Monthly Archives: December 2011

A happy year’s end

Today, I am thankful, profoundly thankful, for this moment, this evening.  My news years eve plans include laundry, cooking (I have 2 minutes and 42 seconds before I need to get the tortilla espanola out of the oven), occasionally observing Milo and his friend play Wii upstairs, listening to a tribute album for a singer-songwriter that I listened to in college and that’s bringing me great joy (no link — it’s too place specific), a movie with Daniel, which we may not stay awake for, and feeling good and whole and cozy in my house and in my life.   I wish you much of the same, however it expresses itself, for this night and the coming year.

Eleven things I’ve learned this year

Today I am thankful that I have outrun a cold or sinus infection or winter crumminess for as long as I have.  I feel something starting to catch up with me, and it will probably hit me full force (wordpress already is pushing me there — it corrected “ful” to “flu” — flu force) very soon.  But that’s okay.  I’ve gone longer and harder on less sleep than ever before, save Milo’s first year.

I’m not entirely sure there are 11 things I’ve learned this year, but I like the idea of reaching for 11 (Can I resist this?  No I cannot.)

1.  I have uncommon and valuable professional skills. I never really understood why employers valued me as much as they seemed to.  I thought that I was doing work that anyone could do.  I can’t really my unique contribution at work, other than to say I’m a kind of utility infielder.  Everyone else seemed smarter, more creative, more aggressive (certainly more aggressive), better networked.  My skills seemed quotidian, homely.

This year, I have had a deputy on my grinding project, and she is invaluable.  She glues things together.  She is a very quick study.  She moves things forward that need to be moved forward.  She makes me look smart and prepared.  In fact she does this on every project she works on, not just mine — and that’s another thing: she can work on just about anything.  It turns out that senior people desperately need junior people like that.  I am “like that.”  Her skills and mine are very similar.  And it turns out that not everyone has those skills.

The transition from that kind of ideal junior person to a strong senior person is hard, and I haven’t finished it, but seeing a version of my skills from the other side has taught me that I bring, and have always brought, a great deal to my office.  I think that knowledge  and the ensuing confidence will help me with the transition.

2.  The word “now” is very important. I have not been putting as much effort into improving my marriage as I had hoped I would, but I have been observing it a great deal.  And whatever state my marriage is in is the state it’s in for now.  It won’t always be as it is.   That comes as a tremendous relief, even at this moment, when Daniel and I are getting along very well and being extremely gracious, loving and compassionate with each other.  We are very happy now.  In the future, we will fight again, and I will be angry or bored or careless or inattentive, and so will Daniel, and that will be the “now” at that point.   I used to (still do, sometimes) put so much energy into trying to work out whether we had a good marriage or a flawed marriage, a harder-than-most marriage or an easier-than-most marriage.  There isn’t “our marriage” full stop.  There is our marriage now.

This is a wonderful concept for me.  I want so much to give things a grade and freeze them (this is another one of the downsides of being good at school.)  This impulse feeds my terrible, happiness-eating habit of comparisons with others.  “Now” is my escape hatch, as are its kind sisters “today”, “sometimes”, and “yet.”  Today my body feels stiff and balance is impossible.  But there was yesterday, and there’s likely to be tomorrow, and my body will be different.  Any comparisons are with myself, and that’s kinder.  I’m not professionally where I want to be… yet.  Oh, that yet opens up all kinds of possibility.  It signals that I’m not done.  All these gracious words acknowledge the fluidity of relationships and situations.  This year I have learned that I have more to gain than to lose from fluidity.

3.  Not shopping is more fun than shopping. I’m looking forward to shopping with Daniel next week when we visit my parents (who live in a very good city for shopping).  But solving the puzzle of my closet has been really gratifying.

4. Corollary to 3: If I like then I’ve probably put a ring on it.  Forgive me: I’ve had that line in my head for weeks!  I already have all the important pieces I need, for both practicality and delight.  That means there’s no particular reason to buy anything else (unless it’s amazing), and even more important, no particular reason to save something for a better occasion.  Why buy an inferior version of something that I already have in order to preserve the good one?

