Sep 202011
 

By the time I realized that it was pissing rain the mini was already pointed toward the groc1 and really, how stupid would it have been to give up the trip just because of a little damp? Nevertheless the weather took its toll on my disposition to the point that half a mile from my house all I could think of was the sodden trod into the store and the damp drive back home, bags half-drowned and hair all a’frizz.

From a block away I saw him, alone on a sidewalk near the local university dorms. Poor sap, I thought. How miserable he must be, trying to get home in this weather on a skateboard. It flashed through my mind to offer him a ride but he was going the wrong way and there was no seat for him in the car considering how much space my massive bad attitude took up.

And then I was close enough to make out his expression. Head back, upturned to the rain with streams soaking down into his clothes and on his face a look of pure, unbridled joy.

A long time ago I would have been just like that young man, minus perhaps the skateboard. I would have walked home umbrella-less in the rain with bliss on my face despite the music in my head. I would have smiled like an idiot at the sheer pleasure of being alive in a downpour on a cool mid-September day.

Where did that person go? Does anyone remember her? Would she, if time behaved differently, recognize the minivan driver stopped at the light furiously sullen at having to grocery shop in the rain? Hellraisin understands, and not only because we went to the same university half a lifetime ago and no doubt ran into each other in any number of midwestern early-autumn squalls:

We weren’t always middle-aged suburban moms. Once, a long time ago, we were just ourselves. The thing about getting older is, you never stop being the person you once were. Cut down the oldest oak you can find*, and you will always be able to count on its stump each layer of time and growth to the sapling that had lived within. This is true about people, too. Under the layers of maturity and responsibility—the grey hair, creased brows, the mortgages, the marriages and sensible clothing, our younger selves peer out and wonder how we got here, and why nobody recognizes us anymore.

It’s been on my mind so much this year, the magical year of turning 42, to wonder how we got here. How did it go so fast from my first apartment, which rented for the queenly sum of $165 a month including everything but phone to now, where $165 won’t touch the groceries required to fuel children who demand the constant intake of food from the moment they arrive home from school until dinner, which they eat with great lust, and who would then snack even more right up until bedtime if I let them? How did I get here? How far has twenty years brought me from joyous walks in the rain? And in twenty more years, will I even remember I was once that girl?

  1. The grocery store []
 

Through the miracle of the internet I was reconnected with a neighbor whose family I barely knew years and years ago. Never mind that we’d exchanged but a handful of words even when our apartments shared a wall! In my first flush of Faceook enthusiasm I happily accepted his friend request which was followed by near-instantaneous irritation as my wall filled up with hand-wringing over the infiltration of secularists into society as well as  paeans to the likes of Rush, Hannity and Limbaugh. My finger itched above the delete button more times than I care to admit but I never pressed it, in large part because he’d just become a father and I go all melty inside at images of babies whose ejecta I am not responsible for tidying.

And this child…well. From the very first picture you could tell there was something special about him. He looked otherworldly, like the offspring of an archangel and a high-elf, conceived in the æther and yanked into the everyday world only very unwillingly. He was utterly beautiful. He just didn’t seem quite right.

I wish I could say that the impression I garnered from his hours-old pictures was wrong. I wish, despite my abhorrence for his father’s politics, that he was now a toddler babbling and darting with the energy of five cocker spaniels rolled into a twenty-pound package of sticky enthusiasm. Instead he has endured one hospitalization after another, one surgery after another to the point that every problem fixed seems to set off a chain reaction of three more. It is heartbreaking to watch even from such a distance as is provided by Facebook. I read my acquaintance’s updates and the responses of his friends, almost to a one referencing the power of prayer and the certain knowledge that faith will get them — all of them — through.

What do you do in a situation like this? What can any non-praying person do? I took my fallback approach which was to match restaurants in his current hometown to ones also in mine; finding a suitable candidate I bought a gift card and sent it with a note to the address attached to his Facebook profile. When ill the last thing I want to do is plan a meal, cook a meal, then clean up after a meal and I can only assume that others feel the same — only a billion times more when it’s not the flu but is instead a perilously sick baby.

I completely forgot about it until, during a week in which I noted that the child had been admitted to the hospital twice for issues which seemed increasingly terrifying, my acquaintance messaged me his thanks for the gift. How are you doing, I asked him. Is there anything at all I can do to help?

