I’ve begun writing about my teaching experiences on The Huffington Post. Here is my first column…and thank you for reading. Click here
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You Can’t Pin a Corsage on a Strapless Dress
At the time most girls my age were showing romantic interest in male people, I was sprawled out on the recliner in the den, watching My Three Sons on TV. My young social life resembled Richard Nixon’s missing tape recordings, with a gap that stretched from third grade to twelfth, and only because I was forced to go to the prom.
I should say, to my credit, that I did find a slot in my life for boys. I did not shun them entirely. In fact, I even thought a few were cute when I was in high school, though it never occurred to me that it might be fun and okay, normal, to let them know. In any event, during the time that boys were liking girls, I made those boys my friends. I had ten thousand boy friends. No, a million. I had more friends who were boys than there are sprinkles on a cone. Ants on a hill. Kernels on a cob.
And, on weekends, we did what friends did. We saw movies. We went to each other’s houses. Joked around, ribbed, played football. Ribbed. Ribbed again. It was the best. They were my most wonderful pals, and still are. However, in eleventh grade, my best friends decided that they wanted girls in their lives who weren’t pals. Unbelievable, right? Really. What the heck for? So, each of them found a different girl and disappeared on Saturday nights. Pouf.
They had a new shared experience, and who knows what else, and I had Robbie. The oldest of the Three Sons, with the wave in the front of his hair.
My brother was away at college and my parents, having worked a long week, generally enjoyed going out a little on Saturday nights. My dad, though, didn’t like the idea of Robbie and me in the den, alone, so he insisted I get dressed and join them. Or, he’d cancel plans and stay home. Either way, not ideal for a sixteen year old, or for Mom. Sometimes, I’d go over to Lynnie’s house and we would eat ice cream with m&ms on top while her mother typed Braille on a special typewriter.
I never thought that any of the boys who were my friends would be interested in me, in an amorous way. That would have been weird. But I found out in twelfth grade that one of them did, and had for a while, uh, for oh, six years. Six years! You have got to be kidding.
Of course, the news did not arrive in an exclamation like that, or even a quiet conversation, as the boy in question chose to rely on actions, not speech. And I, it goes without saying, did not notice the overtures as overtures, not that I would have known what to do with them anyway. The news arrived in time for the prom. Well, sort of.
Mitchell Weingarten and I sat next to each other in the clarinet section. For a concert, he wore a plaid jacket and green tie. I liked Mitchell Weingarten because he was funny and a little irreverent. When I could drive, I picked Mitchell up for school every day in my brother’s old Skylark. He waited on the corner at the end of his street, so I wouldn’t have to turn around twice. He waited on the corner even if it was freezing outside.
I assumed that Mitchell would ask me to the prom because he just would. Unlike the others, he did not have a girlfriend and I–let me just check real fast–was, oh yes, available that night. He would get to drive this time and I’d wear a groovy gown and we’d crack up about Mr. Honer the band teacher and how he threw a music stand off the stage when he got mad one time. It was going to be a blast. He didn’t even have to call to ask because it was just a given. It was understood. Of course we would go to the prom. Together.
So, when I heard in school four days before the big soiree that Mitchell had asked Felicia Feeney to be his date, well, as you can imagine, I was stunned.
“You have to call him on the telephone,” my mother said, stunned, as well.
“That is nuts. He is not going to un-invite Felicia Feeney.”
“You need to find out why he asked her, for your own information.”
I had enough information. It was bad information. And I didn’t need any more of it. “Oh no. I am not going to do that.”
“I think you should.”
“It is just the prom. You don’t have to go to the prom. It will happen, and then it will be over, and no one will remember it.”
My mother was aghast. A teenager in the fifties, she viewed The Prom as an imperative, spiritually, morally, culturally. It was essential to ones being, even if it meant mortifying ones being. “Oh no. You have to go.”
I dragged the telephone cord from the hallway into my room and placed the phone on my vanity table. I sat on its accompanying stool and stared into the mirror. I am not calling. I will just sit here for the duration of a typical “Why didn’t you ask me to the prom?” phonecall, and then emerge from my bedroom, finished. When my mother asks, I can say something like he thought my eyebrows were ugly, or thought I would say no, or liked Felicia better because she had boobs. Something like that. She will believe it.
