The Skirt

The Skirt, kind of
The Skirt, kind of

As I’ve complained before, I loathe shopping. I somehow got tricked into entering a department store by my family because someone needed something and we were having a “family day,” and it obviously wasn’t my turn to choose the day’s activities. Ugh.

We entered the store through the women’s clothing section and I seriously felt like a four-year-old being dragged through a “grown-up” store. All I really wanted was to take a nap.

I was just about to crumple to the floor and throw a proper tantrum when I spotted The Skirt. I metamorphosized from a bratty four-year-old to an Academy Award winning Actress (Actor? Whatever.) in an L.A. minute. I could almost hear people shouting, “Who are you wearing?”

I told my family to run along to get whatever whomever needed what, and my people would call their people when I was ready to exit, stage right.

I took the skirt off the rack and put it back at least five times. It was unnecessary. It was on sale! I’d never have an occasion to wear a skirt like that. But I could make one up! Why bother trying it on? It fit perfectly and made me look, dare I say, svelte? Need I say more? I don’t think so.

The saleswoman talked me into buying a rather matronly top to wear with it. It was on sale. It was okay. It worked. But the first time I wore it I was shedding sequins faster than a drag queen running the 50-yard dash.

I was excited when we received two wedding invitations because I’d get to wear the skirt to both since no one from the first wedding would be at the second one, and, of course, I was happy for the brides and grooms blah, blah, blah.

The first wedding took place at the Blackstone Hotel in Chicago, where Richard’s and my parents were married. My brother Paul’s Bar Mitzvah party had been there, as well.

As the photographer placed our family into the most unnatural poses in the history of all of photography, my parents began to wonder where the busload of kids was that should have already arrived.

Once my mother was informed that the bus driver, who was responsible for safely delivering a bushelful of 7th graders from the synagogue, thought he was supposed to take them to Blackstone Avenue, she began to fear for the safety of the children, as well as the rapid rate at which the ice sculpture was melting.

Thankfully, the shrimp on the buffet was still cold when the children disembarked, not even aware they’d been on a site-seeing tour of the south side of Chicago.

When Richard and I arrived at The Blackstone Hotel for the first wedding, four women who had just left the hotel looked at me and gasped. “Oh, my God! You look fabulous! That skirt is amazing! You look beautiful!”

I said, “Okay. Who is paying you to say this? Where’s John Quinones? Seriously, what is going on?”

Can you believe in this day and age people still act like that in public? They were just being nice and really liked my ensem. I ate it up and swallowed every last bit of it. I became The Skirt, or The Skirt became me, or something like that.

As you’ll see the in the first set of photos, you can dress me up, but you can’t take me anywhere. But, you have to admit, I am pretty talented.

The next wedding we attended had The Best invitation and response card, if you like a side of humor with your salmon. It took place at The Hard Rock Hotel in Chicago.

My skirt and I gracefully swept through the hotel to snap photos of the authentic displays of fabulosity on the walls, before Richard gently reminded me we were there for a wedding, not to stare with wonderment at Steven Tyler’s tiny pants. (Don’t get all judgy on me. I can’t help that I find him attractive.)

I’m excited for The Skirt to return from the dry cleaner so we can make our next appearance. Since we have no invitations at the moment, I’ll lounge around in it while watching the next Bears or Hawks game, and the best part about that is I’ll be wearing comfy, fluffy slippers; not heels.

Dear Dad,

Matzo-Ball-SoupI can’t help but think of you as I make matzo ball soup for the holiday. I want to believe you and Paul are ringing in the Jewish new year together, having a grand old time. Life is hard without both of you in it. Holidays are hard, especially as we face each one for the first time without you and Paul.

But, I’m happy and laughing right now because I’m thinking of one of your favorite jokes, and the way you’d laugh every single time you told it, barely able to contain yourself enough to say:

“You know, the matzo balls are the only edible part of the matzo.”

The Lady Bug Village

 

Cute-Happy-Cartoon-Ladybug-T-Shirts Many years ago when my kids were small I bought a Lady Bug Village. It was an adorable little duplex made of wood with handy little indoor Elfa* shelving units designed for the special Lady Bugs in your life. They could burrow in for the winter, and frolic in the nice weather.