“Not really,” was his answer, and quickly was it followed by the stark message that he was having trouble keeping faith when everything that could go wrong was doing so, spectacularly. “I don’t think life will ever be enjoyable again, for any of us,” he said, and even insulated by hundreds of miles and years of separation and the whole goddamn internet, my heart broke.

How he carries on I do not know. He works in a church. His entire family are believers. I’m absolutely certain that they’re all praying their hearts out for parents and child but is anyone close to him ready to hear that he’s losing faith in God? What would they say if he did?

Like I could do any better. It’s terribly unfair, for all of you, was the best I could manage, although it crossed my mind to be more blunt. Pray if it helps, I wanted to say, but a blank and pitiless universe will give back no solace. God isn’t ignoring you, or at least he is not ignoring you any more than he ignores anyone. But I doubt he was ready to hear that. What Christian parent to a gravely ill child would be? And how monstrous would I have been to suggest it?

A god who will let a sick baby suffer or a god who has forsaken us all equally. Cold comfort in either option, but every so slightly less cold in the latter.

——-

Cold comfort for change

Aug 252011
 

It astounds me to think how very little I take care of myself in comparison to the care I take for the other people in my life; also, how bleeding hard it is to change this habit. Things were better, I think, in the hazy mists of time before my first child was born. Not that I can really remember! Twelve-years-before-three-children was so long ago! But then I did, I think, manage to practice the sort of care that resulted in the bare minimums of adequate nutrition and kind (mostly kind) self-referential thoughts.

But as a mother I have utterly failed at these tasks. I have cooked balanced meals for them while subsisting on cold clotted bites of tortellini shoved in over the sink. I have gone broke buying pyramids of bright produce that never pass my lips. And I have corrected the merest whisper of a hint of my offspring using the pejorative “stupid” while at the same moment — the exact same moment! — screaming it silently to myself.

This summer I’ve felt more stable than I have in years; the combination of right1 medication, plenty of sun and distance from difficult relationships has given me time to think. How could you not? How could you float five times a week in a peaceful pool with sun pouring down and your children safe and not think healing thoughts? I’m more grateful than I can say that I live in a town with such a body of water mere blocks away and the resources to scrape together the cash for a family pass. I am profoundly grateful.

At the same time I made a site that features vegan and vegetarian food found in Montreal. Looking at the images made me so dizzy with desire that I went on a quest to figure out ways to trick myself into putting more nutritious foods into my piehole; eventually (via paths too perilous and convoluted to retrace) I ran across a recipe for a smoothie made from spinach.

I resolved to try it. Pretty sure my thought-process was as such: That is revolting2. We’ll try it once and it will be so vile we’ll never have to eat a vegetable again. Oo-rah. With a wink and a nod I gathered the ingredients: dauntingly large bag of spinach, ice, milk and bananas. Carefully I layered them into the blender while my eldest watched, aghast. “You’re going to drink that?” she asked. I nodded. “And it’s a smoothie?” I nodded again. “But it’s green.”

Do you want to try it? I asked, but she shook her head in horror. The little ones wandered in just then; they sipped and were delighted until they were informed of its contents. And then I took a swallow, and it is no exaggeration to say that I went weak in the knees. My body said yessssss in a way that was nearly orgiastic. I drained the glass and immediately wanted more, which makes me wonder how very badly I needed whatever mojo that smoothie held.

I drank three that day; the next I had two in my system when it came time for a date. Hours of energetic sex later I headed home, starving half to death. In the past I would have stopped for tacos or a burger but all I could think of then was green, thick and green and more green. I am appalled that I have taken so little care of myself that drinking ground-up leaves makes me almost die of joy. I am just appalled. But if it’s what my body needs, I will provide.

Does a Green Monster taste like spinach? Is it like salad, pulverized? No. A thousand times no. Banana, my friends, covers a multitude of tastes, and spinach itself is really quite mild. As I’ve experimented I’ve added other things as well, most notably a fat dollop of almond butter. Oh my god. Almond butter.

I am determined not to let the peace of this summer slip away. My children are all of them in school full-time now, and by Science this must let me have the chance to do some hard-core self-care. Daily jaunts to the pool are coming to an end but I still have a porch. I can still sit on it and absorb the sun3. My picture-taking project has continued apace; inspired by the lovely photography on Vegan Montreal and other food-tastic sites I have resolved to add to it images of the foods I prepare for myself. I know! How almost tragically cliché! But committing — even for a short time — to memorializing what I put in my mouth forces me to take more care. If you put it in a picture, it probably won’t be the last three cold tortellini scraped from the bottom of the pot. Is all I’m sayin’.

