around to face her and declare, "Oh! Oh! I'll take care of him!", because I also assumed this information about Paul's singlehood was most likely being offered up as mere small talk, because, naturally, he would never, ever be interested in me -- a dowdy, chubby, frizzy-haired dork with her fashionable glory days behind her, apparently, or so said my sister.<br />
<br />
On a different night, Paul gave me a ride home. When we got to my house, he let out an exasperated sigh.<br />
<br />
"I don't know what to do with myself," he said, looking at the road ahead.<br />
<br />
"What do you mean?"<br />
<br />
"I don't know, I feel like I…like I don't want to go home right away, you know?"<br />
<br />
He shifted a little impatiently in his seat and repeated, he just didn't know what to do with himself.<br />
<br />
And Dumb-Ass – that is, yours truly, with palm already curled around the passenger door handle -- shrugged and said:<br />
<br />
"Well, I'm sure you'll find something to do." I pushed open the door. "Thanks again for the ride. Goodnight!"<br />
<br />
Then I disappeared into the house and wearily climbed the stairs to my bedroom, where I popped a VHS tape of a Molly Ringwald movie into the player and thought, "Damn. I wish Paul Cartin wanted to date me."<br />
<br />
Don't you just want to go back in time and smack me???? I know I do.<br />
<br />
My confidence in Paul's apathy towards me was confirmed in four ways. Note the jackass logic forthcoming.<br />
<br />
Way Number One. I once decided to plant a little seed that might, just might, bring Paul and I closer to a potential dating scenario, by putting us in a situation together sans Jack. I asked him:<br />
<br />
"Hey! Can I come over to your house sometime and visit your animals?"<br />
<br />
I received a disappointing reply.<br />
<br />
"Uh…I guess so."<br />
<br />
He shrugged and sort of said it like, Well, I'd tolerate your presence, but as soon as you get your petting zoo fix, I expect you to get lost. And I also thought I detected a hint of, What kind of totally uncool nerd are you that you want to visit my animals? No, I decided. He definitely did not like me. Of course. And why would he?<br />
<br />
Way Number Two. One night Paul and I were working on a model of a potential claymation segment for the TV pilot in Jack's basement. Some friend of Jack's – another loudmouth – came down to the basement and started making insincere hits on me, you know, like when a guy just wants to look like Casanova in front of his friends. "Well hel-lo there! Tell me, what are you doing Saturday night?" Secretly I wanted Paul to stand up to him and say, "Cut it out, Bill," or better still, "She's going out with me Saturday night. So back off."<br />
<br />
Yes, I was hoping for some expression of jealousy on Paul's part. I don't know why I bothered to hope, but I did.<br />
<br />
He said nothing. : (<br />
<br />
The one happy thing I took away from the situation was the thought that, Hey, maybe if it looks like other men could be interested in me, Paul will begin to see me in a different light, i.e., attractive!<br />
<br />
Way Number Three. One afternoon while sitting in cozy proximity to Paul in Jack's kitchen, sketching out ideas or maybe experimenting in clay, I began to feel that deliciously natural rapport blossoming between us. It had room to grow because Jack and his mouth were on the other side of the room, on the phone. Paul and I spoke in semi-hushed tones, engaging one another in such lovely, happy harmony – but the second Jack got off the phone, he came over to the table and like a foghorn blurted:<br />
<br />
"All right, break it up break it up! This is supposed to be a work session here."<br />
<br />
I assumed Jack knew something I didn't. Like maybe Paul had suddenly gained a girlfriend and this friendly chat between us was taboo. Or, perhaps Jack was doing Paul another kind of favor – saving him from the ugly girl who was getting too friendly. Bailing him out, as it were. Of course he'd want to be bailed out, I thought. Why do I bother fantasizing about what isn't really there?<br />
<br />
And, finally, Way Number Four. At some point Paul and I were having a conversation about our creative interests, and he mentioned he was attempting to write some songs with a friend.<br />
<br />
"She has a keyboard, so she's writing the music and I'm working on the lyrics."<br />
<br />
Well, I thought, that takes care of that. He's writing love ballads with another chick. He's madly, swooningly in love with a musician. Of course. No point wishing on any stars with this guy. We're done here.<br />
<br />
And so, that's how my imaginary love affair with Paul Cartin ended. The TV pilot project was dropped and we never saw each other again. I just assumed he trotted off into the sunset with his pianist. (Bitch.) <br />
<br />
And here I sit fourteen years later, slack-jawed, realizing, Oh my God! The guy was interested in me all along! Or at least until I frustrated the hell out of him and had him convinced I didn't care one wit about him. Poor guy. Poor me! No – make that stupid, stoooo-pid me. <br />
