Why, Heidi Klum, Why?

I don't watch Project Runway. Anyone who has ever met me knows I get all my fashionable clothes as hand-me-downs from my best friend and all my unfashionable clothes from TJ Maxx and the local Goodwill. 

It seems nearly every blogger in my pledge class has gone style on me. Their blogs are hip, they have sections for fashion or home decor or what have you, and even though I know I would never want a section on Surrender, Dorothy for such things, there are days when I look at my blog and understand exactly why I am not financing my vacation home with ad revenue. 

AWKWARD SEGUE TO HEIDI

Since I don't watch Project Runway, I didn't realize that Heidi Klum kicked off this season by getting all nekkid for her ad campaign.

Heidiklum-naked-projectrunway9
This is what is accompanying my Blues Travelor on Pandora this morning. I looked up before my second cup of coffee and was all WHOA NAKED PEOPLE TOO EARLY IN THE MORNING.

And then my next thought was WHAT IN THE HELL DOES NAKED HAVE TO DO WITH SCISSORS?

WHY DID SHE WRITE ON HER ARM? IS SHE DOING A TRIATHLON WITH SCISSORS? IS SHE GOING TO RUN WITH SCISSORS? HAS SHE LEARNED NOTHING?

HER HAIR IS THE SAME IN EVERY PICTURE IN THIS AD CAMPAIGN. AND HER FACE. ONLY SOMETIMES SHE HAS CLOTHES ON AND SOMETIMES SHE DOESN'T.

WHY ARE THE SCISSORS LONGER THAN HER ARM?

WHY AM I SO IMMUNE TO NAKED HEIDI? SHE IS NAKED. RIGHT THERE. NAKED. THIS IS GROSS. I'M NO PRUDE, BUT SERIOUSLY CAN WE KEEP THE NAKED PEOPLE BEHIND SUBSCRIPTION-BASED PAYWALLS WHERE THEY BELONG SO MY DAUGHTER DOESN'T HAVE TO SEE HEIDI WITH HER BIG SCISSORS BEFORE 8 AM?

My thoughts this morning are in all caps. I am soo ready for vacation.

The Ghost of Winter Future
6a00d8341c52ab53ef0154340f4928970c-800wi.jpg

Every year I think summer goes too quickly. But this summer is passing with very alarming speed. In July, I asked where June had gone, and it was a sincere question. Now next week is August and BlogHer '11 and the week off I thought was so so far away and then after that the little angel will be back in school, and I'm sitting here staring at the calendar vaguely remembering trips back to Iowa and fireworks and watering plants and a few languid afternoons treading water at the swimming pool and little else -- it's an actual blur.

I sometimes wonder what's happening to my memory.

Clearly the problem is rushing. When I rush, I don't really live in the moment. I started out summer doing a great job of not rushing, but in the ensuing months, life happened and it all went ass over ankles out the window.

I had a dream last night I looked outside and it was sleeting. In my dream, somehow I'd missed my last chance at sailing and biking and Halloween and Labor Day and every fun thing about fall, and I was spitting mad that it was winter. (I hate winter. I try to be more loving toward winter, but it's a really tenuous relationship necessitated by my insistence on staying in the Midwest.)

I woke up angry and blinked and looked outside and realized it was already 88 degrees before 8 am, and I was happy about that. It is mind-meltingly hot, and it has been for weeks, and it will be 100 degrees today and 102 tomorrow and I'm GLAD. It means I didn't miss everything, and I still get to go to BlogHer '11 and then take a week off (blessed, sweet week off, I'll miss you Internet, but I won't be here the week of August 8 because clearly I need to live in the moment away from distractions) and have my end of summer. I still get to experience the evenings when the light turns gold and the air finally starts to cool off and the last few barbeques are enjoyed with friends and their end-of-summer, we-don't-really-tan-anymore glow.

This morning was all Marley's ghost for me. THANK GOD. I almost missed it.