The Lady Bug Village came complete with a bag of “Lady Bug Lunch,” and a bottle of a pheromone-based solution called “Eau de Lady Bug.” There must be Manly Bugs in the Lady Bug world, and the pheromones in the spray must encourage mating. The only thing missing from that set-up was a Barry White CD.

I nailed the box to the fence in the backyard, added a scoop of food, shpritzed a few drops of “Eau de Lady Bug” around, and waited for my guests to arrive.

Weeks went by and the village remained uninhabited. “Maybe they’d like something besides Lady Bug Lunch,” I thought to myself as I added a few raisins and apple slices to entice them.

Eventually, the rotting fruit combined with the Lady Bug Lunch and spray attracted bees, natty little flies, and mosquitoes, but no Lady Bugs. Every day that flew by without a Lady Bug caused me to develop a severe case of Jewish Mother Syndrome, a thought process that’s not good for anyone, and apparently doesn’t work on Lady Bugs.

“Why won’t they visit me?” I sat in the dark in a rocking chair, barely moving from my little spot where I had an unobstructed view of the Lady Bug Abode through the window. “That’s gratitude for you,” I thought to myself. “I go and get them the very best box and the most expensive food and pheromone spray, and this is how they repay me? They don’t call, they don’t write. Not even a flyby.”

After weeks of waiting for Lady Bugs to find the villa, to no avilla, I went back to the hardware store to see if I could spend even more money to try to lure those ungrateful little shits. I spotted nothing until my eyes landed on bags of real live Lady Bugs.

Buying Lady Bugs, instead of being able to attract them naturally, felt a little bit like cheating. But, I built it, so they had to come, even if I had to buy them.

When we got home, I sprinkled Lady Bug Lunch, and sprayed Eau de Lady Bug in their little cottage, and on nearby shrubs and bushes. The moment had finally arrived! My hands were shaking as I untied the burlap bag and sprinkled my new little friends in and around their new home.

We were going to be so happy together. I felt like borrowing all of Veronica’s stuffed animals and setting up a little table and chairs so we could celebrate their arrival with a proper Lady Bug Tea Party.

But, I didn’t. Not because I suddenly became in touch with reality, but because I figured the poor little things were all tuckered out from their long day and needed a night to settle in and get comfortable.

I sat quietly on a patio chair and watched them meander around their new ‘hood for about an hour. The kids would be home from school soon, and I needed to start cooking dinner.

I bade the Ladies a fond goodnight, promising I’d come out to see them in the morning. There’s a slight chance I told them if they needed anything during the night that I was just inside the bigger house next door, and if they could figure out how to knock or ring the doorbell, I’d come running.

After the kids left for school in the morning, I ran outside in my jammies and slippers to the Lady Bug Manse, bringing their Lunch and sex spray with me, in case they were running low.

“I bet you’re all hiding inside snug as a bug in a rug,” I said, because none of them was on the bushes or shrubs. I peeked inside, ever so quietly so as not to disturb their slumber.

Not one lousy Lady or Manly bug was home. I figured they waited until dark, ate, drank, had an orgy, and took off. How could they do such a thing after I made such a nice home for them? Why? And they didn’t even leave a note?

ladybugsleaving

 

 

 

 

 

 

I hoped they’d come back in the spring, but they didn’t. Ever. Eventually I ripped that old, rotted, piece of wooden crap off the fence and threw it out along with their expensive, stupid food, and sex spray.

All I can say is those Lady Bugs didn’t know how good they had it. They probably got eaten by other bugs, or even birds. I would have never let that happen to them, those invertebrate ingrates.

A few springs later I went back to the hardware store, but this time I brought home a hammock. I balance my computer and Phoebe on it with me while I “work.” I also bought a birdfeeder. Birds don’t turn on you and they always eat, which every Jewish mother loves to see.

happybirds

 

 

 

 

 

 

*The Container Store has yet to return my repeated calls to validate this statement.

 

This is an edited version of an article I wrote that was published in skirt! Magazine (in print and online) in May, 2000.

Listen Up! Hike 4 Better Hearing Saturday, September 20th!

I’m 53 years old and have worn hearing aids from Hearing Health Center for the past two years. I was told I needed hearing aids when I was in my 30’s, but refused to believe it.