<br />
How many clues did I need? Jack's girlfriend took me out on a snack run just to get me alone and deliver the You Should Be Paul's Girlfriend Sales Pitch. Of course, her pitch needed a little work, but nevertheless, her heart was in the right place. I was just too dumb to figure it out. Dumb, and completely lacking in any self-confidence.<br />
<br />
And how about sitting side-by-side in the front seat of his car at 9:00 at night, beneath the shadow of my family's house: "I just don't know what to do with myself…I don't want to go home right away." Geeeeeee. Ya think he might've been hoping I'd say, "Well why don't we go grab a bite to eat, or get some coffee?" You know, I needed to be hit over the head and just dragged off. IDIOT!!!! And there I was in my room daydreaming about him night and day. God! How STUPID!!!<br />
<br />
And I'm sure he was thrilled when I asked to come visit…his animals! I can almost hear him thinking, And what am I? Pond scum? <br />
<br />
The happy ending to this story is that I'm not nearly as insecure as I was at 22. Not by a long shot. I know I have good things to offer my fellow beings. I believe I am likeable. I know I can't be likeable to everyone, and that's A-OK with me. But my default position is no longer, "Of course I'm not wanted!" <br />
<br />
The less-than-perfect part of this happy ending is that I still retain some of my self-doubt. Even as I write this, a little voice in my head is whispering, What if Paul Cartin googles himself and finds this blog and writes to you and says, Yo. Brittingham. I was NOT interested in you, I was NOT hinting that we should go out when we were in my car. Keep dreaming, you egomaniacal witch! How totally embarrassing that would be. Maybe you should keep this story to yourself. <br />
<br />
But a second voice is saying, Don't listen to her! See where your insecurities have gotten you before? This is a charming story that a lot of people can relate to. I'm sure even Paul Cartin himself would be nothing but flattered if he read it. You have nothing to fear. And stop calling yourself an idiot. <br />
<br />
So I'm sticking with the latter voice. It feels truer. But that bit about not calling myself an idiot? Nah. Can't let myself off the hook there.<br />
<br />
Idiot. Idiot! IDIOT!!!!Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-80629939460531997812007-06-28T09:29:00.000-04:002011-12-11T09:31:07.389-05:00Love Letter to Duran Duran<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-TxjeeJJuJl4/TuS-gqo6mtI/AAAAAAAAAEE/Bx7sUstMWPE/s1600/cmh%2Bdd.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em"><img border="0" height="320" width="269" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-TxjeeJJuJl4/TuS-gqo6mtI/AAAAAAAAAEE/Bx7sUstMWPE/s320/cmh%2Bdd.jpg" /></a></div><br />
It was perfect timing.<br />
<br />
Duran Duran came to play at the Hammerstein Ballroom on June 17, 2007. Perfect because I wanted to plunge into a chapter about my adolescent obsession with them, but I was having trouble.<br />
<br />
I just couldn't cross over into that state where the writing flows and the reality of the room around me simply vanishes. I knew I had a lot to say, but each time I tried to begin, words landed on the page with a splat. There was a complete lack of depth. It read like a recipe for orphanage gruel.<br />
<br />
I even tried changing things up – instead of typing, I wrote by hand in a notebook. It was agonizing. This was a subject of considerable passion – at least for my teenage self. Why<br />
did I feel so stalled?<br />
<br />
When I was in junior high, my best friend Charlene and I built our worlds around Duran Duran. They weren't just our favorite band; they were an entire (future) lifestyle, about<br />
which we dreamt constantly. During the final months of 8th grade, we co-wrote an entire novel in which we created characters based on Duran Duran (in our book, "Tibetan Red"), and idealized grown-up versions of ourselves. "Charli Austin" and "Madeley Fairchild" were private detectives who shared a four-story brownstone in Manhattan. Our book begins when they're hired to go on tour with Tibetan Red to protect its lead singer from the insanely jealous and murderous jilted ex of his supermodel girlfriend.<br />
<br />
When I went to see Duran Duran two weeks ago, (alone, because it's getting increasingly difficult to dig up a Duran Duran fan who doesn't have to stay home with the kids), I was<br />
transported back in time to 1983.<br />
<br />
Those familiar faces. Better known to me than my own, I think. Shadows falling slender beneath their cheekbones, the touchable slopes of their jaws. Impish grins branded onto my brain from hours of staring at pin-ups from Bop and Star Hits. Like a cozy sort of déjà vu, I revisited a parade of postures, scowls, plump lower lips, knock-knees, sharp elbows, boyish cheeks and funny walks that once represented burning hope. Five imperfect but undeniably cute Englishmen, a collective channel for my desire to grow up, be free, feel deeply, see the world, and have a fabulous wardrobe.<br />