5. Style comes from combinations, accessories, and silhouettes, not any particular item of clothing.  This is true for me, at my age, given where I go in the world, and my budget.  This is going to save me from a lot of mistakes — those pieces that seem like a bold and striking departure, but end up as awkward rebukes in my closet.  There are better ways for me to go a little nuts.  This is the most important lesson I’ve learned from Ines.

6. Corollary to 5: the worst mistakes I make are when I try to shift my silhouette dramatically; and bad proportions, rather than any one piece in particular, that make me look frumpy.

7. Corollary to 6: Pants shapes change faster than skirt shapes, so pants can date me more quickly than skirts.  I always look better in skirts than in pants anyway.  There are trends in skirt lengths, too, but a knee length skirt will always, always, always look good.  Pants change, subtly but constantly, in rise, in length, volume.  And pants are less forgiving to subtle but constant changes in my body.

8. If I take cost per wear seriously, I’ll pay more for tshirts than for dresses.  This may be my next fashion challenge: expensive tshirts and cheap dresses.

9. I love our dog.  I meant to write a whole post about this, but I am surprised that I love our dog.  I didn’t want a dog at first.  There were practical reasons, but mainly a dog is very clearly not a second child, yet it requires care, feeding, cleaning up after, and a general reorientation of life around it.  I thought that getting a dog would make me sad or angry because it wasn’t the object of care and attention that I so desperately wanted.  The best case scenario seemed to be anything more than peaceful co-existence.  But I love our dog, and even more surprising, our dog really loves me.

10. I should always do yoga, but I should also do something else.  Yoga has been my sole form of exercise for years.  (I walk a lot but not fast enough or far enough to count as exercise.)  I love it, and I love how much it teaches me about myself.  But I need something more aggressive, more vigorous, more difficult.  I went to another budokon class last week and I was completely overwhelmed and couldn’t keep up and it’s exactly what I need.  I need to give the competitive and aggressive part of myself a place to play.

11.  Fried eggs are indescribably delicious if you cook them over medium low heat.  It’s tempting to reach for profundity here, but it’s late, and this post has taken me almost two hours to write.  I think the theme that emerges from most of what I’ve written is:  love what I have even as it always changes.  Don’t try so hard to be perfect, or to define things, or to be a purist.  I can delight in surprise.  I can withstand changes that I don’t control (arghh!).  Value what I am and have, and let go, let go, let go of what I’m not and don’t.  For now.  Sometimes.

And yet, there is still a place for rules and instructions, and Mark Bittman says cook fried eggs on low to medium heat for no more than 3 minutes, and he is absolutely right.

 

 

 

Poem for Wednesday

Today I am thankful that Daniel has brought me to a life in which art and poetry are never far away.  Without Daniel, I would want to go to museums, and I would want to take my child (if I had one) to museums, and I would certainly want my husband to go to museums, but I would be unlikely to act on that desire.  It would have to wait until everything was cleaned, folded, organized, paid for, soaked, boiled, baked, and mailed.  One of the challenges and rewards (all in one) of life with Daniel is that he resists with all his might those sensible and orderly priorities.

Richard Howard has published some really lovely things in the last several months.  Recusant!  Ah…

The Love Canal Presaged

Dear Mamma, the great-coat has come,
whose use, and my gratitude for it, will surely cumulate
                     all winter long, if
       the cold has not caused me to need it until now.

However, all the last fortnight
floods of rain have fallen—the farms all look like lagoons,
                     and even College
       has turned picturesque, a sort of moated fortress,

or bastion, you might say, given
our fashion of flinging a recusant gauntlet to Progress—some
                     (though not you, mother)
       would declare it quite the Old Testament temper.

Only this morning, for instance,
the Slade Professor delivered us one of his great Jeremiads,
                     truly fierce it was—
       against the age and its fiendish idols, whereof

a dark illustration ensued:
a painting by Turner was lugged into Hall, apparently
                     one that Ruskin owned,
       sturdily framed and glazed, a landscape of Leicester,

we learned, the Abbey only just
discernible across a river. We stared while Ruskin read
                     (Henry VIII, IV ii)
       the tale of Wolsey’s death on the road to London:

At long last, with easy roads, he came to Leicester,
              Lodged in the abbey, where the reverent Abbot
              With all his convent honorably received him;
              So went to bed, where eagerly his sickness
              Pursued him still, and three nights after this
              He gave his honors to the world again… 

You may recall the lines. Myself
I did not know the phrase a little earth for charity, but here
                     he left off quoting
       to praise the idyll Leicester had been the days

Turner painted it: “If you like,
you may go there. Not I. Not now. Nor again, although
                     I’ll hazard a guess … ”
       slyly raising a paintbrush … what has it come to.