A Different Kind of Anonymous
6a00d8341c52ab53ef0154340f4928970c-800wi.jpg

My flight out to LaGuardia was delayed by three and a half hours on Tuesday. Two hours in the Kansas City airport, forty-five minutes on the tarmac in Kansas City, and the rest sitting on the tarmac in New York. By the time I found myself in the taxi line, it was 1:30 a.m. and the line was at least sixty people deep. The temperature congealed above ninety degrees. I watched some people ahead of me laughing to each other, and despite my intention of keeping a good attitude, I couldn't wrap my head around how anyone could laugh at that point in the trip. I stumbled into my hotel room at two bells, texted Beloved and fell into bed.

The next morning I felt much better, despite having way less than my requisite amount of sleep and a half-functioning window unit air conditioner on the 16th floor. I even figured out in my haste booking the trip last week, I'd confused Midtown East with Midtown West in my favor and instead of having a twenty-minute walk, I had a ten-minute one. Two days flew by.

My story really starts when I tried to leave on Thursday afternoon at five. I walked out into a sweltering New York afternoon. The heat index was well over a hundred, and the haze seemed to be leaking out of everyone's pores. I found myself nearly in the street trying to catch a cab at West 43rd and Fifth Avenue, along with every tourist in New York City. I expected it to take a while. I've been to New York before; I lived in Chicago for fifteen months. I forgot, though, the helplessness I would feel when I realized after fifty minutes of standing on that street with my arm in the air that I might not get a cab, that I might not make one of the last flights back to Kansas City, that all the adrenaline I'd used up powering myself from the moment I found out last week I had to take this trip until that very minute might be for nothing if I couldn't get myself home in time to get up, unpack, repack and drive to my in-laws' house in Iowa on Friday morning.

I started to sense my defenses crumbling a little. Then I felt someone staring at me and looked over my shoulder to see a small blond woman with a very large camera click-click-clicking away. I scowled at her and turned my back on her, waving my arm harder, thinking if I could just get a cab I could get away from this weirdo taking my picture. She kept circling around me to get different angles as I tried to ignore her. Finally I looked right at her as she pointed her camera at me. "You aren't putting these on istockphoto, are you?" I asked in exasperation, pissed that talking to her required me to take my attention away from the cabs that kept rushing by with other people inside them.

She smiled. Her accent was thick, European. She tried to show me the photo. "It's just so typically New York," she said, as though that meant I should be happy to be featured. "These are really very good." I saw the desperation on my face in the photo. Yes, I thought. That is typically New York for me. Every time I am here I am worried I will never escape. I want to like New York and Chicago, I really do, but I am accustomed to big sky and big horizons, and the street feels so confined to me, so crowded. Instead of seeing it as a challenge, I always end up seeing it as an ant farm.

I abandoned my spot on the street and tweeted my desperation. My friend Karen told me to find a hotel and get in their cab line. I couldn't find a hotel. I was by the library. As I tried to cross the street, a cab finally slowed, and a minute later the cab driver was berating me for my stupidity in apparently not allowing twelve hours for myself to catch a cab and get to the airport at rush hour.

"What, you thought you'd just walk onto the street and get a cab?" he said.

"No, not exactly. I admit I was surprised it took 57 minutes."

"You're going to miss your plane, you know." I'd told him my flight was at seven. It was at 7:40.

We drove in silence for a little bit.

"Okay, it's not really at seven. It's at 7:40."

He laughed. "Oh, you thought you'd make me go faster?"

"Well, you thought I was stupid, anyway."

He laughed and laughed. "I think you will make your flight."

We cleared an accident -- lightssirenscarspeoplewavingarms -- and barreled over a bridge. We arrived at the airport at 6:30. I would've made the plane probably even if it was at seven, ironically. I made it through security faster than I thought I would, all of us stinking and sweating in the cattle line. I stood behind one of those ethereally thin young women who turns to the side at the last minute and you are shocked to realize she is at least eight months pregnant and you can't tell from behind.

The flight back home left on time from LaGuardia for the first time in my fifteen-year business traveling history. When I got back to my car at 10:15, I actually had to sit in the seat and pump myself up to drive the 45 minutes home, the last leg, I told myself, you can do this. It's the last part.

When I walked in the door at 11 on Thursday night, I thought of that woman and her camera and wondered if my photo would remain in her private collection or find its way onto the Internet, forever marking me as a cog in the New York machine, a typical scene.

