Sunday, January 24, 2010

Why I shouldn't watch Helen Hunt movies

Since Middle School, I've been trying to make mild depression seem romantic.

Honestly, I'm not sure I even suffer from depression. More exactly, I'm VERY sure I either suffer from serious depression or none at all but, in either case, when feeling stuck in the thickness of my head, wearing three day old sweatpants, watching (but not following the plot of) old TV sitcoms, staring down piles of laundry wondering how televised housewives can match socks with such easy enthusiasm, and feeling like even the smallest movement will set off a thin ragged fault line through myself, in those moments, I want depression to seem romantic.

I blame the old movies they showed us in health class: made-for-TV (or worse: Made-for-Health-Class) films depicting reluctant suicidal teens charming poorly-dressed psychiatrists or sweetly dispositioned anorexics captivating loving gymnastics coaches. When Helen Hunt jumped through that window or that odd alcoholic girl drunk-rode her horse down Main Street, I thought personal problems never looked so good. Those movies made me think being troubled (being crazy?) wasn't too unusual a state of mind to make work.

Then, later, Helen Hunt again, with what I call The Twister Complex. Remember the movie Twister? Hunt is all gorgeous and brave, chasing tornadoes and flipping over cars, but (like 99% of the professionally successful women characters in film) she uses her work to hide from the emotional risks of her love life. Enter Romantic Interest, so drawn to her recklessness and beauty! Enter Romantic Interest, to save her from herself! He grabs her out of the mouth of a tornado (oh the metaphor!), confronts her emotional reluctance as rain soaks her thin T-shirt (oh the drama!), and makes her give love a chance despite her deeply broken heart (oh the romance!). The Twister Complex is when you perfect being beautifully broken to the point where other people are irresistibly drawn to fixing you. See the appeal?

Although he is totally the Run-Through-Tornadoes type, my husband met me when the metaphorical skies were clear. In fact, he met me at the absolutely most healthy moment in my life (perhaps the most healthy day) when, all confidence and cunning, I asked him when the Martin Luther King Jr holiday would fall that year (I already knew the answer). After that, I kept arranging lunch dates until, tired of waiting for him to make the first move, I showed up at his office unexpected and asked for a goodnight kiss. I actually said "I've come to get a goodnight kiss". He complied willingly without, he now assures me, any sense of being stalked.

The Best First Kiss Ever.

This was a time in my life when I was confident and relaxed, thinner than I'd been since Middle School, prone to jogging for fun and laughing over small delights like they were all that mattered. This was a time when I made all the important moves (going to graduate school, getting my own apartment, eating healthy, falling in love) with a confidence and easy enthusiasm you'd never see in Health Class. This was the best kiss from the best man and I didn't have to do anything to seem more romantic than I actually was.

Comparatively, this all made any future Twister Complex harder to pull off. Now when my husband comes home to find me eating brownies, my hair tugged into a sloppy ponytail, a shadow of izabella's yogurt (or is that snot?) still smeared across my sleeve, and dirty dishes stacked by the sink, neither of us think "How Reckless and Beautiful!". Now depression seems boring and tasteless, nothing worthy of the time it slowly chews on and swallows. To make depression seem romantic now I'd need to wear heels and bolder lipstick, I think, or maybe a wet Tshirt? Short of that, mildly (seriously? not-at-all?) debilitating moodiness just doesn't seem worth a rescue mission.

So I try, depressed or not, to keep my family in matched socks and clean dishes. I try to shower whenever needed, watch less TV, and write whenever I can. I try to make phone calls, leave the house when the sun shines, and play games with the toddlers. And instead of trying to make depression seem romantic, I try to find romance in the rare unexpected order of take-out and in my husband's unflappable optimistic belief that this too shall pass.

Still, you better believe that if ever faced with the opportunity to dodge a tornado-tossed cow and tracker combo I am totally going to make depression seem romantic. Timing is everything.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Parenting Izabella - when everyday is a carnival ride

Early last week, to celebrate their half birthdays, my toddler son and daughter gave themselves haircuts. They stole the kid-safe craft scissors out of the art supply cabinet and delighted in snipping off long 6 inch strands of her curls and short little puffs of his newly-professionally-cut hair. Down to the scalp.