“Do you know what you are going to say?” my mother called from down the hall.
“I’m good.”
I sensed that she was in close range, too close, sitting on the chair, maybe, just outside my room. I knelt on the floor at the threshold, turning my head sideways to line up my eyes with the edge of the door. Slowly, I pulled it open. No feet under the chair, no body in it. I crawled out and peered around the corner of the wall that led to the hallway and spotted her at the end of the house. All clear, I re-entered my room and watched the clock. After about fifty-three seconds, though, I heard slippers on the hardwood. By fifty-seven, a turn of the knob.
“You are not on the phone.”
“That is right, I am not on the phone. Yet. Not on the phone, yet.”
“Well, go ahead. Don’t wait.”
“There is no urgency, Mom. It’s not as if he’s going to ask someone else, if I don’t call this second. The deed is done. I could call when I’m thirty-five.”
“Just call.”
I put the phone on the floor and sat next to it. I tried out a few opening lines. “Hi Mitchell. So, do you have fever that is making you delusional?” or “Okay, you can stop the joke now, you are so funny.” I picked up the receiver and dialed.
“Hello.”
“Mitchell, hi. It’s Pam.”
“Hey Kripper.” He would make it hard for me.
“Hi.”
“What’s up?”
“What’s up. Interesting remark. Well, I hear you are taking Felicia Feeney to the prom. Do you even know Felicia Feeney?”
“I know Felicia.”
“Hardly.”
“Kripper, I know her.”
“Well, I don’t think you know her well enough to go to the prom with her.”
“You don’t?”
“No, you can’t go to the prom with someone you don’t know, because that is just not how it’s done.”
I had no organized attack for getting the answer I needed. I was all over the place, disjointed, focused on the wrong ideas. I would have to ask him point blank, why her and not me. Oy. I couldn’t do that. That is so pathetic. So needy. I was not needy.
“The truth is, Kripper, I have been asking you since seventh grade and you have never said yes.”
Wow. We did not have a prom in seventh grade. No, you idiot. He’s not talking about the prom.
“So I decided…”
Oh God, more.
“…I decided not to ask you anymore.”
It was a lot to take in. I didn’t know how to say that I was afraid to like him back, or didn’t know how to like him back, but liked him, I knew. I didn’t know that I had hurt his feelings when I thought I was just being his friend, a really good friend. How could that happen. So I said nothing, nothing but okay, see you tomorrow. I’ll pick you up on the corner, regular time.
My mother narrowed down my choices to three of my brother’s friends who were home from college for the summer. I would have to ask one of them, since the acceptable boys in my class were already paired up. Staying home was not an option, and if you had to ask someone, why not an older boy who went to Dartmouth.
So, I dragged the stupid phone into my room and called Mitchell (yes, same name) Winston (and initial) and he graciously accepted, after he figured out who, exactly, I was. He was the perfect date, handsome, gentlemanly and most important, present, even when I danced a dance with Mitchell Weingarten. After the party was over, I thanked him very much and went to the beach with Lynnie.
Catching the Crooks, One Cupcake at a Time
I just love doing this….Click here
Oh, Hi
I have been away, I know. Not far, by any means, just away, from here. But back I am. Hello. How have you been.
I have been busy, having taken on an additional task. When I am not tending to kids or writing, I now teach English at a city school here in Dallas. The experience, in a few short weeks, has given me many ideas. I am taking notes. What I am writing down speaks mostly to the failures of a large urban public school system. There are a lot of failures. Students lose out, continually. These, impoverished middle schoolers, have been losing out for years.
More later. Here and elsewhere. For now, a roomful of 15 year olds are asleep on my daughter’s floor (Happy Birthday, Happy Birthday) and Grandma’s in the back house. From New York. More later, yes. Did you know that they put sequins on sweatshirts? Anyway, hello again.
Tempting the Clock
It has not been a productive day. I say that as the productivity part, well the productivity part related to work, earning an income, putting food on the proverbial table, that part, comes to a close. It ends at 2:21 these days. And sixteen seconds. That is not to say that I am without things to produce. I have several. And more important, they are to be produced within a certain window of time. It is a small window. Single pane. This is when I sometimes feel spunky, brazen, you know, dangerous. I am not like this when I have a bay window-sized window, or a sliding door-width window. It is only when I am crunched. Ha ha, I scoff, at the things to be produced.