This is what motherhood has done to me, and it is both a miracle and a burden: It has forced me to re-parent myself. It has made me question every day my assumptions and then make corrections. It is terribly difficult and at the same time revelatory. I don’t know how I’m doing it, and yet I keep on doing it.

So — who’s going to try a Green Monster with me tomorrow morning?

  1. At least at this moment []
  2. I bet that is where some of you are at right now, amirite? []
  3. In fact I am doing so right this moment. It is lovely. []
Aug 162011
 

Note: I wrote a piece for My Name is Me. It was not selected1 so I will share it with you below. After you’re done, please go read this post.

I would love to live in a world where the wearing of a button which proclaims “I love butt-sex!” attracts no more attention in the grocery store than would one throwing support behind Team Edward. Unfortunately we do not yet live in that world, or at least I don’t.

As a teenager I was the strange bookish kid in a teenytiny town where any oddity was seen as a moral failing of oneself and one’s entire family. When that family overflowed with unchecked mental illness and sexual abuse, and when psychiatric help was impossibly far away, and when pastors and school counselors could not be trusted to keep confidentiality, the only options I saw were gouging lines into my legs with supersharp embroidery scissors or transferring dire thoughts out of my head and onto paper. A series of spiral-bound journals stacked up; these I would sort through from time to time, committing the oldest to flames. Even then I had plans for my work’s anonymity. I’m keeping these for a friend, I practiced saying in preparation for the day my mother would stumble upon my cache. Or It’s only fiction.

Eventually I broke free but the journals kept on coming. I’d write a stack then burn a stack, a pattern repeated through college, through my early married life, through the births of two children. But when that second child was a year old and my marriage was a tragedy wrapped in a pretense inside a torrent of seething resentment, I decided the content was too hot for paper pages. Thus was born my blog. Into it went not only the anger and frustration of dealing with (by then) three tiny children and a checked-out husband, but also all the sex I’d pushed down due to ridiculous, crappy parenting and throughout my entire marriage.

Lost amongst billions of other web pages, why, I thought, would anyone read mine? I’d forgotten one crucial fact: People like to read about sex, especially if it is written well — and once separated there was sex a’plenty, written as well as you’d expect from someone who’d spent her formative years hunched over notebooks with pen in hand. My readers cheered me on through new-found singlehoood, through dates, through explorations tentative and audacious in areas I’d previously only imagined — or seen in porn. The bolder my writing became the gladder I was that I’d made the decision to write anonymously, because while I was most sincerely enjoying my sextoys, my silicone lube and my buttsex, I felt fairly confident that my neighbors would not be so appreciative.

I am absolutely comfortable having shared nearly six years of my adventures with the world, but if those exploits were tied to my legal name they would cease to be shared. They would instead forced upon the people who share my name, and that’s just not fair to them. Should my pre-teen be teased in math class because her mom is, by society’s standards, a great big slut? Should my former husband have to endure speculation about his role in his ex-wife’s sexuality? I’d love it if everyone in the world were so secure with hir own boundaries and the boundaries of others that they could differentiate between my informed sexual choices and what those choices say about the character of the people in my life (read: little to nothing). So many of us can’t do that. We assume that the sins — the perceived sins — of the mother somehow pass down to her daughter. Or up to her parents.

I count among my friends and associates in online anonymity: educators who have too many times been confronted by parents angry that they helped their children receive honest, comprehensive sexuality information; BDSM enthusiasts whose exes would erroneously assume that an affinity for rope magically transforms one into an unfit parent; and sex workers who face online attacks that have grown even more relentless in the wake of Porn WikiLeaks. Sexbloggers, especially female sexbloggers, report falling victim to a phenomenon wherein people assume those who write about sex are also widely (and indiscriminately) available for sex, which is quite often the opposite of the truth. I know parenting bloggers who simply don’t want that one unbalanced reader to show up at the playgroun. These people have the right to speak truth about their lives without fear of harassment.

We all do.

Maybe some day I will be judged not on the sexual acts I practice (or with whom I practice them) but instead only on the quality of my character. Until then, I’ll talk about my colorful dating life (and buttsex) anonymously. I’ll be aag.