Right here, these stepping-stones across
the water have been replaced, of course, by a lovely
                     iron bridge…” black paint
       on the glass of the picture! “ … the color the stream

should have is supplied on the left
by the indigo-works … ” at once that side of the stream
                     ran indigo “… and
       on the right, by a soap factory …” dashing in

saffron “… they mix in the middle,
like curds and whey!” working the muddy mess together
                     with awful relish
       “… You surely see, this empty bit of heath is now

properly occupied … ” whereat
a scarlet banner bisected the picture, developing into
                     roofs and a red-brick
       chimney “… atmosphere made—so!” and a cloud of smoke

dismantled Turner’s sky. Whereat
the brush was thrown down, and the eyesore hauled off amid
                     a storm of applause
       (in former years he berated empty benches),

and Ruskin turned, frowning, to face
the civilization of England! I do not yet see his purpose
                     in citing the lines
       from Shakespeare; moreover, how he confuted all

science and geological
survey with the assistance of the college cook I have not
                     time nor wit to tell,
       but gratefully remain, your loving son Terence

whose father will have to explain
what “a little earth for charity” meant to Ruskin
                     (and the Cardinal).
       November, ’88
                               St. John’s College,
                                                             Oxford

This poem appeared in the December 15, 2011, issue of {The New Republic} magazine.

Closet archive 8

Today I am thankful for my home life and for the comfort it gives me.  I don’t often take as much comfort in my home life as it offers — I focus too much on the messes, the things left undone, the stains, scuffs, worn spots, paint chips and unravellings (actual and metaphorical).  But today, after a conference call concerning my all-consuming work project that left me shaking with anger for 30 minutes and too dispirited to do much work for an additional 90 minutes, I fell back on my imperfect home life and was very glad to have it.  I’ll come out fine in my own office from this upsetting turn of events — I’ve just never been treated so poorly and lied to so smoothly by people outside my company who are supposedly working towards the same goals.

Sal at Already Pretty had a nice post last week about fashion inspiration.   Sal’s more practiced and therefore more advanced at reading outfits and understanding what’s interesting her and how it corresponds to what she has.  But I’m getting better at it.  Hence, closet archive #8, inspired by this outrageously expensive brand of sweaters (yes, they are often shapeless and the color of rocks, but my sister in law gave me an Inhabit cardigan as a hand me down, and I love it), and an item in New York magazine about fuzzy sweaters.

The challenging item is the grey tunic.

Why I don’t wear it: When I got this tunic, it was a dress.  The tunic is the same, I am different.  In 1998, Daniel and I went on our first big trip together.  Friends were getting married in Rome, so Daniel cashed in a decade’s worth of frequent flier miles and we went to Rome, then to Naples, then to Capri.  (Daniel grandly remarked to others who were headed to Florence after the wedding, “We always go south.”  Yes, if “always” means “once.”)  Daniel bought this dress for me in Capri.  I was lean and lithe and had legs for days.  So of course wearing a sweater dress that was a only centimeter longer than scandalous made perfect sense.

Now, my body is different.  I am stronger and much more flexible than I was 13 years ago.  I have less of some kinds of endurance, more of other kinds.  I am softer in the belly and the thighs.  And I’m not quite as comfortable wearing a very short dress.  It used to feel effortless, now it feels like a lot of work.

Why I still have it: Capri, Daniel, legs for days.  This dress is my best souvenir.

What might save it: Renaming it.  It’s a tunic now!  And tunics seem like just the thing for me lately.  It’s fuzzy! And New York magazine says fuzzy is just the thing for everyone lately.   Friday, that was enough for me to pull this out of the closet and wear it with jeans, a tshirt, and ankle boots.

