ad hoc MOM

Aug9Movin’ On Up?
Tonya

It’s been so amazing here at adhocMOM but, sadly, we are moving on. Moving up.

I can now be found at my new blog: Going To Mensa and on twitter: @Going2Mensa.

I can also still be found at The Mouthy Housewives.

Unlike Weezy though my move won’t come with an apartment in the sky.

Anyway, since Gwyneth Paltrow has a cookbook and J.Lo seems to be up for Single Mother of the Year award I’ve decided to branch out into poetry. After a few attempts with a “Man from Nantucket” I moved on to the haiku.  I’ve written one for all you lovely folks out there in the blogosphere:

A train to catch. Now.

I know not where it travels.

Maybe back to you?

I know; it’s pretty damn deep.

Seriously, I just want to say I feel so lucky to have met such amazing people! I will miss everyone so much! And I really hope that you all come over and visit me on Going to Mensa and The Mouthy Housewives. But most of all, though, THANK YOU for all of the awesome comments, the wonderful advice, the amazing support, and, most of all, the huge laughs!!!

Love,

Tonya

 

 
Jun14Suburban Living 101: Or, Has Anyone Seen My Car?
Paula

It’s hard to believe that it’s been almost three months since we left Brooklyn.  While we miss our friends, the restaurants, the coffee shops and the bars (even though we haven’t set foot in one in years), I’m pleased to report that there’s much to like about living in the suburbs.  We eat dinner outside more than inside (and sometimes even breakfast!).  We have so many windows that we haven’t had to turn on any air conditioners, if I get annoyed with June I can demand that she “go play upstairs.”  However, there are some basics to living out here that have taken me awhile to grasp.  For instance. . . .

Maybe trading in our car for a shopping cart car would solve all of my problems?

  • When you park your car in a huge parking lot, like at Target or Home Depot, it seems you’re supposed to make a mental note of where you left it.  I forget to do this EVERY TIME.  Every time!  Like a total idiot, I am always walking out of Target with bags of stuff I don’t need, a cranky toddler, and a puzzled look on my face because I have NO idea where my car is.
  • Speaking of stuff I don’t need.  Let’s talk about Target briefly.  The second you put something in your cart, whether it be an $8.00 Merona t-shirt or an economy size box of goldfish crackers you have just committed to spending at least $120.00 at that store.  It is IMPOSSIBLE to spend less than $120.00 at Target.  Try it.  Seriously.  I challenge you to spend a penny less.
  • Okay, shopping carts.  Why is it they barely move in the actual store. . . they are all squeaky and difficult to push, yet the second you get the stupid cart out to your car and dare look away from it for two seconds while opening the trunk the damn thing is flying down the parking lot at about 50 mph toward like a major highway or a Mercedes?  Seriously, I am always sure to remove my child from the cart, like, immediately upon reaching the car (as soon as I find it that is).

I’m sure there’s more stuff I’m screwing up – and I have much more to learn.  We’re off to the store, so please wish us luck.

And hey, if you want to horrify your friends and family by writing a memoir, I’m giving a free webinar next Monday!

 

 

 
Apr25When the Summer (Makes Me) Come Undone**
Carrie

I’m going to be a spoil sport here. A debbie downer. A whiner. A glass is gone, let alone half empty kind of girl. Mock me if you want. But don’t come crying to me when you’re having a break down right around Fourth of July, OK?

Summer isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. In fact, it is looming large, threatening to arrive any day now and it’s shaking its sweaty fists in my face and its breath smells like barbecue. I already feel nostalgic for September.

I can hear you booing. You think I care?

Last Wednesday, it was a beautiful day here in Brooklyn–sunny and unexpectedly warm. Drunk from Vitamin D, I went directly to the park after school with both of my boys–on a whim. Let’s just say, I really wouldn’t advise just “hopping over to the park after school” without a back up plan and some extra muscle on hand. Forewarned is forearmed. Consider this my shot across your bow.

After months and months spent indoors, your wardrobe is not ready for its closeup. Sure, shed your parka–but to what end? Maybe you’ll be a bit more comfortable in the temperature sense, but you certainly won’t feel at ease once you realize you are wearing dirty pants, mismatched socks, beat up clogs and a sweaty turtleneck.

Congratulations! Now that you’re strutting your sorry self around in public, you’re going to have to count on running into people you know. And, because you look like total crap (apologies), you better have something interesting to say to compensate for what you lack in aesthetic appeal. I beg of you–prepare yourself! What do you plan on saying to your neighbor after you blurt out (with spit coming out the side of your mouth) “OHMYGAWD…It’s such a BEAUTIFUL DAY?”

You have spent the winter negotiating with terrorists, making concessions that no person with any shred of dignity or sense of justice should ever have to make. But you did it for a temporary peace in that ninth hour of indoor play on that third day of snow. Your children own your ass now and they know it. And thanks to the warmer temperatures, the rest of the world will know it, too. Onlookers will see you being marched to the ice cream truck by your three-year old. They will tsk-tsk under their breath as you fork over $3.50 for an ice pop that you could buy at the grocery store for 50 cents. And finally, they’ll arch their eyebrows as they watch the cataclysmic aftershocks of the sugar rush that ensues 15 minutes later.