<br />
I'm a great big dork and I know it, so I have no problem telling you this: during the concert, I decided to play a little game with myself. In the middle of "Wild Boys", I thought, "For the next two songs, I'm going to pretend the band on stage is not Duran Duran, but Tibetan Red, and that I'm actually Madeley Fairchild, and I'll really psyche myself into believing I'm living inside the book."<br />
<br />
And as I stood there, I morphed into Madeley Fairchild 2007, attending a Tibetan Red reunion concert. And an entire sequel to my junior high book spilled forth in my mind, like a hundred Technicolor daisies erupting from the ground in some psychedelic animation you'd see on Sesame Street.<br />
<br />
Madeley and Chaz divorce in 1986. They had been madly, deeply, lip-bitingly, gut-achingly in love, but she refuses to stand by and watch him coke himself to death. After the divorce, Chaz nearly has a nervous breakdown, but his best friend and band mate Tyler comes to his rescue and forces him into rehab in the nick of time. (Duranies, find the wink in that last line.) Tibetan Red disbands, and the London tabloids break the news in big block letters across their front pages. Women and girls from Texas to Tokyo weep. <br />
<br />
Years pass and one day, Madeley runs into Tyler. He has aged, but so has she. There is a joyous embrace and their cheeks ache from uncontrollable smiling. Intimate meetings in bistros ensue, with much reminiscing and rediscovering one another. Madeley ends up marrying Tyler, her true soul mate after all, who was once such a dear<br />
friend to her, and inarguably the best friend her ex-husband ever had. <br />
<br />
VH-1 proposes a Tibetan Red reunion. Madeley and Tyler now have to face Chaz as husband and wife. How will he react? How will Madeley feel about Chaz after all these<br />
years, even though she's in love with her new husband Tyler? Will those old passions be rekindled? Will they be rekindled in Chaz, too? <br />
<br />
I looked up at "my" dear husband Tyler on stage and smiled. I caught the eye of "my" ex-husband Chaz and saw him smile, and knew everything would be OK between us all. <br />
<br />
It was scrumptious. I must've had a ridiculous grin on my face. It was just like the old days. I was digging Duran Duran on dual levels.<br />
<br />
When I was fourteen I thought I loved the men of Duran Duran, personally and specifically, based on all their favorite things as listed in Superteen. ("Simon's FAVES!!!") But by high school I recognized them for what they are -- an entertainment product. Not my best friends. Not my boyfriends. Not necessarily even people I'd befriend under different circumstances. And my imagination and I have enjoyed them lustily – received double our money's worth. If I sound cold, make no mistake: I love Duran Duran. I love them for the music they've made, and the images they've created around themselves, because as a package, they've been a beloved template for my dreams.<br />
<br />
The morning after the concert I woke up and started typing like a madwoman – about Duran Duran, about Tibetan Red, about being young and discontented because I felt trapped in a bleak suburban existence and wanted to grow up so badly so I could move to New York City and be the Madeley Fairchild I knew I was meant to be.<br />
<br />
My brain was working faster than my fingers could type. The clouds parted; I was on a roll.<br />
<br />
There won't always be a concert to take me back, but I've got two boxes of diaries, scrapbooks and magazines in storage – highly efficient fuel for my time machine. When I need<br />
to get into the right mindset to write about, say, my pre-Duran preoccupation with S.E. Hinton and "The Outsiders", or my days performing in children's theatre, or my 5th grade fascination with the Holocaust, I'll have plenty of resource material.<br />
<br />
I can't wait to remember what I forgot.Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-563104338874316662.post-88178149276414417202007-04-26T09:32:00.000-04:002011-12-11T09:32:47.931-05:00My Dad, My Memoir, and Alec BaldwinEver since the Alec Baldwin story broke – that is, the voicemail recording of him verbally bullying his 11-year-old daughter, Ireland – there seem to have emerged two dominant points of view.<br />
<br />
There are those who think it was unacceptable and abusive for Baldwin to call his child an "ungrateful pig", to tell her "you don't have the brains or the decency as a human being" and threaten to "straighten your ass out when I see you…I'm going to really make sure you get it…I'm going to let you know just how I feel about what a rude little pig you really are".<br />
<br />
Then there are those who think everyone else is making far too big a deal out of the whole thing. Some folks debating the issue on Yahoo made the following comments:<br />
<br />