  1. small sob []
Aug 112011
 

For nine months my heart seized every time I heard sirens on my street because each scream convinced me that he’d finally made good on his wish to die.

He was my master first and my friend later. He was my Bill. I loved him so much; I loved him in every way I could think of considering that we were married to other people and never once touched in a manner that could have been seen as inappropriate. When after knowing each other for two years he came out to me as trans, I only loved him more.

The ‘net was still young but my dial-up modem eventually wheezed its way to sites that taught me what trans meant, and what issues someone who identified as he did was likely to face. Over the course of several months I watched with a thrill of wonder and pleasure as he cultivated gentler movements, a softer voice, longer hair. I learned the name he’d called himself in secret since he was a child. He tried on my shoes.

It would have been a miracle if he’d have been able to carry through with his plans but he was married to someone who could not have been any more different from me. She was in no way ready to deal with a transitioning spouse and he was in no way willing to give up his marriage. Thus began a period where he talked of nothing but death: his plans, his equipment, the effect he wanted it to have on his wife. Frantic, I demanded that he hand over all his razor blades and ratted him out to his wife and therapist. The latter did what she could. The former posited vaguely that his mood was bound to improve once the season changed. I wrung my hands and listened for the phone to ring after every siren.

Eventually he reached the conclusion that an intact marriage was the most important goal. He cut off his hair,  re-grew his beard and adopted an attitude of such insufferable assholery that I could take no more and began calling him on his shit. It was at that point that he removed from his life the people who had been the most accepting of his desire to transition. Including his therapist. Including me.

With the perspective of many years now I can forget about the pain of losing the relationship and remember only what he1 taught me, the tiniest fraction of which is this: Jokes at the expense of trans people just aren’t funny, and so when one popped up on a board I frequent on this site — a site which, mind you, is dedicated to the free exploration of consensual sexuality — I sent off a note to the comment’s author.

Who happened to be an assistant moderator on that particular board, a fact which I pointed out to him in my note. What example does it send to the rest of our members? I said. How do you think your comment would make a trans person reading our boards, or considering joining, feel? Would they feel welcome, I asked, and to his credit he immediately agreed to remove the “joke”. But then he spent the next half-hour arguing with me about it. “I’ve got black friends, Asian friends, gay friends,” he said, “and they all think my jokes are funny.” And “If someone’s going to be offended over a little joke they don’t belong in our group.” And “If 99 people think it’s funny and only one is offended, I’m going to go with the majority.” And I argued back despite being in tears because with every word he said I could only hear sirens screaming down my street.

We left off with polite words but when I checked back hours later not only was his original “joke” still there but it was also echoed and expanded upon by another group member. This time I went straight to the top; I made my case to the group’s main moderator with the final promise that if “jokes” like those were allowed to stay on our boards, I wouldn’t. I cannot watch this, I told her. I cannot by my silence give the impression of approval.

She gets it. The jokes are now gone. I won this round, but I have a feeling the next one won’t be so easy. I have a feeling that very soon my affiliation with that group will need to end, because I won’t — I can’t — sit by while  dehumanizing “jokes” at the expense of already marginalized communities go unchecked.

It’s a sin that somehow
Light is changing to shadow
And casting its shroud
Over all we have known

  1. I have used masculine pronouns throughout as this is where he ended up. I am not sure if this is the right answer in a situation like this but it feels the most respectful []
Aug 012011
 

Almost my entire life has been spent in cities large enough that the freaks, the weirdos and the socially inept1 can both blend in and find ample company. The exception was the time between my eighth grade and senior years when I lived in a town smaller than some big-city high school classes. This was a benefit in that I could participate in just about every activity I set my heart on; also I graduated first in my class. It was a drawback in that every damn fool had to know every other damn fool’s business; also I graduated first in my class. Small town life in no way prepared me for the rigors of even a moderately challenging state university, and the unwelcoming nature of my particular stretch of the prairie meant that everyone looked the same, worshiped the same, had sex the same. Or at least gave off the appearance of such.

I was taught to hold myself apart from the doings of the town. Other people were trashy, low-class, hillbillies. Slights from decades in the past prevented socialization in the present, and darn near everyone under consideration for my friendship2 was found to be sorely lacking. Oh the stories I heard! The tales of cousins’ thefts, of grandparents’ drunkenness, of former-sisters-in-law’s-step-sons’ cheating. It was the stuff of legend and operetta, writ small. I believed every word of it, of course. When the people providing your food and shelter tell you what to think, you think it — or risk going without.