But you know what–who cares what people think?? It’s a BEAUTIFUL GODDAMN DAY and the only thing that matters is that you and your kids are enjoying it. BUT. But. But. You skipped Playground Spring Training. You have lost all muscle memory of what it feels like to hurl yourself through the air, grabbing the ankle of your toddler who is about to catapult himself over the side of a rail up in the playground sky while you hold your other child on your hip. You are not nearly flexible enough to pull one child off of a stranger’s child as they duke it out for the pole position on the curly slide. You do these things, because you must. But you will need pain medication and a cocktail when you get home.

So, cheers to Spring, Summer’s welcome mat. But let us meditate on Summer’s sobering, looming threats before we celebrate. Sunburn, sweat, ice cream tantrums, heat waves, park bathrooms, stroller fits, playground pandemonium, parenting on display and fashion unzipped. In the words of Michael Conrad on HIll Street Blues: “Let’s be careful out there.”
** with apologies to Yo La Tengo

 
Apr6Junie, I Don’t Think We’re in Brooklyn Anymore
Paula

It’s entirely possible that I’ll fall asleep in the middle of writing this blog post.  Why?  It’s completely silent here.  SILENT.  My husband is playing with my daughter ON A DIFFERENT FLOOR, and I can’t hear the hum of the subway running underneath my building five floors below, or general noise from neighbors, or the sound of the elevator running.  I loved those sounds.  I’m not necessarily saying that I miss them – the quiet is good too.  I just never realized how noisy regular life in an apartment building can be.  But seriously, this is just this tip of the suburban OMG-I’m-so-confused iceberg.  And really, I don’t mean to sound like one of those dipshits from a romantic comedy who can’t function outside of a city.  I’m from Wisconsin!  We moved 15 miles from Manhattan!  I realize I’m not trying to survive somewhere in the Arctic with just a pair of dogs and a slice of blubber.  I’m genuinely surprised by some of the stuff I’m discovering about my new surroundings. . . .

Seriously, where am I?  I swear to god it’s not that far?  WTF?

1)   Okay, our oil tank ran out.  This means NO heat.  The oil tank people came.  Envision someone from the Dunder Mifflin Paper Company, but in the oil business.  They filled our oil tank, which costs like over $1,000.  Instead of asking for a credit card like sane people would, THEY TOLD US THEY WOULD SEND US A BILL.  WTF?  Hello?  Didn’t you just say this was $1,000+?  How do you even know we have any money?  When I expressed SHOCK and amazement, the Michael Scott figure said “we trust you.”  Idiots!  Oh, but I mean that in the nicest way of course because we totally pay our bills!

2)   I went to the Rite-Aid to buy June some markers and crayons, etc. since hers are yet to be found.  The cashier, who oddly was not disgruntled or angry – was puzzled that he didn’t know who I was.  He said “Are you new to the neighborhood? Because I don’t believe I’ve seen you before.”  I reluctantly told him I was – fearing he’d force me to fill out some sort Rite-Aid Lifetime Membership Club Card for People Who Love Shopping At Rite-Aid or something, but then he was like “Oh!  Welcome to the neighborhood!  I’m KEVIN!”  And then proceeded to be all efficient and polite about ringing up my markers and crayons.  How weird is that?

3)   June and I were walking around on the sidewalks when these kids, i.e. potential murderers who I’d guess were between the ages of ten and twelve started gesticulating wildly at us.  It would appear that they were waving, but this is New Jersey!  Who knows!  That could mean “I’m going to cut you in your sleep” here.  I told June to put her head down and keep walking.  Every time we left the house it was the same story.  Finally, there was no avoiding it. . . as these hooligans were approaching fast.  Imagine my disbelief when these, I guess I’ll call them children?  Introduced themselves to us.  They told us where they lived and who their parents were.  Why would they do that?  What am I supposed to do with this information?  Do they want me to bring them presents?  Invite them over for parties?  Buy them alcohol?  I’m so confused. . . so confused.

I’m fading. . it’s too dark and quiet.

 
Mar30Goodbye, Yellow Walled Apartment
Paula

I’m sitting in the apartment I bought with my boyfriend over seven years ago.  It’s weird to write the word “boyfriend” – it sounds so youthful, and frankly, exciting.  Boyfriend!  We bought this place because we thought it was pretty.  It’s one of those pre-war deals that has loads of character.  It has a sunken living room that we thought would be conducive to cocktail parties (it was).  The first time we looked at it we knew exactly where we would put the bar.  It has a real foyer which feels incredibly grown up.  We never got tired of saying stuff like “can you get my book?  It’s in the foyer.”  Or more likely – “watch out, the cat just vomited up a hairball in the foyer.”  We loved that the apartment was across the street from a museum, the botanic garden, and my favorite – the main branch of the library.  I couldn’t believe my luck that I lived so close to such a magnificent place.  But here’s the thing, when you buy an apartment for its cocktail party potential, you’re not thinking about what you’ll do a few years down the road when you decide “Hey!  I know!  Let’s get married and then have a kid.”  Suddenly your bar is holding baskets of toys and the booze is relegated to a safer more secure area in your very tiny kitchen.  While it’s wonderful to have a foyer, you’re wondering why it didn’t occur to you to consider apartments with second bedrooms.  I’m not saying we have regrets – neither of us has a single one, I’m just pointing out that it’s absolutely fascinating how quickly needs can change.  One day our sunken living room was elegant, the next day a death trap as we found ourselves with a newly walking baby.  But we’ve loved every second of our lives here. . . even as we’ve struggled to stay organized or out of each others way.