He ended up with a dashing dart of baldness across the side of his head and the thinest sliver of skin where a little curl used to sit at the center of his forehead. Looking at him now you might think "Clumsy Barber" or, knowing better, you'd laugh (Ha Ha!) at the whimsical carelessness of youth. Darling child.

She ended up with a four-by-three inch path blazed down the center of her head riddled with nickle-sized bald patches and moody quarter-inch hair tufts that zigzagged madly upward. Looking at her, you might think "This is what the mullet would look like if anyone other than white people had tried it" or, knowing better, you'd cry (Dear God!) at how quickly something so beautiful could be so thoroughly trashed. It was her very first haircut.

I, of course, cried. Sobbed actually. Sobbed on and off for over an hour while I called friends and family to bemoan (dramatically) how ill-equiped I am for adult responsibility. ("I was doing dishes! I never get to do dishes! All i tried to do was do my dishes and now they are Bald! Bald! Do you understand? My babies are Bald!" or "What am I supposed to do? Last month Ron2 got an unpopped popcorn kernal in his lower eyelid! Before that he got a penny adhered to the roof of his mouth! and now this! He just got a haircut. There isn't any hair left on his head - how did he cut what he has with those tiny dull little scissors? How can I save them from themselves when they keep doing things that aren't even physically possible!?") My friends and family said tried to reassure: "No. It isn't your fault. Kids do these things. Well, okay, so kids don't do THESE things so much as far less absurd versions of these things. But someday you'll look back and think its funny. Its actually funny now. Describe her hair to me again. Can you send pictures? It's freaking funny, really, i mean, i'm sorry i'm laughing but... Tell me again what he said when you found them..."

I briefly contemplated moving to New York where my mother could help me raise these little wayward balding babies. But then I rallied. On principle, I insist on raising them myself, well, raising them as long as they survive, which suddenly didn't seem likely to be long. Post-Haircut every household object seemed menacing. No amount of childproofing could save them from themselves if they insisted on such reckless creativity. My only hope is Ron2's judgement. When I first discovered their joyful game (Iza said "Look Mommy! I cutting!" I said "Good Baby, what are you cutting?"), he mumbled under his breath "I knew I shouldn't have listened to Izabella. I knew it!" (Suddenly I see us outside a police station, she's 16, he'd tried to stop her from going to that party, wait, no, he'd tried to stop her from breaking into the zoo afterhours but she said they'd be back home before anyone knew they were missing and wouldn't it just be so much fun to see the animals at night?...) Now, seeing me cry as I held handfuls of Iza'a hair up to the heavens (why god why?), Ron2 hung his head remorsefully and patted my arm ("It's okay mommy. Izabella wanted to cut her hair.").

Iza, true to form, was nothing but Adventurous Charm in response to the crisis. She put on her tattered princess costume, danced on the dining room table, stole my phone to begin a riviting game of chase, etc etc. At first I thought she didn't even care that I was upset but later, in a quiet moment over lunch, she gravely said "I cut my hair" and then confessed to stealing and eating half a box of tic-tacs and two pieces of gum. Then: Remorse Iza Style. For the rest of the day, she'd spontaneously jump to me and plant fat enthusiastic noisy kisses on my cheeks.

Let me be clear - the kisses do not make the hair cut worth it and I wouldn't think twice before trading this funny memory for an intact head of gorgeous curly hair. But today, when I tried to fold laundry, Iza took the saddle off the cloth-covered rocking horse, removed her pants and diaper, and rode bare-back bare-butted while singing the title song to her school's xmas pageant ("He's the Messiah! Dum dah dah. He's the Messiah!"). And even though she wasn't on a real horse and even though she doesn't really have hair, I could see her riding through an open field, wind blowing through her hair, sun kissing her skin, iza sqeezing every joyful bit out of life. In that moment I knew her spirit is going to spare her more trouble then it's going to get her into.

Thank God she looks good in headbands.