If that was a typical scene, it makes me sad. Because I was nervous and annoyed and very, very sad at that moment, thinking I might miss my plane despite all my planning and three days of carefully orchestrated timing, despite the extreme energy it had taken me to plan the trip at the last minute, pull myself through the meetings with good cheer and quick decisions, navigate unfamiliar subways and streets late at night, sweat with the rest of the city -- that I might be undone after all that by the lack of a taxicab ... I hope that kind of quiet desperation is not stereotypically New York.

I went out to look at my flowers and tomatoes when I got home, even though it was dark. They bloomed quietly, the only sound the cicadas and tree frogs. Despite the oppressive heat, I could see stars. No one tried to take my picture. And I went back to being my kind of anonymous. The kind in which I realize people might try to take my picture if I go to BlogHer '11 or stand on a street corner in New York, but no one will here, because I am just not that interesting, not part of the scenery, and that is absolutely fine with me.

 


Ever since I started working on my YA novel (I'm still plugging, still plugging -- querying is The Suck), people have told me I should read Sarah Dessen. So I did -- see what I thought of What Happened to Goodbye at BlogHer Book Club!

She Passed.
6a00d8341c52ab53ef0154340f4928970c-800wi.jpg

I am preparing for a last-minute business trip (read: what, my toenails look like I live in a cave and I'm not sure what I have clean to wear), but today when I picked up the little angel from summer camp, she said:

"Mommy, I have a green band! I can swim in the big kid's pool!"

And we did a little happy dance around the parking lot.

And I told her over and over again how proud I am of her.

Then we went to swim lessons and made a bunch of extra sandwiches for lunches and picnic dinners at swim lessons while I am gone, and she helped me pack, and the Celebriducks had a show in the bathtub in which the Celebriduck Dorothy may or may not have sung an extremely off-key version of Over the Rainbow.

That's the best way I know to celebrate. Hope you're having a good week. Posting this week will most likely be bizarre as I attempt to navigate the NYC subway system on less sleep than I would prefer. This month is totally bizarre for me.

Also -- I saw all your comments about ladybugs. I went to Ace Hardware after swim lessons, but alas, no ladybugs. WE WILL PREVAIL. The search continues.

Reason for Return

The ladybugs I ordered from Amazon arrived a few days ago in the midst of a nose-clogging heat wave. I waited until the little angel got home to open them -- I was so excited and sure she would be, too.

We pried open the package to find a little plastic container filled with wood shavings and 1,500 dead ladybugs.

I shook the container, hoping some would crawl out from under the wreckage.

The little angel shook her head santimoniously. "Their legs are all curled, Mommy. They're dead."

I actually refused to believe this. "They can't all be dead."

I shook the container again.

"I told you not to order live things off the Internet, Mommy."

I stared at her. Since when is my seven-year-old lecturing me on purchase behavior? WTF?

I stalked inside and pulled up Amazon, determined to return the stupid dead ladybugs. Let them have their funeral at an Amazon warehouse. The Amazon return process is pretty amazing -- you fill out some stuff and a Fed Ex guy shows up with a return label and you just hand him the box. The problem is you have to select a reason for return. These were my choices:

Amazon returns
I chose "does not work properly."

Because they were dead.

But any of these would've worked, really. Different from what was ordered? Yes. Different from website description? Yes! Missing parts or accessories? Like a heatbeat?  YES! I could go on and on.

So now I guess I have to find some local ladybugs. Any ideas?

The Transformation of Chateau Travolta: Unexpected and Completely Random Home Improvements

"We're taking the truck."

"Why?"

"Because we're going to the Habitat for Humanity Restore. Why on earth would we not take the truck?"

Example #8,499 of Me Being Right

Beloved had a Groupon for the Habitat for Humanity Restore. That sentence alone is some crazy shit. Charities are on Groupon now? The premise is pretty much like Goodwill -- people donate stuff and they sell it and give all the proceeds to Habitat for Humanity. It's a giant junkyard -- nothing has been shined up unless it arrived that way -- and I am so totally going back to get some wood blinds as soon as I measure my windows.