I’m really going to miss this place.

Tonight is our last night in our yellow walled apartment.  We arrived as two people and are leaving as three.  It’s sad, but it’s happy too.  We’re moving to a beautiful house in a lovely town – I worry we won’t see our friends as often, but I know we’ll manage to see them.  We have to!  It’s that simple.  But when all of this change feels like too much, I think of another simple thought.  As of tomorrow, I’ll have enough space that I can put my liquor back on the bar.  There will be an entire room just for toys.

 
Mar16Gabrielle Hamilton: A Mom I’d Like To Meet
Paula

My friend Maya was telling me about Blood, Bones & Butter:  The Inadvertent Education of a Reluctant Chef, a new memoir by Gabrielle Hamilton.  If you don’t know who she is (and I had no idea), Hamilton is the chef/owner of the popular East Village restaurant Prune.  While I love memoirs and like to read about food, I wasn’t initially convinced that this book would be my cup of tea (even though Maya has overall good taste, just FYI).  I’ve never eaten at Prune, and I’m kind of sick of chefs, wanna be chefs, and various food writers blathering on about how root vegetables, eating croissants in Paris and butchering pigs CHANGED THEIR LIVES.  But Maya convinced me the book wasn’t just about being a chef – it was also about the birth of a writer, and being a mom.  Those things appeal to me big time, so I read it.  I am now kind of girl crushin’ on Gabrielle Hamilton.   Here’s why:

You know those stories of working moms who do crazy things?  Like give a press conference about their company going public seconds after delivery triplets via c-section?  Um, I admit I have a tendency to be judgy about such behavior.  Hamilton finds herself in the position of scheduling her birth after two of her chefs quit while 39 weeks pregnant leaving her in a major lurch.  This is what she says:

“It’s possible that working that brunch egg shift at thirty-nine weeks pregnant is badass.  And also possible that biting the bullet and scheduling your own labor is badass.  Keeping your shit together in front of your crew, no matter what, is badass.  Maybe even driving out to IKEA to pick up thirty white china platters and get back by dinner service the day before you are going to give birth is badass.  But badass is the last thing I am interested in being.  Badass is a juvenile aspiration.

She goes on. . . .

“But at thirty-eight years old, hugely pregnant with my future tiny, pure, precious son, I don’t want anything to do with badass.  I want to be J. Crew catalogue clean.  I don’t want to be that woman who can – and did – get down on all fours and scrape the pancake batter off the oven door after having just cooked three hundred eggs with a near-constant monologue of fucking fuck of a fuck issuing from her lips.”

Okay.  Lesson learned here.  Not everyone who does badass crazy things pre/post birth actually is PROUD of doing said things.  Definitely noted.  Stop the judgment Paula!

At one point in the book she is invited to speak at a conference at the Culinary Institute of America called “Where Are the Women?” about the challenges of being a woman chef.  During the conference, a woman asks if it is possible to manage to have both a family and a career.  Hamilton listened to her colleagues give what she calls “crap answers” and thought about what she had to do just to get to the conference that day. . .  and how she left the house without seeing her two boys awake.  She goes on to think about how the physical demands of being a chef are actually a pretty good preparation for motherhood.  I won’t spoil it for you, but let’s just say the words “cannibalization” and “breastfeeding” came up in the same sentence.  But what really moved me was her honesty, which I can safely say I was spared until I was presented with an actual live baby.

“Days go very badly and there is never balance.  Everybody gets shorted, everybody gets hurt, and you, the mom, not the least.  But it does give you a leg up, I often think, because the restaurant family is a perfect starter family.  It’s such an accurate in-flight simulator that I have grown to feel sorry for anybody who enters parenthood and a domestic project without having first run a restaurant.  From the earliest stages of family life when you are pregnant and uncomfortable and not sleeping well at night, the parallels to running a restaurant are almost over-obvious and all of that work you’ve done on your feet all day, with back problems from lifting so much heavy stuff or standing in one place for so long, with sometimes no time to eat or even to pee, and not sleeping much at all because of your commitment to your restaurant will all feel incredibly familiar and doable.”

She talks about the joys of family life too, this woman is seriously crazy about her kids – but if was a relief to see that someone else found caring for a baby difficult.  I remember feeling like I was the only one who was overwhelmed and overwrought by the “joys of parenting.”  It’s clear reading Blood, Bones and Butter that Hamilton can write. . . and word on the street is she’s a pretty good cook too.  I think I’ll make a reservation at Prune.

 
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