But time passes. People I graduated with have by now carried their reproduction out to the second degree; they show off grandchildren older than my children on Facebook. And in the past couple months the other extreme also has flashed across my screen in the form of a handful of deaths of my classmates’ parents.

It amazes me to see what people say in these situations, which is really just a way of saying that it amazes me how much these dead were loved. Page after page of condolence scrolls by and I marvel at it. Of course we glorify the dead. It’s unavoidable. From the grave they have no more power to hurt; it is therefore safe to speak of their strengths without fear of encouraging their faults. Nevertheless there is a disconnect in my mind between the overwhelming lauds and the messages I remember hearing.

These dead were nothing more than trash to my family, and yet they were loved. They were loved — are loved! — by my townsfolks, who now share tales of their generosity, their kindness, their openheartedness. They speak of them so highly I wonder what I missed in not knowing them more.

And I wonder what I’ll read when my own parents pass. Will they be glorified or ignored? What sort of impression have they, so negative toward most, garnered for themselves? And will it be more upsetting to read of their glory, or nothing at all?

  1. All three groups of which I count myself a proud member []
  2. or more []
Jul 272011
 

We are driving to the swimming pool.

Kid 1: My feet are older than I am.

Me, fiddling with CD player: Mmm?

Kid 2: Your feet aren’t old.

Kid 1 (K1): My feet aren’t old, but they are older than me.

Me: Wait, what?

K1: My feet are older than me.

Me: Do you mean that your feet were born first? That they came out of my stomach first?

Kid 2 (K2): I grew in my birthmom’s stomach.

Kid 3 (K3): Yeah, I grew in my birthmom’s stomach too.

K2: Your birthmom is the same as my birthmom.

K3: I know that. Why did you think I didn’t know that? My birth dad is [xxxxx], but he’s not your birthdad.

K2: I know that. We don’t know my birthdad.

[K2 and K3 bickering continues.]

Me, mentally preparing lecture about typical logistics of birth: Do you mean that your feet came out of me first?

K1: No, gross. Wait, did they?

Me: No, your head came out first.

K1: Oh ok. But my feet are still older.

Me: How so?

K1: Well, my feet grew before I was born, right?

Me: Okay?

K1: And I wasn’t really me until I was born, right?

Me: Oh, I see what you mean. I guess if you count it that way then yes, your feet are definitely older than you are.

K1: What other way is there to count it?

Me: Well, most people who are interested in logic and science say that a fetus turns into an actual baby around the point when it can live independently, outside the mother. Most pregnancies last about forty weeks, but some babies who are born early, at around twenty-two or so weeks can also live. So by your reasoning, your feet are five or six months older than you are.

K1: Well I believe in science and logic, so that’s what I believe.

Me: Yes, that’s what our family believes. But not everyone thinks that way.

K1: Why wouldn’t they believe that?

Me: Some people believe that it’s a baby from the moment the sperm and egg come together.

K1: But it doesn’t even have organs! It doesn’t have a brain, or a heart!

Me: You can see a fetus’ heartbeat by the time the woman is eight weeks pregnant. I saw yours then.

K2: Did you see mine then?

Me: No, I didn’t see yours. I didn’t know N. then. But I saw your heart beating later.

K3: Did you see mine?

Me: No, N. was living in [xxxxxx] then.

K1: But having a heartbeat doesn’t mean it’s a person.

Me: That’s what I think. But not everyone thinks that way. Those are the people who believe that every single pregnancy should go to term no matter what.

K1: But what if the mother is, like, twelve years old [She is at this moment just barely twelve years old.] Do they think that mother should have to stay pregnant?

Me: Yes.

K1: But that’s so mean!

Me: There’s a passage in the Bible that says, essentially, that God knew you before you were born; that he knit you together in your mother’s womb. That’s a big part of why anti-choice people say that no pregnancy should be ended.

K1: That’s dumb.

Me: You might think it’s dumb, but lots of people believe that.

K1: But we don’t, right?

Me: Right, we don’t.

[We flash our pool passes at the desk.]

Me: Here’s the thing though. I had tests to check on how the everything was developing when I was first pregnant. If those tests had shown that there were abnormalities, that the baby wouldn’t have survived, or that it would have had a painful, difficult life, I would not have continued the pregnancy.