Why do I do this, I wonder. I should say that I don’t always do it, but when I do, it is consciously. It is decided upon. I will tempt the window. I will laugh at the tightening deadline. I will hope that I don’t trip tomorrow and require stitches in an elbow, or toe, which will monopolize the actual minutes that remain. Usually, I tell myself that something in me, something in my artistic soul needs the extra breathing room. The brilliance that will make the particular assignment that much more magnificent needs to germinate this exact amount of time. Then, it will be ready to sprout. Then, it will emerge, glorious, at 9:12 tomorrow morning. It is germinating, now, all by itself. I can feel it. So, in essence, I am working, yes, I am.
This is the kind of thing I tell myself when I just need a day off. Why can’t I just take a day off, polish the toes, eat a normal lunch? People with regular jobs get regular days off, and they don’t tell themselves their ideas are whirring around in their brains right then, when they are doing relaxing things, so that they don’t feel guilty. They just eat the normal lunch, happily, and paint the toes, angst-free.
It is now 2:09, which is pretty darn close to 2:21. I don’t have much time left, though I probably have more to say. I could have done more with my day off, I am thinking. More day-off things. But I guess you have to know it is that kind of day before it just becomes one. Aaarggghhhhhhh.
Driving Me Crazy
If you stay up late watching tennis, you will be tired the next day and not want to get out of bed or do any work or write anything clever. Fortunately, your 14 year old realizes this and lets out the dog, Charlie, a frisky guy who likes to go out early, even if I have stayed up late watching tennis. He doesn’t care. He doesn’t like tennis, at least not the way he did at first. But, your 14 year old, and even your 13 year old, though they can do assorted wondrous things for themselves, cannot drive the car. It sits out there, beckoning. Take me somewhere. Put them in it and take us all somewhere. C’mon, do it now. Put the key in.
I’m sick of driving. We don’t have school buses in our little community. Instead, moms drive their own school buses, with nine seats and wheels that surpass my head height, even when standing. Even when we know the deal with the oil and the Mideast and the global warming. Anyway, that is something else. Today, we are talking about the quantity of driving, rather than the quality. My quantity is too big.
So, when I don’t have to drive to the tennis courts or the lake (for rowing, not to jump into), or the schools, or the supermarket, or to cover a story, I just sit at my desk and look at the car, out the window in our driveway. Not yet, I say, through the glass. Simmer down.
Not too long ago, though, she got to go far….(Click here)
No More Grilled Cheese
In the summer, you have to make lunch. At the table. You have to make lunch, just like you make dinner. It is a good time to eat, better than later, the experts say. But it is a bad time to be in the kitchen. It just interrupts everything. Kids have to eat lunch, though, so when it is summer, and they are home, you have to make it.
Yesterday, school began. It is now 12:22 pm. I have just experienced my second day of not making lunch in the kitchen. It feels like a vacation, not that I don’t enjoy feeding my children. I do, I just don’t like the plates, and the dishwasher. I’d rather keep bees than empty the dishwasher.
Anyway, here is a story about that weed lady I told you about months ago…(Click here)
Taking a Seat
The only chair left was in the Reference section. It is hard to be creative in the Reference section. Test preparation manuals don’t inspire the flow of compelling ideas. And that is what I am after, after all, the flow. The Flow.
When the house gets stale, I leave, in search of a place that might do the mental trick. Often, I will go to the bookstore nearby. At the bookstore, you don’t have to feel guilty about not buying coffee. Coffee turns into another substance when it is not made in my kitchen. So I go to the bookstore, where there are big upholstered chairs set amongst the stacks.
“Try that book,” they seem to say. “Here, sit here and read it, or some of it. C’mon.”
But I do not go to read. The literature section has three chairs, and they were all occupied today. That made me pretty mad, since the occupiers were not writing anything. One was talking…talking!…to another person who sat on the floor. The second was reading. Imagine, reading in the literature section. The third was sleeping. I felt like a pregnant woman on a bus, hanging onto the strap. Look at me, will you? I’m a writer. I’m dying here. Get up, will ya?
I walked around the store until I found the chair that ultimately became mine. I was not motivated, tucked in between guides to Asian walking trips and dictionaries of generic drug names. I debated whether to go back to the shelves where the real books were, and to haul the non-writing people up to standing. But I realized that might be a neurotic choice. Instead, I picked up a “Fast Fact Review for Algebraic Equations” and settled in.
