Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Fried in First


Last Monday night, my company had their annual Holiday party at their annual random pick of a venue - Dave & Buster's. My reaction to this news was a 1 on the enthusiasm scale, given that I am more of a martini and stilettos kind of girl than a Dave & Buster's kind of girl. Or so I thought...

I was quite the athlete in high school. Not only did I get "best sportsmanship" as my senior year superlative (who wants to get "most beautiful" anyway), I almost wound up playing D1 basketball but gave it up to do the sorority/binge drinking thing. Given that my older brother was more into golf and bowling in high school (sorry Big Fried but you were), my dad placed his hopes for a contact sports child on me, and told me to act more like a tom boy than boy crazy. Clearly I managed to be both, but either way, in my twenties, I am far more tan than agile. So Dave & Buster's wasn't immediately on my "things I am thrilled to do" list.

To my surprise however, upon arrival to the Holiday extravaganza, not only did I forgo the buffet (unheard of especially when mini sliders are on the menu), I pushed passed the herd of small children waiting to get their game credits, and went straight to the basketball shooting game. I did well the first round, better the next, and so on and so on for almost an hour. I beat kid after kid, screaming in their face things like "boo ya" and "yeah WHAT?" I even chest bumped a younger girl I didn't even know when I got my highest score. And the tickets for winning kept coming out. I started a pile of them, disregarding the bruises forming on my knees and ankles from jumping in stilettos (please note this is a standstill hot-shots game, not a live action court situation, no need for jumping).

I felt a sudden surge of energy and level of competitiveness come over me that is strange and inappropriate for a professional woman at her company Holiday shindig, and I knew it was all down hill from here. Throwing my cardigan off and pulling my hair back into a ponytail, I challenged anyone I could to car racing, skeet ball, even the game where you pay tokens to get more tokens. I was sweating, talking far too fast, and somewhere along the way lost my purse. But I didn't care. It was game time.

After an hour of standing at the hand-grabber candy machine (won a Charleston Chew and mini Butterfinger after ten tries - I at least deserved a Snickers), I calmed my heartbeat and stepped away from the flashing lights, sound of coins falling and kids screaming. And I realized...I have a ton of tickets to cash in for a prize!!!

I was making my way over to the store (filled with the kind of useless crap that only myself and a 9 year old would love), when my co-worker and friend Rachel stopped me. She explained that she had some tickets too and that it would be a nice gesture to give our tickets to a child (not sure why she assumes I am an adult), so that they can enjoy a bigger prize. Reluctantly I handed her my tickets in exchange for a glass of wine and watched as she "did the right thing."

I didn't sleep that night. Not only because I knew some kid was running around with an awesome toy that I fully deserved, but also because I felt something inside of me coming alive. I had forgotten how incredibly over-competitive (and sometimes scary), I can be when it comes to games, sports, really anything that involves a chance to win. And it felt great. Don't get me wrong, I love the city-girl side of me, the sushi-eating, french manicured, overly-bronzed woman that I am, but I also love that competitive, never-back-down, gotta get the win girl that I think I had forgotten about...

Sometimes it is in the smallest, most random things, like a Holiday party at Dave & Buster's on a Monday night that make you realize the greatest, most important things about yourself. It doesn't matter what anyone thinks about you, all that matters is what you know about yourself. I know that this fried lady has quite the fire inside of her, and well, I put up a damn good fight.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Aging is "Facocta"


I was at a friend's apartment last night for a fondue party, and I found myself making my way from an over-sized super cozy chair to a high wrought iron bar stool. As I sat down, I said out loud, "wow, this feels great. I really needed to switch to a nice hard chair," and it hit me. I am getting old.

I started to think about all of the other subtle signs in my life that are beginning to shed light on the fact that college wasn't just a few years ago anymore. It was almost 5 years ago, and high school almost 10. And while I am only at the ripe age of 26, I am aware now that I am entering an unknown and harsh terrain called growing up.

Some of my favorite shows during the week, most are of the mindless reality TV-show genre, start at 10 or 10:30pm, and that schedule suddenly makes me angry. 10pm seems much later than it used to, and I fight heavy eyelids just to get to the conclusion of the program. I have complained several times recently that these shows should be on at 8pm which is a far more "reasonable" hour. And when I do get in bed at night now, I sigh. Not an "oh this is a comfy bed" sigh, but more of an "oh my body is aching and now it can re-gain its strength" sigh. Very scary.