K1, jockeying for first sunblock-application position: Okay?

Me: But other people in the same position would choose to have a baby like that, and love it and raise it.

K1: Okay?

Me: This is what it means to be pro-choice. Every woman gets to decide for herself.

K1: Mom, I know.

And off she ran on her twelve-year-and-six-month-old feet.

Jul 262011
 

Ataraxia, a brainy friend of mine said about a photo I posted the other day, and so crazybusy was I what with work, preparations to speak in front of people at a college, kid-wranglin’, and the most basic human hygiene that I didn’t have a chance to do even cursory research into what it meant ’til today:

For the Epicureans, ataraxia was synonymous with the only true happiness possible for a person. It signifies the state of robust tranquility that derives from eschewing faith in an afterlife, not fearing the gods because they are distant and unconcerned with us, avoiding politics and vexatious people, surrounding oneself with trustworthy and affectionate friends and, most importantly, being an affectionate, virtuous person, worthy of trust.

For the Pyrrhonians, owing to one’s inability to say which sense impressions are true and which ones are false, it is the quietude that arises from suspending judgment on dogmatic beliefs or anything non-evident and continuing to inquire.

The words had barely sunk into my brain when it was time to go to the pool. Lately our routine has been thus: Pathetic keening complains over the application of sunscreen, jumping up and down exhortations to hurry mommy please hurry, then mad dives into the deep end with me fast upon their heels. I am meant to be a sort of living buoy, a safe island for little ones to paddle around like so many giggling ships and to be grabbed upon when the ability to float wanes. A moment of peace came that day when they stroked toward the edge en masse and put their heads, two curly blond and one sleek brunette, together. And then they were off to the slides, tossing instructions over honey-brown shoulders to stay in the pool and wait without moving, Mom, stay there!

This time I did, and not only because I forgot my book on the bedside table and would have had nothing to do in my deckchair but FWP1 and envy the other mothers. A brutal heatwave had broken the night before in an hours-long thunderstorm. This had the dual benefits of bringing up the water to the very rim as well as allowing the populace to luxuriate in their own homes’ cool air instead of making the heat-drenched and surly trek to the pool. Kids gone I was the only person left; the lone lifeguard looked at me with what seemed like pity and I sunk to my chin in the coolness.

There are so few moments of real rest for the mother. Even under the protection of another — whether father, teacher or lifeguard — tentacles2 of concern radiate out. And yet they were almost the only ones there, surrounded by professionals. They didn’t need me. This was as ataraxia-like as it got.

But I’m always scheming, always planning ahead. Since January my eldest and I have been deep in a tour of preteen-friendly media, a tour whose purpose is to give her philosophy to carry her through these next several turbulent years. We’ve made our way through this and this and are now, at her request, watching this. But when, it’s been occurring to me lately to wonder, when is the appropriate moment to introduce her to this, without which no education can be considered truly complete? How can you act like an adult if not for the example of Winston Wolfe? How can you understand the dynamics of the foot massage without this conversation playing in your head? How can you be rounded without wondering how well Jules succeeded in trying to be the good shepherd?

Surely it is not appropriate to show such a film to one under eighteen — and even without the blood and violence and splattered brains what child of that age would understand a non-linear narrative highlighting the differences between our protagonists’ paths? More to the point, how could I dream of introducing her to The Bride, who, I believe, should be absolutely required study for anyone audacious enough to love, for who hasn’t at some point felt the swirl of admiration, adoration and absolute hatred she felt for Bill? Who hasn’t?

But by the time I saw that film it was too late. I could see my past in The Bride but the art was too late to inoculate me against future hurt. Will I get the opportunity to give this to my child? When, in the narrow window between eighteen and the-time-she-leaves-the-house, will it be right?

I picture Christmas 2019, shoving aside wrapping paper and young ‘uns to demand that she watch with me, for surely by the time she’s twenty she’ll have had her heart cracked open enough to understand. I gave her Buffy in time, I think, in time that the lessons are in place when she’ll need them. “Oh,” I want her to think when the time comes. “Someone else has gone through this. So many someone-elses have had this happen to them that they wrote a show about it. Buffy made it, and I will too.”  I hope she finds the rest in time, and it both thrills and terrifies me to think of how very much philosophy she will have to acquire without my assistance.