"Boo hoo! Parents talk shit to their kids. It's their right as parents," said someone self-identified as "But Seriously Folks". "My mom used to threaten to run away from home and leave 'you ungrateful little fucks'. I found it funny then and now. I'm well adjusted…for the most part…Man up, Ireland!!!"<br />
<br />
"DixieNormous" posted, "It's not like he beat or molest(ed) her. They are just overreacting."<br />
<br />
Alec Baldwin's biting hissy-fit reminded me of my own dad, and how he talked to me when I was growing up. And the debate around Baldwin's voicemail reminds me of arguments I once had with myself about whether or not to write a memoir.<br />
<br />
There was a time when I didn't think the obstacles I've had to overcome in my past were "tragic enough" to warrant a memoir. There were things about my upbringing I was upset about, but I suspected I might be overreacting. Family members told me so, sounding a lot like those people who think we bleeding hearts are overreacting to Alec Baldwin's verbal beating on his daughter.<br />
<br />
I certainly didn't think an insecure, needling father was a very big deal. Sure, I spent most of my childhood and adolescence avoiding the man, leaving every room he entered whenever possible. I was convinced he was inherently a little "off" and had serious anger issues, and I hated his guts for all of it, and in particular, for picking on me mercilessly. I saw him as a belligerent, edgy sort of crackpot ex-jock who emanated the specific and constant intensity of straining to hold back a punch.<br />
<br />
But in a world where people fight and overcome horrific diseases and live to write memoirs about them, who would care about my insignificant stories?<br />
<br />
Like when I was 19 years old, pulling on my jacket in the front hall of our seven-bedroom, three-story stone house (the one my friends jokingly dubbed "Graceland"), about to run out the front door to meet my date who was parked at the curb. My dad appeared from out of nowhere and decided to send me out into the world with some words of fatherly tenderness and wisdom.<br />
<br />
"You know, you really are a shrewd piece of work," he said bitterly. "You're out three and four nights a week. You don't really care about any of these assholes who come for you. You and I both know the only reason you go on all these dates is to get your hands on the free food."<br />
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The situation was transparent to me even then. My parents were losing everything at that point. My dad lost his job and couldn't get hired elsewhere. Our car was repossessed from our driveway in the night. We were all losing our home and living with a discomforting cluelessness about where we'd land next. Little by little my parents were selling off everything they had of any value – some of it sentimental, some things my mother had waited a lifetime to own: the cream-colored baby grand piano, her blue fox jacket; his gun collection, a Murano glass chandelier. For Christmas that year, friends of the family brought us a carload of industrial-sized groceries from a warehouse club so we'd have something to eat.<br />
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Clearly, my dad was terrified and humiliated at not being able to provide for his family. His machismo was taking a hit, and his way of coping was to make me into some kind of TGIFriday's whore.<br />
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But that wasn't anything serious, I thought. Who would want to read about that? It was so…well, normal. My parents hadn't died a violent death before my eyes when I was five. We weren't brewing club drugs in the basement as a family project. We weren't in the Witness Protection Program.<br />
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Not only would any memoir I'd write be painfully dull, but who could possibly care about me as a character when all I did was dwell on petty crap? Like the time when I was eight years old and my dad and I drove a friend home after she'd stayed overnight. When we got home he slammed the kitchen door behind us and spat at my mother:<br />
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"You won't believe what this cocky little bitch did!"<br />
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What? Wha--what had I done? I honestly didn't know.<br />
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"We dropped her friend off, and then all the way home, she sits in the back seat, like I'm her fuckin' chauffer!"<br />
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Who was I to feel anxious or broken-hearted about things that happened in upper-middle class suburbia? There were people with much worse fates in the world. I had a lot of nerve thinking my life was memoir material.<br />
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People have reacted strongly to Alec Baldwin's raging "ungrateful pig" voicemail. Enough of them have piped up to say, "It's wrong to talk to your child this way" to reaffirm that my stories are not just the attention-seeking sulkings of a spoiled brat.<br />