I also have a new sense of impatience. And when my patience is tested I use angry Yiddish words that my Jewish grandmother frequently spews when she too feels a sense of injustice or that her time is being wasted. When the bus came late the other day, (yes people, I take the bus), I swiped my metro card, turned to my bus-friend and said emphatically, "this bus schedule is facocta." That is Yiddish for f'd up. Who says that?

Have I mentioned all of a sudden I cannot digest dairy? Yes, age has eliminated an entire level of the food pyramid for me, and now I have doctors asking me if I take calcium supplements so I don't get osteoporosis. The fact that the word "osteoporosis" came up in my annual check-up last year means lollipops after exams are no longer acceptable (my pediatrician put in a good word for me with my internal doctor a few years back), and I have to move on to a mineral supplement parting gift instead.

There is something beautiful in this growing up business though. I do get a lot more sleep than I used to, and I have no choice but to listen to my body when I am beat since now it yells instead of whispers when I am worn down. I also have a lot more empathy towards my parents, grandparents, and the old guy who calls me every day at work and asks me if we have eggplant (I work at a magazine).

Growing up and getting older also reminds me that each moment is a true gift and that I am blessed to have my health and a full life packed with love, family and friends. And although I am grateful for this day and this time, I do hope that someday they start to offer senior citizens discounts at the tanning salon. That, my friends, will never change.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

The Cat Lady


Yea yea, so I am a cat lady, so what?

I live alone in a studio on the east side of Manhattan. I have a coffee maker, a nightstand with lots of half-read books, and yes, a cat. I know the stereotypes, believe me, I hear them all the time. And I understand that a lot of people don't like cats, claiming to be allergic to avoid contact with the "alien being," or just telling me "I like cats, I just would rather watch him than touch him."

People are always surprised that I am a cat lady. Given that my freezers contents consist of an oversized bottle of Grey Goose and ice, and that I have more wine than food in my apartment, one might be shocked to find out that I rescued and adopted a cat. Some people even ask me when I have time to spend with the little guy, being that I work almost 9 hour days, and have to "entertain" at night (clients or otherwise).

The truth is, I don't spend that much time with him, and when I do see him, I am usually 3 martinis in and am more concerned about the bagel that I am about to take down at 1am. This is why my cat, Sir Zigfried Weiss, aka Ziggy, is more of a gangster than a cat. He is pissed. He is pissed that I am rarely home, and pissed that I cannot commit to the cat lady life the way most cat ladies do. He is pissed that he is underloved and overlooked, and I can't blame him.

After seeing an Animal Planet special on a cat lady hoarder who lived and breathed taking care of felines, he realized, I am just not up to cat lady-par. He also realized that if he wanted me to be a better cat lady, that he was going to have to pull some trick out of his...paw, to get my attention.

When I get home at night, I am left to fend for myself. Ziggy has a white head band on and he is sliding ninja-style along the hallway wall, making his way to me, the resentment filling his eyes with controlled anger. We rumble, briefly. I am left with scratches that once the vodka wears off I know will sting, and I ask myself, what did I do to deserve this? I appease the lord of the cats with salmon flavored treats, coaxing him into forgetting that I have been gone most of the day. I see him waver in his trust, he bites, I bleed a little more, a tear rolls down my cheek, and I turn off the light and get into bed.

He stands on one leg (that's how ninja cats sleep), balancing on the edge of the bottom of my bed beckoning me through fluffed whiskers to play with him, tire him, to give him some freaking credit. But I am too sleepy, and wounded, and I fall asleep to the sounds of his frustrated sighs as he lays down to sleep yet another 8 hours of his existence away. I can feel his dissapointment and as much as I hate going to bed angry, we do.

Being a cat lady is no easy feat. The love I have for the furball outways the brief battles, and cost of Neosporin and Band-Aids each month. And I do have someone to come home to, domestic cat violence or not, he is always there. The best part of being a cat lady though is in breaking the stereotype. We are not all crazy, nor are we all lonley and desperate. In fact, I am far too tan, far too much of a lush, and far to busy to be defined as such.

I believe I have elevated cat ladies to a new place. A place where even if one choses to write an entire blog post about her cat (not sure who would do such a thing), she can still be considered to be full of life, and also respected for her love of the feline.

Friday, November 21, 2008

In Memory of “Captain Max”


Endless tides meet endless times, and he aboard his boat,
Pink sun kissing rippled waves, beauty admired as in a sonnet God wrote.