While I was waiting for a huge cart (not a cart, more of what in Iowa we would call a lowboy), I spotted one of the workers putting a price tag on a sink.

A stainless steel sink.

With all of its hardware attached.

005
I let it sit on the ground for approximately FIVE SECONDS, because it was $40 and my old cast iron sink looks like this:

003
It's chipped. It's beige. It defies cleaning products. And it stinks.

I was wheeling this baby over when I heard my name being called. I looked around to see Beloved standing protectively over a Bosch dishwasher with stainless steel innards. It's beige, not white like I wish, but the old one threw ground-up bits of disgusting all over my dishes and looked like this:

001
New dishwasher  = $35.

So then Beloved walked over to the TV section and grabbed himself a huge TV for the garage for $15. We walked to the checkout. I pulled out the Groupon.

A woman approached me with something like rage in her eyes.

"Are you sure you want those?" she asked, eyeing my dishwasher and sink.

"Yes."

"Are you sure you're sure?"

"Yes."

Man, people.

So I hand the cashier the Groupon. It's $19 for $50 worth of stuff. Our grand total is $90.

Beloved piped up, ever the negotiator. He's like William Shatner, that boy.

"Can you cut us a deal?"

She eyed our stuff, eyed the Groupon.

"$27.50."

My mouth fell open. So we already paid $19 for the Groupon and another $27.50 is, um, $46.50 for a perfectly fine and functioning stainless steel sink, dishwasher and television?

As we were pushing our lowboy out to the truck -- YES, THE TRUCK! WE SHOULD TAKE THE TRUCK! -- two different people stopped me and congratulated me on my find. It may have been the shit-eating grin on my face.

It only took poor Beloved three trips to the hardware store and six hours to install them both. There was that moment where I had to borrow a large pipe wrench from a neighbor whom I've met once, but don't worry, I gave him two Summer Shandys for his trouble. Oh, and it might have been 110 degrees outside.

004
He loves me. He hates me. He loves me. He's handy!

But it's in, it's done, and it's so pretty.

009
007
Only countertops, cabinets, floor, dining room table and window treatments to go!

Thank you, baby.

 

Connection Between Eating Disorders and Postpartum Depression
6a00d8341c52ab53ef015433ac1e03970c-800wi.jpg

Hey, there! I wrote this post about connections between eating disorders and postpartum depression last week, but I didn't get the chance to tell you about it. Here's an excerpt:

Pregnancy brings on a lot of changes quickly -- both physical and mental. It's no surprise to me that women previously diagnosed with eating disorders are at a higher risk for postpartum depression, but recently Stephanie Zerwas of the University of North Carolina flipped it around and looked to see if women who came in for postpartum depression and anxiety had previously suffered from an eating disorder. Thirty-five percent of them had -- compared to seven or eight percent in the general population. Eating disorders, then, could be a risk factor for postpartum depression.

Stephanie is the associate research director of UNC's Eating Disorders Program. It comprises both research studies and treatment programs with inpatient, outpatient and partial hospitalization programs. Her special interest is eating disorders during pregnancy and postpartum. She and other researchers have studied 100,000 moms and babies in Norway, looking at moms who had eating disorders right before becoming pregnant and the later outcomes for both the moms and the kids.

Read the rest at BlogHer.com! Back tomorrow to tell you about last weekend's accidental home improvements.

He Finally Let Me Blog About This

It may have been six weeks ago now when I was finishing up some work in my home office around 5:30 pm. The little angel was watching iCarly like she incessantly does now even though she has seen every episode on streaming Netflix at least six times. Beloved was making dinner. Homemade french fries, to be exact. With a mandoline slicer that looked something like this.

Mandoline
I heard some obscenities, but quiet ones.

"What's up, babe?"

"I cut myself. Bad."

"Do you need to get stitches?"

"Yup."

I swear. I can't believe how calm the conversation was. I turned off the TV and stuffed a baffled little angel in the car as he went back into the house to grab a rag, which he wrapped around his pinkie finger.

I drove him to urgent care. When we walked in, I told the receptionist he was bleeding.

She looked at him. "Can you see bone?"

He nodded.