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There was a time when I needed to be angry – truly, blindingly, teeth-gnashingly angry – at my dad for being such a hotheaded, thoughtless prick. That's when I first became someone who'd want Alec Baldwin's balls on a skewer. However, I've cooled down a lot since then, enough to see the full spectrum of humanity in what happened in my earlier years.<br />
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These days, the temperature with which I regard my dad is closer to how the even-handed, middle-ground minority feels about Baldwin. More like Rosie O'Donnell, who had this to say on "The View":<br />
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"He's very much of a tortured father who feels alienated from his own child…(Basinger) defies a lot of court orders for him to visit the child, which I think is making him crazy. Not that that's an excuse."<br />
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I also agree with Rosie's usual polar opposite on "The View", Elizabeth Hasselbeck, who said, "Hearing something like that from your father could be potentially the worst thing you could ever hear."<br />
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In my case, I didn't do anything to deserve the crap my dad heaped on me (and we can't be sure Ireland deserved her dad's ire, either). But at least I can look at where my dad came from and acknowledge how he got to be so bullish and unmistakably unsure of himself. His parents were cold, critical and just plain weird. This helps me to keep a healthy perspective when I'm writing. It keeps me from falling into the "woe is me" trap that, once upon a time, I was so worried my work would fall into.<br />
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My therapist also contributed an important point in helping me realize my memoir is not mere sniveling. She was the first to suggest to me that all pain and suffering is relative.<br />
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"How do you know that the pain one little girl feels over her father calling her names doesn't hurt as much as the pain some woman on the other side of the planet is feeling because she's lost her son? What hurts one person deeply may be more or less affecting to another."<br />
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I'm not saying that the story of a kid being berated by her father is the most important thing in the world. But what I have to say about my experiences may someday matter to somebody else. Maybe my memoir will give a teen in a family similar to mine the tenacity to hang in there and become a well-rounded adult. Maybe my book will be read by a parent with a sensitive child, unaware of the ill effects of their harsh words and actions – and maybe they'll be moved to do things differently. And since my memoir isn't all about bleak dysfunction, maybe some readers will just be happily entertained – which in itself is a perfectly good reason for a book to exist, too.<br />
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Since the days before I gave myself full permission to write a memoir, I've read a lot of memoirs by others. I see how many books are published about realities of all kinds. In contrast to my earlier and erroneous beliefs, I now know it isn't necessary to have been raised on cat food or escaped from Turkish prison to have one's memoir published, read and even loved.<br />
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We should never stop ourselves from writing about our lives because we think we don't have enough misfortune or shock value to make it "worth it". There are many ways a reader may derive value from a story. And we should never delay an autobiographical endeavor because we're afraid the misfortunes we will write about might be whiny, shameful, or anything else we've been told we are. Let the readers read and decide.<br />
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Take it for granted now: you will be read by people who will be unsettled or miffed by your writing, who might even write venomous reviews about it. They might be the same people who think all children deserve a good braining with a two-by-four once in a while, just to keep them in line.<br />
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You will also be read by people who will identify with your story, perhaps even call it their favorite and write to tell you so. Maybe they're among the people who think Alec Baldwin was wrong for what he said. Some of them may even have the wisdom to feel sorry for him.<br />
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You will never win everyone's hearts. That's every memoirist's true story.<br />
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There's a place on the shelf for your memoir. And if you want to write it, don't delay for silly reasons like the ones I used to have. Just write. Claim your experience, claim your space.Kim Brittinghamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07064032465151752045noreply@blogger.com0