2017: 3 days in

Today in my drawer I discovered a pair of cotton underpants whose tag I had apparently never read. It said "hand wash only."

Is someone kidding me? I'm gonna hand wash cotton underpants? 

I am not. I'm not going to hand wash any underpants. And that is my only "new year's resolution." As I've told y'all before, I don't trade in resolutions, preferring to simply try and live well and do right all year long. That said, with today's finding, I enthusiastically resolve to never bother with hand-wash-only undies. That's like baby clothes that are dry clean only. Nonsense!

Although this may sound sad, one thing I continue to learn is that it is often better to have fewer expectations of any given thing than more. This is why I never read movie or book reviews until after I've seen or read said work. Let me go in blind and burden-free, thank you. It's why I'm glad I bought those cute cotton undies without reading their ridiculous laundry instructions.

New Year's Eve has come to fall into this category. Delightfully so. For a good fifteen to twenty years, I found NYE to be wildly overrated and, thus, perennially disappointing. So I gave it up for a few years. T and I just parked our pajama-clad selves on our couch with some kind of alcohol and meal and cared not if we witnessed any ball drop.

Two years ago, my dear friend, A, and her husband invited us over for a NYE party. Miraculously I found a sitter, and because why not, I donned a gold sequin skirt, tights, and heels, and Tom and I headed over for eighty-nine kinds of booze and chili. Friends, it was a blast. 

This year, T and I received a different invitation, all gold, black and spangly, and because these friends happen to also be the parents of one of the kids' favorite pals, J and O were invited too. We assumed we'd stay for a few hours and then boogie home when the kids spazzed from fatigue.

People, the night was terrifically fun, included pals old and new, and we all made it well past midnight. Cocktails included The Barack, and The Michelle, and our friends planned a fabulous 2016 Burn Board, the additions to which we did later burn in their fireplace, a la Leia's spirit in this cartoon:

I must say that this was both a cathartic way to close 2016 out and a seriously fun means of ushering 2017 in. Don't get me wrong- I'm not thinking 2017 is going to be awesome, but perhaps since I have zero expectations of it, something therein will pleasantly surprise me. Like my newfound appreciation of great NYE parties and the fact that my kids are getting old enough to stay up super late and not wreak havoc on us the next day. 

What do you think?

On 2016

Although I find myself struggling to feel terribly hopeful about the coming year, it is with little sadness that I bid 2016 adieu. 

This year started off so well- a new home, a joyous 40th birthday, a great family trip, and the liberating realization that as I've come into myself and my age, I have far fewer fucks left to give than I ever imagined possible. That, my friends, is a win!

My family is happy and healthy, I have so many good friends, Percy is snug as a bug with Suzanne who dotes on him with mad love, my sister’s TV show was purchased by Netflix and will begin airing in America in March (stay tuned), and my father will retire in the relatively near future after working endless-hour days for decades.

I am so grateful for everything, and yet this year also took so much, so wantonly. My heart is both light and heavy; it is full in all meanings of the word.

The loss of so many talented people has been stunning. David Bowie, Prince, Alan Rickman, Carrie Fisher, Debbie Reynolds, George Michael, Gene Wilder, Harper Lee, Umberto Eco, Phife Dawg, Gary Shandling, Morley Safer, Elie Wiesel, Edward Albee, Leonard Cohen, Gwen Ifill, Muhammad Ali, Shimon Peres, Janet Reno, Florence Henderson, John Glenn, Pat Summitt, Patty Duke, Pat Conroy...the list goes on. So many of those folks fought to make this world better. Through their words, work, humor, music, journalism, films, and political tenures, they pushed boundaries, opened our eyes and minds, challenged us to be better, made us laugh.

Thank god the "Save Betty White From 2016" campaign seems to have worked. Knock on wood.