Poem for Wednesday

Today I am thankful for my feet.  No, really.  I don’t have bunions, and I can spread my toes out wide for yoga and walk comfortably for long distances (well, until my back starts to bother me, but that’s different).  I can feel grounded and solid when I need to.

This poem appeared earlier this week in one of the yoga newsletters I still get (I only unsubscribed to the one that made me feel bad).  I normally don’t like poems that are so didactic, but it spoke to me when I was having a bad bout of envy, discontent, and a tinge of misanthropy.

The Guest House 

This being human is a guest house.
Every morning a new arrival.


A joy, a depression, a meanness,
some momentary awareness comes
as an unexpected visitor.


Welcome and entertain them all!
Even if they’re a crowd of sorrows,
who violently sweep your house
empty of its furniture,
still, treat each guest honorably.
He may be clearing you out
for some new delight.


The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
meet them at the door laughing,
and invite them in.


Be grateful for whoever comes,
because each has been sent
as a guide from beyond.

Closet archive 7

Today I am thankful that I was calmer and more focused at work, and that I recovered my closet creativity.

Once I wrote about my unattractive insanity, it abated.  I feel like that post might have been off-putting to readers.  I am not the best judge.  One of my favorite New Yorker features, in fact the thing I remember most about the first time I ever read the New Yorker, is On and Off the Avenue, which is a brilliantly annotated list of stuff to buy in Manhattan.   I love it because Patricia Marx, who writes it, plays it straight, even though you can tell that she’s plenty capable of 10,000 words of social commentary.  Instead, she’ll use a perfectly chosen 10, and that’s all she needs.  I also find myself taken by the What I Wore column in the NY Times, even though it’s a little creepy to read about what rich women wear, and they all sound alike after a while.  Except this one, which is my favorite.  One day, I’ll do a real-life version (Sunday: I had to unload the dishwasher and do 5 loads of laundry, so I didn’t change out of my Lands End pajama bottoms and 10-year-old half marathon t-shirt until noon.  Then I pulled on some uniqlo jeans to go to Target, and wore the same t-shirt because I just couldn’t be bothered to change.)

Anyway, when I stopped craving and stalking and filling my head with what I didn’t have and could get, I started to see, again, what I had.  (Yes, that’s also a metaphor.  It’s easier with clothes.  I’ve written that before.)

And thus, closet archive 7.  (There’s no closet archive 6, by the way.  I accidentally named two posts closet archive 5.)

(Milo was my photographer.  He did a fine job.  My iPhone camera isn’t that great.)  The challenging item is the beige (I prefer “camel”) cashmere sweater.

Why I don’t wear it:  The sweater is square and baggy, and a little bit too big.  Camel is a tricky color for me.  I’m kind of camel-colored myself, so I can look oddly monochrome when I wear it near my face.  Mono-blocking isn’t supposed to include skin and hair.

Why I still have it:  It always seemed really dumb to let go of something so classic.  The cashmere is exquisite quality.  The tag is long gone, so I don’t know where it came from or how old it is, but I’m sure it was fantastically expensive once.   My dad found this sweater for me in a Goodwill at least 15 years ago, maybe more.  That was before cashmere was available at the Gap and Target, and he was so proud of his find.  Now, my dad has at least a dozen cashmere sweaters from Goodwill.  He wears them like sweatshirts.

What might save it:  In my weeks of obsession, I noticed that slouchy, boxy, unfitted sweaters are extremely fashionable.  I can fit a shirt underneath this sweater, and mitigate the beige-out.  I also love the combination of black and camel.  And then there’s the power of sentiment.   When my dad gave it to me, it felt like a wonderful luxury, and as momentous and old-fashioned as receiving a string of pearls.  I’ve had it for so long, I’d miss it if I gave it away. It feels like something I’m supposed to have, whether or not I wear it.

What I did when I wasn’t blogging

Today I am thankful that I treated myself with great gentleness and indulgence.  I went to yoga class at lunchtime today.  I went to a new coffee bar with James, where I discovered a “flat white” (somehow it’s different from a latte.  It was divine).  I treated myself like someone who needed a different kind of day — I created that kind of day.