People who meet me, or even those who have known me for years, don’t know I wear hearing aids because they’re barely visible. But, as I love to say now, “I wouldn’t care if they were the size of ear muffs because my life is so much better now that I can hear.” 

In my 30’s and 40’s I noticed I had trouble understanding what people said. When I began to annoy MYSELF by asking people to repeat themselves, I developed a very convincing head nod, hoping I wasn’t agreeing to babysit a friend’s tarantula for the weekend.

I went for periodic hearing tests and promptly tossed the ENT doctor’s written recommendation into the trash when I got home. I was not going to get hearing aids.

I had a quiet upbringing. I worked at a clothing store, a grocery store, and a bank throughout high school and college. After graduating college, I was hired as a copywriter for the Sears Catalog. I sat in a large room full of other writers in cubicles. On a daily basis, the noise level in that room reached the fever pitch of a library.

If I had worked in a steel mill, operated a jackhammer, or directed airplane traffic on an airport tarmac, I would be able to understand my hearing loss better. I was never the drummer or even a backup singer/dancer for a loud rock band on tour, but I’m not giving up that dream anytime soon.

Two years ago, when my kids and husband became, let’s just say, a little impatient with my inability to hear them, I agreed to have another hearing test. A new Hearing Health Center had just opened in our area, so I made an appointment to go there instead of my ENT.

When I called, the receptionist suggested I bring along someone whose voice I knew well, so of course I asked my friend Rosa, who has a slight Argentinian accent and sometimes speaks in Spanish instead of English, to come with me. 

After a thorough exam and test by the audiologist, I was told I had severe hearing loss in my left ear and moderate to severe loss in my right ear. Idiopathic nerve damage was slowly robbing me of the ability to hear, and to differentiate between consonants. (Over time, mixing up consonants made for some very funy converstations.)

As you can imagine, I took that news about as well as if I’d been told I needed five root canals – – without Novocaine. The audiologist placed amplifiers on my ears to give me an idea of what hearing aids could do for me. I heard doors squeaking as they opened and closed. I heard the traffic outside the office.

But the loudest sound I heard was coming from Rosa who was sitting next to me playing with a candy wrapper. It was so annoying I finally asked her to stop. She and the audiologist looked at each other and smiled. 

At first I didn’t understand why they were smiling. But slowly I understood. I could hear.

Not just another pretty face, that Rosa. She had been playing with the candy wrapper before the amplifiers were placed in my ears, but I didn’t hear it. The audiologist told her she was brilliant for coming up with that idea.

Recently I purchased a Phonak ComPilot, a bluetooth device with a microphone. When I wear it around my neck, I can receive and make phone calls complete with caller ID. I can also adjust the volume of my hearing aids, and listen to music streaming from my phone or MP3 player directly through my hearing aids.

When I remove the necklace from the ComPilot and set it down on a table or next to my yoga mat, I can adjust it to block out background noise and just focus on the voice i want to hear.

Sometimes I sing out loud along with the music in the middle of the produce aisle at the grocery store because only I can hear it. I don’t care if people look at me sideways because it’s so much fun. Many people have asked me how they can get a ComPilot. I just giggle to myself and tell them, “I’m sorry, but you need to wear hearing aids to get one of these.”

 

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As an unofficial spokesperson, and an extrememly grateful client, I want to help spread the word about what The Fisher Foundation does. Established in 2008, by Dr. Ronna Fisher, Au.D., the owner and founder of the Hearing Health Center, the Fisher Foundation strives to “increase the accessibility, affordability, and public awareness of hearing health. The Foundation’s mission is to enhance the quality of life through better hearing.”

Dr. Fisher says, “We don’t want finances to be the reason someone cannot hear. That’s why we are holding our first annual Hike 4 Better Hearing. Funds raised will be used to help people obtain hearing aids at low or no cost.”

Tomorrow’s event will offer the public the chance to meet many  hearing aid company representatives, as well as the audiologists from Hearing Health Center. There will be raffle prizes, snacks, and the opporuntiy to schedule a  FREE hearing test at one of Hearing Health Center’s four locations.

If I were you, and I had trouble hearing,  I’d schedule a free hearing test. Your life will only get better from there.