I learned that I couldn’t outrun my own limits; that ignoring all warning signs of exhaustion and overwhelm doesn’t mean they’ll fizzle out and disappear. I fell, hard. It was and remains a tough but valuable lesson, even when I wish limits weren’t so. As I sometimes tell the boys now when their demands are many and simultaneous, “I am one woman with but two hands. I can only do so much.”

I was reminded that we have a long way to go in not only raising our daughters more like sons but also, as the indomitable Gloria Steinem said, in raising our sons more like daughters.

Yesterday, in the midst of buying a new car to replace my 12-year-old Honda -whose trunk leaked rainwater, whose backseat light long ago quit, whose tires needed refilling on a regular basis, and who’d begun playing an awfully staccatic song on all left turns- I realized that neither of my children had ever known a different car. The material change meant nothing to me or Jack, but my sensitive Oliver, sitting on my lap after five long hours at the dealership, began to cry. He becomes attached to things in which he's made memories, and I love his sentimentality.

“I love all my stickers on my side of the car, and remember the time the windows were shot out [at our old house] but my window didn’t crumble because of my stickers? And we never have trouble finding the car because of all the stickers? And I have played in the trunk so many times….”

I hugged him tight, softening into the sweet moment. The man helping us complete the paperwork said, “In my country, men don’t cry. Come on now. Men don’t cry.”

I stiffened, but didn’t say anything. I hoped Oliver didn’t hear. I was uncomfortable. I didn’t want to go there, I guess. But then he said it again. “Men don’t cry.” And I looked at him, with both softness and steel, and said “In my family, men absolutely can and do cry. It is OK.”

When we are all willing to give up the gendered ghosts that haunt society’s very soul, that peg and judge and shush and intimidate, we will all be better. I believe that we’ll see healthy displays of emotion rather than forceful explosions that burst from cracks because the pressure is too great to stay put anymore.

When we publicly denounce the judgment of men for being emotionally attuned and the judgment of women for being strong and unapologetic, we will also stop excusing locker room as nothing more than “boys will be boys.” When we publicly uphold the dignity and worth of ALL bodies, as well as the total value of the word “NO,” we will shut down men who feel it’s okay to assault women, to demean them, to harm them. We will not allow proven rapists and child molesters to keep their positions because they are talented swimmers and effective coaches. Perhaps, even, we won’t allow a man who mocked the disabled and bragged about sexually assaulting women, to become president.

Breaking down those ages-old walls will take persistent efforts at speaking up and out. As will refusing to normalize Trump's behavior, wholly unpresidential mien, ignorance, and complete lack of qualifications for the office to which he will soon ascend. As will righting our dangerously listing ship of state.

In recent days on Facebook, I have been called “nuts,” “loony,” “insane,” and told “you make me want to vomit.” Why? Because I thanked President Obama for his dignified, thoughtful leadership. Because I thanked Hillary Clinton for her service to women and children over the past forty years and for showing my sons that women can aspire to great heights. And because I disapproved of Trump’s having bragged of grabbing women’s genitals without permission. For expressing my fear of a world based not on fact but on fake news, I was called vitriolic. I and all men who haven't grabbed women's genitals were also, inexplicably, accused of being gay. A woman said that. I have no idea how to move forward with people like that. Does she think normal men just grab women? I don't.

Ours is a deeply fractured country, cleaved by economic disparity, racism, sexism, and fake news. I wonder about a world like this. I worry about it, too. I have zero faith in the incoming administration or in people who sling ugly insults at others offering simple words of gratitude, but I do find hope in the resistance that began rising on November 9. 

During these last months, I've discovered that inside me burns an activist fire that I either wasn’t totally aware of or had always been too scared to do much with. I have discovered an incredible, fiery band of intelligent others who want only for our country and world to be better. Fairer. More equal. Safe. Who want more people to have more rights and better lives, regardless of their gender, skin color, faith, or sexual orientation, rather than only a select few (too often this means: white, Christian, heterosexual, and male) benefitting at the expense of others. Who believe in fact and the need to combat climate change pronto.

As 2016 draws to a close, I feel determined and strong. I hope you do too, because there is much work to be done. 