These thoughts are not conducive to ataraxia.

And then they came back, neon-hued streaks down the side of the pool screaming into the water all around me. “You waited for us,” they babble. “We told you to wait and you waited for us!”

And I say, Yes. Yes I did.

  1. fiddle with phone []
  2. This word has only the most positive connotations for me. []
Jul 112011
 

Over the past several weeks — and three months shy of this site’s six year1 anniversary — I’ve been considering how aagblog.com makes money. I mean, money’s not everything, and I certainly didn’t begin this little venture to get rich, but it’s been tumbling around in my head that I should take a hard look at what’s ended up lo these many years in the sidebar.

A billion years ago it seemed like all I had to do was slap a few affiliate ads up there and each month without fail there would roll in a check. Not a huge check, mind you, but enough $30 checks over enough months eventually added up to a goodly number of cheese sticks, chicken nuggets and clementines. And it’s hard to argue with clementines.

Over time, however, those ads have become less and less effective. Some of them, most notably BlogAds, hadn’t contributed a single clementine to the aag household in months. I really should put it in the circular file, I thought time after time. It’s not doing anything but cluttering up the site.

But then I’d procrastinate, and every great now and again one of my accounts would come through with a check just over the minimum cash-out value. This was enough to keep me from trashing the ads, at least until I read this, which compares your propensity to click on a banner ad with some extremely rare events. I’m not sure I agree with the math used throughout, but the bottom line remains: Clicking on a banner ad? Not very likely.

So for the moment I’m going to do some tweaking of my affiliate accounts and banners. I’m not giving up these account; I can’t not support quality stores like this one or sites that have given me so much pleasure like this one, and I will always support my friends’ excellent businesses and project. But I think you’ll find the sidebar just a wee bit more bare from here on out. I hope you’re ok with that.

Tweak #1 will be an ongoing experiment. Tweak #2 is more short-term. Six weeks ago2 I decided to submit a story to this. I had an idea that I really liked and over the course of a couple days I put the first half of it on paper. Then life got in the way and the rest of it stayed stuck inside what passes for your humble narrator’s brain — and then all of a sudden the deadline is just five days away! Midnight! Friday! How did this happen?

I am absolutely determined to complete this submission, so this week I will be not quite as regular as I’ve been in the past in writing here. Forgive me? Will you send along virtual well-wishes for me to finish my submission on time? And perhaps a word of encouragement delivered via comment, Tweet or Facebook post?

And if you’re a blogger, I’m curious if you’ve made changes in the way you handle affiliate ads and sidebar banners? Let me know in the comments below.

  1. !!!!!!! []
  2. !!!!!!! []
Jul 062011
 

Three months have passed since MOMENTUMCon ended and, at the urging of a friend, I began a little experiment in which each and every day there is posted upon Facebook a picture I have taken of myself.

I know! It’s almost unbearably self-indulgent! But there is a purpose to this, which is to give future generations pictures to remember me by — however, given the fact that last night my eldest flung into my room a Buffy tshirt I had just bought her, thereby, one assumes, breaking up with me, I am not entirely convinced that posterity will be kind to these images — and also to shore up my sadly flagging confidence.

How could it have flagged so far? You’re not the only one to wonder:

I profess to be surprised at finding that you – someone who had the confidence in herself to divorce, taking primary custody with no traditional full time job, and then to build a business, buy/refinance her house – have such little confidence in your looks.

To me this is not surprising at all. Who among us is anything but a dizzying mix of bold and bashful, confident and crushed, self-possessed and in an agony of insecurity every moment of every day? And yet something has changed over the course of making these ninety images. Whereas at first I cowered behind child or pet, edged almost out of frame by something exponentially cuter than my wrinkly self, now I’m taking up a greater portion of the picture. Often the lighting is strong enough for the viewer to make out actual features and not just a vaguely humanoid blob. Sometimes I even put on lipgloss.

Throughout I’ve managed — somehow! — neither to horrify my friends1 nor to grind Facebook to a halt with images of such surpassing ugliness that all flee in their wake. I can look at the folder not with clenched teeth and through my fingers but with the dispassionate eye of being ever so slightly more at peace with my physical presence than I was even three months ago. I am neither as lovely as I remember at twenty-two nor as hideous as I feared at forty-two.

I can live with this.

  1. Erm. I think they are not horrified? []

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