He stands at the helm, crystal sand and salted breeze at his cheek,
The sky brushed with purple clouds and golden bands as if heaven had a leak.

Strong fists pull rope taught and wide sails lap and then stand upright,
And like a seabird skimming the mirrored foam, the white vessel takes flight.

Wood grazing water, boundless with fury and fervor, leaping from crest to crest,
He rides his stallion into the wind, resonating with passion as the sea can attest.

How unsullied joy is, when we become what we worship and love,
As he glides across the horizon and follows the wistful tides to above.

And So We Grow


A single dew drop
A single tear
Another seed
Another year
And so we grow
And fall and climb
The hours hold
The hand of time
There is always light
Among the dark
Always a place
To leave your mark
Clouds do pass
A wrinkled sky
The moon a wink
The sun reply
Life is that
Which we hold near
A single dew drop
A single tear
And so we grow…

The Silence of Lavender

Where lover’s sides meet and hurried breath reaches pillows and dreams, I lay alone. The lights of the city spilling onto me, the weight of my solitude felt through amber and fluorescents. Coupled hearts tend to sleep as the sun tip toes upstairs without a creak, the floorboards of earth mindful not to wake the children of love.

I stand at the window, cold feet touching cold glass, and the secrets of morning are spread across the cracked river. There is a silence when the world is lavender and still, that is beyond humbling. A silence that once wasn’t there and instead was filled with the joy of life, and the simplicity of sleep. When slow songs wrote themselves and scraps of paper were filled with words like "you" and "soul." When morning could creep up without being noticed and linens wrapped bodies like packages of lust.

And now, the silence is so loud, it screams without warning and throws me against the window at dawn, and I am left asking questions to a lingering fog; a fog that like me knows no direction and is boundless in its edges. I have the capacity to love so hard, I know I do. Somewhere between the eyelid of darkness and the blink of day, its there, waiting to inhale and to consume, just as the moon does sun, and the river, for now, does my heart.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Is Chivalry Dead?

Lately I have had this subtle feeling that chivalry is dead. The feeling could have started when I slipped on ice a few years back, skidded 10 feet on my chin, tears salting the ice beneath me, and an entire slew of young, able bodied men watched, mouths agape, not only neglecting to help me up or ask if I was okay, but the only thing I heard from this useless crowd was one guy yell, "did you see THAT?"

Or maybe it was last month when trying to get off the bus in a civilized morning commute, wait your turn to step off the M34 manner, when I was pushed by a middle aged man who either had to go really badly, or was just over the 45 minute sluggish ride that had him lacking patience. Either way, with my coffee splattered on my new coat, purse items strewn on the dirty street, I helped myself gather my things, helped myself wipe off my hazelnut mess and searched for what was left of my dignity for the day. The man walked quickly away, knowing quite well that he had left me on the street to fend for myself, and with no explanation for what the hell men were thinking.

The definition of chivalry is this: "The sum of the eideal qualification of a knight, including courtesy, generosity, valor and dexterity in arms." It is a term that goes back to the medieval institution of knighthood and is now been somehow worked into modern day to describe couteous acts, especially men towards women. So techincally, unless their occupation, on Facebook or otherise, announces that they are in fact a "Knight," what have we been expecting?

How the word even came to be used today, as it is so freely and loosely, is beyond me. Considering the dwindling job title of Knight, I guess the answer to my question is in its origin; Chivalry is dead and has been dead since 10th century France.

It seems to me that we have been using the wrong word, and a powerful one at that, in building our expectations for the male sex. One that has made feminists fight to kill the story of Cinderella for instilling false hope in young girls that a Knight will and should rescue you from, well, yourself. And one that has made men struggle to walk the thin line between being a total doting push over and gentlemanly-enough so as not to insult women by making them feel that they are in fact "helpless."

I can't help but wonder that if we used a more appropriate, less loaded, less dated, more gender-mutual word such as respect, would we still feel as let down by the opposite sex?

So I propose this: If chivalry is somehow, anywhere, lurking in the shadows of our Knight-less society, and not already dead, let's kill it. I have had it with the pressure it subjects both men and women to, especially on a first date (it is the main ingredient in that bit of awkwardness), and I refuse to use a word that attempts to over-indulge a basic human and necessary code of conduct. Respect is all I ask, and all you should ask as well, regardless of gender...

If I was looking for respect that day face-first on the ice, or that awkward tumble off the bus, and I wasn't looking for "chivalry," maybe I would have seen her hand reaching to help me up, and I would know that morality lives.