I notice that when I don’t write, I lose the connection to what I’ve written here.  I have figured out so many things — or rather, a few things many times over.  When I’m not in this space, I forget that I’ve figured them out.  A lot of me is written down here.  I’m sure that one of the reasons I’ve been feeling so scattered and uncomfortable (and I didn’t realize I was feeling unable to achieve comfort) is that I was separated from this record of myself.  I stopped narrating my own life to myself, so it felt fragmented and scattered.  (I am a traditionalist about narrative.  I need it.  I think all humans need it.)

That said, I am thankful that I didn’t entirely lose the thread of myself.  I made sure I was eating well.  When I was able to do yoga, I did a lot of grounding hip openers and, surprisingly for me, a lot of backbends.   If you’re a yoga person and you’re wigging out, do hip openers.

And now the fun stuff… I have been internet shopping as if I could browse and click to world peace.  Or rather, I have been browsing and clicking, not buying.  I have been swept up in these surges of intense, sequential obsessions.  Lately — and by lately, I mean, in the last 10 days or so — it’s been: Clare Vivier bags (I still want one, or two, a clutch and a tote, even though the clutch is totally impractical); an MZ Wallace wallet (still want one of those, too, and didn’t even know I was craving a wallet till I saw one on sale); a red infinity scarf (the obsession never landed any place in particular); just about any dress from the   from the Adam 60% off sale (the no returns policy saved me); which led to a cascade of dress obsessions, including several black and red dresses and this jacket from the Boden temporary 30% off sale (I dithered, the sale ended, and the best red dress is sold out in my size); and  this dress from Garnet Hill (is it maybe just too sensible?); And then, the Anthropologie catalog was full of goodies (The dress I’ve fallen out of love with a bit, but I just might get that scarf if it goes on sale.  It’s pretty amazing).

When I look at that list now I realize I was going a bit mad.  It’s dizzying and slightly sickening.  I don’t want to think of how many hours I spent poring over website descriptions, trying to convince myself that in fact I did have the money, or that I could find a better (washable, returnable) version of whatever I was looking for.  No financial harm done, but a lot of time lost and brain cells set aflame when they needed to be cooled off.   I’ve started keeping a wish list folder with pages torn out of magazines and catalogs, and it’s a very good way to realize that my wishes are pretty transient.  This spate of insanity usefully reinforces that.  Desire rarely can survive six weeks, or even six days.

I suppose I can be proud of myself for resisting the sales, even if I couldn’t resist the pursuit.  And I didn’t resist everything.  I bought  a pair of good, expensive black tights that I’ve wanted for a year and some black fleece-lined leggings because they sound so cozy and so good to wear to walk the dog when it’s cold outside, and a couple of leather belts on a very good sale.  Ines would approve!  But even typing that now makes me feel kind of woozy and drunk. And embarrassed.  I’m dithering over hitting “publish.”  Of course, that means it’s time to hit publish.

 

 

Thanks, Susan

How lovely to be asked to come back.  I was just thinking myself that I needed to write something.  I am not feeling grounded, and writing is  good way to ground myself.  Susan asked for 50 words or so — I can do that now, but not much more.  Daniel and I haven’t had 60 good minutes in a row together since Tuesday, and a late dinner awaits.

Why haven’t I been here?  Work — I am mired, mired, mired in a project, THE project, that has shadowed so much of my writing for months (since March at lest), and it is a spigot stuck in my vitals that drains my energy.  I have put myself on a roller coaster with this project, and I need to get off the carnival ride, and focus intently for six weeks, take a breath and focus again for another six, and be done with it.

Exhaustion — related to work, but also to, oh, everything.  There’s been not enough time to catch my breath.  I am making worse by mindlessly surfing the internet and further depleting myself with relentless yet ever-shifting obsessions.  For my next post, I should list, with photos, all the things I’ve simply HAD to have  in the last two weeks.  I know this is a reaction to stress, and it would be good to snap out of it.

A feeling of nothing to say — which is never to be trusted.  Writing generates its own energy.  I have wonderfully or painfully written my way into something to say many many times before.  I had some moments, even hours, over the last several weeks of being full up with joy at what I have, but then the counterrevolution set in.  That’s worth writing about, and I will, again.

Okay, that’s 294 words.  It’s a start.  A re-start.  Thanks, Susan.