HE NODDED.

My mouth dropped open. They took him in the back behind a curtain, where they pronounced it too serious for urgent care.

At this point, I was really trying not to vomit and totally glad he hadn't shown it to me. And I was also getting pretty concerned about the pain that would kick in at any minute when the shock wore off.

Back in the car, I drove to the closest emergency room, which was packed to the gills with coughing people who looked like they'd been there for hours. He sat down, and I put a piece of paper in a black box, which seemed like quite possibly the most archaic method of telling someone your husband had sliced his finger off known to man.

I thought about giving him Advil, but dude, what if they gave him narcotics later? So I didn't. Argh.

By 6:30, the little angel was starving and Beloved insisted I take her to get something to eat. I poked my head back in the back, where the nurse eyed me disdainfully. "My husband is still bleeding," I said. Aren't ERs supposed to triage Massive Headwound Harry? Seems like every time I take the little angel to the ER for an ear infection, we get in line behind people currently losing platelets.

As I opened the door to go outside, the skies opened up with a downpour. So I ran to the car while the little angel stood under the overhang. I am not kidding, by the time I got to the car, I was literally able to ring out my t-shirt. I am telling you, this experience was fun for everyone involved.

We drove home, and I made three things of Easy Mac. In the car. Back to the ER. This time I brought reading material.

Still there at 8:30, when Beloved insisted I take the little angel home and give her a bath. So I did. And we went back when he texted and said he was behind the curtain. By the time they released him, it was around 10 pm and he had four internal stitches and four external stitches and an open wound because apparently he had lost the tip of his finger. Actually, I think I lost it, because the first time I came home, I put all the potatoes down the garbage disposal and threw away the evil slicer and most likely PART OF MY HUSBAND'S THUMB.

So that was like six weeks ago. Every time we go to the pool, he has to wear what I swear looks like a finger condom.

FingerCotsAll355px

 

Yet another product I didn't know existed.

Practice safe showering.

I could go on.

As the finger healed, the open wound grew shut and this crazy hood of dead skin started separating from the new finger. It was like he was molting. I was watching the entire series of Battlestar Gallactica during this process, and let me tell you, I was all this is how the cylons evolved. Totally creepy yet fascinating and really a miracle -- the healing process is pretty amazing.

Then the other night, it either fell off or he cut it off but he didn't tell me and I really don't want to know.

But it's almost healed. And now that pinkie is almost perfectly square at the top and a few millimeters shorter than the other pinkie.

So I bought him these.

Cutgloves
He wore them last night. Chop, chop!

Cutgloves2
The end.

In Praise of Erin Kotecki Vest

I started working with Erin, who's known in the blogosphere and perhaps circles other than Spain as Queen of Spain, in November 2009. We only got to work together for a few months before she had to go on disability because she kept having organs removed. I only wish I were making that up. Because she has lupus.

We never got to be face-to-face co-workers, since she lives in LA and I live in Kansas City, but I talked to her every day and we chatted about kids and balance and making lunches, and so it was such a huge shock when suddenly the chats were about hospitals and treatments and her having to pretty much stand still for a long time to get her health back.

She doesn't know I'm writing this, and she probably won't figure it out for a few hours because Erin's in Washington, DC, today, back in the White House where she belongs, talking policy and Twitter and all things social media. I'm watching eagerly from the sidelines hoping she feels well, hoping her meds hold, hoping she gets enough rest, hoping nothing goes wrong.

I hope it most of all because Erin deserves to play professionally again.

There are all kinds of people, and most people I know aren't crazy enmeshed with what they do for a living, but Erin is one of those people who makes me want to try harder because she is so incredibly passionate about what she does and what she believes in. I think in many ways though lupus is not the best thing to happen to Erin, Erin may be the best thing to happen to lupus, because if anyone can get the word out, she can.

BlogHer '11 is in a month, and I'm signed up to give blood at the BlogHer '11 blood drive. I'm hoping I can finally, finally hug Erin instead of carrying a picture of her head around on a stick.

  Erin's head
(Get your own damn badge this year, lady.)

 

I'm so happy for you today, Erin. I hope you're feeling your power. Because we are.