Oh Hi, President Obama, SO Nice to Meet You
You know, no one asked me if I would like to invite the President to my house. It’s probably because I didn’t contribute $50,000 to his campaign, but really, what’s the difference. I would have if I could have, but I couldn’t. He will be in Dallas today, after a stop in Austin, at a lawyer’s house not too far from mine.
If I were the one hosting, here is what I would do: First, I would invite people who did not/could not contribute $50,000 to his campaign, even though the purpose of the event is to rally people who did and can, again. Okay, so I wouldn’t fill up the room with them, but I’d sprinkle in a few. Like me. I’d sprinkle in me. After all, I have other things to contribute to the party, well both parties, the one with the hors d’oeuvres and the political one. I can, for starters, inject unexpected and thought-provoking conversation into the conversation. I can play the piano. And I don’t eat too much. I am the perfect guest. Oh, I always bring a fabulous hostess gift, if they are accepting them at such a soiree, I don’t know.
To the other party, I can rally support, among 13 year olds, anyway. I can write things that say why the President should be re-elected. I can make brownies, with little “O”s iced on them.
I do not know when the event is scheduled to begin. It’s all a hush-hush. Clearly, I will not crash. I think the admin is onto that sort of thing now. But I will make a final plea here–and I know you advance team folks are reading (Hi there, advance team folks!)–to just add me to the list. Just another name, no big deal. Just another supportive citizen with a really nice personality, and a pair of heels waiting by the door. And if it will make the difference, okay, I won’t play the piano. I can live with that. I guess.
Caution: Men Working
And then the Lord said, “Let there be no more digging up the pavement in front of my house with excavation equipment including bulldozers, jackhammers, road graders and scoopers that could pick up a naval attack vessel.”
They began yesterday at 6:59 am, one minute ahead of schedule. Twelve of them, in orange vests and drapey hats, like bugs on a hill, each with a tool in hand or under foot. Several drove, whirling like dervishes in miniature tank-ish vehicles, scraping and loading, lifting and passing. Reminding me of something Balanchine would have choreographed, the display of coordination in the street was mesmerizing, if not beautiful, on some level. Not my level. My level was desperate. Noisily desperate. Climb into the dryer desperate.
For the entire day, they produced sounds that I had never heard before, a gutteral, snarly audiotrack of destruction too abrasive for a mammal such as myself, a mammal who was trying to form literate sentences at a desk not twenty yards away. I formed two, maybe three, and then, realizing the futility, decided to clean out the kids’ bathroom cabinets. For hours, I sorted ponytail accessories–elastics from the kind with the balls on the end, fuzzy from sleek–as well as barrettes, clips, bobbies, headbands and ribbons, contact solutions, dental flosses (is it flossi?), lotions–for itchy skin, sensitive skin, vanilla skin, strawberry skin–and the ever-critical battery of sunscreen products. I emerged lathered in cream, headbands on my head, cotton balls in my ears.
By sundown, I had performed similar service on several closets, baskets of magazines, the pantry and the aforementioned head, as my bangs needed trimming. Alas, the racket ceased. In my door, a note. NOTICE, it said. Please remove your car from your driveway before 7 am tomorrow morning and do not return it to your driveway for three days, until after the cement we are pouring is cured. I needed curing. No, they needed curing. What was wrong with the street anyway?
I set my clock for 6:58 and went outside in my pajamas to find the men waiting. Waiting for me. “There she is,” one said, in a different language that I did not understand, though I know that is what he said. “Finally,” said another.
Yeah, right. Out of my way, Mr. Bobcat.
I parked a mile down the street and traipsed back, still in my pajamas, yes, mumbling like tired crazy people do when they are outside in their pajamas. On the way in, I noticed in the window’s reflection that my hair was sticking up like a carrot in one place on my crown and that another section was plastered sideways onto my cheek. It could have been worse, I thought. I checked to see that I was, in fact, wearing my pajamas.
The clattering began as soon as I shut the door behind me. I showered, dressed and left the house, sound waves twitching through me as I trekked to my car. When I returned hours later, the noise had stopped, only to begin again tomorrow, when it will be my neighbor’s turn.