I hope your families are safe and warm and feel loved. I hope you encourage the boys and men in your lives to understand and express their emotions in healthy ways and everyone you know to respect their own and others' bodies. I hope you will meet people from different places and with different backgrounds, talk and laugh with them, eat their food, share. I hope you help those in need and accept help when you struggle. I hope you will stand up for peace and justice in all the ways that you can. 

Here's to love and light in the New Year. Be kind!

Tidy emotions

Tonight I would like to talk to you about tidy emotions. 

Tidy emotions are those that make people -mostly others, but could be you too because you've internalized others' and societal expectations- and society comfortable.

They're the "it's for the best" when someone dies. The "it was meant to be" when something crappy happens -a break-up, for example- and you're desperately and painfully trying to make sense of things. The "calm down and relax" when your heart is upset and, oh, maybe your country seems to be dying. The looks of "hmm" and the cacophonous silence when some bravely stand up in the face of injustice juxtaposed with the loud applause for bathing puppies and perfectly wrapped gifts that pepper our landscape with perky regularity.

For so many years, I was admonished for wearing my heart on my sleeve. I was chastised for my emotions. I was made to feel I was an awful burden because I felt things deeply. I was called "too much," and "too intense," and, yes, "a burden" because I worried about so many relationships and issues and because my confidence couldn't find a stud in which to brace itself against the many winds whirling about. I care about the fate of the polar bears. So sue me. I was told that I "seemed to be awfully stressed" when I had a newborn and a just-three-year-old and didn't have a night nurse and nanny like the person who was telling me I was stressed.

I am quite sure that there were times I was too much, that I was too emotional. I did learn to modulate and moderate, to assess context and situation, to respond versus react, and for that I am infinitely grateful. My porous self has certainly made life hard many times over. I have often wished for a sturdier core.

But I have also unlearned some of that muzzling. I've left behind that inner voice that commanded I be of a certain weight and size. I have worked hard to loose the reins on MY voice, and to accept, to HONOR, that it is sensitive and attuned. That although it is sometimes intense or thorny, it is, more often, generous and kind and feeling. And I will tell you that I would choose being all of that any day over privileged and aloof and tidy and small.

Tidy is women a long time ago but also too many of us today. Tidy is something you could once only afford to be. Tidy is something still afforded by class and privilege.

Tidy makes me tired, as my Aunt Da used to say. Tidy is dull and inaccessible and frequently lacks authenticity. 

The opposite of tidy isn't fake or false or vapid. It isn't singular or snotty. No, those things are as improper, in my opinion, as is superficial polish. They are, often, worse, for they are entitled and ugly and out of touch.

The opposite of tidy is real. REAL. Authentic, candid, Self translated. The opposite of tidy is not going gently. The opposite of tidy is, usually, being courageously on the right side of history. 

In today's New York Times, Charles Blow wrote

"I fully understand that elevated outrage is hard to maintain. It’s exhausting. But the alternative is surrender to national nihilism and the welcoming of woe. The next four years could be epochal years in the history of this country. They could test the limits of presidential power and the public’s passivity.
I happen to believe that history will judge kindly those who continued to shout, from the rooftops, through their own weariness and against the corrosive drift of conformity: This is not normal!"

Whether you want to see it or not, America is falling apart. As is our news, our common belief in fact, the binding threads of our communal quilt. Judgment and bigotry and exclusion and restriction are racing back into our public spheres in terrifying ways. We were better than this. I am ashamed that we've decided to put that exceptional goodness on hiatus. We should ALL be ashamed of that.

For those who are, stay loud. Stay strong. Resist. Anger is OK if you don't let it overtake you.

If someone tells you to get over it, or quiet down, or just move on, tell them to shove it. For those of you who only share lightness and animals and happy family pictures, consider why. Usually, the outtake prior to the "perfect" shot was the more real one. If you see someone suffering or struggling or simply in need of a hug, give. 

Be honest. Be real. Do not surrender.